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269 строки
12 KiB
Plaintext
269 строки
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Tinderbox Documentation:
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------------------------
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*) Every directory has a ReadMe file which tells about all the files
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in that directory.
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*) Every executable can be run with --help so that you can see what
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the program does and what its arguments are. If you have trouble
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running the file just look at the file in a text editor and find
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the string "usage".
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*) The top of every file (both code and configuration) has a short
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explanation of what this file does.
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*) The code has lots of documentation so you can read the code if you
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need more details about how something works.
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To install:
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-----------
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*) You will need to ensure that Perl is installed on your webserver.
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It would be a good idea to have these modules installed:
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Storable, Date::Format,
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You can easily check if these are installed by executing these two
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commands.
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If the module is installed, you'll get no output:
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perl -e 'use Storable'
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perl -e 'use Date::Format'
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*) Read the Policies and Overview documents found in this directory to
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help you get a feel for the scope of this installation.
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*) The process id which receives and process the mail must be the
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same id which runs the tinderbox cron job to prepare the web pages. I
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prefer to manage my webserver so that all CGI scripts do not run as
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the same user. Using one user id can cause security problems which
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are hard to detect. If you must run all web applications as a single
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user it would be safer to ensure that this user is a specific web user
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(apache, cgiuser, webuser) so that this is not mixed up with other
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unix system users (daemon, nobody, bin) since this could cause
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security interactions with other programs which use these ids.
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It may take some thought as to how the user id will be configured to
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run when receiving mail and when receiving web requests and not be a
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user id which will cause security problems.
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These products will help partition your web application to run as
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different users. (See http://www.w3.org/Security/Faq/wwwsf4.html for
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more info)
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CGIWrap
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http://cgiwrap.unixtools.org/
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http://sourceforge.net/projects/cgiwrap/
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sbox: Put CGI Scripts in a Box
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http://stein.cshl.org/software/sbox/
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The Apache Web server comes with its own wrapper script called suEXEC.
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*) The src/default_conf directory contains perl libraries which are
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specific to an individual users site configuration. No two users of
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Tinderbox will have the identical sets of files.
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The files found in default_conf are sample files which are used at
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Mozilla.org. Other users are expected to customize these libraries and
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install the modified libraries in local_conf. Files found in
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local_conf will be used before any file found in default_conf.
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The distribution of Tinderbox will never place any files in the
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local_conf directory as this is assumed to be under local control.
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A quick overview of the files:
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TinderConfig.pm: general configuration settings
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(HTML directories, Log files, implementations of libraries
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to use, etc).
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TreeData.pm: version control (CVS, Bonsai) configuration.
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Error_Parse.pm: the regular expressions for identifying
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errors in build logs.
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BTData.pm: bug tracking configuration
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FileStructure.pm: filesystem (storage) and global/per-project
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settings. Most users will not have to change this.
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In particular you will need a TinderConfig.pm and a TreeData.pm which
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describes your local setup. You may need to make local versions of
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the other files depending on how you wish to have Tinderbox configured.
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I install Tinderbox via RPM. I have three RPMS. One tracks changes in
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the Tinderbox server source code just as I get it from CVS. One RPM
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contains my local_conf files. The clientbin files get put in their
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own RPM which is installed on the buildmachine along with the
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local_conf files. I do not currently have all the other configuration
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details worked out (crontab files, /etc/rc.d/init.d, .cvspass,) but
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most of the state of my machines is under RPM control.
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*) Run ./configure. When configure is done you will have a Makefile
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and a config.out. Although Tinderbox consists entirely of perl
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scripts we must substitute some values into the source code to make it
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executable. You may wish to change the default directories in
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configure for some of the makefile variables. Please read config.out
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and make any changes which need to be made for your system. Configure
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also accepts command line options to change some default variables.
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Please look at the configure source code for variable details, but the
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most common changes are:
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prefix: the directory for most of the tinderbox files,
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defaults to /home/tinderbox2
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cgibin_prefix: The directory where cgi scripts will be
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run. This depends on how your webserver is configured.
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For security you may wish to ensure that this
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directory is disjoint from the prefix directory. This
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defaults to /var/www/cgi-bin/tinderbox.
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html_prefix: The directory where html files should be
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written. This depends on how your webserver is configured.
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This is where the webserver will pick up tinderbox2
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output. This defaults to /home/httpd/html/tinderbox.
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*) run 'make' to create executable versions of the source code in the
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./build directory.
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*) run 'make compile_bin_code' to ensure that the code will compile
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when it is installed. This will not work if your target machine is
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very different from the machine you are running make on.
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*) If you wish run the test programs as described in
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/build/test/ReadMe to ensure that you have configured the program
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correctly. This will require a TinderConfig.pm file in your local_conf
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directory. See the ReadMe file in the test directory for detailed
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information on how the tests work.
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*) run make install, to install Tinderbox on your system. You may
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wish to run this with a different 'prefix'
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make install prefix=/opt/tinderbox
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It is currently assumed that the bin directory of your installation
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will be where the webserver will run the tinderbox cgi's from. You
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can copy the *.cgi files to another directory if this is not the case.
