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James E. Blaircdd00072012-06-08 19:17:28 -07001:title: Triggers
2
3Triggers
4========
5
6The process of merging a change starts with proposing a change to be
Gregory Haynes4fc12542015-04-22 20:38:06 -07007merged. Zuul supports Gerrit and GitHub as triggering systems.
James E. Blaircdd00072012-06-08 19:17:28 -07008Zuul's design is modular, so alternate triggering and reporting
James E. Blair63bb0ef2013-07-29 17:14:51 -07009systems can be supported.
James E. Blaircdd00072012-06-08 19:17:28 -070010
11Gerrit
12------
13
14Zuul works with standard versions of Gerrit by invoking the ``gerrit
15stream-events`` command over an SSH connection. It also reports back
16to Gerrit using SSH.
17
David Pursehouse78556f72014-11-04 18:44:36 +090018If using Gerrit 2.7 or later, make sure the user is a member of a group
19that is granted the ``Stream Events`` permission, otherwise it will not
20be able to invoke the ``gerrit stream-events`` command over SSH.
21
Joshua Heskethfe485c62015-08-11 23:42:34 +100022A connection name with the gerrit driver can take multiple events with
23the following options.
24
25 **event**
26 The event name from gerrit. Examples: ``patchset-created``,
27 ``comment-added``, ``ref-updated``. This field is treated as a
28 regular expression.
29
30 **branch**
31 The branch associated with the event. Example: ``master``. This
32 field is treated as a regular expression, and multiple branches may
33 be listed.
34
35 **ref**
36 On ref-updated events, the branch parameter is not used, instead the
37 ref is provided. Currently Gerrit has the somewhat idiosyncratic
38 behavior of specifying bare refs for branch names (e.g., ``master``),
39 but full ref names for other kinds of refs (e.g., ``refs/tags/foo``).
40 Zuul matches what you put here exactly against what Gerrit
41 provides. This field is treated as a regular expression, and
42 multiple refs may be listed.
43
44 **ignore-deletes**
45 When a branch is deleted, a ref-updated event is emitted with a newrev
46 of all zeros specified. The ``ignore-deletes`` field is a boolean value
47 that describes whether or not these newrevs trigger ref-updated events.
48 The default is True, which will not trigger ref-updated events.
49
50 **approval**
51 This is only used for ``comment-added`` events. It only matches if
52 the event has a matching approval associated with it. Example:
53 ``code-review: 2`` matches a ``+2`` vote on the code review category.
54 Multiple approvals may be listed.
55
56 **email**
57 This is used for any event. It takes a regex applied on the performer
58 email, i.e. Gerrit account email address. If you want to specify
59 several email filters, you must use a YAML list. Make sure to use non
60 greedy matchers and to escapes dots!
61 Example: ``email: ^.*?@example\.org$``.
62
63 **email_filter** (deprecated)
64 A deprecated alternate spelling of *email*. Only one of *email* or
65 *email_filter* should be used.
66
67 **username**
68 This is used for any event. It takes a regex applied on the performer
69 username, i.e. Gerrit account name. If you want to specify several
70 username filters, you must use a YAML list. Make sure to use non greedy
71 matchers and to escapes dots!
72 Example: ``username: ^jenkins$``.
73
74 **username_filter** (deprecated)
75 A deprecated alternate spelling of *username*. Only one of *username* or
76 *username_filter* should be used.
77
78 **comment**
79 This is only used for ``comment-added`` events. It accepts a list of
80 regexes that are searched for in the comment string. If any of these
81 regexes matches a portion of the comment string the trigger is
82 matched. ``comment: retrigger`` will match when comments
83 containing 'retrigger' somewhere in the comment text are added to a
84 change.
85
86 **comment_filter** (deprecated)
87 A deprecated alternate spelling of *comment*. Only one of *comment* or
88 *comment_filter* should be used.
89
90 *require-approval*
91 This may be used for any event. It requires that a certain kind
92 of approval be present for the current patchset of the change (the
93 approval could be added by the event in question). It follows the
94 same syntax as the :ref:`"approval" pipeline requirement
95 <pipeline-require-approval>`. For each specified criteria there must
96 exist a matching approval.
97
98 *reject-approval*
99 This takes a list of approvals in the same format as
100 *require-approval* but will fail to enter the pipeline if there is
101 a matching approval.
102
Gregory Haynes4fc12542015-04-22 20:38:06 -0700103GitHub
104------
105
106Github webhook events can be configured as triggers.
107
108A connection name with the github driver can take multiple events with the
109following options.
