NOTE : This project is no longer actively maintained.
GitZilla is Python magic to support Git-Bugzilla integration. There are various ways of using GitZilla.
Note that GitZilla must be installed on the machine receiving commits from everyone - home to the the "official" or the "central" repository.
There's a mailing list for GitZilla now, at [email protected]
GitZilla might be the right tool if you want to::
-
Automatically add commits to bugs referenced in the commit messages whenever changes are pushed to a central git repository.
-
Reject commits without a bug reference.
-
Only allow commits referring to active bugs (reject commits referring to CLOSED, RESOLVED or any other specific bug states).
-
(contributed, untested): Usable with Gerrit.
-
Some combination or all of the above.
With the above capabilities, GitZilla allows for::
- Per-user, or system-wide authentication for Bugzilla.
- Configurable bug comment formats and content.
- Optional diffstat as part of the bug comments.
- Configurable regexes for matching bug IDs in commit messages.
To quickly start using GitZilla:
-
Install GitZilla. You may choose the .deb for easy installation on Debian/Ubuntu systems. Otherwise, just unpack the source and install in the usual setuptools way::
sudo python3 ./setup.py install
-
Switch to the hooks directory (/path/to/central/repository/Example.git/hooks) and delete the
post-receive
andupdate
hooks. -
Link (or copy) the gitzilla provided hooks::
ln -s $(which gitzilla-post-receive) post-receive ln -s $(which gitzilla-update) update
-
Read and edit the config file at /etc/gitzillarc. A simple (and sufficient for most cases) configuration is something like::
[/path/to/repository/Example.git] bugzilla_url: https://repo.example.com/bugzilla/xmlrpc.cgi bugzilla_user: [email protected] bugzilla_password: blahblah allowed_bug_states: NEW, ASSIGNED, REOPENED
(and even the last item is optional!)
-
Commit away!
If you need the hooks to do other stuff apart from just the Bugzilla
integration, you could write your hook as a Python script and leave the
Bugzilla stuff to functions from gitzilla.hookscripts
or
gitzilla.hooks
.
In fact with the defaults, are equivalent to the following:
post-receive::
#!/usr/bin/python
from gitzilla.hookscripts import post_receive
post_receive()
update::
#!/usr/bin/python
from gitzilla.hookscripts import update
update()
The functions from gitzilla.hookscripts
parse and pick up values from the
configuration files. If you want to taylor more use the functions from
gitzilla.hooks
.
post-receive::
#!/usr/bin/python
from gitzilla.hooks import post_receive
post_receive("https://repo.example.com/bugzilla", "username", "password")
update::
#!/usr/bin/python
from gitzilla.hooks import update
update("https://repo.example.com/bugzilla", "username", "password")
You could pass a custom bug id extraction regex and your own logging.Logger instance. The update hook function also accepts an array of allowed bug status strings.
Look at the module help for gitzilla.hooks for more information.
GitZilla uses a global configuration file (at /etc/gitzillarc) as well as
per-user configuration files (at ~/.gitzillarc). All the configuration options
are picked up from the global config file, and the user specific config is
allowed to override only the bugzilla_user
and bugzilla_password
parameters.
The configuration files themselves are in the ConfigParser format (see http://docs.python.org/library/configparser.html). A sample configuration looks like::
[DEFAULT]
user_config: deny
allowed_bug_states: NEW, ASSIGNED, REOPENED
[/path/to/repository/.git]
bugzilla_url: https://repo.example.com/bugzilla/xmlrpc.cgi
bugzilla_user: [email protected]
bugzilla_password: blahblah
logfile: /var/log/gitzilla.log
loglevel: info
Each git repository on the system MAY have its own section. The global config
MUST specify the bugzilla_url
parameter.
Default values (applied to each repository unless overridden) may be specified in a [DEFAULT] section.
The user specific files are entirely optional.
- bugzilla_url
-
bugzilla_user
the default username for Bugzilla.
-
bugzilla_password
the default password for Bugzilla.
