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I'm using Gerrit REST API to query all changes whose status is "merged". My query is

https://android-review.googlesource.com/changes/?q=status:merged&n=2

where "n=2" limits the size of query results to 2. So I got a JSON object like:

enter image description here

Of course there are more results. According to the REST document:

If the n query parameter is supplied and additional changes exist that match the query beyond the end, the last change object has a _more_changes: true JSON field set. Callers can resume a query with the N query parameter, supplying the last change’s _sortkey field as the value.

So I add the query parameter N with the _sortkey of the last change 100309. The new query is:

https://android-review.googlesource.com/changes/?q=status:merged&n=2&N=002e4203000187d5

With this new query, I was hoping that I'll get another 2 new query results, since I provided the _sortkey as a cursor of my previous search results.

However, it's really weird that this new query returns exactly the same results as the previous query, instead of the next 2 results as I expected. It seems like providing "N=002e4203000187d5" has no effect at all.

Does anybody know why using _sortkey to resume my query doesn't work?

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  • Which version of Gerrit are you using? I just checked a script I use and it follows that exact syntax but works fine. I'm hitting a server running 2.8.3.
    – Brad
    Jul 14, 2014 at 18:22
  • @Brad I query the Android Gerrit (android-review.googlesource.com) but not sure which version of Gerrit it uses.
    – Ida
    Jul 15, 2014 at 2:31

2 Answers 2

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+50

I chatted with one of the developers at Google, and he confirmed that _sortkey has been removed from the newer versions of Gerrit they are running at android-review and gerrit-review. The N= parameter is no longer valid. The documentation will be updated to reflect this.

The alternative is to use &S=x to skip x results, which I tested and works well.

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  • The documentation hasn't been updated at this point, therefore I'm really confused. Thank you very much for the information.
    – Ida
    Jul 16, 2014 at 8:13
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sortkey is deprecated in Gerrit v2.9 -
see the (Gerrit) ReleaseNotes-2.9.txt, under REST API - Changes:

[[sortkey-deprecation]]

  • Results returned by the [query changes] endpoint are now paginated using offsets instead of sortkeys.
    • The sortkey and sortkey_prev parameters on the endpoint are deprecated.
      The results are now paginated using the --limit (-n) option to limit the number of results, and the -S option to set the start point.
    • Queries with sortkeys are still supported against old index versions, to enable online reindexing while clients have an older JS version.

See also here -
PSA: Removing the "sortkey" field from the gerrit-on-borg query interface:

...
Our solution is to kill the sortkey field and its related search operators (sortkey_before, sortkey_after, and resume_sortkey).

There are two ways you can achieve similar functionality.

  1. Add "&S=" to your query to skip a fixed number of results.
    (Note that this redoes the search so new results may have jumped ahead and
    you might process the same change twice.
    This is true of the resume_sortkey implementation as well,
    so your code should already be able to handle this.)

  2. Use the before/after operators.
    Instead of taking the sortkey field from the last returned change and
    using it in a resume_sortkey operator, you take the updated field from
    the last returned change and use it in a before operator.
    (This has slightly different semantics than the sortkey field, which
    uses the change number as a tiebreaker when changes have similar updated times.)

...

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