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.. -*- rst -*-
.. _Schedulers:

Schedulers
----------

.. contents::
    :depth: 1
    :local:

Schedulers are responsible for initiating builds on builders.

Some schedulers listen for changes from ChangeSources and generate build sets
in response to these changes.  Others generate build sets without changes,
based on other events in the buildmaster.

.. _Configuring-Schedulers:

Configuring Schedulers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. bb:cfg:: schedulers

The :bb:cfg:`schedulers` configuration parameter gives a list of Scheduler
instances, each of which causes builds to be started on a particular set of
Builders. The two basic Scheduler classes you are likely to start with are
:class:`SingleBranchScheduler` and :class:`Periodic`, but you can write a
customized subclass to implement more complicated build scheduling.

Scheduler arguments should always be specified by name (as keyword arguments),
to allow for future expansion::

    sched = SingleBranchScheduler(name="quick", builderNames=['lin', 'win'])

There are several common arguments for schedulers, although not all are
available with all schedulers.

``name``
    Each Scheduler must have a unique name. This is used in status
    displays, and is also available in the build property ``scheduler``.

``builderNames``
    This is the set of builders which this scheduler should trigger, specified
    as a list of names (strings).

.. index:: Properties; from scheduler

``properties``
    This is a dictionary specifying properties that will be transmitted to all
    builds started by this scheduler.  The ``owner`` property may be of
    particular interest, as its contents (as a list) will be added to the list of
    "interested users" (:ref:`Doing-Things-With-Users`) for each triggered build.
    For example

    .. code-block:: python

        sched = Scheduler(...,
            properties = { 'owner' : [ 'zorro@company.com', 'silver@company.com' ] })

``fileIsImportant``
    A callable which takes one argument, a Change instance, and
    returns ``True`` if the change is worth building, and ``False`` if
    it is not.  Unimportant Changes are accumulated until the build is
    triggered by an important change.  The default value of None means
    that all Changes are important.

``change_filter``
    The change filter that will determine which changes are recognized
    by this scheduler; :ref:`Change-Filters`.  Note that this is
    different from ``fileIsImportant``: if the change filter filters
    out a Change, then it is completely ignored by the scheduler.  If
    a Change is allowed by the change filter, but is deemed
    unimportant, then it will not cause builds to start, but will be
    remembered and shown in status displays.

``codebases``
    When the scheduler processes data from more than 1 repository at the
    same time then a corresponding codebase definition should be passed for each
    repository. A codebase definition is a dictionary with one or more of the 
    following keys: repository, branch, revision. The codebase definitions have
    also to be passed as dictionary.

    .. code-block:: python

        codebases = {'codebase1': {'repository':'....',
                                   'branch':'default',
                                   'revision': None},
                     'codebase2': {'repository':'....'} }

    .. IMPORTANT:: ``codebases`` behaves also like a change_filter on codebase.
        The scheduler will only process changes  when their codebases are found
        in ``codebases``. By default ``codebases`` is set to ``{'':{}}`` which
        means that only changes with codebase '' (default value for codebase)
        will be accepted by the scheduler.

    Buildsteps can have a reference to one of the codebases. The step will only
    get information (revision, branch etc.)  that is related to that codebase.
    When a scheduler is triggered by new changes, these changes (having a
    codebase) will be incorporated by the new build. The buildsteps referencing
    to the codebases that have changes get information about those changes. 
    The buildstep that references to a codebase that does not have changes in
    the build get the information from the codebases definition as configured in
    the scheduler.

``onlyImportant``
    A boolean that, when ``True``, only adds important changes to the
    buildset as specified in the ``fileIsImportant`` callable. This
    means that unimportant changes are ignored the same way a
    ``change_filter`` filters changes. This defaults to
    ``False`` and only applies when ``fileIsImportant`` is
    given.

``reason``
    A string that will be used as the reason for the triggered build.

``createAbsoluteSourceStamps``
    This option only has effect when using multiple codebases. When ``True``, it
    uses the last seen revision for each codebase that does not have a change.
    When ``False``, the default value, codebases without changes will use the
    revision from the ``codebases`` argument.

The remaining subsections represent a catalog of the available Scheduler types.
All these Schedulers are defined in modules under :mod:`buildbot.schedulers`,
and the docstrings there are the best source of documentation on the arguments
taken by each one.

.. _Change-Filters:

Change Filters
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Several schedulers perform filtering on an incoming set of changes.  The filter
can most generically be specified as a :class:`ChangeFilter`.  Set up a
:class:`ChangeFilter` like this::

    from buildbot.changes.filter import ChangeFilter
    my_filter = ChangeFilter(
        project_re="^baseproduct/.*",
        branch="devel")

and then add it to a scheduler with the ``change_filter`` parameter::

    sch = SomeSchedulerClass(...,
        change_filter=my_filter)

There are five attributes of changes on which you can filter:

``project``
    the project string, as defined by the ChangeSource.
    
