deanesmith / lighthouse

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Lighthouse

A lightweight ChatOps based webhook handler which can trigger Jenkins X Pipelines and Tekton Pipelines based on webhooks from multiple git providers such as: GitHub, GitHub Enterprise, BitBucket Server and GitLab

Installing without Jenkins X

See the install guide.

Building

To build the code clone git then type:

make build

Then to run it:

./bin/lighthouse

Environment variables

The following environment variables are used:

Name Description
GIT_KIND the kind of git server: github, bitbucket, gitea, stash
GIT_SERVER the URL of the server if not using the public hosted git providers: https://github.com or https://bitbucket.org https://gitlab.com
GIT_USER the git user (bot name) to use on git operations
GIT_TOKEN the git token to perform operations on git (add comments, labels etc)
HMAC_TOKEN the token sent from the git provider in webhooks
JX_SERVICE_ACCOUNT the service account to use for generated pipelines

Features

Currently Lighthouse supports the common Prow plugins and handles push webhooks to branches to then trigger Jenkins X pipelines.

Lighthouse uses the same config.yaml and plugins.yaml file structure from Prow so that we can easily migrate from prow <-> lighthouse.

This also means we get to reuse the clean generation of Prow configuration from the SourceRepository, SourceRepositoryGroup and Scheduler CRDs integrated into jx boot. e.g. here's the default scheduler configuration which is used for any project imported into your Jenkins X cluster; without you having to touch the actual prow configuration files. You can create many schedulers and associate them to different SourceRepository resources.

We can also reuse Prow's capability of defining many separate pipelines on a repository (for PRs or releases) via having separate contexts. Then on a Pull Request we can use /test something or /test all to trigger pipelines and use the /ok-to-test and /approve or /lgtm commands

Comparisons to Prow

Lighthouse is very prow-like and currently reuses the Prow plugin source code and a bunch of plugins from Prow

Its got a few differences though:

  • rather than be GitHub specific lighthouse uses jenkins-x/go-scm so it can support any git provider
  • lighthouse is mostly like hook from Prow; an auto scaling webhook handler - to keep the footprint small
  • lighthouse is also very light. In Jenkins X we have about 10 pods related to prow; with lighthouse we have just 1 along with the tekton controller itself. That one lighthouse pod could easily be auto scaled too from 0 to many as it starts up very quickly.
  • lighthouse focuses purely on Tekton pipelines so it does not require a ProwJob CRD; instead a push webhook to a release or pull request branch can trigger zero to many PipelineRun CRDs instead

Porting Prow commands

If there are any prow commands you want which we've not yet ported over, its relatively easy to port prow plugins.

We've reused the prow plugin code and configuration code; so its mostly a case of switching imports of k8s.io/test-infra/prow to github.com/jenkins-x/lighthouse/pkg/prow - then modifying the github client structs from, say, github.PullRequest to scm.PullRequest.

Most of the github structs map 1-1 with the jenkins-x/go-scm equivalents (e.g. Issue, Commit, PullRequest) though the go-scm API does tend to return slices to pointers to resources by default. There are some naming differences at different parts of the API though.

e.g. compare the githubClient API for the prow lgtm versus the lighthouse lgtm.

All the prow plugin related code lives in the tree of packages. Mostly all we've done is switch to using jenkins-x/go-scm and switch out the current prow agents and instead use a single tekton agent using the PlumberClient to trigger pipelines.

Testing Lighthouse

If you want to hack on lighthouse; such as to try it out with a specific git provider from jenkins-x/go-scm you can run it locally via:

make build

Then to run it:

./bin/lighthouse

Then if you want to test it out with a git provider running on the cloud or inside Kubernetes you can use ngrok to setup a tunnel to your laptop. e.g.:

ngrok http 8080

Now you can use your personal ngrok URL to register a webhook handler with your git provider. NOTE remember to append /hook to the generated ngrok URL. e.g. something like: https://7cc3b3ac.ngrok.io/hook

Any events that happen on your git provider should then trigger your local lighthouse.

Debugging Lighthouse

You can setup a remote debugger for lighthouse using delve via:

dlv --listen=:2345 --headless=true --api-version=2 exec ./bin/lighthouse -- $*        

You can then debug from your go based IDE (e.g. GoLand / IDEA / VS Code).

Using a local go-scm

If you are hacking on support for a specific git provider you may find yourself hacking on the lighthouse code or the jenkins-x/go-scm code together.

Go modules lets you easily swap out the version of a dependency with a local copy of the code; so you can edit code in lighthouse and jenkins-x/go-scm at the same time.

Just add this line to the end of your go.mod file:

replace github.com/jenkins-x/go-scm => /workspace/go/src/github.com/jenkins-x/go-scm

Using the exact path to where you cloned jenkins-x/go-scm.

Then if you do:

make build

It will uses your local jenkins-x/go-scm source.

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License:Apache License 2.0


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