Caution

Buildbot no longer supports Python 2.7 on the Buildbot master.

2.5.11.9. Git

class buildbot.steps.source.git.Git

The Git build step clones or updates a Git repository and checks out the specified branch or revision.

Note

Buildbot supports Git version 1.2.0 or later. Earlier versions (such as the one shipped in Ubuntu ‘Dapper’) do not support the git init command that Buildbot uses.

from buildbot.plugins import steps

factory.addStep(steps.Git(repourl='git://path/to/repo', mode='full',
                          method='clobber', submodules=True))

The Git step takes the following arguments:

repourl (required)

The URL of the upstream Git repository.

branch (optional)

This specifies the name of the branch or the tag to use when a Build does not provide one of its own. If this parameter is not specified, and the Build does not provide a branch, the default branch of the remote repository will be used. If alwaysUseLatest is True then the branch and revision information that comes with the Build is ignored and the branch specified in this parameter is used.

submodules (optional, default: False)

When initializing/updating a Git repository, this tells Buildbot whether to handle Git submodules. If remoteSubmodules is True, then this tells Buildbot to use remote submodules: Git Remote Submodules

shallow (optional)

Instructs Git to attempt shallow clones (--depth 1). The depth defaults to 1 and can be changed by passing an integer instead of True. This option can be used only in full builds with clobber method.

reference (optional)

Use the specified string as a path to a reference repository on the local machine. Git will try to grab objects from this path first instead of the main repository, if they exist.

origin (optional)

By default, any clone will use the name “origin” as the remote repository (eg, “origin/master”). This renderable option allows that to be configured to an alternate name.

progress (optional)

Passes the (--progress) flag to (git fetch). This solves issues of long fetches being killed due to lack of output, but requires Git 1.7.2 or later. Its value is True on Git 1.7.2 or later.

retryFetch (optional, default: False)

If true, if the git fetch fails, then Buildbot retries to fetch again instead of failing the entire source checkout.

clobberOnFailure (optional, default: False)

If a fetch or full clone fails, we can retry to checkout the source by removing everything and cloning the repository. If the retry fails, it fails the source checkout step.

mode (optional, default: 'incremental')

Specifies whether to clean the build tree or not.

incremental

The source is update, but any built files are left untouched.

full

The build tree is clean of any built files. The exact method for doing this is controlled by the method argument.

method (optional, default: fresh when mode is full)

Git’s incremental mode does not require a method. The full mode has four methods defined:

clobber

It removes the build directory entirely then makes full clone from repo. This can be slow as it need to clone whole repository. To make faster clones enable the shallow option. If the shallow option is enabled and the build request has unknown revision value, then this step fails.

fresh

This removes all other files except those tracked by Git. First it does git clean -d -f -f -x, then fetch/checkout to a specified revision (if any). This option is equal to update mode with ignore_ignores=True in old steps.

clean

All the files which are tracked by Git, as well as listed ignore files, are not deleted. All other remaining files will be deleted before the fetch/checkout. This is equivalent to git clean -d -f -f then fetch. This is equivalent to ignore_ignores=False in old steps.

copy

This first checks out source into source directory, then copies the source directory to build directory, and then performs the build operation in the copied directory. This way, we make fresh builds with very little bandwidth to download source. The behavior of source checkout follows exactly the same as incremental. It performs all the incremental checkout behavior in source directory.

getDescription (optional)

After checkout, invoke a git describe on the revision and save the result in a property; the property’s name is either commit-description or commit-description-foo, depending on whether the codebase argument was also provided. The argument should either be a bool or dict, and will change how git describe is called:

  • getDescription=False: disables this feature explicitly

  • getDescription=True or empty dict(): runs git describe with no args

  • getDescription={...}: a dict with keys named the same as the Git option. Each key’s value can be False or None to explicitly skip that argument.

    For the following keys, a value of True appends the same-named Git argument:

    • all : –all

    • always: –always

    • contains: –contains

    • debug: –debug

    • long: –long`

    • exact-match: –exact-match

    • tags: –tags

    • dirty: –dirty

    For the following keys, an integer or string value (depending on what Git expects) will set the argument’s parameter appropriately. Examples show the key-value pair:

    • match=foo: –match foo

    • abbrev=7: –abbrev=7

    • candidates=7: –candidates=7

    • dirty=foo: –dirty=foo

config (optional)

A dict of Git configuration settings to pass to the remote Git commands.

sshPrivateKey (optional)

The private key to use when running Git for fetch operations. The ssh utility must be in the system path in order to use this option. On Windows, only Git distribution that embeds MINGW has been tested (as of July 2017, the official distribution is MINGW-based). The worker must either have the host in the known hosts file or the host key must be specified via the sshHostKey option.

sshHostKey (optional)

Specifies public host key to match when authenticating with SSH public key authentication. This may be either a Secret or just a string. sshPrivateKey must be specified in order to use this option. The host key must be in the form of <key type> <base64-encoded string>, e.g. ssh-rsa AAAAB3N<…>FAaQ==.

sshKnownHosts (optional)

Specifies the contents of the SSH known_hosts file to match when authenticating with SSH public key authentication. This may be either a Secret or just a string. sshPrivateKey must be specified in order to use this option. sshHostKey must not be specified in order to use this option.