``repository``
    the repository in which this change occurred.

``branch``
    the branch on which this change occurred.  Note that 'trunk' or 'master' is often
    denoted by ``None``.

``category``
    the category, again as defined by the ChangeSource.

``codebase``
    the change's codebase.

For each attribute, the filter can look for a single, specific value::

    my_filter = ChangeFilter(project = 'myproject')

or accept any of a set of values::

    my_filter = ChangeFilter(project = ['myproject', 'jimsproject'])

or apply a regular expression, using the attribute name with a "``_re``"
suffix::

    my_filter = ChangeFilter(category_re = '.*deve.*')
    # or, to use regular expression flags:
    import re
    my_filter = ChangeFilter(category_re = re.compile('.*deve.*', re.I))

For anything more complicated, define a Python function to recognize the strings
you want::

    def my_branch_fn(branch):
        return branch in branches_to_build and branch not in branches_to_ignore
    my_filter = ChangeFilter(branch_fn = my_branch_fn)

The special argument ``filter_fn`` can be used to specify a function that is
given the entire Change object, and returns a boolean.

The entire set of allowed arguments, then, is

+------------+---------------+---------------+
| project    | project_re    | project_fn    |
+------------+---------------+---------------+
| repository | repository_re | repository_fn |
+------------+---------------+---------------+
| branch     | branch_re     | branch_fn     |
+------------+---------------+---------------+
| category   | category_re   | category_fn   |
+------------+---------------+---------------+
| codebase   | codebase_re   | codebase_fn   |
+------------+---------------+---------------+
| filter_fn                                  |
+--------------------------------------------+

A Change passes the filter only if *all* arguments are satisfied.  If no
filter object is given to a scheduler, then all changes will be built (subject
to any other restrictions the scheduler enforces).

.. bb:sched:: SingleBranchScheduler
.. bb:sched:: Scheduler

.. _Scheduler-SingleBranchScheduler:

SingleBranchScheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This is the original and still most popular scheduler class. It follows
exactly one branch, and starts a configurable tree-stable-timer after
each change on that branch. When the timer expires, it starts a build
on some set of Builders. The Scheduler accepts a :meth:`fileIsImportant`
function which can be used to ignore some Changes if they do not
affect any *important* files.

If ``treeStableTimer`` is not set, then this scheduler starts a build for every Change that matches its ``change_filter`` and statsfies :meth:`fileIsImportant`.
If ``treeStableTimer`` is set, then a build is triggered for each set of Changes which arrive within the configured time, and match the filters.

.. note:: The behavior of this scheduler is undefined, if ``treeStableTimer`` is set, and changes from multiple branches, repositories or codebases are accepted by the filter.

.. note:: The ``codebases`` argument will filter out codebases not specified there, but *won't* filter based on the branches specified there.

The arguments to this scheduler are:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``fileIsImportant``

``change_filter``

``onlyImportant``

``reason``

``createAbsoluteSourceStamps``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``treeStableTimer``
    The scheduler will wait for this many seconds before starting the
    build. If new changes are made during this interval, the timer will be
    restarted, so really the build will be started after a change and then
    after this many seconds of inactivity.
    
    If ``treeStableTimer`` is ``None``, then a separate build is started
    immediately for each Change.

``fileIsImportant``
    A callable which takes one argument, a Change instance, and returns
    ``True`` if the change is worth building, and ``False`` if
    it is not.  Unimportant Changes are accumulated until the build is
    triggered by an important change.  The default value of None means
    that all Changes are important.

``categories`` (deprecated; use change_filter)
    A list of categories of changes that this scheduler will respond to.  If this
    is specified, then any non-matching changes are ignored.

``branch`` (deprecated; use change_filter)
    The scheduler will pay attention to this branch, ignoring Changes
    that occur on other branches. Setting ``branch`` equal to the
    special value of ``None`` means it should only pay attention to
    the default branch.

    .. note:: ``None`` is a keyword, not a string, so write ``None``
       and not ``"None"``.


