Using Prow at Scale
If you are maintaining a Prow instance that will need to scale to handle a large load, consider using the following best practices, features, and additional tools. You may also be interested in “Getting more out of Prow”.
Features and Tools
Separate Build Cluster(s)
It is frequently not secure to run all ProwJobs in the same cluster that runs
Prow’s service components (hook
, plank
, etc.). In particular, ProwJobs that
execute presubmit tests for OSS projects should typically be isolated from
Prow’s microservices. This isolation prevents a malicious PR author from
modifying the presubmit test to do something evil like breaking out of the
container and stealing secrets that live in the cluster or DOSing a
cluster-internal Prow component service.
Any number of build clusters can be used in order to isolate specific jobs from each other, improve scalability, or allow tenants to provide and manage their own execution environments. Instructions for configuring jobs to run in different clusters can be found here.
Production Prow instances should run most ProwJobs in a build cluster separate from the Prow service cluster (the cluster where the Prow components live). Any ‘trusted’ jobs that require secrets or services that should not be exposed to presubmit jobs, such as publishing or deployment jobs, should run in a different cluster from the rest of the ‘untrusted’ jobs. It is common for the Prow service cluster to be reused as a build cluster for these ‘trusted’ jobs since they are typically fast and few in number so running and managing an additional build cluster would be wasteful.
Pull Request Merge Automation
Pull Requests can be automatically merged when they satisfy configured merge
requirements using tide
. Automating merge is critical for
large projects where allowing human to click the merge button is either a bottle
neck, a security concern, or both. Tide ensures that PRs have been tested
against the most recent base branch commit before merging (retesting if
necessary), and automatically groups multiple PRs to be tested and merged as a
batch whenever possible.
Config File Split
If your Prow config starts to grow too large, consider splitting the job config
files into more specific and easily reviewed files. This is particularly useful
for delegating ownership of ProwJob config to different users or groups via the
use of OWNERS files with the approve
plugin and
Tide
. It is common to enforce custom config policies for
jobs defined in certain files or directories via presubmit unit tests. This
makes it safe for Prow admins to delegate job config ownership by enforcing
limitations on what can be configured and by whom. For example, we use a golang
unit test in a presubmit job to validate that all jobs that are configured to
run in the test-infra-trusted
build cluster are defined in a file controlled
by test-infra oncall.
(examples)
To use this pattern simply aggregate all job configs in a directory of files
with unique base names and supply the directory path to components via
--job-config-path
. The updateconfig
plugin and
config-bootstrapper
support this pattern by
allowing multiple files to be loaded into a single configmap under different
keys (different files once mounted to a container).
GitHub API Cache
ghproxy
is a reverse proxy HTTP cache optimized for the GitHub API.
It takes advantage of how GitHub responds to E-tags in order to fulfill repeated
requests without spending additional API tokens. Check out this tool if you find
that your GitHub bot is consuming or approaching its token limit. Similarly,
re-deploying Prow components may trigger a large amount of API requests to GitHub
which may trip the abuse detection mechanisms. At scale, the tide
deployment
itself may create enough API throughput to trigger this on its own. Deploying the
GitHub proxy cache is critical to ensuring that Prow does not trip this mechanism
when operating at scale.
Config Driven GitHub Org Management
Managing org and repo scoped settings across multiple orgs and repos is not easy with the mechanisms that GitHub provides. Only a few people have access to the settings, they must be manually synced between repos, and they can easily become inconsistent. These problems grow with number of orgs/repos and with the number of contributors. We have a few tools that automate this kind of administration and integrate well with Prow:
label_sync
is a tool that synchronizes labels and their metadata across multiple orgs and repos in order to provide a consistent user experience in a multi-repo project.branchprotector
is a Prow component that synchronizes GitHub branch requirements and restrictions based on config.peribolos
is a tool that synchronizes org settings, teams, and memberships based on config.
Metrics
Prow exposes some Prometheus metrics that can be used to generate graphs and alerts. If you are maintaining a Prow instance that handles important workloads you should consider using these metrics for monitoring.
Best Practices
Don’t share Prow’s GitHub bot token with other automation.
Some parts of Prow do not behave well if the GitHub bot token’s rate limit is exhausted. It is imperative to avoid this so it is a good practice to avoid using the bot token that Prow uses for any other purposes.
Working around GitHub’s limited ACLs.
GitHub provides an extremely limited access control system that makes it impossible to control granular permissions like authority to add and remove specific labels from PRs and issues. Instead, write access to the entire repo must be granted. This problem grows as projects scale and granular permissions become more important.
Much of the GitHub automation that Prow provides is designed to fill in the gaps in GitHub’s permission system. The core idea is to limit repo write access to the Prow bot (and a minimal number of repo admins) and then let Prow determine if users have the appropriate permissions before taking action on their behalf. The following is an overview of some of the automation Prow implements to work around GitHub’s limited permission system:
- Permission to trigger presubmit tests is determined based on org membership
as configured in the
triggers
plugin config section. - File ownership is described with OWNERS files and change approval is
enforced with the
approve
plugin. See the docs for details. - Org member review of the most recent version of the PR is enforced with the
lgtm
plugin. - Various other plugins manage labels, milestone, and issue state based on
/foo
style commands from authorized users. Authorization may be based on org membership, GitHub team membership, or OWNERS file membership. Tide
provides PR merge automation so that humans do not need to (and are not allowed to) merge PRs. Without Tide, a user either has no permission to merge or they have repo write access which grants permission to merge any PR in the entire repo. Additionally, Tide enforces merge requirements like required and forbidden labels that humans may not respect if they are allowed to manually click the merge button.
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Glad to hear it! Please tell us how we can improve.
Sorry to hear that. Please tell us how we can improve.