Send Sir Perceval on a quest to retrieve and gather data from software repositories.
usage: perceval [-g] <backend> [<args>] | --help | --version | --list
Repositories are reached using specific backends. The most common backends
are:
askbot Fetch questions and answers from Askbot site
bugzilla Fetch bugs from a Bugzilla server
bugzillarest Fetch bugs from a Bugzilla server (>=5.0) using its REST API
confluence Fetch contents from a Confluence server
discourse Fetch posts from Discourse site
dockerhub Fetch repository data from Docker Hub site
gerrit Fetch reviews from a Gerrit server
git Fetch commits from Git
github Fetch issues, pull requests and repository information from GitHub
gitlab Fetch issues, merge requests from GitLab
gitter Fetch messages from a Gitter room
googlehits Fetch hits from Google API
groupsio Fetch messages from Groups.io
hyperkitty Fetch messages from a HyperKitty archiver
jenkins Fetch builds from a Jenkins server
jira Fetch issues from JIRA issue tracker
launchpad Fetch issues from Launchpad issue tracker
mattermost Fetch posts from a Mattermost server
mbox Fetch messages from MBox files
mediawiki Fetch pages and revisions from a MediaWiki site
meetup Fetch events from a Meetup group
nntp Fetch articles from a NNTP news group
pagure Fetch issues from Pagure
phabricator Fetch tasks from a Phabricator site
pipermail Fetch messages from a Pipermail archiver
redmine Fetch issues from a Redmine server
rocketchat Fetch messages from a Rocket.Chat channel
rss Fetch entries from a RSS feed server
slack Fetch messages from a Slack channel
stackexchange Fetch questions from StackExchange sites
supybot Fetch messages from Supybot log files
telegram Fetch messages from the Telegram server
twitter Fetch tweets from the Twitter Search API
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --version show version
-g, --debug set debug mode on
-l, --list show available backends
Run 'perceval <backend> --help' to get information about a specific backend.
- Python >= 3.4
- python3-dateutil >= 2.6
- python3-requests >= 2.7
- python3-bs4 (beautifulsoup4) >= 4.3
- python3-feedparser >= 5.1.3
- python3-dulwich >= 0.20.0
- grimoirelab-toolkit >= 0.1.4
Note that you should have also the following packages installed in your system:
- git
- build-essential
There are several ways for installing Perceval on your system: from packages, from a docker image or from the source code.
Perceval can be installed using pip, a tool for installing Python packages. To do it, run the next command:
$ pip3 install perceval
A Perceval Docker image is available at DockerHub.
Detailed information on how to run and/or build this image can be found here.
To install from the source code you will need to clone the repository first:
$ git clone https://github.com/chaoss/grimoirelab-perceval.git
Then you can execute the following commands:
$ pip3 install -r requirements.txt
$ pip3 install .
In case you are a developer, you should execute the following commands to install Perceval in your working directory (option -e
) and the packages of requirements_tests.txt.
$ pip3 install -r requirements.txt
$ pip3 install -r requirements_tests.txt
$ pip3 install -e .
Documentation is generated automatically in the ReadTheDocs Perceval site.
If you use Perceval in your research papers, please refer to Perceval: software project data at your will -- Pre-print:
Dueñas, S., Cosentino, V., Robles, G., & Gonzalez-Barahona, J. M. (2018, May). Perceval: software project data at your will. In Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceeedings (pp. 1-4). ACM.
@inproceedings{duenas2018perceval,
title={Perceval: software project data at your will},
author={Due{\~n}as, Santiago and Cosentino, Valerio and Robles, Gregorio and Gonzalez-Barahona, Jesus M},
booktitle={Proceedings of the 40th International Conference on Software Engineering: Companion Proceeedings},
pages={1--4},
year={2018},
organization={ACM}
}
$ perceval askbot 'http://askbot.org/' --from-date '2016-01-01'
To fetch bugs from Bugzilla, you have two options:
a) Use the traditional backend
$ perceval bugzilla 'https://bugzilla.redhat.com/' --backend-user user --backend-password pass --from-date '2016-01-01'
b) Use the REST API backend for Buzilla 5.0 (or higher) servers. We strongly recommend this backend when data is fetched from version servers >=5.0 because the retrieval process is much faster.
$ perceval bugzillarest 'https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/' --backend-user user --backend-password pass --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval confluence 'https://wiki.opnfv.org/' --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval discourse 'https://foro.mozilla-hispano.org/' --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval dockerhub grimoirelab perceval
To run gerrit, you will need an authorized SSH private key:
$ eval `ssh-agent -s`
$ ssh-add ~/.ssh/id_rsa
Identity added: /home/user/.ssh/id_rsa (/home/user/.ssh/id_rsa)
To run the backend, execute the next command:
$ perceval gerrit --user user 'review.openstack.org' --from-date '2016-01-01'
To run this backend execute the next command. Take into account that to run this backend Git program has to be installed on your system.
