How src executes a Batch Spec
This document helps you debug and troubleshoot the writing and execution of Batch Specs with the Sourcegraph CLI src
command.
Here, you will learn what happens when a user applies or previews a Batch Spec by running src batch apply
or src batch preview
commands.
Overview
src batch apply
and src batch preview
execute a batch spec the same way by following these steps:
- How src executes a Batch Spec
The only difference is the last step, i.e., Preview or apply the batch spec. Here, the src batch apply
command applies the batch spec, and the src batch preview
prints a URL that gives you a preview of what would change if you applied the batch spec.
Let's learn about each step in more detail.
Parse the batch spec
src
reads in, parses, and validates the batch spec YAML specified with the -f
flag. It validates the batch spec against its schema. It then performs some semantic checks to make sure that, for example, changesetTemplate
is specified if steps
are specified or that no feature is used that's not supported by the Sourcegraph instance.
Resolving namespace
src
resolves the given namespace to apply/preview the batch spec by sending a GraphQL request to the Sourcegraph instance to fetch the ID for the given namespace name.
If no namespace is specified with -namespace
(or -n
) then the currently authenticated user is used as the namespace. Learn more about how to Connect to Sourcegraph in the CLI docs for details on how to authenticate.
Preparing container images
If the batch spec contains steps
, then for each step, src
checks its container
image to see whether it's locally available.
To do so, it runs docker image inspect --format {{.Id}} -- <container-image-name>
to get the specific image ID for the container image.
If that fails with a No such image error, src
tries to pull the image by running docker image pull <container-image-name>
and then running docker image inspect --format {{.Id}} -- <container-image-name>
again.
Resolving repositories
src
resolves each entry in the batch spec's on
property to produce a unique list of repositories (!) in which to execute the batch spec's steps
. With an on
property like this:
YAMLon: - repositoriesMatchingQuery: lang:go fmt.Sprintf("%d", :[v]) patterntype:structural -file:vendor - repositoriesMatchingQuery: repohasfile:README - repository: github.com/sourcegraph/sourcegraph - repository: github.com/sourcegraph/automation-testing branch: thorstens-test-branch
src
will do the following:
-
For each
repositoriesMatchingQuery
, it will:- Send a request to the Sourcegraph API to execute the search query
- Collect each result's repository: The ID, name, default branch, and the current revision of the default branch. If the search result is a repository result, i.e., a search query of
type:repo
only produces repositories, that's used. If it's a file match, then the file match's repository is used - (Optional): If the results are file matches, then their path in the repository is also saved so that they can be used in the
steps
with templating
-
For each
repository
without abranch
, it will:- Send a request to the Sourcegraph API to get the repository's ID, name, default branch, and the current revision of the default branch
-
For each
repository
with abranch
, it will:- Send a request to the Sourcegraph API to get the repository's ID, name, and the current revision of the specified
branch
- It then creates a unique list of all repositories yielded by the previous three steps by going through all repositories and comparing them, skipping those where no current revision of a branch could be resolved, and checking whether they're on a supported code host. If they are on unsupported code hosts and no
-allow-unsupported
flag is given, then a warning is printed, and the repositories are not added to the list
- Send a request to the Sourcegraph API to get the repository's ID, name, and the current revision of the specified
Executing steps
If a batch spec contains steps
, then src
executes the steps locally on the machine on which src
is run for each repository yielded by the previous Resolving repositories step.
If -clear-cache
is not set and it previously executed the same steps
for the same repository at the same revision of the base branch, it will try to use cached results instead of re-executing the steps.
