1

At the moment of committing a change to my repository, I want to be able to, in effect, tell Buildbot to not schedule a build for the change.

I know about the stopChange privilege in the authorization logic but for whatever reason Buildbot never presents me with the button to stop a change, even though I have given myself the privilege. Moreover, even if it worked, I'd essentially have to catch the change in the Web-based UI before Buildbot starts the build. Tricky.

This is how I create my scheduler:

c['schedulers'].append(SingleBranchScheduler(
    name="foo",
    change_filter=filter.ChangeFilter(project="foo", branch="master",
                                      repository=url),
    treeStableTimer=300,
    builderNames=["foo-build"]))

1 Answer 1

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You could use the fileIsImportant option to check for the presence of a file among the changes, and if this file is changed, then deem the change unimportant, which causes Buildbot to not schedule a build. So:

def fileIsImportant(change):

    if ".skipbuild" in change.files:
        return False

    # There could be more logic here to test other things...

Then you register your scheduler like this:

c['schedulers'].append(SingleBranchScheduler(
    name="foo",
    change_filter=filter.ChangeFilter(project="foo", branch="master",
                                      repository=url),
    treeStableTimer=300,
    fileIsImportant=fileIsImportant,
    builderNames=["foo-build"]))

With the code above, any commit in which there is a change for the file named .skipbuild (a file appearing in the root of your repository) won't result in a build being schedule. I use something similar as the code above for my own Buildbot configuration.

Another options would be to check the commit message. Contrarily to what the name suggests fileIsImportant is really determining whether a change is important rather than just a file. So:

def fileIsImportant(change):

    if "[skipbuild]" in change.comments:
        return False

    # There could be more logic here to test other things...

With this function, if the commit message has the text [skipbuild], the change won't schedule a build.

I prefer the first option because a) it does not pollute commit messages, b) I find it easier to look for the file to change in my repository root and change it than remember what magic text I need to put in the commit message to skip the build.

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