Example::

    from buildbot.schedulers.basic  import SingleBranchScheduler
    from buildbot.changes import filter
    quick = SingleBranchScheduler(name="quick",
                        change_filter=filter.ChangeFilter(branch='master'),
                        treeStableTimer=60,
                        builderNames=["quick-linux", "quick-netbsd"])
    full = SingleBranchScheduler(name="full",
                        change_filter=filter.ChangeFilter(branch='master'),
                        treeStableTimer=5*60,
                        builderNames=["full-linux", "full-netbsd", "full-OSX"])
    c['schedulers'] = [quick, full]

In this example, the two *quick* builders are triggered 60 seconds
after the tree has been changed. The *full* builds do not run quite
so quickly (they wait 5 minutes), so hopefully if the quick builds
fail due to a missing file or really simple typo, the developer can
discover and fix the problem before the full builds are started. Both
Schedulers only pay attention to the default branch: any changes
on other branches are ignored by these schedulers. Each scheduler
triggers a different set of Builders, referenced by name.

The old names for this scheduler, ``buildbot.scheduler.Scheduler`` and
``buildbot.schedulers.basic.Scheduler``, are deprecated in favor of the more
accurate name ``buildbot.schedulers.basic.SingleBranchScheduler``.

.. bb:sched:: AnyBranchScheduler

.. _AnyBranchScheduler:

AnyBranchScheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This scheduler uses a tree-stable-timer like the default one, but
uses a separate timer for each branch.

If ``treeStableTimer`` is not set, then this scheduler is indistinguishable from bb:sched:``SingleBranchScheduler``.
If ``treeStableTimer`` is set, then a build is triggered for each set of Changes which arrive within the configured time, and match the filters.

The arguments to this scheduler are:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``fileIsImportant``

``change_filter``

``onlyImportant``

``reason``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``treeStableTimer``
    The scheduler will wait for this many seconds before starting the build. If
    new changes are made *on the same branch* during this interval, the timer
    will be restarted.

``branches`` (deprecated; use change_filter)
    Changes on branches not specified on this list will be ignored.

``categories`` (deprecated; use change_filter)
    A list of categories of changes that this scheduler will respond to.  If this
    is specified, then any non-matching changes are ignored.

.. bb:sched:: Dependent

.. _Dependent-Scheduler:
    
Dependent Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

It is common to wind up with one kind of build which should only be
performed if the same source code was successfully handled by some
other kind of build first. An example might be a packaging step: you
might only want to produce .deb or RPM packages from a tree that was
known to compile successfully and pass all unit tests. You could put
the packaging step in the same Build as the compile and testing steps,
but there might be other reasons to not do this (in particular you
might have several Builders worth of compiles/tests, but only wish to
do the packaging once). Another example is if you want to skip the
*full* builds after a failing *quick* build of the same source
code. Or, if one Build creates a product (like a compiled library)
that is used by some other Builder, you'd want to make sure the
consuming Build is run *after* the producing one.

You can use *Dependencies* to express this relationship
to the Buildbot. There is a special kind of scheduler named
:class:`scheduler.Dependent` that will watch an *upstream* scheduler
for builds to complete successfully (on all of its Builders). Each time
that happens, the same source code (i.e. the same ``SourceStamp``)
will be used to start a new set of builds, on a different set of
Builders. This *downstream* scheduler doesn't pay attention to
Changes at all. It only pays attention to the upstream scheduler.

If the build fails on any of the Builders in the upstream set,
the downstream builds will not fire.  Note that, for SourceStamps
generated by a ChangeSource, the ``revision`` is ``None``, meaning HEAD.
If any changes are committed between the time the upstream scheduler
begins its build and the time the dependent scheduler begins its
build, then those changes will be included in the downstream build.
See the :ref:`Triggerable-Scheduler` for a more flexible dependency
mechanism that can avoid this problem.

The keyword arguments to this scheduler are:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``upstream``
    The upstream scheduler to watch.  Note that this is an *instance*,
    not the name of the scheduler.

Example::

    from buildbot.schedulers import basic
    tests = basic.SingleBranchScheduler(name="just-tests",
                            treeStableTimer=5*60,
                            builderNames=["full-linux", "full-netbsd", "full-OSX"])
    package = basic.Dependent(name="build-package",
                            upstream=tests, # <- no quotes!
                            builderNames=["make-tarball", "make-deb", "make-rpm"])
    c['schedulers'] = [tests, package]

.. bb:sched:: Periodic

.. _Periodic-Scheduler:
    
Periodic Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This simple scheduler just triggers a build every *N* seconds.

The arguments to this scheduler are:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``onlyImportant``

``reason``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``periodicBuildTimer``
    The time, in seconds, after which to start a build.

Example::

    from buildbot.schedulers import timed
    nightly = timed.Periodic(name="daily",
                    builderNames=["full-solaris"],
                    periodicBuildTimer=24*60*60)
    c['schedulers'] = [nightly]

The scheduler in this example just runs the full solaris build once
per day. Note that this scheduler only lets you control the time
between builds, not the absolute time-of-day of each Build, so this
could easily wind up an *evening* or *every afternoon* scheduler
depending upon when it was first activated.

