Gerrit

Gerrit is a code review system. The Gerrit driver supports sources, triggers, and reporters.

Zuul will need access to a Gerrit user.

Create an SSH keypair for Zuul to use if there isn’t one already, and create a Gerrit user with that key:

cat ~/id_rsa.pub | ssh -p29418 review.example.com gerrit create-account --ssh-key - --full-name Zuul zuul

Give that user whatever permissions will be needed on the projects you want Zuul to report on. For instance, you may want to grant Verified +/-1 and Submit to the user. Additional categories or values may be added to Gerrit. Zuul is very flexible and can take advantage of those.

Connection Configuration

The supported options in zuul.conf connections are:

<gerrit connection>
<gerrit connection>.driver (required)
gerrit

The connection must set driver=gerrit for Gerrit connections.

<gerrit connection>.server (required)

Fully qualified domain name of Gerrit server.

<gerrit connection>.canonical_hostname

The canonical hostname associated with the git repos on the Gerrit server. Defaults to the value of <gerrit connection>.server. This is used to identify projects from this connection by name and in preparing repos on the filesystem for use by jobs. Note that Zuul will still only communicate with the Gerrit server identified by server; this option is useful if users customarily use a different hostname to clone or pull git repos so that when Zuul places them in the job’s working directory, they appear under this directory name.

<gerrit connection>.port
Default: 29418

Gerrit server port.

<gerrit connection>.baseurl
Default: https://{server}

Path to Gerrit web interface. Omit the trailing /.

<gerrit connection>.gitweb_url_template
Default: {baseurl}/gitweb?p={project.name}.git;a=commitdiff;h={sha}

Url template for links to specific git shas. By default this will point at Gerrit’s built in gitweb but you can customize this value to point elsewhere (like cgit or github).

The three values available for string interpolation are baseurl which points back to Gerrit, project and all of its safe attributes, and sha which is the git sha1.

<gerrit connection>.user
Default: zuul

User name to use when logging into Gerrit via ssh.

<gerrit connection>.sshkey
Default: ~zuul/.ssh/id_rsa

Path to SSH key to use when logging into Gerrit.

<gerrit connection>.keepalive
Default: 60

SSH connection keepalive timeout; 0 disables.

<gerrit connection>.password

The HTTP authentication password for the user. This is optional, but if it is provided, Zuul will report to Gerrit via HTTP rather than SSH. It is required in order for file and line comments to reported (the Gerrit SSH API only supports review messages). Retrieve this password from the HTTP Password section of the Settings page in Gerrit.

<gerrit connection>.auth_type
Default: digest

The HTTP authentication mechanism.

digest

HTTP Digest authentication; the default for most Gerrit installations.

basic

HTTP Basic authentication.

form

Zuul will submit a username and password to a form in order to authenticate.

<gerrit connection>.verify_ssl
Default: true

When using a self-signed certificate, this may be set to false to disable SSL certificate verification.

Trigger Configuration

Zuul works with standard versions of Gerrit by invoking the gerrit stream-events command over an SSH connection. It also reports back to Gerrit using SSH.

If using Gerrit 2.7 or later, make sure the user is a member of a group that is granted the Stream Events permission, otherwise it will not be able to invoke the gerrit stream-events command over SSH.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>

The dictionary passed to the Gerrit pipeline trigger attribute supports the following attributes:

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.event (required)

The event name from gerrit. Examples: patchset-created, comment-added, ref-updated. This field is treated as a regular expression.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.branch

The branch associated with the event. Example: master. This field is treated as a regular expression, and multiple branches may be listed.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.ref

On ref-updated events, the branch parameter is not used, instead the ref is provided. Currently Gerrit has the somewhat idiosyncratic behavior of specifying bare refs for branch names (e.g., master), but full ref names for other kinds of refs (e.g., refs/tags/foo). Zuul matches this value exactly against what Gerrit provides. This field is treated as a regular expression, and multiple refs may be listed.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.ignore-deletes
Default: true

