+++ /dev/null
-#!/usr/bin/perl -w
-#
-# ciabot -- Mail a CVS log message to a given address, for the purposes of CIA
-#
-# Loosely based on cvslog by Russ Allbery <rra@stanford.edu>
-# Copyright 1998 Board of Trustees, Leland Stanford Jr. University
-#
-# Copyright 2001, 2003, 2004 Petr Baudis <pasky@ucw.cz>
-#
-# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
-# the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2, as published by the
-# Free Software Foundation.
-#
-# The master location of this file is
-# http://pasky.or.cz/~pasky/dev/cvs/ciabot.pl.
-#
-# This version has been modified a bit, and is available on CIA's web site:
-# http://cia.navi.cx/clients/cvs/ciabot_cvs.pl
-#
-# This program is designed to run from the loginfo CVS administration file. It
-# takes a log message, massaging it and mailing it to the address given below.
-#
-# Its record in the loginfo file should look like:
-#
-# ALL /usr/bin/perl $CVSROOT/CVSROOT/ciabot_cvs.pl %{,,,s} $USER project from_email dest_email ignore_regexp
-#
-# IMPORTANT: The %{,,,s} in loginfo is new, and is required for proper operation.
-#
-# Make sure that you add the script to 'checkoutlist' before
-# committing it. You may need to change /usr/bin/perl to point to your
-# system's perl binary.
-#
-# Note that the last four parameters are optional, you can alternatively
-# change the defaults below in the configuration section.
-#
-
-use strict;
-use vars qw ($project $from_email $dest_email $rpc_uri $sendmail $sync_delay
- $xml_rpc $ignore_regexp $alt_local_message_target);
-
-
-### Configuration
-
-# Project name (as known to CIA).
-#
-# NOTE: This shouldn't be a long description of your project. Ideally
-# it is a short identifier with no spaces, punctuation, or
-# unnecessary capitalization. This will be used in URLs related
-# to your project, as an internal identifier, and in IRC messages.
-# If you want a longer name shown for your project on the web
-# interface, please use the "title" metadata key rather than
-# putting that here.
-#
-$project = 'phpeclipse';
-
-# The from address in generated mails.
-$from_email = 'bananeweizen@sourceforge.net';
-
-# Mail all reports to this address.
-$dest_email = 'cia@cia.navi.cx';
-
-# If using XML-RPC, connect to this URI.
-$rpc_uri = 'http://cia.navi.cx/RPC2';
-
-# Path to your USCD sendmail compatible binary (your mailer daemon created this
-# program somewhere).
-$sendmail = '/usr/sbin/sendmail';
-
-# Number of seconds to wait for possible concurrent instances. CVS calls up
-# this script for each involved directory separately and this is the sync
-# delay. 5s looks as a safe value, but feel free to increase if you are running
-# this on a slower (or overloaded) machine or if you have really a lot of
-# directories.
-# Increasing this could be a very good idea if you're on Sourceforge ;)
-$sync_delay = 5;
-
-# This script can communicate with CIA either by mail or by an XML-RPC
-# interface. The XML-RPC interface is faster and more efficient, however you
-# need to have RPC::XML perl module installed, and some large CVS hosting sites
-# (like Savannah or Sourceforge) might not allow outgoing HTTP connections
-# while they allow outgoing mail. Also, this script will hang and eventually
-# not deliver the event at all if CIA server happens to be down, which is
-# unfortunately not an uncommon condition.
-$xml_rpc = 0;
-
-# You can make this bot to totally ignore events concerning the objects
-# specified below. Each object is composed of <module>/<path>/<filename>,
-# therefore file Manifest in root directory of module gentoo will be called
-# "gentoo/Manifest", while file src/bfu/inphist.c of module elinks will be
-# called "elinks/src/bfu/inphist.c". Easy, isn't it?
-#
-# This variable should contain regexp, against which will each object be
-# checked, and if the regexp is matched, the file is ignored. Therefore ie. to
-# ignore all changes in the two files above and everything concerning module
-# 'admin', use:
-#
-# $ignore_regexp = "^(gentoo/Manifest|elinks/src/bfu/inphist.c|admin/)";
-$ignore_regexp = "";
-
-# It can be useful to also grab the generated XML message by some other
-# programs and ie. autogenerate some content based on it. Here you can specify
-# a file to which it will be appended.
-$alt_local_message_target = "";
-
-
-
-
-### The code itself
-
-use vars qw ($user $module $tag @files $logmsg $message);
-
-my @dir; # This array stores all the affected directories
-my @dirfiles; # This array is mapped to the @dir array and contains files
- # affected in each directory
-
-
-# A nice nonprinting character we can use as a separator relatively safely.
-# The commas in loginfo above give us 4 commas and a space between file
-# names given to us on the command line. This is the separator used internally.
-# Now we can handle filenames containing spaces, and probably anything except
-# strings of 4 commas or the ASCII bell character.
-#
-# This was inspired by the suggestion in:
-# http://mail.gnu.org/archive/html/info-cvs/2003-04/msg00267.html
-#
-$" = "\7";
-
-### Input data loading
-
-
-# These arguments are from %s; first the relative path in the repository
-# and then the list of files modified.
-
-@files = split (' ,,,', ($ARGV[0] or ''));
-$dir[0] = shift @files or die "$0: no directory specified\n";
-$dirfiles[0] = "@files" or die "$0: no files specified\n";
-
-
-# Guess module name.
-
-$module = $dir[0]; $module =~ s#/.*##;
-
-
-# Figure out who is doing the update.