.. bb:sched:: Nightly

.. _Nightly-Scheduler:

Nightly Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This is highly configurable periodic build scheduler, which triggers
a build at particular times of day, week, month, or year. The
configuration syntax is very similar to the well-known ``crontab``
format, in which you provide values for minute, hour, day, and month
(some of which can be wildcards), and a build is triggered whenever
the current time matches the given constraints. This can run a build
every night, every morning, every weekend, alternate Thursdays,
on your boss's birthday, etc.

Pass some subset of ``minute``, ``hour``, ``dayOfMonth``,
``month``, and ``dayOfWeek``\; each may be a single number or
a list of valid values. The builds will be triggered whenever the
current time matches these values. Wildcards are represented by a
'*' string. All fields default to a wildcard except 'minute', so
with no fields this defaults to a build every hour, on the hour.
The full list of parameters is:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``fileIsImportant``

``change_filter``

``onlyImportant``

``reason``

``codebases``

``createAbsoluteSourceStamps``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.  Note that ``fileIsImportant``,
    ``change_filter`` and ``createAbsoluteSourceStamps`` are only relevant
    if ``onlyIfChanged`` is ``True``.

``onlyIfChanged``
    If this is true, then builds will not be scheduled at the designated time
    *unless* the specified branch has seen an important change since
    the previous build.

``branch``
    (required) The branch to build when the time comes.  Remember that
    a value of ``None`` here means the default branch, and will not
    match other branches!

``minute``
    The minute of the hour on which to start the build.  This defaults
    to 0, meaning an hourly build.

``hour``
    The hour of the day on which to start the build, in 24-hour notation.
    This defaults to \*, meaning every hour.

``dayOfMonth``
    The day of the month to start a build.  This defaults to ``*``, meaning
    every day.

``month``
    The month in which to start the build, with January = 1.  This defaults
    to \*, meaning every month.

``dayOfWeek``
    The day of the week to start a build, with Monday = 0.  This defaults
    to \*, meaning every day of the week.

For example, the following master.cfg clause will cause a build to be
started every night at 3:00am::

    from buildbot.schedulers import timed
    c['schedulers'].append(
        timed.Nightly(name='nightly',
            branch='master',
            builderNames=['builder1', 'builder2'],
            hour=3,
            minute=0))

This scheduler will perform a build each Monday morning at 6:23am and
again at 8:23am, but only if someone has committed code in the interim::

    c['schedulers'].append(
        timed.Nightly(name='BeforeWork',
             branch=`default`,
             builderNames=['builder1'],
             dayOfWeek=0,
             hour=[6,8],
             minute=23,
             onlyIfChanged=True))

The following runs a build every two hours, using Python's :func:`range`
function::

    c.schedulers.append(
        timed.Nightly(name='every2hours',
            branch=None, # default branch
            builderNames=['builder1'],
            hour=range(0, 24, 2)))

Finally, this example will run only on December 24th::

    c['schedulers'].append(
        timed.Nightly(name='SleighPreflightCheck',
            branch=None, # default branch
            builderNames=['flying_circuits', 'radar'],
            month=12,
            dayOfMonth=24,
            hour=12,
            minute=0))

.. bb:sched:: Try_Jobdir
.. bb:sched:: Try_Userpass

.. _Try-Schedulers:
            
Try Schedulers
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This scheduler allows developers to use the :command:`buildbot try`
command to trigger builds of code they have not yet committed. See
:bb:cmdline:`try` for complete details.

Two implementations are available: :bb:sched:`Try_Jobdir` and
:bb:sched:`Try_Userpass`.  The former monitors a job directory, specified
by the ``jobdir`` parameter, while the latter listens for PB
connections on a specific ``port``, and authenticates against
``userport``.

The buildmaster must have a scheduler instance in the config file's
:bb:cfg:`schedulers` list to receive try requests. This lets the
administrator control who may initiate these `trial` builds, which branches
are eligible for trial builds, and which Builders should be used for them.

The scheduler has various means to accept build requests.
All of them enforce more security than the usual buildmaster ports do.
Any source code being built can be used to compromise the buildslave
accounts, but in general that code must be checked out from the VC
repository first, so only people with commit privileges can get
control of the buildslaves. The usual force-build control channels can
waste buildslave time but do not allow arbitrary commands to be
executed by people who don't have those commit privileges. However,
the source code patch that is provided with the trial build does not
have to go through the VC system first, so it is important to make
sure these builds cannot be abused by a non-committer to acquire as
much control over the buildslaves as a committer has. Ideally, only
developers who have commit access to the VC repository would be able
to start trial builds, but unfortunately the buildmaster does not, in
general, have access to VC system's user list.