$ perceval git 'https://github.com/chaoss/grimoirelab-perceval.git' --from-date '2016-01-01'
Git backend can also work with a Git log file as input. We recommend to use the next command to get the most complete log file.
git log --raw --numstat --pretty=fuller --decorate=full --parents --reverse --topo-order -M -C -c --remotes=origin --all > /tmp/gitlog.log
Then, to run the backend, just execute any of the next commands:
$ perceval git --git-log '/tmp/gitlog.log' 'file:///myrepo.git'
or
$ perceval git '/tmp/gitlog.log'
$ perceval github elastic logstash --from-date '2016-01-01'
The GitHub backend accepts the categories issue
, pull_request
and repository
which allow to fetch the specific data.
$ perceval github --category issue elastic logstash
$ perceval gitlab elastic logstash --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval gitter -t 'abcdefghi' --from-date '2020-03-18' 'jenkinsci' 'jenkins'
$ perceval googlehits "bitergia grimoirelab"
$ perceval groupsio 'updates' -e '<[email protected]>' -p 'my-password' --from-date '2016-01-01'
In order to fetch the data from a group, you should first subscribe to it via the Groups.io website. In case you want to know the group names where you are subscribed, you can use the following script: https://gist.github.com/valeriocos/ad33a0b9b2d13a8336230c8c59df3c55
$ perceval hyperkitty 'https://lists.mailman3.org/archives/list/[email protected]' --from-date 2017-01-01
$ perceval jenkins 'https://build.opnfv.org/ci/'
$ perceval jira 'https://tickets.puppetlabs.com' --project PUP --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval launchpad ubuntu --from-date '2016-01-01'
$ perceval mattermost 'http://mattermost.example.com' jgw7jdmjkjf19ffkwnw59i5f9e --from-date '2016-01-01' -t 'abcdefghijk'
$ perceval mbox 'http://example.com' /tmp/mboxes/
$ perceval mediawiki 'https://wiki.mozilla.org' --from-date '2016-06-30'
$ perceval meetup 'Software-Development-Analytics' --from-date '2016-06-01' -t abcdefghijk
$ perceval nntp 'news.mozilla.org' 'mozilla.dev.project-link' --offset 10
$ perceval pagure '389-ds-base' --from-date '2020-03-06'
$ perceval phabricator 'https://secure.phabricator.com/' -t 123456789abcefe
$ perceval pipermail 'https://mail.gnome.org/archives/libart-hackers/'
Pipermail also is able to fetch data from Apache's mod_box
interface:
$ perceval pipermail 'http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/httpd-dev/'
$ perceval redmine 'https://www.redmine.org/' --from-date '2016-01-01' -t abcdefghijk
Rocket.Chat backend needs an API token and a User Id to authenticate to the server.
$ perceval rocketchat -t 'abchdefghij' -u '1234abcd' --from-date '2020-05-02' https://open.rocket.chat general
$ perceval rss 'https://blog.bitergia.com/feed/'
Slack backend requires an API token for authentication. Slack apps can be
used to generate and configure this API token. The scopes required by a Slack
app for the backend are channels:history
, channels:read
and users:read
.
To know more about Slack apps and its integration please refer the
Slack apps documentation.
For more information about the scopes required by a Slack app please refer the
Scopes and permissions documentation.
The following script can also be used to generate an OAuth2 token to access the Slack API.
$ perceval slack C0001 --from-date 2016-01-12 -t abcedefghijk
$ perceval stackexchange --site stackoverflow --tagged python --from-date '2016-01-01' -t abcdabcdabcdabcd
$ perceval supybot 'http://channel.example.com' /tmp/supybot/
Telegram backend needs an API token to authenticate the bot. In addition and in order to fetch messages from a group or channel, privacy settings must be disabled. To know how to create a bot, to obtain its token and to configure it please read the Telegram Bots docs pages.
Note that the messages are available on the Telegram server until the bot fetches them, but they will not be kept longer than 24 hours.
$ perceval telegram mybot -t 12345678abcdefgh --chats 1 2 -10
Twitter backend needs a bearer token to authenticate the requests. It can be obtained using the code available on GistGitHub: https://gist.github.com/valeriocos/7d4d28f72f53fbce49f1512ba77ef5f6
$ perceval twitter grimoirelab -t 12345678abcdefgh
Perceval comes with a comprehensive list of unit tests.
To run them, in addition to the dependencies installed with Perceval,
you need httpretty
.
Licensed under GNU General Public License (GPL), version 3 or later.