110
111 **event**
112 The pull request event from github. A ``pull_request`` event will
113 have associated action(s) to trigger from. The supported actions are:
114
115 *opened* - pull request opened
116
117 *changed* - pull request synchronized
118
119 *closed* - pull request closed
120
121 *reopened* - pull request reopened
122
Jan Hrubanc7ab1602015-10-14 15:29:33 +0200123 *comment* - comment added on pull request
124
Jan Hruban16ad31f2015-11-07 14:39:07 +0100125 *labeled* - label added on pull request
126
127 *unlabeled* - label removed from pull request
128
129 *push* - head reference updated (pushed to branch)
130
Jan Hruband4edee82015-12-16 12:49:51 +0100131 **branch**
132 The branch associated with the event. Example: ``master``. This
133 field is treated as a regular expression, and multiple branches may
134 be listed. Used for ``pull-request`` events.
135
Jan Hrubanc7ab1602015-10-14 15:29:33 +0200136 **comment**
137 This is only used for ``pull_request`` ``comment`` events. It accepts a list
138 of regexes that are searched for in the comment string. If any of these
139 regexes matches a portion of the comment string the trigger is matched.
140 ``comment: retrigger`` will match when comments containing 'retrigger'
141 somewhere in the comment text are added to a pull request.
142
Jan Hruban16ad31f2015-11-07 14:39:07 +0100143 **label**
144 This is only used for ``labeled`` and ``unlabeled`` actions. It accepts a list
145 of strings each of which matches the label name in the event literally.
146 ``label: recheck`` will match a ``labeled`` action when pull request is
147 labeled with a ``recheck`` label. ``label: 'do not test'`` will match a
148 ``unlabeled`` action when a label with name ``do not test`` is removed from
149 the pull request.
150
Jan Hruband4edee82015-12-16 12:49:51 +0100151 Additionally a ``push`` event can be configured, with an ``ref`` field. This
152 field is treated as a regular expression and multiple refs may be listed.
153 Github always sends full ref name, eg. ``refs/tags/bar`` and this string is
154 matched against the regexp.
Wayne1a78c612015-06-11 17:14:13 -0700155
Gregory Haynes4fc12542015-04-22 20:38:06 -0700156GitHub Configuration
157~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
158
159Configure GitHub `webhook events
160<https://developer.github.com/webhooks/creating/>`_.
161
162Set *Payload URL* to
163``http://<zuul-hostname>/connection/<connection-name>/payload``.
164
165Set *Content Type* to ``application/json``.
166
167Select *Events* you are interested in. See above for the supported events.
Joshua Heskethfe485c62015-08-11 23:42:34 +1000168
James E. Blair63bb0ef2013-07-29 17:14:51 -0700169Timer
170-----
171
172A simple timer trigger is available as well. It supports triggering
173jobs in a pipeline based on cron-style time instructions.
James E. Blairc494d542014-08-06 09:23:52 -0700174
Joshua Heskethfe485c62015-08-11 23:42:34 +1000175Timers don't require a special connection or driver. Instead they can
176be used by listing **timer** as the trigger.
177
178This trigger will run based on a cron-style time specification.
179It will enqueue an event into its pipeline for every project
180defined in the configuration. Any job associated with the
181pipeline will run in response to that event.
182
183 **time**
184 The time specification in cron syntax. Only the 5 part syntax is
185 supported, not the symbolic names. Example: ``0 0 * * *`` runs
186 at midnight.
187
James E. Blairc494d542014-08-06 09:23:52 -0700188Zuul
189----
190
191The Zuul trigger generates events based on internal actions in Zuul.
Joshua Heskethfe485c62015-08-11 23:42:34 +1000192Multiple events may be listed.
193
194Zuul events don't require a special connection or driver. Instead they
195can be used by listing **zuul** as the trigger.
196
197 **event**
198 The event name. Currently supported:
199
200 *project-change-merged* when Zuul merges a change to a project,
201 it generates this event for every open change in the project.
202
203 *parent-change-enqueued* when Zuul enqueues a change into any
204 pipeline, it generates this event for every child of that
205 change.
206
207 **pipeline**
208 Only available for ``parent-change-enqueued`` events. This is the
209 name of the pipeline in which the parent change was enqueued.
210
211 *require-approval*
212 This may be used for any event. It requires that a certain kind
213 of approval be present for the current patchset of the change (the
214 approval could be added by the event in question). It follows the
215 same syntax as the :ref:`"approval" pipeline requirement
216 <pipeline-require-approval>`. For each specified criteria there must
217 exist a matching approval.
218
219 *reject-approval*
220 This takes a list of approvals in the same format as
221 *require-approval* but will fail to enter the pipeline if there is
Gregory Haynes4fc12542015-04-22 20:38:06 -0700222 a matching approval.