PEP 474 – Creating forge.python.org
- Author:
- Nick Coghlan <ncoghlan at gmail.com>
- Status:
- Withdrawn
- Type:
- Process
- Created:
- 19-Jul-2014
- Post-History:
- 19-Jul-2014, 08-Jan-2015, 01-Feb-2015
Abstract
This PEP proposes setting up a new PSF provided resource, forge.python.org, as a location for maintaining various supporting repositories (such as the repository for Python Enhancement Proposals) in a way that is more accessible to new contributors, and easier to manage for core developers.
This PEP does not propose any changes to the core development workflow for CPython itself (see PEP 462 in relation to that).
PEP Withdrawal
This PEP has been withdrawn by the author in favour of the GitLab based proposal in PEP 507.
If anyone else would like to take over championing this PEP, contact the core-workflow mailing list
Proposal
This PEP proposes that an instance of the self-hosted Kallithea code repository management system be deployed as “forge.python.org”.
Individual repositories (such as the developer guide or the PEPs repository) may then be migrated from the existing hg.python.org infrastructure to the new forge.python.org infrastructure on a case-by-case basis. Each migration will need to decide whether to retain a read-only mirror on hg.python.org, or whether to just migrate wholesale to the new location.
In addition to supporting read-only mirrors on hg.python.org, forge.python.org will also aim to support hosting mirrors on popular proprietary hosting sites like GitHub and BitBucket. The aim will be to allow users familiar with these sites to submit and discuss pull requests using their preferred workflow, with forge.python.org automatically bringing those contributions over to the master repository.
Given the availability and popularity of commercially backed “free for open source projects” repository hosting services, this would not be a general purpose hosting site for arbitrary Python projects. The initial focus will be specifically on CPython and other repositories currently hosted on hg.python.org. In the future, this could potentially be expanded to consolidating other PSF managed repositories that are currently externally hosted to gain access to a pull request based workflow, such as the repository for the python.org Django application. As with the initial migrations, any such future migrations would be considered on a case-by-case basis, taking into account the preferences of the primary users of each repository.
Rationale
Currently, hg.python.org hosts more than just the core CPython repository, it also hosts other repositories such as those for the CPython developer guide and for Python Enhancement Proposals, along with various “sandbox” repositories for core developer experimentation.
While the simple “pull request” style workflow made popular by code hosting sites like GitHub and BitBucket isn’t adequate for the complex branching model needed for parallel maintenance and development of the various CPython releases, it’s a good fit for several of the ancillary projects that surround CPython that we don’t wish to move to a proprietary hosting site.
The key requirements proposed for a PSF provided software forge are:
- MUST support simple “pull request” style workflows
- MUST support online editing for simple changes
- MUST be backed by an active development organisation (community or commercial)
- MUST support self-hosting of the master repository on PSF infrastructure without ongoing fees
Additional recommended requirements that are satisfied by this proposal, but may be negotiable if a sufficiently compelling alternative is presented:
- SHOULD be a fully open source application written in Python
- SHOULD support Mercurial (for consistency with existing tooling)
- SHOULD support Git (to provide that option to users that prefer it)
- SHOULD allow users of git and Mercurial clients to transparently collaborate on the same repository
- SHOULD allow users of GitHub and BitBucket to submit proposed changes using the standard pull request workflows offered by those tools
- SHOULD be open to customisation to meet the needs of CPython core development, including providing a potential path forward for the proposed migration to a core reviewer model in PEP 462
The preference for self-hosting without ongoing fees rules out the free-as-in-beer providers like GitHub and BitBucket, in addition to the various proprietary source code management offerings.
The preference for Mercurial support not only rules out GitHub, but also other Git-only solutions like GitLab and Gitorious.
The hard requirement for online editing support rules out the Apache Allura/HgForge combination.
The preference for a fully open source solution rules out RhodeCode.
Of the various options considered by the author of this proposal, that leaves Kallithea SCM as the proposed foundation for a forge.python.org service.