src
does the following for each repository:
Download archive and prepare
Downloads the archive of a repository. It's equivalent to:
BASHcurl -L -v -X GET -H 'Accept: application/zip' \ -H 'Authorization: token <SRC_ACCESS_TOKEN>' \ 'http://sourcegraph.example.com/github.com/my-org/my-repo@refs/heads/master/-/raw' \ --output ~/tmp/my-repo.zip
- Unzip the archive into the workspace. Where the workspace lives depends on the workspace mode, which can be controlled by the
-workspace
flag. The two modes are:- Bind mount mode (the default everywhere except Intel macOS), this will be somewhere on the filesystem, e.g.,
~/.cache/sourcegraph/batch-changes
(seesrc batch preview -h
for the default value of cache directory, overwrite with-cache
) - Volume mount mode (the default on Intel macOS), a Docker volume will be created using
docker volume create
and attached to all running containers, then removed beforesrc
exits
- Bind mount mode (the default everywhere except Intel macOS), this will be somewhere on the filesystem, e.g.,
cd
into the workspace, which now contains the unzipped archive- In the workspace, create a Git repository. Configure
git
to not use local configuration (see the code for explanations on what each variable does):
BASHexport GIT_CONFIG_NOSYSTEM=1 \ GIT_CONFIG=/dev/null \ GIT_AUTHOR_NAME=Sourcegraph \ GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL=[email protected] \ GIT_COMMITTER_NAME=Sourcegraph \ GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL=[email protected]
- Next, use the following:
- Run
git init
- Run
git config --local user.name Sourcegraph
- Run
git config --local user.email [email protected]
- Run
git add --force --all
- Run
git commit --quiet --all -m sourcegraph-batch-changes
- Run
Run the steps
For each step in the batch spec steps
:
- Probe container image (the
container
property of the step) to see whether it has/bin/sh
or/bin/bash
- Write the step's
run
command to a temp file on the host, e.g.,/tmp-script
- Run
chmod 644 /tmp-script
- Run the Docker container. The exact command will depend on the workspace mode:
- For the Bind mount mode:
BASHdocker run --rm --init --workdir /work \ --mount type=bind,source=/unzipped-archive-locally,target=/work \ --mount type=bind,source=/tmp-script,target=/tmp-file-in-container \ --entrypoint /bin/bash -- <IMAGE> /tmp-file-in-container
- For the Volume mount mode:
BASHdocker run --rm --init --workdir /work \ --mount type=volume,source=temporary-docker-volume-id,target=/work \ --mount type=bind,source=/tmp-script,target=/tmp-file-in-container \ --entrypoint /bin/bash -- <IMAGE> /tmp-file-in-container
- Finally, add all produced changes to the git index via
git add --all
Create final diff
In the workspace, create a diff by running: git diff --cached --no-prefix --binary
Saving a changeset spec
src
adds the produced diff to the local cache so that re-executing the same steps in the same repository can be skipped if the base branch has not changed.
src
then creates a changeset spec from:
- The diff
- The
changesetTemplate
, and - Information about the repository in which the changes have been made (the name and ID of the repository, the revision of its base branch)
A changeset spec is a description of what the changeset should look like.
Importing changesets
If the batch spec contains importChangesets
, then src
goes through the list of importChangesets
, and for each entry it:
- Resolves the repository name, trying to get an ID, base branch, and revision for the given repository name
- Parses the
externalIDs
, checking that they're valid strings or numbers - For each external ID, it saves a changeset spec that describes that a changeset with the given external ID in the given repository should be imported and tracked in the batch change
Sending changeset specs
The previous two steps, Executing steps and Importing changesets, can produce changeset specs, each one describing either a changeset to create or to import. These changeset specs are now uploaded to the connected Sourcegraph instance, with one request per changeset spec.
Each request yields an ID that uniquely identifies the changeset spec on the Sourcegraph instance. These IDs are used for the next step.
Sending the batch spec
The IDs of the changeset specs that were created in the previous step, Sending changeset specs, are collected into a list and used for the next request with which src
uploads the batch spec to the connected Sourcegraph instance.
src
creates the batch spec on the Sourcegraph instance, together with the changeset spec IDs, so that the batch spec fully describes the desired state of a batch change: its name, its description, and which changesets should be created or imported from which repository on which code host.
That request yields an ID uniquely identifying this expanded batch spec version.
Preview or apply the batch spec
If src batch apply
was used, then the ID of the batch change is used to send another request to the Sourcegraph instance to apply the batch spec.
If src batch preview
was used to execute and create the batch spec, then a URL is printed, pointing to a preview page on the Sourcegraph instance, on which you can see what would happen if you were to apply the batch spec.