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Thoth's build-watcher

A bot that watches for builds done in an OpenShift cluster and automatically submits container images and build logs to Thoth. This bot helps Thoth to aggregate new knowledge about build failures and possible package issues.

See the demo recording explaining build analysis and/or presentation available in this repository.

Note

Please enable micropipenv in your OpenShift Source-To-Image builds to make builds verbose and ready for data aggregation. micropipenv can be enabled using ENABLE_MICROPIPENV=1 environment variable in Python 3 UBI/RHEL/CentOS/Fedora container images. micropipenv is enabled by default in Thoth based s2i container images and the environment variable stated has no effect.

Deploying build-watcher into a namespace

The build of this bot is done using OpenShift's s2i. OpenShift templates to deploy this bot are present in openshift/ directory. See required parameters for configuring this bot in deploy.sh script.

To deploy this bot, log into your OpenShift cluster:

oc login <cluster>
oc project <my-project> # Namespace where the bot should be deployed.

Now you need to setup build-watcher, clone this repo and adjust configuration in deploy.sh script.

git clone https://github.com/thoth-station/build-watcher  # or use SSH
cd build-watcher
vim deploy.sh  # Exit using :wq! :)
# Run the deploy script:
./deploy.sh

Removing build-watcher deployment

To remove build-watcher from a namespace, simply issue:

oc delete rolebinding,sa,bc,cm,dc,is -l component=thoth-build-watcher

This will clear all the objects created in the cluster related to build-watcher.

Configuring an external registry

See presentation available in this repository for an architecture scheme.

If you build your images in a cluster and would like to submit images for analysis to Thoth which is running inside another cluster, you can configure build-watcher to automatically submit images into an external registry (assuming the in-cluster one has no external route exposed which would be accessible to Thoth backend) which will then be used as a source registry for Thoth analysis. See push registry configuration --push-registry.

Credentials handling

Note this bot does not directly analyze images. Credentials (and possibly token) are propagated to Thoth's User API which triggers analysis on backend side. If this is not desired, you can turn of this by disabling certain container image analysis (base or output).

Caching results on Thoth side

Thoth provides a cache of build analyses. It's completely fine if this bot submits same images for analysis multiple times. Thoth will simply return pre-cached analyses results cache.

Scaling build-watcher

If you are monitoring a cluster with a lot of builds, you can optionally adjust THOTH_BUILD_WATCHER_WORKERS which will cause build-watcher to start a process pool of workers (defaults to 1) where each worker will push image to an external registry (if configured so) and will submit image for analysis in Thoth. This is handy if pushing to an external registry takes some time (large images) and/or there is a lot of builds happening in the cluster.

Using build-watcher as a CLI

You can also run this bot from your local machine as a CLI. Just make sure you are logged in into OpenShift cluster (the configuration will be automatically picked from your account) and pass correct values/parameters to the CLI:

git clone https://github.com/thoth-station/build-watcher  # or use SSH
cd build-watcher
pipenv install
oc login <cluster>
KUBERNETES_VERIFY_TLS=1 pipenv run python3 app.py --build-watcher-namespace jupyterhub --thoth-api-host khemenu.thoth-station.ninja --no-tls-verify --pass-token --no-registry-tls-verify

See pipenv run python3 app.py --help for more info.

Copyright (C) 2020-2021 AICoE Project Thoth; Red Hat Inc.