Continuous Integration
Sentry uses a variety of continuous integration services to help ensure we don't accidentally break the application.
GitHub Actions
GitHub actions is our primary CI system and runs our tests on every pull request and on merges to master. It is required that tests pass before changes can be merged.
Freight
Freight is how we deploy our applications to staging & production.
Reverting / Rolling Back After a Bad Deploy
If you've deployed something bad, you'll need to do the following:
- Deploy the most recently known good commit that succeeded ASAP. Keep an eye on this as deploys MUST finish, otherwise it's possible some web machines will still be stuck on the bad deploy's code.
- Inform #team-engineering that you're rolling back a bad deploy, and that no one should deploy getsentry master until the issue is resolved.
- Fix the issue, and get it merged into master.
- Deploy the fix, and verify that the issue has indeed been fixed.
- Inform #team-engineering that it is safe to deploy getsentry again.
Docker images
We use Google Cloud Build to build our Docker containers. Every single commit (including from PRs) gets built, tested and becomes available at us.gcr.io/sentryio/sentry:<sha>
with no retention guarantees. Every push to master
gets built, tested and pushed to Docker Hub permanently. You can set SENTRY_IMAGE
to the following, when working with getsentry/self-hosted:
getsentry/sentry:<sha>
,getsentry/sentry:<short_sha>
, orgetsentry/sentry:latest
to pull from a commit in getsentry/sentrymaster
us.gcr.io/sentryio/sentry:<sha>
to pull from a commit in any other branch or PR
CI workflow for testing changes with getsentry
See Workflow.
Troubleshooting CI
You might also be interested in troubleshooting the dev environment.
Problem:
When pushing your build to staging and you it fails the Ensure test image
step on Travis.
Solution:
You probably forgot to push your branch on Sentry to GitHub.
Old Systems
For historical reference, we used to use Travis and Percy which have been replaced by GitHub actions and a GitHub action respectively.