-
user_config
allow/deny user specific bugzilla credentials. The legal values are ``allow``, ``deny`` and ``force``. Defaults to ``allow``.
-
require_bug_ref
if True, the update hook will require that each commit message contains a bug number. If False, it will not. Defaults to True (same as historical behaviour).
-
allowed_bug_states
a comma separated set of states that a bug must be in, in order for the commit to be allowed by the update hook.
-
formatspec
appended to ``--pretty=format:`` and passed to ``git whatchanged``. See the ``git whatchanged`` manpage for more info. Newlines are automatically converted to '%n', which is what the git format spec requires.
-
include_diffstat
include diffstat (a list of changed file with a histogram). If False, the diffstat is not included. Defaults to True to be consistent with previous behaviour.
-
separator
a string which would never occur in commit messages. You should not need to set this, as it is already at a safe default.
-
bug_regex
the (Python) regex for capturing bug numbers. MUST capture all the digits (and only the digits) of the bug id in a named group called ``bug``. This regex is compiled internally with the MULTILINE, DOTALL and IGNORECASE options set. The default regex captures from the following forms: * bug 123 * Bug # 123 * BUG123 * bug# 123 * Bug #123
-
git_ref_prefix
the string which must start a git reference for its commits to be processed. Defaults to 'refs/heads/' so that we don't process 'tags/' and run the risk of processing many commits multiple times. You can set it to the empty string to process all git references.
-
logfile
the file to log to. MUST be writable by the uid of the git process. In case of ssh pushes, tha usually means it should be writable by all.
-
loglevel
can be ``info`` or ``debug``. Defaults to ``debug``.
Note that the global config would be readable by all and may contain a bugzilla credentials. If you think this is a problem, you may rely on per-user auth.
If the user_config
option is set to allow
or force
, then auth
credentials are picked up from the user specific ~/.gitzillarc
file.
If the user_config
option is force
and the ~/.gitzillarc
does not
contain bugzilla credentials, then the ~/.bugz_cookie
file is used for
authentication. To generate a cookie file, a user may use the
gitzilla-gencookie
script. The cookie validity will of course be dependent
on your Bugzilla configuration. If neither credentials nor the cookie file are
present (and valid), Bugzilla interactions will fail and the commits will be
rejected.
If the user_config
option is allow
, then user specific credentials are
used if available. Only if credentials are unavailable in both the
user-specific as well as the systemwide configs, the cookie file is used. This
configuration is the default because of the closeness of behaviour from version
1.0.
To summarize:
-
To allow (but not force) users to use their own auth/credentials set
user_config
toallow
and setbugzilla_user
andbugzilla_password
in the system wide config. -
To enforce user credentials, set
user_config
toforce
and leave the Bugzilla credentials out of the system wide config. -
To use system wide credentials only, set
user_config
todeny
. -
To enforce Bugzilla integration, use the update hook. The update hook will check the validity of the credentials (system or user, depending on the config), regardless of the
allowed_bug_states
option. This is a change in behaviour from version 1.0.
*cookies are no longer used since Bugzilla 4.4.3
To install and run GitZilla, you need:
- Python 3 (tested with 3.4.0)
- pybugz >= 0.11.1
This combination has been tested with Bugzilla 4.4.6 & 4.2.11
If you wish to use python 2:
- Python (tested with 2.6.4, should work with >=2.5)
- Pybugz (tested with 0.8.0)
- Gitzilla <= 2.0
This python 2 combination works with Bugzilla 3.0.11, and with pybugz 0.9.3 it may support up to Bugzilla 4.4.2
The excellent pybugz can be obtained from http://github.com/williamh/pybugz and http://github.com/williamh/pybugz/releases
GitZilla is hosted at GitHub : http://github.com/gera/gitzilla
You can access the downloads at : http://github.com/gera/gitzilla/downloads
The download page contains a .deb which should work on Debian and Ubuntu systems.
The official GitZilla mailing list: [email protected]