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gitea/services/webhook/telegram.go

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// Copyright 2019 The Gitea Authors. All rights reserved.
// SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
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package webhook
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import (
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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"context"
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"fmt"
"html"
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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"net/http"
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"strings"
webhook_model "code.gitea.io/gitea/models/webhook"
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"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/git"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/json"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/log"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/markup"
api "code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/structs"
"code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/util"
webhook_module "code.gitea.io/gitea/modules/webhook"
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)
type (
// TelegramPayload represents
TelegramPayload struct {
Message string `json:"text"`
ParseMode string `json:"parse_mode"`
DisableWebPreview bool `json:"disable_web_page_preview"`
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}
// TelegramMeta contains the telegram metadata
TelegramMeta struct {
BotToken string `json:"bot_token"`
ChatID string `json:"chat_id"`
ThreadID string `json:"thread_id"`
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}
)
// GetTelegramHook returns telegram metadata
func GetTelegramHook(w *webhook_model.Webhook) *TelegramMeta {
s := &TelegramMeta{}
if err := json.Unmarshal([]byte(w.Meta), s); err != nil {
log.Error("webhook.GetTelegramHook(%d): %v", w.ID, err)
}
return s
}
type telegramConvertor struct{}
// Create implements PayloadConvertor Create method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Create(p *api.CreatePayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
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// created tag/branch
Use the type RefName for all the needed places and fix pull mirror sync bugs (#24634) This PR replaces all string refName as a type `git.RefName` to make the code more maintainable. Fix #15367 Replaces #23070 It also fixed a bug that tags are not sync because `git remote --prune origin` will not remove local tags if remote removed. We in fact should use `git fetch --prune --tags origin` but not `git remote update origin` to do the sync. Some answer from ChatGPT as ref. > If the git fetch --prune --tags command is not working as expected, there could be a few reasons why. Here are a few things to check: > >Make sure that you have the latest version of Git installed on your system. You can check the version by running git --version in your terminal. If you have an outdated version, try updating Git and see if that resolves the issue. > >Check that your Git repository is properly configured to track the remote repository's tags. You can check this by running git config --get-all remote.origin.fetch and verifying that it includes +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*. If it does not, you can add it by running git config --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*". > >Verify that the tags you are trying to prune actually exist on the remote repository. You can do this by running git ls-remote --tags origin to list all the tags on the remote repository. > >Check if any local tags have been created that match the names of tags on the remote repository. If so, these local tags may be preventing the git fetch --prune --tags command from working properly. You can delete local tags using the git tag -d command. --------- Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
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refName := git.RefName(p.Ref).ShortName()
title := fmt.Sprintf(`[%s] %s %s created`,
htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL, p.Repo.FullName),
html.EscapeString(p.RefType),
htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL+"/src/"+util.PathEscapeSegments(refName), refName),
)
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return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title), nil
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}
// Delete implements PayloadConvertor Delete method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Delete(p *api.DeletePayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
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// created tag/branch
Use the type RefName for all the needed places and fix pull mirror sync bugs (#24634) This PR replaces all string refName as a type `git.RefName` to make the code more maintainable. Fix #15367 Replaces #23070 It also fixed a bug that tags are not sync because `git remote --prune origin` will not remove local tags if remote removed. We in fact should use `git fetch --prune --tags origin` but not `git remote update origin` to do the sync. Some answer from ChatGPT as ref. > If the git fetch --prune --tags command is not working as expected, there could be a few reasons why. Here are a few things to check: > >Make sure that you have the latest version of Git installed on your system. You can check the version by running git --version in your terminal. If you have an outdated version, try updating Git and see if that resolves the issue. > >Check that your Git repository is properly configured to track the remote repository's tags. You can check this by running git config --get-all remote.origin.fetch and verifying that it includes +refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*. If it does not, you can add it by running git config --add remote.origin.fetch "+refs/tags/*:refs/tags/*". > >Verify that the tags you are trying to prune actually exist on the remote repository. You can do this by running git ls-remote --tags origin to list all the tags on the remote repository. > >Check if any local tags have been created that match the names of tags on the remote repository. If so, these local tags may be preventing the git fetch --prune --tags command from working properly. You can delete local tags using the git tag -d command. --------- Co-authored-by: delvh <dev.lh@web.de>
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refName := git.RefName(p.Ref).ShortName()
title := fmt.Sprintf(`[%s] %s %s deleted`,
htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL, p.Repo.FullName),
html.EscapeString(p.RefType),
htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL+"/src/"+util.PathEscapeSegments(refName), refName),