Kallithea is a full GPLv3 application (derived from the clearly and unambiguously GPLv3 licensed components of RhodeCode) that is being developed under the auspices of the Software Freedom Conservancy. The Conservancy has affirmed that the Kallithea codebase is completely and validly licensed under GPLv3. In addition to their role in building the initial Kallithea community, the Conservancy is also the legal home of both the Mercurial and Git projects. Other SFC member projects that may be familiar to Python users include Twisted, Gevent, BuildBot and PyPy.
Intended Benefits
The primary benefit of deploying Kallithea as forge.python.org is that supporting repositories such as the developer guide and the PEP repo could potentially be managed using pull requests and online editing. This would be much simpler than the current workflow which requires PEP editors and other core developers to act as intermediaries to apply updates suggested by other users.
The richer administrative functionality would also make it substantially easier to grant users access to particular repositories for collaboration purposes, without having to grant them general access to the entire installation. This helps lower barriers to entry, as trust can more readily be granted and earned incrementally, rather than being an all-or-nothing decision around granting core developer access.
Sustaining Engineering Considerations
Even with its current workflow, CPython itself remains one of the largest open source projects in the world (in the top 2% of projects tracked on OpenHub). Unfortunately, we have been significantly less effective at encouraging contributions to the projects that make up CPython’s workflow infrastructure, including ensuring that our installations track upstream, and that wherever feasible, our own customisations are contributed back to the original project.
As such, a core component of this proposal is to actively engage with the upstream Kallithea community to lower the barriers to working with and on the Kallithea SCM, as well as with the PSF Infrastructure team to ensure the forge.python.org service integrates cleanly with the PSF’s infrastructure automation.
This approach aims to provide a number of key benefits:
- allowing those of us contributing to maintenance of this service to be as productive as possible in the time we have available
- offering a compelling professional development opportunity to those volunteers that choose to participate in maintenance of this service
- making the Kallithea project itself more attractive to other potential users by making it as easy as possible to adopt, deploy and manage
- as a result of the above benefits, attracting sufficient contributors both in the upstream Kallithea community, and within the CPython infrastructure community, to allow the forge.python.org service to evolve effectively to meet changing developer expectations
Some initial steps have already been taken to address these sustaining engineering concerns:
- Tymoteusz Jankowski has been working with Donald Stufft to work out what would be involved in deploying Kallithea using the PSF’s Salt based infrastructure automation.
- Graham Dumpleton and I have been working on making it easy to deploy demonstration Kallithea instances to the free tier of Red Hat’s open source hosting service, OpenShift Online. (See the comments on that post, or the quickstart issue tracker for links to Graham’s follow on work)
The next major step to be undertaken is to come up with a local development workflow that allows contributors on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux to run the Kallithea tests locally, without interfering with the operation of their own system. The currently planned approach for this is to focus on Vagrant, which is a popular automated virtual machine management system specifically aimed at developers running local VMs for testing purposes. The Vagrant based development guidelines for OpenShift Origin provide an extended example of the kind of workflow this approach enables. It’s also worth noting that Vagrant is one of the options for working with a local build of the main python.org website.
If these workflow proposals end up working well for Kallithea, they may also be worth proposing for use by the upstream projects backing other PSF and CPython infrastructure services, including Roundup, BuildBot, and the main python.org web site.
Personal Motivation
As of July 2015, I now work for Red Hat as a software development workflow designer and process architect, focusing on the upstream developer experience in Fedora. Two of the key pieces of that experience will be familiar to many web service developers: Docker for local container management, and Vagrant for cross-platform local development VM management. Spending time applying these technologies in multiple upstream contexts helps provide additional insight into what works well and what still needs further improvement to provide a good software development experience that is well integrated on Fedora, but also readily available on other Linux distributions, Windows, Mac OS X.
In relation to code review workflows in particular, the primary code review workflow management tools I’ve used in my career are Gerrit (for multi-step code review with fine-grained access control), GitHub and BitBucket (for basic pull request based workflows), and Rietveld (for CPython’s optional pre-commit reviews).
