epriestley e9af4f8970 Fix an issue where Drydock followup tasks would not queue if the main task failed
Summary:
Ref T9994. This fixes the first issue discussed on that task, which is that when a merge fails after "arc land", we would not clean up all the leases properly.

Specifically, when a merge fails, we use `queueTask()` to schedule a followup task. This followup destroys the lease and frees the underlying resource.

However, the default behavior of `queueTask()` is to //not queue tasks// if the parent task fails. This is a reasonable, safe behavior that was originally introduced in D8774, where it kept us from sending too much mail if a task did "send some mail" and then failed a little later on and got retried.

Since I think the default behavior is correct, I just special cased the behavior for Drydock to make it queue even on failure. These are the only types of followup tasks we currently want to queue on main task failure.

(It's possible that future Blueprints might want some kind of more specialized behavior, where some tasks queue only on success, but we can cross that bridge when we come to it.)

Test Plan:
  - See T9994#149878 for test case setup.
  - I ran that test case again with this patch, and saw the followup task queue properly in the `--trace` log, a correspoinding update task show up in `/daemon/`, and the lease get destroyed when I ran it a moment later.

{F1029915}

Reviewers: chad

Reviewed By: chad

Maniphest Tasks: T9994

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D14818
2015-12-18 08:17:04 -08:00
2015-06-09 23:06:52 +10:00
2015-12-11 08:14:12 -08:00
2015-12-17 15:38:03 -08:00
2015-08-21 14:53:29 -07:00
2015-11-13 07:09:12 +11:00
2015-02-12 07:00:13 +11:00
2015-02-12 07:00:13 +11:00

Phabricator is a collection of web applications which help software companies build better software.

Phabricator includes applications for:

  • reviewing and auditing source code;
  • hosting and browsing repositories;
  • tracking bugs;
  • managing projects;
  • conversing with team members;
  • assembling a party to venture forth;
  • writing stuff down and reading it later;
  • hiding stuff from coworkers; and
  • also some other things.

You can learn more about the project (and find links to documentation and resources) at Phabricator.org

Phabricator is developed and maintained by Phacility.


SUPPORT RESOURCES

For resources on filing bugs, requesting features, reporting security issues, and getting other kinds of support, see Support Resources.

NO PULL REQUESTS!

We do not accept pull requests through GitHub. If you would like to contribute code, please read our Contributor's Guide.

LICENSE

Phabricator is released under the Apache 2.0 license except as otherwise noted.

Description
Phabricator
Readme 105 MiB
Languages
PHP 93.4%
JavaScript 4.1%
CSS 2.4%