)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title), nil
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}
// Fork implements PayloadConvertor Fork method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Fork(p *api.ForkPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
title := fmt.Sprintf(`%s is forked to %s`, html.EscapeString(p.Forkee.FullName), htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL, p.Repo.FullName))
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title), nil
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}
// Push implements PayloadConvertor Push method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Push(p *api.PushPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
branchName := git.RefName(p.Ref).ShortName()
var titleLink, commitDesc string
if p.TotalCommits == 1 {
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commitDesc = "1 new commit"
titleLink = p.Commits[0].URL
} else {
commitDesc = fmt.Sprintf("%d new commits", p.TotalCommits)
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titleLink = p.CompareURL
}
if titleLink == "" {
titleLink = p.Repo.HTMLURL + "/src/" + util.PathEscapeSegments(branchName)
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}
title := fmt.Sprintf(`[%s:%s] %s`, htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repo.HTMLURL, p.Repo.FullName), htmlLinkFormatter(titleLink, branchName), html.EscapeString(commitDesc))
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var htmlCommits string
for _, commit := range p.Commits {
htmlCommits += fmt.Sprintf("\n[%s] %s", htmlLinkFormatter(commit.URL, commit.ID[:7]), html.EscapeString(strings.TrimRight(commit.Message, "\r\n")))
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if commit.Author != nil {
htmlCommits += " - " + html.EscapeString(commit.Author.Name)
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}
}
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title + htmlCommits), nil
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}
// Issue implements PayloadConvertor Issue method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Issue(p *api.IssuePayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
text, _, extraMarkdown, _ := getIssuesPayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
// TODO: at the moment the markdown can't be rendered easily because it has context-aware links (eg: attachments)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text + "\n\n" + html.EscapeString(extraMarkdown)), nil
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}
// IssueComment implements PayloadConvertor IssueComment method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) IssueComment(p *api.IssueCommentPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
text, _, _ := getIssueCommentPayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text + "\n" + html.EscapeString(p.Comment.Body)), nil
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}
// PullRequest implements PayloadConvertor PullRequest method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) PullRequest(p *api.PullRequestPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
text, _, extraMarkdown, _ := getPullRequestPayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text + "\n" + html.EscapeString(extraMarkdown)), nil
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}
// Review implements PayloadConvertor Review method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Review(p *api.PullRequestPayload, event webhook_module.HookEventType) (TelegramPayload, error) {
var text, extraMarkdown string
switch p.Action {
case api.HookIssueReviewed:
action, err := parseHookPullRequestEventType(event)
if err != nil {
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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return TelegramPayload{}, err
}
text = fmt.Sprintf("[%s] Pull request review %s: #%d %s", html.EscapeString(p.Repository.FullName), html.EscapeString(action), p.Index, html.EscapeString(p.PullRequest.Title))
extraMarkdown = p.Review.Content
}
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text + "\n" + html.EscapeString(extraMarkdown)), nil
}
// Repository implements PayloadConvertor Repository method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Repository(p *api.RepositoryPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
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var title string
switch p.Action {
case api.HookRepoCreated:
title = fmt.Sprintf(`[%s] Repository created`, htmlLinkFormatter(p.Repository.HTMLURL, p.Repository.FullName))
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title), nil
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case api.HookRepoDeleted:
title = fmt.Sprintf("[%s] Repository deleted", html.EscapeString(p.Repository.FullName))
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(title), nil
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}
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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return TelegramPayload{}, nil
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}
Webhook for Wiki changes (#20219) Add support for triggering webhook notifications on wiki changes. This PR contains frontend and backend for webhook notifications on wiki actions (create a new page, rename a page, edit a page and delete a page). The frontend got a new checkbox under the Custom Event -> Repository Events section. There is only one checkbox for create/edit/rename/delete actions, because it makes no sense to separate it and others like releases or packages follow the same schema. ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018803-26851196-831f-4fde-9a4c-9e639b0e0d6b.png) The actions itself are separated, so that different notifications will be executed (with the "action" field). All the webhook receivers implement the new interface method (Wiki) and the corresponding tests. When implementing this, I encounter a little bug on editing a wiki page. Creating and editing a wiki page is technically the same action and will be handled by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. But the function need to know if it is a new wiki page or just a change. This distinction is done by the ```action``` parameter, but this will not be sent by the frontend (on form submit). This PR will fix this by adding the ```action``` parameter with the values ```_new``` or ```_edit```, which will be used by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. I've done integration tests with matrix and gitea (http). ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018795-eb5cdc01-9ba3-483e-a6b7-ed0e313a71fb.png) Fix #16457 Signed-off-by: Aaron Fischer <mail@aaron-fischer.net>