When a branch is deleted, a ref-updated event is emitted with a newrev of all zeros specified. The ignore-deletes field is a boolean value that describes whether or not these newrevs trigger ref-updated events.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.approval

This is only used for comment-added events. It only matches if the event has a matching approval associated with it. Example: Code-Review: 2 matches a +2 vote on the code review category. Multiple approvals may be listed.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.email

This is used for any event. It takes a regex applied on the performer email, i.e. Gerrit account email address. If you want to specify several email filters, you must use a YAML list. Make sure to use non greedy matchers and to escapes dots! Example: email: ^.*?@example\.org$.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.username

This is used for any event. It takes a regex applied on the performer username, i.e. Gerrit account name. If you want to specify several username filters, you must use a YAML list. Make sure to use non greedy matchers and to escapes dots. Example: username: ^zuul$.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.comment

This is only used for comment-added events. It accepts a list of regexes that are searched for in the comment string. If any of these regexes matches a portion of the comment string the trigger is matched. comment: retrigger will match when comments containing retrigger somewhere in the comment text are added to a change.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.require-approval

This may be used for any event. It requires that a certain kind of approval be present for the current patchset of the change (the approval could be added by the event in question). It follows the same syntax as pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval. For each specified criteria there must exist a matching approval.

pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.reject-approval

This takes a list of approvals in the same format as pipeline.trigger.<gerrit source>.require-approval but will fail to enter the pipeline if there is a matching approval.

Reporter Configuration

Zuul works with standard versions of Gerrit by invoking the gerrit command over an SSH connection. It reports back to Gerrit using SSH.

The dictionary passed to the Gerrit reporter is used for gerrit review arguments, with the boolean value of true simply indicating that the argument should be present without following it with a value. For example, verified: 1 becomes gerrit review --verified 1 and submit: true becomes gerrit review --submit.

A connection that uses the gerrit driver must be supplied to the trigger.

Requirements Configuration

As described in pipeline.require and pipeline.reject, pipelines may specify that items meet certain conditions in order to be enqueued into the pipeline. These conditions vary according to the source of the project in question. To supply requirements for changes from a Gerrit source named my-gerrit, create a configuration such as the following:

pipeline:
  require:
    my-gerrit:
      approval:
        - Code-Review: 2

This indicates that changes originating from the Gerrit connection named my-gerrit must have a Code-Review vote of +2 in order to be enqueued into the pipeline.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>

The dictionary passed to the Gerrit pipeline require attribute supports the following attributes:

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval

This requires that a certain kind of approval be present for the current patchset of the change (the approval could be added by the event in question). It takes several sub-parameters, all of which are optional and are combined together so that there must be an approval matching all specified requirements.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval.username

If present, an approval from this username is required. It is treated as a regular expression.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval.email

If present, an approval with this email address is required. It is treated as a regular expression.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval.older-than

If present, the approval must be older than this amount of time to match. Provide a time interval as a number with a suffix of “w” (weeks), “d” (days), “h” (hours), “m” (minutes), “s” (seconds). Example 48h or 2d.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval.newer-than

If present, the approval must be newer than this amount of time to match. Same format as “older-than”.

Any other field is interpreted as a review category and value pair. For example Verified: 1 would require that the approval be for a +1 vote in the “Verified” column. The value may either be a single value or a list: Verified: [1, 2] would match either a +1 or +2 vote.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.open

A boolean value (true or false) that indicates whether the change must be open or closed in order to be enqueued.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.current-patchset

A boolean value (true or false) that indicates whether the change must be the current patchset in order to be enqueued.

pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.status

A string value that corresponds with the status of the change reported by the trigger.

pipeline.reject.<gerrit source>

The reject attribute is the mirror of the require attribute. It also accepts a dictionary under the connection name. This dictionary supports the following attributes:

pipeline.reject.<gerrit source>.approval

This takes a list of approvals. If an approval matches the provided criteria the change can not be entered into the pipeline. It follows the same syntax as pipeline.require.<gerrit source>.approval.

Example to reject a change with any negative vote:

reject:
  my-gerrit:
    approval:
      - Code-Review: [-1, -2]