Handle `.agola/config.star` files in starlark config format.
To provide a context like done for jsonnet we require that the starlark agola
config file contains a main function that will receive a config context as a
dict.
We also had to implement our own json conversion from a starlark dict since go
starlark removed its own function.
During tests provide a zaptest Logger so all services output will be redirected
to golang testing logger.
When multiple services of the same type are provided add a unique name field to
distinguish them.
Explicitly write and flush the headers in the various services LogHandlers.
Currently the 200 response and the other headers will be automatically written
by the golang http implementation only when we send something in the body. But if
there's nothing to send (no logs yet written) the client will never receive the
headers and cannot know if the request was successful.
* objectstorage: remove `types` package and move `ErrNotExist` in base package
* objectstorage: Implement .Is and add helper `IsErrNotExist` for `ErrNotExist`
* util: Rename `ErrNotFound` to `ErrNotExist`
* util: Add `IsErr*` helpers and use them in place of `errors.Is()`
* datamanager: add `ErrNoDataStatus` to report when there's not data status in ost
* runservice/common: remove `ErrNotExist` and use errors in util package
Only match the current ref type, ie: don't match a branch when the ref type is a
tag or pull request.
Ref is always matched because it's not related to a specific ref type.
Currently we are using different `When` types for every service and convert
between them. This is a good approach if we want to keep isolated all the
services (like if we were using different repos for every service instead of the
current monorepo).
But currently, since When is identical between all the services, simplify this by
using a common When type.
In c1ff28ef9f we exported various types. Unfortunately the types used by cmd
variable create/update are the wrong types and marshalling fails. Fix it using
the right type. In future this internal types should be exported.
Allow setting the destination branch/tag/ref so users can test the run
conditions based on the branch/tag/ref.
To simulate a pull request an user can define a ref that matches one of these
regular expressions: `refs/pull/(\d+)/head`, `refs/merge-requests/(\d+)/head`
Export clients and related packages.
The main rule is to not import internal packages from exported packages.
The gateway client and related types are totally decoupled from the gateway
service (not shared types between the client and the server).
Instead the configstore and the runservice client currently share many types
that are now exported (decoupling them will require that a lot of types must be
duplicated and the need of functions to convert between them, this will be done
in future when the APIs will be declared as stable).
Since they're not types common to all the services but belongs to the
configstore.
Next step will be to make them local to the configstore and not directly used by
other services since these types are also stored.
Use the go sql context functions (ExecContext, QueryContext etc...)
The context is saved inside Tx so the library users should only pass it one time
to the db.Do function.
* Don't make cors enabled on all (*) by default.
* Handle related web.allowedOrigins options
* Only the gateway api should be called by a browser so setup the cors handler
only on it
* Make the new fields RegistrationEnabled/LoginEnabled in types.RemoteSource
bool pointers (since they are new fields that don't exist in previously saved
remote sources) and default them to true if null when unmarshaling (or existing
remotesources will have registration and login disabled)
* Add options to cmd remotesource create/update to set the registration/login
disabled.
Since the user direct runs all belong to the same run group (the user id) all
the user direct runs will share the same caches. To distinguish between the
different caches we need to use something in addition to the user id. In this
case we are usin the local repo uuid generated by the direct run start command.