As a result, the try scheduler requires a bit more configuration. There are
currently two ways to set this up:

``jobdir`` (ssh)
    This approach creates a command queue directory, called the
    :file:`jobdir`, in the buildmaster's working directory. The buildmaster
    admin sets the ownership and permissions of this directory to only
    grant write access to the desired set of developers, all of whom must
    have accounts on the machine. The :command:`buildbot try` command creates
    a special file containing the source stamp information and drops it in
    the jobdir, just like a standard maildir. When the buildmaster notices
    the new file, it unpacks the information inside and starts the builds.
    
    The config file entries used by 'buildbot try' either specify a local
    queuedir (for which write and mv are used) or a remote one (using scp
    and ssh).
    
    The advantage of this scheme is that it is quite secure, the
    disadvantage is that it requires fiddling outside the buildmaster
    config (to set the permissions on the jobdir correctly). If the
    buildmaster machine happens to also house the VC repository, then it
    can be fairly easy to keep the VC userlist in sync with the
    trial-build userlist. If they are on different machines, this will be
    much more of a hassle. It may also involve granting developer accounts
    on a machine that would not otherwise require them.
    
    To implement this, the buildslave invokes :samp:`ssh -l {username} {host}
    buildbot tryserver {ARGS}`, passing the patch contents over stdin. The
    arguments must include the inlet directory and the revision
    information.

``user+password`` (PB)
    In this approach, each developer gets a username/password pair, which
    are all listed in the buildmaster's configuration file. When the
    developer runs :command:`buildbot try`, their machine connects to the
    buildmaster via PB and authenticates themselves using that username
    and password, then sends a PB command to start the trial build.
    
    The advantage of this scheme is that the entire configuration is
    performed inside the buildmaster's config file. The disadvantages are
    that it is less secure (while the `cred` authentication system does
    not expose the password in plaintext over the wire, it does not offer
    most of the other security properties that SSH does). In addition, the
    buildmaster admin is responsible for maintaining the username/password
    list, adding and deleting entries as developers come and go.


For example, to set up the `jobdir` style of trial build, using a
command queue directory of :file:`{MASTERDIR}/jobdir` (and assuming that
all your project developers were members of the ``developers`` unix
group), you would first set up that directory:

.. code-block:: bash

    mkdir -p MASTERDIR/jobdir MASTERDIR/jobdir/new MASTERDIR/jobdir/cur MASTERDIR/jobdir/tmp
    chgrp developers MASTERDIR/jobdir MASTERDIR/jobdir/*
    chmod g+rwx,o-rwx MASTERDIR/jobdir MASTERDIR/jobdir/*

and then use the following scheduler in the buildmaster's config file::

    from buildbot.schedulers.trysched import Try_Jobdir
    s = Try_Jobdir(name="try1",
                   builderNames=["full-linux", "full-netbsd", "full-OSX"],
                   jobdir="jobdir")
    c['schedulers'] = [s]

Note that you must create the jobdir before telling the buildmaster to
use this configuration, otherwise you will get an error. Also remember
that the buildmaster must be able to read and write to the jobdir as
well. Be sure to watch the :file:`twistd.log` file (:ref:`Logfiles`)
as you start using the jobdir, to make sure the buildmaster is happy
with it.

.. note::

    Patches in the jobdir are encoded using netstrings, which place an
    arbitrary upper limit on patch size of 99999 bytes.  If your submitted try
    jobs are rejected with `BadJobfile`, try increasing this limit with a
    snippet like this in your `master.cfg`::

        from twisted.protocols.basic import NetstringReceiver
        NetstringReceiver.MAX_LENGTH = 1000000

To use the username/password form of authentication, create a
:class:`Try_Userpass` instance instead. It takes the same
``builderNames`` argument as the :class:`Try_Jobdir` form, but
accepts an additional ``port`` argument (to specify the TCP port to
listen on) and a ``userpass`` list of username/password pairs to
accept. Remember to use good passwords for this: the security of the
buildslave accounts depends upon it::

    from buildbot.schedulers.trysched import Try_Userpass
    s = Try_Userpass(name="try2",
                     builderNames=["full-linux", "full-netbsd", "full-OSX"],
                     port=8031,
                     userpass=[("alice","pw1"), ("bob", "pw2")] )
    c['schedulers'] = [s]

Like most places in the buildbot, the ``port`` argument takes a
`strports` specification. See :mod:`twisted.application.strports` for
details.