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// Wiki implements PayloadConvertor Wiki method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Wiki(p *api.WikiPayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
Webhook for Wiki changes (#20219) Add support for triggering webhook notifications on wiki changes. This PR contains frontend and backend for webhook notifications on wiki actions (create a new page, rename a page, edit a page and delete a page). The frontend got a new checkbox under the Custom Event -> Repository Events section. There is only one checkbox for create/edit/rename/delete actions, because it makes no sense to separate it and others like releases or packages follow the same schema. ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018803-26851196-831f-4fde-9a4c-9e639b0e0d6b.png) The actions itself are separated, so that different notifications will be executed (with the "action" field). All the webhook receivers implement the new interface method (Wiki) and the corresponding tests. When implementing this, I encounter a little bug on editing a wiki page. Creating and editing a wiki page is technically the same action and will be handled by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. But the function need to know if it is a new wiki page or just a change. This distinction is done by the ```action``` parameter, but this will not be sent by the frontend (on form submit). This PR will fix this by adding the ```action``` parameter with the values ```_new``` or ```_edit```, which will be used by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. I've done integration tests with matrix and gitea (http). ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018795-eb5cdc01-9ba3-483e-a6b7-ed0e313a71fb.png) Fix #16457 Signed-off-by: Aaron Fischer <mail@aaron-fischer.net>
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text, _, _ := getWikiPayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text), nil
Webhook for Wiki changes (#20219) Add support for triggering webhook notifications on wiki changes. This PR contains frontend and backend for webhook notifications on wiki actions (create a new page, rename a page, edit a page and delete a page). The frontend got a new checkbox under the Custom Event -> Repository Events section. There is only one checkbox for create/edit/rename/delete actions, because it makes no sense to separate it and others like releases or packages follow the same schema. ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018803-26851196-831f-4fde-9a4c-9e639b0e0d6b.png) The actions itself are separated, so that different notifications will be executed (with the "action" field). All the webhook receivers implement the new interface method (Wiki) and the corresponding tests. When implementing this, I encounter a little bug on editing a wiki page. Creating and editing a wiki page is technically the same action and will be handled by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. But the function need to know if it is a new wiki page or just a change. This distinction is done by the ```action``` parameter, but this will not be sent by the frontend (on form submit). This PR will fix this by adding the ```action``` parameter with the values ```_new``` or ```_edit```, which will be used by the ```updateWikiPage``` function. I've done integration tests with matrix and gitea (http). ![image](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/121972/177018795-eb5cdc01-9ba3-483e-a6b7-ed0e313a71fb.png) Fix #16457 Signed-off-by: Aaron Fischer <mail@aaron-fischer.net>
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}
// Release implements PayloadConvertor Release method
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Release(p *api.ReleasePayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
text, _ := getReleasePayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
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return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text), nil
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}
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func (t telegramConvertor) Package(p *api.PackagePayload) (TelegramPayload, error) {
text, _ := getPackagePayloadInfo(p, htmlLinkFormatter, true)
return createTelegramPayloadHTML(text), nil
}
func createTelegramPayloadHTML(msgHTML string) TelegramPayload {
// https://core.telegram.org/bots/api#formatting-options
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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return TelegramPayload{
Message: strings.TrimSpace(markup.Sanitize(msgHTML)),
ParseMode: "HTML",
DisableWebPreview: true,
}
}
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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func newTelegramRequest(_ context.Context, w *webhook_model.Webhook, t *webhook_model.HookTask) (*http.Request, []byte, error) {
var pc payloadConvertor[TelegramPayload] = telegramConvertor{}
return newJSONRequest(pc, w, t, true)
Store webhook event in database (#29145) Refactor the webhook logic, to have the type-dependent processing happen only in one place. --- ## Current webhook flow 1. An event happens 2. It is pre-processed (depending on the webhook type) and its body is added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, some more logic (depending on the webhook type as well) is applied to make an HTTP request This means that webhook-type dependant logic is needed in step 2 and 3. This is cumbersome and brittle to maintain. Updated webhook flow with this PR: 1. An event happens 2. It is stored as-is and added to a task queue 3. When the task is processed, the event is processed (depending on the webhook type) to make an HTTP request So the only webhook-type dependent logic happens in one place (step 3) which should be much more robust. ## Consequences of the refactor - the raw event must be stored in the hooktask (until now, the pre-processed body was stored) - to ensure that previous hooktasks are correctly sent, a `payload_version` is added (version 1: the body has already been pre-process / version 2: the body is the raw event) So future webhook additions will only have to deal with creating an http.Request based on the raw event (no need to adjust the code in multiple places, like currently). Moreover since this processing happens when fetching from the task queue, it ensures that the queuing of new events (upon a `git push` for instance) does not get slowed down by a slow webhook. As a concrete example, the PR #19307 for custom webhooks, should be substantially smaller: - no need to change `services/webhook/deliver.go` - minimal change in `services/webhook/webhook.go` (add the new webhook to the map) - no need to change all the individual webhook files (since with this refactor the `*webhook_model.Webhook` is provided as argument)
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}