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rageshake/README.md
Tulir Asokan 065b2b9a04
Add support for creating GitLab issues (#37)
Signed-off-by: Tulir Asokan <tulir@maunium.net>
2021-08-10 18:04:58 +01:00

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# rageshake [![Build status](https://badge.buildkite.com/76a4362a20b12dcd589f9308a905ffcc537278b9c363c0b5f1.svg?branch=master)](https://buildkite.com/matrix-dot-org/rageshake)
Web service which collects and serves bug reports.
rageshake requires Go version 1.15 or later.
To run it, do:
```
go build
./bin/rageshake
```
Optional parameters:
* `-config <path>`: The path to a YAML config file; see
[rageshake.sample.yaml](rageshake.sample.yaml) for more information.
* `-listen <address>`: TCP network address to listen for HTTP requests
on. Example: `:9110`.
## HTTP endpoints
The following HTTP endpoints are exposed:
### GET `/api/listing/`
Serves submitted bug reports. Protected by basic HTTP auth using the
username/password provided in the environment. A browsable list, collated by
report submission date and time.
### POST `/api/submit`
Submission endpoint: this is where applications should send their reports.
The body of the request should be a multipart form-data submission, with the
following form field names. (For backwards compatibility, it can also be a JSON
object, but multipart is preferred as it allows more efficient transfer of the
logs.)
* `text`: A textual description of the problem. Included in the
`details.log.gz` file.
* `user_agent`: Application user-agent. Included in the `details.log.gz` file.
* `app`: Identifier for the application (eg 'riot-web'). Should correspond to a
mapping configured in the configuration file for github issue reporting to
work.
* `version`: Application version. Included in the `details.log.gz` file.
* `label`: Label to attach to the github issue, and include in the details file.
If using the JSON upload encoding, this should be encoded as a `labels` field,
whose value should be a list of strings.
* `log`: a log file, with lines separated by newline characters. Multiple log
files can be included by including several `log` parts.
If the log is uploaded with a filename `name.ext`, where `name` contains only
alphanumerics, `.`, `-` or `_`, and `ext` is one of `log` or `txt`, then the
file saved to disk is based on that. Otherwise, a suitable name is
constructed.
If using the JSON upload encoding, the request object should instead include
a single `logs` field, which is an array of objects with the following
fields:
* `id`: textual identifier for the logs. Used as the filename, as above.
* `lines`: log data. Newlines should be encoded as `\n`, as normal in JSON).
* `compressed-log`: a gzipped logfile. Decompressed and then treated the same as
`log`.
Compressed logs are not supported for the JSON upload encoding.
* `file`: an arbitrary file to attach to the report. Saved as-is to disk, and
a link is added to the github issue. The filename must be in the format
`name.ext`, where `name` contains only alphanumerics, `-` or `_`, and `ext`
is one of `jpg`, `png`, or `txt`.
Not supported for the JSON upload encoding.
* Any other form field names are interpreted as arbitrary name/value strings to
include in the `details.log.gz` file.
If using the JSON upload encoding, this additional metadata should insted be
encoded as a `data` field, whose value should be a JSON map. (Note that the
values must be strings; numbers, objects and arrays will be rejected.)
The response (if successful) will be a JSON object with the following fields:
* `report_url`: A URL where the user can track their bug report. Omitted if
issue submission was disabled.
## Notifications
You can get notifications when a new rageshake arrives on the server.
Currently this tool supports pushing notifications as GitHub issues in a repo,
through a Slack webhook or by email, cf sample config file for how to
configure them.