.. bb:sched:: Triggerable

.. index:: Triggers

.. _Triggerable-Scheduler:

Triggerable Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The :class:`Triggerable` scheduler waits to be triggered by a Trigger
step (see :ref:`Triggering-Schedulers`) in another build. That step
can optionally wait for the scheduler's builds to complete. This
provides two advantages over Dependent schedulers. First, the same
scheduler can be triggered from multiple builds. Second, the ability
to wait for a Triggerable's builds to complete provides a form of
"subroutine call", where one or more builds can "call" a scheduler
to perform some work for them, perhaps on other buildslaves.
The Triggerable-Scheduler supports multiple codebases. The scheduler filters out
all codebases from Trigger steps that are not configured in the scheduler.

The parameters are just the basics:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``codebases``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.


This class is only useful in conjunction with the :class:`Trigger` step.
Here is a fully-worked example::

    from buildbot.schedulers import basic, timed, triggerable
    from buildbot.process import factory
    from buildbot.steps import trigger
    
    checkin = basic.SingleBranchScheduler(name="checkin",
                branch=None,
                treeStableTimer=5*60,
                builderNames=["checkin"])
    nightly = timed.Nightly(name='nightly',
                branch=None,
                builderNames=['nightly'],
                hour=3,
                minute=0)
    
    mktarball = triggerable.Triggerable(name="mktarball",
                    builderNames=["mktarball"])
    build = triggerable.Triggerable(name="build-all-platforms",
                    builderNames=["build-all-platforms"])
    test = triggerable.Triggerable(name="distributed-test",
                    builderNames=["distributed-test"])
    package = triggerable.Triggerable(name="package-all-platforms",
                    builderNames=["package-all-platforms"])
    
    c['schedulers'] = [mktarball, checkin, nightly, build, test, package]
    
    # on checkin, make a tarball, build it, and test it
    checkin_factory = factory.BuildFactory()
    checkin_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['mktarball'],
                                           waitForFinish=True))
    checkin_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['build-all-platforms'],
                                       waitForFinish=True))
    checkin_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['distributed-test'],
                                      waitForFinish=True))
    
    # and every night, make a tarball, build it, and package it
    nightly_factory = factory.BuildFactory()
    nightly_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['mktarball'],
                                           waitForFinish=True))
    nightly_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['build-all-platforms'],
                                       waitForFinish=True))
    nightly_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['package-all-platforms'],
                                         waitForFinish=True))


.. bb:sched:: NightlyTriggerable

NightlyTriggerable Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. py:class:: buildbot.schedulers.timed.NightlyTriggerable

The :class:`NightlyTriggerable` scheduler is a mix of the :class:`Nightly` and :class:`Triggerable` schedulers.
This scheduler triggers builds at a particular time of day, week, or year, exactly as the :class:`Nightly` scheduler.
However, the source stamp set that is used that provided by the last :class:`Trigger` step that targeted this scheduler.

The parameters are just the basics:

``name``

``builderNames``

``properties``

``codebases``
    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``minute``

``hour``

``dayOfMonth``

``month``

``dayOfWeek``
    See :bb:sched:`Nightly`.

This class is only useful in conjunction with the :class:`Trigger` step.
Note that ``waitForFinish`` is ignored by :class:`Trigger` steps targeting this scheduler.

Here is a fully-worked example::

    from buildbot.schedulers import basic, timed
    from buildbot.process import factory
    from buildbot.steps import shell, trigger

    checkin = basic.SingleBranchScheduler(name="checkin",
                branch=None,
                treeStableTimer=5*60,
                builderNames=["checkin"])
    nightly = timed.NightlyTriggerable(name='nightly',
                builderNames=['nightly'],
                hour=3,
                minute=0)

    c['schedulers'] = [checkin, nightly]

    # on checkin, run tests
    checkin_factory = factory.BuildFactory()
    checkin_factory.addStep(shell.Test())
    checkin_factory.addStep(trigger.Trigger(schedulerNames=['nightly']))

    # and every night, package the latest successful build
    nightly_factory = factory.BuildFactory()
    nightly_factory.addStep(shell.ShellCommand(command=['make', 'package']))

.. bb:sched:: ForceScheduler

.. index:: Forced Builds

ForceScheduler Scheduler
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The :class:`ForceScheduler` scheduler is the way you can configure a
force build form in the web UI.

In the ``builder/<builder-name>`` web page, you will see one form for each
ForceScheduler scheduler that was configured for this builder.

This allows you to customize exactly how the build form looks, which builders
have a force build form (it might not make sense to force build every builder),
and who is allowed to force builds on which builders.

The scheduler takes the following parameters:

``name``

``builderNames``

    See :ref:`Configuring-Schedulers`.

``reason``

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the reason for
    the build.  The default value is a string parameter with value "force build".

``reasonString``

    A string that will be used to create the build reason for the forced build. This
    string can contain the placeholders '%(owner)s' and '%(reason)s', which represents
    the value typed into the reason field.