Kallithea is interesting as a base project to build, as it’s currently a combined repo hosting and code review management platform, but doesn’t directly integrate the two by offering online merges. This creates the opportunity to blend the low barrier to entry benefits of the GitHub/BitBucket pull request model with the mentoring and task hand-off benefits of Gerrit in defining an online code merging model for Kallithea in collaboration with the upstream Kallithea developers.
Technical Concerns and Challenges
Introducing a new service into the CPython infrastructure presents a number of interesting technical concerns and challenges. This section covers several of the most significant ones.
Service hosting
The default position of this PEP is that the new forge.python.org service will be integrated into the existing PSF Salt infrastructure and hosted on the PSF’s Rackspace cloud infrastructure.
However, other hosting options will also be considered, in particular, possible deployment as a Kubernetes hosted web service on either Google Container Engine or the next generation of Red Hat’s OpenShift Online service, by using either GCEPersistentDisk or the open source GlusterFS distributed filesystem to hold the source code repositories.
Ongoing infrastructure maintenance
Ongoing infrastructure maintenance is an area of concern within the PSF, as we currently lack a system administrator mentorship program equivalent to the Fedora Infrastructure Apprentice or GNOME Infrastructure Apprentice programs.
Instead, systems tend to be maintained largely by developers as a part-time activity on top of their development related contributions, rather than seeking to recruit folks that are more interested in operations (i.e. keeping existing systems running well) than they are in development (i.e. making changes to the services to provide new features or a better user experience, or to address existing issues).
While I’d personally like to see the PSF operating such a program at some point in the future, I don’t consider setting one up to be a feasible near term goal. However, I do consider it feasible to continue laying the groundwork for such a program by extending the PSF’s existing usage of modern infrastructure technologies like OpenStack and Salt to cover more services, as well as starting to explore the potential benefits of containers and container platforms when it comes to maintaining and enhancing PSF provided services.
I also plan to look into the question of whether or not an open source cloud management platform like ManageIQ may help us bring our emerging “cloud sprawl” problem across Rackspace, Google, Amazon and other services more under control.
User account management
Ideally we’d like to be able to offer a single account that spans all python.org services, including Kallithea, Roundup/Rietveld, PyPI and the back end for the new python.org site, but actually implementing that would be a distinct infrastructure project, independent of this PEP. (It’s also worth noting that the fine-grained control of ACLs offered by such a capability is a prerequisite for setting up an effective system administrator mentorship program)
For the initial rollout of forge.python.org, we will likely create yet another identity silo within the PSF infrastructure. A potentially superior alternative would be to add support for python-social-auth to Kallithea, but actually doing so would not be a requirement for the initial rollout of the service (the main technical concern there is that Kallithea is a Pylons application that has not yet been ported to Pyramid, so integration will require either adding a Pylons backend to python-social-auth, or else embarking on the Pyramid migration in Kallithea).
Breaking existing SSH access and links for Mercurial repositories
This PEP proposes leaving the existing hg.python.org installation alone, and setting up Kallithea on a new host. This approach minimises the risk of interfering with the development of CPython itself (and any other projects that don’t migrate to the new software forge), but does make any migrations of existing repos more disruptive (since existing checkouts will break).
Integration with Roundup
Kallithea provides configurable issue tracker integration. This will need to be set up appropriately to integrate with the Roundup issue tracker at bugs.python.org before the initial rollout of the forge.python.org service.
Accepting pull requests on GitHub and BitBucket
The initial rollout of forge.python.org would support publication of read-only mirrors, both on hg.python.org and other services, as that is a relatively straightforward operation that can be implemented in a commit hook.
While a highly desirable feature, accepting pull requests on external services, and mirroring them as submissions to the master repositories on forge.python.org is a more complex problem, and would likely not be included as part of the initial rollout of the forge.python.org service.
