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RelEng Retrospective - Q1 2015

RelEng had a great start to 2015. We hit some major milestones on projects like Balrog and were able to turn off some old legacy systems, which is always an extremely satisfying thing to do!

We also made some exciting new changes to the underlying infrastructure, got some projects off the drawing board and into production, and drastically reduced our test load!

Firefox updates

Balrog

balrog

All Firefox update queries are now being served by Balrog! Earlier this year, we switched all Firefox update queries off of the old update server, aus3.mozilla.org, to the new update server, codenamed Balrog.

Already, Balrog has enabled us to be much more flexible in handling updates than the previous system. As an example, in bug 1150021, the About Firefox dialog was broken in the Beta version of Firefox 38 for users with RTL locales. Once the problem was discovered, we were able to quickly disable updates just for those users until a fix was ready. With the previous system it would have taken many hours of specialized manual work to disable the updates for just these locales, and to make sure they didn't get updates for subsequent Betas.

Once we were confident that Balrog was able to handle all previous traffic, we shut down the old update server (aus3). aus3 was also one of the last systems relying on CVS (!! I know, rite?). It's a great feeling to be one step closer to axing one more old system!

Funsize

When we started the quarter, we had an exciting new plan for generating partial updates for Firefox in a scalable way.

Then we threw out that plan and came up with an EVEN MOAR BETTER plan!

The new architecture for funsize relies on Pulse for notifications about new nightly builds that need partial updates, and uses TaskCluster for doing the generation of the partials and publishing to Balrog.

The current status of funsize is that we're using it to generate partial updates for nightly builds, but not published to the regular nightly update channel yet.

There's lots more to say here...stay tuned!

FTP & S3

Brace yourselves... ftp.mozilla.org is going away...

brace yourselves...ftp is going away

...in its current incarnation at least.

Expect to hear MUCH more about this in the coming months.

tl;dr is that we're migrating as much of the Firefox build/test/release automation to S3 as possible.

The existing machinery behind ftp.mozilla.org will be going away near the end of Q3. We have some ideas of how we're going to handle migrating existing content, as well as handling new content. You should expect that you'll still be able to access nightly and CI Firefox builds, but you may need to adjust your scripts or links to do so.

Currently we have most builds and tests doing their transfers to/from S3 via the task cluster index in addition to doing parallel uploads to ftp.mozilla.org. We're aiming to shut off most uploads to ftp this quarter.

Please let us know if you have particular systems or use cases that rely on the current host or directory structure!

Release build promotion

Our new Firefox release pipeline got off the drawing board, and the initial proof-of-concept work is done.

The main idea here is to take an existing build based on a push to mozilla-beta, and to "promote" it to a release build. So we need to generate all the l10n repacks, partner repacks, generate partial updates, publish files to CDNs, etc.

The big win here is that it cuts our time-to-release nearly in half, and also simplifies our codebase quite a bit!

Again, expect to hear more about this in the coming months.

Infrastructure

In addition to all those projects in development, we also tackled quite a few important infrastructure projects.

OSX test platform

10.10 is now the most widely used Mac platform for Firefox, and it's important to test what our users are running. We performed a rolling upgrade of our OS X testing environment, migrating from 10.8 to 10.10 while spending nearly zero capital, and with no downtime. We worked jointly with the Sheriffs and A-Team to green up all the tests, and shut coverage off on the old platform as we brought it up on the new one. We have a few 10.8 machines left riding the trains that will join our 10.10 pool with the release of ESR 38.1.

Got Windows builds in AWS

We saw the first successful builds of Firefox for Windows in AWS this quarter as well! This paves the way for greater flexibility, on-demand burst capacity, faster developer prototyping, and disaster recovery and resiliency for windows Firefox builds. We'll be working on making these virtualized instances more performant and being able to do large-scale automation before we roll them out into production.

Puppet on windows

RelEng uses puppet to manage our Linux and OS X infrastructure. Presently, we use a very different tool chain, Active Directory and Group Policy Object, to manage our Windows infrastructure. This quarter we deployed a prototype Windows build machine which is managed with puppet instead. Our goal here is to increase visibility and hackability of our Windows infrastructure. A common deployment tool will also make it easier for RelEng and community to deploy new tools to our Windows machines.

New Tooltool Features

We've redesigned and deployed a new version of tooltool, the content-addressable store for large binary files used in build and test jobs. Tooltool is now integrated with RelengAPI and uses S3 as a backing store. This gives us scalability and a more flexible permissioning model that, in addition to serving public files, will allow the same access outside the releng network as inside. That means that developers as well as external automation like TaskCluster can use the service just like Buildbot jobs. The new implementation also boasts a much simpler HTTP-based upload mechanism that will enable easier use of the service.

Centralized POSIX System Logging

Using syslogd/rsyslogd and Papertrail, we've set up centralized system logging for all our POSIX infrastructure. Now that all our system logs are going to one location and we can see trends across multiple machines, we've been able to quickly identify and fix a number of previously hard-to-discover bugs. We're planning on adding additional logs (like Windows system logs) so we can do even greater correlation. We're also in the process of adding more automated detection and notification of some easily recognizable problems.

Security work

Q1 included some significant effort to avoid serious security exploits like GHOST, escalation of privilege bugs in the Linux kernel, etc. We manage 14 different operating systems, some of which are fairly esoteric and/or no longer supported by the vendor, and we worked to backport some code and patches to some platforms while upgrading others entirely. Because of the way our infrastructure is architected, we were able to do this with minimal downtime or impact to developers.

API to manage AWS workers

As part of our ongoing effort to automate the loaning of releng machines when required, we created an API layer to facilitate the creation and loan of AWS resources, which was previously, and perhaps ironically, one of the bigger time-sinks for buildduty when loaning machines.

Cross-platform worker for task cluster

Release engineering is in the process of migrating from our stalwart, buildbot-driven infrastructure, to a newer, more purpose-built solution in taskcluster. Many FirefoxOS jobs have already migrated, but those all conveniently run on Linux. In order to support the entire range of release engineering jobs, we need support for Mac and Windows as well. In Q1, we created what we call a "generic worker," essentially a base class that allows us to extend taskcluster job support to non-Linux operating systems.

Testing

Last, but not least, we deployed initial support for SETA, the search for extraneous test automation!

This means we've stopped running all tests on all builds. Instead, we use historical data to determine which tests to run that have been catching the most regressions. Other tests are run less frequently.