Bot.io is a fully scriptable build/test bot for Github projects. It is similar to Travis-CI in purpose, but most of the action happens at the pull request level and there are no constraints on what types of tests you can run. (Also you have to provision your own test/build servers).
Bot.io is written in Node.js and works on both Windows and Unix. It is used in several Mozilla projects, including PDF.js, Boot-to-Gecko, Popcorn.js, and Butter.js.
- You write shell-like scripts such as on_cmd_test.js that tell the bot what to do when it receives a command. (Any arbitrary command can be defined).
- Pull request reviewers leave a comment containing a bot command like
/botio test
, causing the bot to run the corresponding script against a hypothetically merged pull request. - The bot reports back to the pull request discussion with a comment containing the test result, so reviewers can anticipate if the PR will break their master branch before merging it.
-
Live browser tests: Bot.io comes with a built-in web server, so if your project is a web app you can create a script, say on_cmd_preview.js, to deploy select files into the server. Reviewers can then issue
/botio preview
and take the PR for a spin in their browser before merging it. -
Post-receive scripts: Bot.io scripts can do just about anything shell scripts can do, and they can hook into other Github events. For example, the script on_push.js is executed every time new commits are pushed to the master branch.
Bot.io depends on Node.js and git
. To get started, install Bot.io globally, create a new dir for your Botio files, and bootstrap the necessary files for your repo, for example:
$ npm install -g botio
$ mkdir botio-files; cd botio-files
$ botio bootstrap --repo arturadib/pdf.js
(Replace arturadib
and pdf.js
with your Github username and repo, respectively).
The bootstrapped file config.json
contains sensible defaults, but you will likely want to double-check and/or modify it at this point. (In particular, make sure host
, port
, and whitelist
are what you want). Then let Bot.io set up the necessary Github hooks, and start the server, for example:
$ botio sethooks --user arturadib --pwd password123
$ botio start --user arturadib --pwd password123
(Replace arturadib
and password123
with your corresponding Github credentials).
That's it! You can now trigger your first Bot.io job by leaving the following comment on any pull request in your repo:
/botio test
The bot should write back a hello world response in the PR discussion. At this point you will probably want to customize your scripts, as described below.
When Github sends a new notification, Botio automatically fires up the corresponding script. For example, push
(post-receive) notifications will trigger on_push.js
, whereas a PR comment containg a command like /botio preview
will trigger on_cmd_preview.js
.
If you want to write a script that triggers on pushes to branches other than master, simply name the file on_push_to_branchname.js
.
Bot.io uses ShellJS to enable portable shell-like scripting, so your scripts look like traditional Unix shell scripts but work verbatim on different platforms (like Windows). See mozilla/botio-files-pdfjs for real-world examples.
When you require()
the main Botio module, it automatically takes care of the necessary cloning and merging into a temporary (private) directory, and executes your script in that directory. The module also exposes the following job information properties:
botio.id // Unique id string of the job
botio.event // Event type (e.g. cmd_test, push, etc)
botio.issue // Issue number (if event comes from issue comment or pull request)
botio.private_dir // Where tests for the current PR will be run
botio.public_dir // Where public files for the current PR should be stored
botio.public_url // URL of this PR's public dir
botio.base_url // Git URL of the main repo
botio.head_url // Git URL of the pull request repo
botio.head_ref // Name of pull request branch
botio.head_sha // SHA of the most recent commit in the pull request
botio.debug // True if the server was invoked with --debug
as well as the following methods:
botio.message(str) // Instruct the bot to write 'str' in the pull request response
If you want the bot to leave comments as a different Github user (here are some gravatar suggestions), simply start the server with the desired user credentials:
$ botio start --user fancy_pants_bot --pwd password123
Here are some important properties you might want to modify:
host // Host name of server. By default Botio will use its public IP
name // Name of the bot, in case you have multiple ones (e.g. `Bot.io-Windows`, `Bot.io-Linux`, etc)
handles // Array of handles the bot responds to via `/handle command` (e.g. `['botio', 'botio-linux']`)
whitelist // Array of Github user names allowed to trigger Botio commands via pull request comments
public_dir // Path to the base directory where all web-facing files should be stored
private_dir // Path to the base directory where all tests will be run
script_timeout // (In seconds) Will kill any script that takes longer than this
use_queue // Set to true if commands should be run in a queue, i.e. not concurrently
// (Useful when commands are too memory/CPU heavy, e.g. browser tests)
On your Github repo, go to Admin > Service Hooks > Post-Receive URLs and disable the URL corresponding to the IP of your machine. (Don't forget to save it).
Bot.io only responds to white-listed users.
In a pull request discussion, issue:
/botio help