Transparent Git and Mercurial interoperability
Kallithea’s native support for both Git and Mercurial offers an opportunity to make it relatively straightforward for developers to use the client of their choice to interact with repositories hosted on forge.python.org.
This transparent interoperability does not exist yet, but running our own multi-VCS repository hosting service provides the opportunity to make this capability a reality, rather than passively waiting for a proprietary provider to deign to provide a feature that likely isn’t in their commercial interest. There’s a significant misalignment of incentives between open source communities and commercial providers in this particular area, as even though offering VCS client choice can significantly reduce community friction by eliminating the need for projects to make autocratic decisions that force particular tooling choices on potential contributors, top down enforcement of tool selection (regardless of developer preference) is currently still the norm in the corporate and other organisational environments that produce GitHub and Atlassian’s paying customers.
Prior to acceptance, in the absence of transparent interoperability, this PEP should propose specific recommendations for inclusion in the CPython developer’s guide section for git users for creating pull requests against forge.python.org hosted Mercurial repositories.
Pilot Objectives and Timeline
[TODO: Update this section for Brett’s revised timeline, which aims to have a CPython demo repository online by October 31st, to get a better indication of future capabilities once CPython itself migrates over to the new system, rather than just the support repos]
This proposal is part of Brett Cannon’s current evaluation of improvement proposals for various aspects of the CPython development workflow. Key dates in that timeline are:
- Feb 1: Draft proposal published (for Kallithea, this PEP)
- Apr 8: Discussion of final proposals at Python Language Summit
- May 1: Brett’s decision on which proposal to accept
- Sep 13: Python 3.5 released, adopting new workflows for Python 3.6
If this proposal is selected for further development, it is proposed to start with the rollout of the following pilot deployment:
- a reference implementation operational at kallithea-pilot.python.org, containing at least the developer guide and PEP repositories. This will be a “throwaway” instance, allowing core developers and other contributors to experiment freely without worrying about the long term consequences for the repository history.
- read-only live mirrors of the Kallithea hosted repositories on GitHub and BitBucket. As with the pilot service itself, these would be temporary repos, to be discarded after the pilot period ends.
- clear documentation on using those mirrors to create pull requests against Kallithea hosted Mercurial repositories (for the pilot, this will likely not include using the native pull request workflows of those hosted services)
- automatic linking of issue references in code review comments and commit messages to the corresponding issues on bugs.python.org
- draft updates to PEP 1 explaining the Kallithea-based PEP editing and submission workflow
The following items would be needed for a production migration, but there doesn’t appear to be an obvious way to trial an updated implementation as part of the pilot:
- adjusting the PEP publication process and the developer guide publication process to be based on the relocated Mercurial repos
The following items would be objectives of the overall workflow improvement process, but are considered “desirable, but not essential” for the initial adoption of the new service in September (if this proposal is the one selected and the proposed pilot deployment is successful):
- allowing the use of python-social-auth to authenticate against the PSF hosted Kallithea instance
- allowing the use of the GitHub and BitBucket pull request workflows to submit pull requests to the main Kallithea repo
- allowing easy triggering of forced BuildBot runs based on Kallithea hosted repos and pull requests (prior to the implementation of PEP 462, this would be intended for use with sandbox repos rather than the main CPython repo)
Future Implications for CPython Core Development
The workflow requirements for the main CPython development repository are significantly more complex than those for the repositories being discussed in this PEP. These concerns are covered in more detail in PEP 462.
Given Guido’s recommendation to replace Rietveld with a more actively maintained code review system, my current plan is to rewrite that PEP to use Kallithea as the proposed glue layer, with enhanced Kallithea pull requests eventually replacing the current practice of uploading patche files directly to the issue tracker.
I’ve also started working with Pierre Yves-David on a custom Mercurial extension that automates some aspects of the CPython core development workflow.
Copyright
This document has been placed in the public domain.
Source: https://github.com/python/peps/blob/main/pep-0474.txt
Last modified: 2022-01-21 11:03:51 GMT