How can we know the changes has been applied? I had checked several
recent builds, they all use the original configs.

Davies

On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 6:17 PM, Josh Rosen <rosenvi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> FYI, I edited the Spark Pull Request Builder job to try this out.  Let’s see
> if it works (I’ll be around to revert if it doesn’t).
>
> On October 17, 2014 at 5:26:56 PM, Davies Liu (dav...@databricks.com) wrote:
>
> One finding is that all the timeout happened with this command:
>
> git fetch --tags --progress https://github.com/apache/spark.git
> +refs/pull/*:refs/remotes/origin/pr/*
>
> I'm thinking that maybe this may be a expensive call, we could try to
> use a more cheap one:
>
> git fetch --tags --progress https://github.com/apache/spark.git
> +refs/pull/XXX/*:refs/remotes/origin/pr/XXX/*
>
> XXX is the PullRequestID,
>
> The configuration support parameters [1], so we could put this in :
>
> +refs/pull//${ghprbPullId}/*:refs/remotes/origin/pr/${ghprbPullId}/*
>
> I have not tested this yet, could you give this a try?
>
> Davies
>
>
> [1]
> https://wiki.jenkins-ci.org/display/JENKINS/GitHub+pull+request+builder+plugin
>
> On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 5:00 PM, shane knapp <skn...@berkeley.edu> wrote:
>> actually, nvm, you have to be run that command from our servers to affect
>> our limit. run it all you want from your own machines! :P
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 4:59 PM, shane knapp <skn...@berkeley.edu> wrote:
>>
>>> yep, and i will tell you guys ONLY if you promise to NOT try this
>>> yourselves... checking the rate limit also counts as a hit and increments
>>> our numbers:
>>>
>>> # curl -i https://api.github.com/users/whatever 2> /dev/null | egrep
>>> ^X-Rate
>>> X-RateLimit-Limit: 60
>>> X-RateLimit-Remaining: 51
>>> X-RateLimit-Reset: 1413590269
>>>
>>> (yes, that is the exact url that they recommended on the github site lol)
>>>
>>> so, earlier today, we had a spark build fail w/a git timeout at 10:57am,
>>> but there were only ~7 builds run that hour, so that points to us NOT
>>> hitting the rate limit... at least for this fail. whee!
>>>
>>> is it beer-thirty yet?
>>>
>>> shane
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Fri, Oct 17, 2014 at 4:52 PM, Nicholas Chammas <
>>> nicholas.cham...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Wow, thanks for this deep dive Shane. Is there a way to check if we are
>>>> getting hit by rate limiting directly, or do we need to contact GitHub
>>>> for that?
>>>>
>>>> 2014년 10월 17일 금요일, shane knapp<skn...@berkeley.edu>님이 작성한 메시지:
>>>>
>>>> quick update:
>>>>>
>>>>> here are some stats i scraped over the past week of ALL pull request
>>>>> builder projects and timeout failures. due to the large number of spark
>>>>> ghprb jobs, i don't have great records earlier than oct 7th. the data
>>>>> is
>>>>> current up until ~230pm today:
>>>>>
>>>>> spark and new spark ghprb total builds vs git fetch timeouts:
>>>>> $ for x in 10-{09..17}; do passed=$(grep $x SORTED.passed | grep -i
>>>>> spark | wc -l); failed=$(grep $x SORTED | grep -i spark | wc -l); let
>>>>> total=passed+failed; fail_percent=$(echo "scale=2; $failed/$total" | bc
>>>>> |
>>>>> sed "s/^\.//g"); line="$x -- total builds: $total\tp/f:
>>>>> $passed/$failed\tfail%: $fail_percent%"; echo -e $line; done
>>>>> 10-09 -- total builds: 140 p/f: 92/48 fail%: 34%
>>>>> 10-10 -- total builds: 65 p/f: 59/6 fail%: 09%
>>>>> 10-11 -- total builds: 29 p/f: 29/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-12 -- total builds: 24 p/f: 21/3 fail%: 12%
>>>>> 10-13 -- total builds: 39 p/f: 35/4 fail%: 10%
>>>>> 10-14 -- total builds: 7 p/f: 5/2 fail%: 28%
>>>>> 10-15 -- total builds: 37 p/f: 34/3 fail%: 08%
>>>>> 10-16 -- total builds: 71 p/f: 59/12 fail%: 16%
>>>>> 10-17 -- total builds: 26 p/f: 20/6 fail%: 23%
>>>>>
>>>>> all other ghprb builds vs git fetch timeouts:
>>>>> $ for x in 10-{09..17}; do passed=$(grep $x SORTED.passed | grep -vi
>>>>> spark | wc -l); failed=$(grep $x SORTED | grep -vi spark | wc -l); let
>>>>> total=passed+failed; fail_percent=$(echo "scale=2; $failed/$total" | bc
>>>>> |
>>>>> sed "s/^\.//g"); line="$x -- total builds: $total\tp/f:
>>>>> $passed/$failed\tfail%: $fail_percent%"; echo -e $line; done
>>>>> 10-09 -- total builds: 16 p/f: 16/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-10 -- total builds: 46 p/f: 40/6 fail%: 13%
>>>>> 10-11 -- total builds: 4 p/f: 4/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-12 -- total builds: 2 p/f: 2/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-13 -- total builds: 2 p/f: 2/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-14 -- total builds: 10 p/f: 10/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-15 -- total builds: 5 p/f: 5/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-16 -- total builds: 5 p/f: 5/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>> 10-17 -- total builds: 0 p/f: 0/0 fail%: 0%
>>>>>
>>>>> note: the 15th was the day i rolled back to the earlier version of the
>>>>> git plugin. it doesn't seem to have helped much, so i'll probably bring
>>>>> us
>>>>> back up to the latest version soon.
>>>>> also note: rocking some floating point math on the CLI! ;)
>>>>>
>>>>> i also compared the distribution of git timeout failures vs time of
>>>>> day,
>>>>> and there appears to be no correlation. the failures are pretty evenly
>>>>> distributed over each hour of the day.
>>>>>
>>>>> we could be hitting the rate limit due to the ghprb hitting github a
>>>>> couple of times for each build, but we're averaging ~10-20 builds per
>>>>> hour
>>>>> (a build hits github 2-4 times, from what i can tell). i'll have to
>>>>> look
>>>>> more in to this on monday, but suffice to say we may need to move from
>>>>> unauthorized https fetches to authorized requests. this means
>>>>> retrofitting
>>>>> all of our jobs. yay! fun! :)
>>>>>
>>>>> another option is to have local mirrors of all of the repos. the
>>>>> problem w/this is that there might be a window where changes haven't
>>>>> made
>>>>> it to the local mirror and tests run against it. more fun stuff to
>>>>> think
>>>>> about...
>>>>>
>>>>> now that i have some stats, and a list of all of the times/dates of the
>>>>> failures, i will be drafting my email to github and firing that off
>>>>> later
>>>>> today or first thing monday.
>>>>>
>>>>> have a great weekend everyone!
>>>>>
>>>>> shane, who spent way too much time on the CLI and is ready for some
>>>>> beer.
>>>>>
>>>>> On Thu, Oct 16, 2014 at 1:04 PM, Nicholas Chammas <
>>>>> nicholas.cham...@gmail.com> wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> On Thu, Oct 16, 2014 at 3:55 PM, shane knapp <skn...@berkeley.edu>
>>>>>> wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>> i really, truly hate non-deterministic failures.
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Amen bruddah.
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>
>
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