``username``

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the project for
    the build.  The default value is a username parameter,

``codebases``

    A list of strings or :ref:`CodebaseParameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying
    the codebases that should be presented. The default is a single codebase with no name.

``properties``

    A list of :ref:`parameters <ForceScheduler-Parameters>`, one for each
    property.  These can be arbitrary parameters, where the parameter's name is
    taken as the property name, or ``AnyPropertyParameter``, which allows the
    web user to specify the property name.

``buttonName``

    The name of the "submit" button on the resulting force-build form.
    This defaults to "Force Build".

An example may be better than long explanation.  What you need in your config
file is something like::

    from buildbot.schedulers.forcesched import *

    sch = ForceScheduler(name="force",
                 builderNames=["my-builder"],

                 # will generate a combo box
                 branch=ChoiceStringParameter(name="branch",
                                        choices=["main","devel"], default="main"),

                 # will generate a text input
                 reason=StringParameter(name="reason",label="reason:<br>",
                                        required=True, size=80),

                 # will generate nothing in the form, but revision, repository,
                 # and project are needed by buildbot scheduling system so we
                 # need to pass a value ("")
                 revision=FixedParameter(name="revision", default=""),
                 repository=FixedParameter(name="repository", default=""),
                 project=FixedParameter(name="project", default=""),

                 # in case you dont require authentication this will display
                 # input for user to type his name
                 username=UserNameParameter(label="your name:<br>", size=80),

                 # A completely customized property list.  The name of the
                 # property is the name of the parameter
                 properties=[

                    BooleanParameter(name="force_build_clean",
                                label="force a make clean", default=False),

                    StringParameter(name="pull_url",
                        label="optionally give a public Git pull url:<br>",
                        default="", size=80)
                 ]
                 )
    c['schedulers'].append(sch)


Authorization
.............

The force scheduler uses the web status's :ref:`authorization <Authorization>`
framework to determine which user has the right to force which build.  Here is
an example of code on how you can define which user has which right::

    user_mapping = {
        re.compile("project1-builder"): ["project1-maintainer", "john"] ,
        re.compile("project2-builder"): ["project2-maintainer", "jack"],
        re.compile(".*"): ["root"]
    }
    def force_auth(user,  status):
        global user_mapping
        for r,users in user_mapping.items():
            if r.match(status.name):
                if user in users:
                        return True
        return False

    # use authz_cfg in your WebStatus setup
    authz_cfg=authz.Authz(
        auth=my_auth,
        forceBuild = force_auth,
    )

.. _ForceScheduler-Parameters:

ForceSched Parameters
.....................

Most of the arguments to ``ForceScheduler`` are "parameters".  Several classes
of parameters are available, each describing a different kind of input from a
force-build form.

All parameter types have a few common arguments:

``name`` (required)

    The name of the parameter. For properties, this will correspond to the name
    of the property that your parameter will set.  The name is also used
    internally as the identifier for in the HTML form.

``label`` (optional; default is same as name)

    The label of the parameter. This is what is displayed to the user.  HTML is
    permitted here.

``default`` (optional; default: "")

    The default value for the parameter, that is used if there is no user
    input.

``required`` (optional; default: False)

    If this is true, then an error will be shown to user if
    there is no input in this field

The parameter types are:

FixedParameter
##############

::

    FixedParameter(name="branch", default="trunk"),

This parameter type will not be shown on the web form, and always generate a
property with its default value.

StringParameter
###############

::

    StringParameter(name="pull_url",
        label="optionally give a public Git pull url:<br>",
        default="", size=80)

This parameter type will show a single-line text-entry box, and allow the user
to enter an arbitrary string.  It adds the following arguments:

``regex`` (optional)

    a string that will be compiled as a regex, and used to validate the input
    of this parameter

``size`` (optional; default: 10)

    The width of the input field (in characters)

TextParameter
#############

::

    StringParameter(name="comments",
        label="comments to be displayed to the user of the built binary",
        default="This is a development build", cols=60, rows=5)

This parameter type is similar to StringParameter, except that it is
represented in the HTML form as a textarea, allowing multi-line input.  It adds
the StringParameter arguments, this type allows:

``cols`` (optional; default: 80)

    The number of columns the textarea will have

``rows`` (optional; default: 20)

    The number of rows the textarea will have

This class could be subclassed in order to have more customization e.g.

    * developer could send a list of Git branches to pull from

    * developer could send a list of gerrit changes to cherry-pick,

    * developer could send a shell script to amend the build.

beware of security issues anyway.

IntParameter
############

::

    IntParameter(name="debug_level",
        label="debug level (1-10)", default=2)

This parameter type accepts an integer value using a text-entry box.