-
-$user = $ARGV[1];
-
-
-# Use the optional parameters, if supplied.
-
-$project = $ARGV[2] if $ARGV[2];
-$from_email = $ARGV[3] if $ARGV[3];
-$dest_email = $ARGV[4] if $ARGV[4];
-$ignore_regexp = $ARGV[5] if $ARGV[5];
-
-
-# Parse stdin (what's interesting is the tag and log message)
-
-while (<STDIN>) {
- $tag = $1 if /^\s*Tag: ([a-zA-Z0-9_-]+)/;
- last if /^Log Message/;
-}
-
-$logmsg = "";
-while (<STDIN>) {
- next unless ($_ and $_ ne "\n" and $_ ne "\r\n");
- s/&/&/g;
- s/</</g;
- s/>/>/g;
- $logmsg .= $_;
-}
-
-### Remove to-be-ignored files
-
-$dirfiles[0] = join (' ',
- grep {
- my $f = "$dir[0]/$_";
- $f !~ m/$ignore_regexp/;
- } split (/\s+/, $dirfiles[0])
-) if ($ignore_regexp);
-exit unless $dirfiles[0];
-
-
-
-### Sync between the multiple instances potentially being ran simultanously
-
-my $sum; # _VERY_ simple hash of the log message. It is really weak, but I'm
- # lazy and it's really sorta exceptional to even get more commits
- # running simultanously anyway.
-$sum = 0;
-map { $sum += ord $_ } split(//, $logmsg);
-
-my $syncfile; # Name of the file used for syncing
-$syncfile = "/tmp/cvscia.$project.$module.$sum";
-
-
-if (-f $syncfile and -w $syncfile) {
- # The synchronization file for this file already exists, so we are not the
- # first ones. So let's just dump what we know and exit.
-
- open(FF, ">>$syncfile") or die "aieee... can't log, can't log! $syncfile blocked!";
- print FF "$dirfiles[0]!@!$dir[0]\n";
- close(FF);
- exit;
-
-} else {
- # We are the first one! Thus, we'll fork, exit the original instance, and
- # wait a bit with the new one. Then we'll grab what the others collected and
- # go on.
-
- # We don't need to care about permissions since all the instances of the one
- # commit will obviously live as the same user.
-
- # system("touch") in a different way
- open(FF, ">>$syncfile") or die "aieee... can't log, can't log! $syncfile blocked!";
- close(FF);
-
- exit if (fork);
- sleep($sync_delay);
-
- open(FF, $syncfile);
- my ($dirnum) = 1; # 0 is the one we got triggerred for
- while (<FF>) {
- chomp;
- ($dirfiles[$dirnum], $dir[$dirnum]) = split(/!@!/);
- $dirnum++;
- }
- close(FF);
-
- unlink($syncfile);
-}
-
-
-
-### Compose the mail message
-
-
-my ($VERSION) = '2.4';
-my ($URL) = 'http://cia.navi.cx/clients/cvs/ciabot_cvs.pl';
-my $ts = time;
-
-$message = <<EM
-<message>
- <generator>
- <name>CIA Perl client for CVS</name>
- <version>$VERSION</version>
- <url>$URL</url>
- </generator>
- <source>
- <project>$project</project>
- <module>$module</module>
-EM
-;
-$message .= " <branch>$tag</branch>" if ($tag);
-$message .= <<EM
- </source>
- <timestamp>
- $ts
- </timestamp>
- <body>
- <commit>
- <author>$user</author>
- <files>
-EM
-;
-
-for (my $dirnum = 0; $dirnum < @dir; $dirnum++) {
- map {
- $_ = $dir[$dirnum] . '/' . $_;
- s#^.*?/##; # weed out the module name
- s/&/&/g;
- s/</</g;
- s/>/>/g;
- $message .= " <file>$_</file>\n";
- } split($", $dirfiles[$dirnum]);
-}
-
-$message .= <<EM
- </files>
- <log>
-$logmsg
- </log>
- </commit>
- </body>
-</message>
-EM
-;
-
-
-
-### Write the message to an alt-target
-
-if ($alt_local_message_target and open (ALT, ">>$alt_local_message_target")) {
- print ALT $message;
- close ALT;
-}
-
-
-
-### Send out the XML-RPC message
-
-
-if ($xml_rpc) {
- # We gotta be careful from now on. We silence all the warnings because
- # RPC::XML code is crappy and works with undefs etc.
- $^W = 0;
- $RPC::XML::ERROR if (0); # silence perl's compile-time warning
-
- require RPC::XML;
- require RPC::XML::Client;
-
- my $rpc_client = new RPC::XML::Client $rpc_uri;
- my $rpc_request = RPC::XML::request->new('hub.deliver', $message);
- my $rpc_response = $rpc_client->send_request($rpc_request);
-
- unless (ref $rpc_response) {
- die "XML-RPC Error: $RPC::XML::ERROR\n";
- }
- exit;
-}
-
-
-
-### Send out the mail
-
-
-# Open our mail program
-
-open (MAIL, "| $sendmail -t -oi -oem") or die "Cannot execute $sendmail : " . ($?>>8);
-
-
-# The mail header
-
-print MAIL <<EOM;
-From: $from_email
-To: $dest_email
-Content-type: text/xml
-Subject: DeliverXML
-
-EOM
-
-print MAIL $message;
-
-
-# Close the mail
-
-close MAIL;
-die "$0: sendmail exit status " . ($? >> 8) . "\n" unless ($? == 0);
-
-# vi: set sw=2: