197 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
197 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
:title: IRC Services
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.. _irc:
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IRC Services
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############
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The infrastructure team runs a number of IRC bots that are active on
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OpenStack related channels.
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At a Glance
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===========
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:Hosts:
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* http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/
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* http://review.openstack.org/
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* https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Infrastructure_Status
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:Puppet:
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/puppet-meetbot/tree/
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/puppet-statusbot/tree/
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/puppet-gerritbot/tree/
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* :file:`modules/openstack_project/manifests/eavesdrop.pp`
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* :file:`modules/openstack_project/manifests/review.pp`
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:Configuration:
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* :config:`gerritbot/channels.yaml`
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:Projects:
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* http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot
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* http://sourceforge.net/projects/supybot/
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/meetbot
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/gerritbot
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* https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/statusbot
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:Bugs:
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* https://storyboard.openstack.org/#!/project/748
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Channel Requirements
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====================
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In general, discussion for OpenStack projects is preferred in #openstack-dev,
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but there are many reasons why a team would like to have their own channel.
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Access
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------
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Register the channel with ChanServ and give the infrastructure team account
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founder access to the channel with::
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/msg chanserv access #channel add openstackinfra +AFRefiorstv
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This is good practice project-wide to make sure we keep channels under
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control and is a requirement if you want any of the project bots in
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your channel.
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Join #openstack-infra if you have any trouble with any of these commands.
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Meetbot
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=======
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The OpenStack Infrastructure team run a slightly modified
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`Meetbot <http://wiki.debian.org/MeetBot>`_ to log IRC channel activity and
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meeting minutes. Meetbot is a plugin for
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`Supybot <http://sourceforge.net/projects/supybot/>`_ which adds meeting
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support features to the Supybot IRC bot.
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Supybot
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-------
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In order to run Meetbot you will need to get Supybot. You can find the latest
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release `here <http://sourceforge.net/projects/supybot/files/>`_. Once you have
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extracted the release you will want to read the ``INSTALL`` and
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``doc/GETTING_STARTED`` files. Those two files should have enough
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information to get you going, but there are other goodies in ``doc/``.
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Once you have Supybot installed you will need to configure a bot. The
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``supybot-wizard`` command can get you started with a basic config, or you can
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have the OpenStack meetbot puppet module do the heavy lifting.
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One important config setting is ``supybot.reply.whenAddressedBy.chars``, which
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sets the prefix character for this bot. This should be set to something other
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than ``#`` as ``#`` will conflict with Meetbot (you can leave the setting blank
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if you don't want a prefix character).
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Meetbot
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-------
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The OpenStack Infrastructure Meetbot fork can be found at
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https://git.openstack.org/cgit/openstack-infra/meetbot. Manual installation of the Meetbot
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plugin is straightforward and documented in that repository's README.
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OpenStack Infrastructure installs and configures Meetbot through Puppet.
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Voting
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^^^^^^
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The OpenStack Infrastructure Meetbot fork adds simple voting features. After
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a meeting has been started a meeting chair can begin a voting block with the
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``#startvote`` command. The command takes two arguments, a question posed to
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voters (ending with a ``?``), and the valid voting options. If the second
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argument is missing the default options are "Yes" and "No". For example:
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``#startvote Should we vote now? Yes, No, Maybe``
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Meeting participants vote using the ``#vote`` command. This command takes a
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single argument, which should be one of the options listed for voting by the
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``#startvote`` command. For example:
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``#vote Yes``
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Note that you can vote multiple times, but only your last vote will count.
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One can check the current vote tallies useing the ``#showvote`` command, which
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takes no arguments. This will list the number of votes and voters for each item
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that has votes.
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When the meeting chair(s) are ready to stop the voting process they can issue
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the ``#endvote`` command, which takes no arguments. Doing so will report the
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voting results and log these results in the meeting minutes.
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A somewhat contrived voting example:
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::
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foo | #startvote Should we vote now? Yes, No, Maybe
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meetbot | Begin voting on: Should we vote now? Valid vote options are Yes, No, Maybe.
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meetbot | Vote using '#vote OPTION'. Only your last vote counts.
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foo | #vote Yes
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bar | #vote Absolutely
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meetbot | bar: Absolutely is not a valid option. Valid options are Yes, No, Maybe.
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bar | #vote Yes
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bar | #showvote
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meetbot | Yes (2): foo, bar
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foo | #vote No
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foo | #showvote
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meetbot | Yes (1): bar
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meetbot | No (1): foo
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foo | #endvote
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meetbot | Voted on "Should we vote now?" Results are
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meetbot | Yes (1): bar
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meetbot | No (1): foo
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Logging
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^^^^^^^
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Meetings are automatically logged and published at
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http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/meetings/
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The bot also has the ability to sit in a channel for the sole purpose
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of logging channel activity, not just meetings. Standard channel logs
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are sent to http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/irclogs/
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The configuration for specific channel logging can be found in
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:file:`modules/openstack_project/manifests/eavesdrop.pp`.
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.. _statusbot:
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Statusbot
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=========
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Statusbot is used to distribute urgent information from the
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Infrastructure team to OpenStack channels. It updates the
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`Infrastructure Status wiki page
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<https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/Infrastructure_Status>`_. It
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supports the following public message commands when issued by
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authenticated and whitelisted users from the channels the bot is
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listening to, including #openstack-infra:
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#status log MESSAGE
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Log a message to the wiki page.
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#status notice MESSAGE
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Broadcast a message to all OpenStack channels, and log to the wiki
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page.
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#status alert MESSAGE
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Broadcast a message to all OpenStack channels and change their
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topics, log to the wiki page, and set an alert box on the wiki
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page (eventually include this alert box on status.openstack.org
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pages).
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#status ok [MESSAGE]
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Remove alert box and restore channel topics, optionally announcing
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and logging an "okay" message.
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.. _gerritbot:
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Gerritbot
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=========
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Gerritbot watches the Gerrit event stream (using the "stream-events"
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Gerrit command) and announces events (such as patchset-created, or
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change-merged) to relevant IRC channels.
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Gerritbot's configuration is in :config:`gerritbot/channels.yaml`
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Teams can add their channel and go through the standard code review process to
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get the bot added to their channel. The configuration is organized by channel,
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with each project that a channel is interested in listed under the channel.
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