BooleanParameter
################

::

    BooleanParameter(name="force_build_clean",
        label="force a make clean", default=False)

This type represents a boolean value. It will be presented as a checkbox.

UserNameParameter
#################

::

    UserNameParameter(label="your name:<br>", size=80)

This parameter type accepts a username.  If authentication is active, it will
use the authenticated user instead of displaying a text-entry box.

``size`` (optional; default: 10)
    The width of the input field (in characters)

``need_email`` (optional; default True)
    If true, require a full email address rather than arbitrary text.

.. bb:sched:: ChoiceStringParameter

ChoiceStringParameter
#####################

::

    ChoiceStringParameter(name="branch",
        choices=["main","devel"], default="main")

This parameter type lets the user choose between several choices (e.g the list
of branches you are supporting, or the test campaign to run).  If ``multiple``
is false, then its result is a string - one of the choices.  If ``multiple`` is
true, then the result is a list of strings from the choices.

Note that for some use cases, the choices need to be generated dynamically. This can
be done via subclassing and overiding the 'getChoices' member function. An example
of this is provided by the source for the :py:class:`InheritBuildParameter` class.

Its arguments, in addition to the common options, are:

``choices``

    The list of available choices.

``strict`` (optional; default: True)

    If true, verify that the user's input is from the list.  Note that this
    only affects the validation of the form request; even if this argument is
    False, there is no HTML form component available to enter an arbitrary
    value.

``multiple``

    If true, then the user may select multiple choices.

Example::

        ChoiceStringParameter(name="forced_tests", 
            label = "smoke test campaign to run",
            default = default_tests,
            multiple = True, 
            strict = True,
            choices = [ "test_builder1",
                        "test_builder2",
                        "test_builder3" ])

        # .. and later base the schedulers to trigger off this property:

        # triggers the tests depending on the property forced_test
        builder1.factory.addStep(Trigger(name="Trigger tests",
                                        schedulerNames=Property("forced_tests")))

CodebaseParameter
#####################

::

    CodebaseParameter(codebase="myrepo")

This is a parameter group to specify a sourcestamp for a given codebase.

``codebase``

    The name of the codebase.

``branch`` (optional; default: StringParameter)

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the branch to
    build.  The default value is a string parameter.

``revision`` (optional; default: StringParameter)

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the revision to
    build.  The default value is a string parameter.

``repository`` (optional; default: StringParameter)

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the repository
    for the build.  The default value is a string parameter.

``project`` (optional; default: StringParameter)

    A :ref:`parameter <ForceScheduler-Parameters>` specifying the project for
    the build.  The default value is a string parameter.

.. bb:sched:: InheritBuildParameter

InheritBuildParameter
#####################

This is a special parameter for inheriting force build properties from another
build.  The user is presented with a list of compatible builds from which to
choose, and all forced-build parameters from the selected build are copied into
the new build.  The new parameter is:

``compatible_builds``

   A function to find compatible builds in the build history.  This function is
   given the master :py:class:`~buildbot.status.master.Status` instance as
   first argument, and the current builder name as second argument, or None
   when forcing all builds.

Example::

    def get_compatible_builds(status, builder):
        if builder == None: # this is the case for force_build_all
            return ["cannot generate build list here"]
        # find all successful builds in builder1 and builder2
        builds = []
        for builder in ["builder1","builder2"]:
            builder_status = status.getBuilder(builder)
            for num in xrange(1,40): # 40 last builds
                b = builder_status.getBuild(-num)
                if not b:
                    continue
                if b.getResults() == FAILURE:
                    continue
                builds.append(builder+"/"+str(b.getNumber()))
        return builds

    # ...

    sched = Scheduler(...,
        properties=[
            InheritBuildParameter(
                name="inherit",
                label="promote a build for merge",
                compatible_builds=get_compatible_builds,
                required = True),
                ])

.. bb:sched:: BuildslaveChoiceParameter

BuildslaveChoiceParameter
#########################

This parameter allows a scheduler to require that a build is assigned to the
chosen buildslave. The choice is assigned to the `slavename` property for the build.
The :py:class:`~buildbot.builder.enforceChosenSlave` functor must be assigned to
the ``canStartBuild`` parameter for the ``Builder``.

Example::

    from buildbot.process.builder import enforceChosenSlave

    # schedulers:
    ForceScheduler(
        # ...
        properties=[
            BuildslaveChoiceParameter(),
        ]
    )

    # builders:
    BuilderConfig(
        # ...
        canStartBuild=enforceChosenSlave,
    )

AnyPropertyParameter
####################

This parameter type can only be used in ``properties``, and allows the user to
specify both the property name and value in the HTML form.

This Parameter is here to reimplement old Buildbot behavior, and should be
avoided. Stricter parameter name and type should be preferred.