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*) There are some gifs located in the gif directory which have
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historically been used by tinderbox. The installation via 'make
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install' does not install these images. Put them somewhere in your
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webserver's html directory if you wish to use them. Samples of their
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use are in the configuration files.
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*) set up a cron job to run $cgi-bin/bin/tinder.cgi --daemon-mode
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every five minutes. This generates the static tinderbox pages
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which users see.
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set up a cron job to run $prefix/bin/rmlogs at least once a day.
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six am is a good time to run this as the machine load is usually light
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and will avoids any day light savings problems. This keeps the
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archive of compressed build logs from growing without limit.
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*) set up the $prefix/bin/processmail* programs to receive the
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incoming tinderbox mail. The process id which receives and process
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the mail must be the the same id which runs the tinderbox cron job to
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prepare the web pages. Usually this set up is accomplished by having
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the MTA (Sendmail) pass mail for particular accounts into a script.
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This can be configured via a global configuration file (Sendmail alias
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file) or via a .forward file (each account gets the same user id but a
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different home directory, each home directory gets a .forward to cause
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incoming mail to be delivered through the correct tinderbox mail
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processing program).
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I have used the following configurations for the mail server Postfix.
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The postfix aliases file /etc/postfix/aliases contains the following
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lines. This file must be processed with a /usr/sbin/postalias command
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which must be run by the same id which will run the tinderbox cgi scripts.
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tinderbox_builds: |/home/tinderbox2/bin/processmail_builds
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tinderbox_bugzilla: |/home/tinderbox2/bin/processmail_bugs
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If it is not possible to have mail delivery on your web machine and to
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have your web machine deliver specific mail through a program then I
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suggest you use fetchmail to simulate this delivery format. Download
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fetchmail (from http://tuxedo.org/~esr/fetchmail) and install it on
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your webserver. Have the mail sent to any pop/imap mail server which
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is accessible from the webserver. Configure fetchmail to gather the
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mail from the mail server and pass it through to the correct mail
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processing program. You should keep the polling interval short (30-200
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seconds) as long polling intervals will cause delays in the tinderbox
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system and limit how quickly users see the new data. If the polling
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interval is too short then you will overload your pop server with
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needless queries. Fetchmail should run under the same id as the
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tinderbox server. The fetchmail configuration file will look
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something like:
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poll mail.provider.net with proto pop3:
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user "tinderbox_builds" there has password "u can't krak this"
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is tinder here and wants mda "$prefix/bin/processmail_builds"
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We use the mail address 'tinderbox_builds' for build information
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destined for the webserver. Similarly the bug tracking system should
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send mail to 'tinderbox_bugs'.
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*) If you are using VC_CVS.pm then you will need to put a ~/.cvspass
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for tinderbox to use. Log into the CVS repository yourself, once for
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each tree you have defined. The login command must use the
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hostname/modules exactly as you wrote it in VCData. Then copy your
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~/.cvspass into the tinderbox server user id's home directory. This
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must be the REAL home of the Tinderbox daemon, as listed in
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/etc/passwd/ and set in the $HOME environmental variable for
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tinder.cgi. The file must not be world readable or writable or
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executable. It is recommended that VC_CVS.pm is only used as an
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interim step in setting up VC_Bonsai. VC_Bonsai is not hard to setup
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and provided many useful features which are absent in VC_CVS.pm.
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*) Setup the build machines to mail their build logs (with tinderbox
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variables on the top) to the web server machine. New builds must not
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start earlier then 6 minutes after the last build started. Each build
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machine mails the build log of each build and puts some build data at
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the top of the log. Build information includes whether the build was
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a success, which error parsers to use on the log file and what build
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this is. Run 'processmail_builds --help' to learn about how the mail
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processing system works and what the mail messages are expected to
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look like. There is an example mail in the test directory called
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samplelog. The clientbin directory contains code which can be used on
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the buildmachine. See the README to help setup your buildmachine.
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http://www.ntsendmail.com/ has a perl program which can be used to
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send mail on systems where there is no sendmail installed.
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There is nothing special about sending mail. Any data transport layer
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would work including HTTP Post and SSH the only requirement is that
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the data is sent to the STDIN of the mail processing programs upon
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delivery and that the process which runs this is the same uid as the
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tinderbox server. I have not thought too much about how to set up
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these alternate delivery mechanisms so I have no practical advice but
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It should not be too hard to setup. There is a set of instructions for
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this in lwpcook.pod which suggest you will need to install
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HTTP::Request::Common and LWP::UserAgent;
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*) Set up the bug tracking system to send mail to 'tinderbox_bugs' on
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the webserver machine whenever a Bug ticket changes state. It is not
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interesting to see which tickets are being worked on, so restrict
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mailing to changes in ticket state not updates (edit) of a ticket.
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*) Check that the time on your webserver, your version control
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machine, your bug tracking machine and your build machines are all in
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sync. Check that mail if build mail bounces on any of the above
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machines that it will be received by someone who can act on it.
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I keep my email up to date in the Contact file. If you have trouble
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with these instructions please drop me a line.
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Ken Estes.
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