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A cross-distribution upstream release monitoring project

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Anitya

Anitya is a release monitoring project.

Its goal is to regularly check if a project has made a new release. Originally developed within Fedora, the project created tickets on the Fedora bugzilla when a new release is available. Now this service has been split into two parts:

  • anitya: find and announce new releases
  • the new hotness: listens to the fedmsg bus, opens a ticket on bugzilla for packages allowing for it and triggers a scratch-build of the new version

Anitya provides a user-friendly interface to add or edit projects. New releases are announced on fedmsg and notifications can then be sent via FMN (the FedMsg Notifications service).

Github page:https://github.com/fedora-infra/anitya

Hacking

virtualenv

Here are some preliminary instructions about how to stand up your own instance of anitya. We'll use a virtualenv and a sqlite database and we'll install our dependencies from the Python Package Index (PyPI). None of these are best practices for a production instance, but they will do for development.

First, set up a virtualenv:

$ sudo yum install python-virtualenv
$ virtualenv anitya-env --system-site-packages
$ source anitya-env/bin/activate

Issuing that last command should change your prompt to indicate that you are operating in an active virtualenv.

Next, install your dependencies:

(anitya-env)$ pip install -r requirements.txt

Create the database, by default it will be a sqlite database located at /var/tmp/anitya-dev.sqlite:

(anitya-env)$ python createdb.py

If all goes well, you can start a development instance of the server by running:

(anitya-env)$ python runserver.py

Open your browser and visit http://localhost:5000 to check it out.

docker

You can use dockerfile provided in root of this repository. Build it:

$ cd anitya/
$ docker build --tag=anitya .

And run:

$ docker run --net=host anitya

--net=host will use network stack from your host system. Application will be then available on localhost at http://localhost:5000.

If you inspect the dockerfile you can see that installation method is almost identical to the described in section virtualenv.

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