#!/usr/bin/env python # Copyright 2018 The Chromium Authors. All rights reserved. # Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be # found in the LICENSE file. """Returns a timestamp that approximates the build date.
build_type impacts the timestamp generated, both relative to the date of the
last recent commit:
- default: the build date is set to the most recent first Sunday of a month at
5:00am. The reason is that it is a time where invalidating the build cache
shouldn't have major repercussions (due to lower load).
- official: the build date is set to the time of the most recent commit.
Either way, it is guaranteed to be in the past and always in UTC. """
# The requirements for the timestamp: # (1) for the purposes of continuous integration, longer duration # between cache invalidation is better, but >=1mo is preferable. # (2) for security purposes, timebombs would ideally be as close to # the actual time of the build as possible. It must be in the past. # (3) HSTS certificate pinning is valid for 70 days. To make CI builds enforce # HTST pinning, <=1mo is preferable. # # On Windows, the timestamp is also written in the PE/COFF file header of # executables of dlls. That timestamp and the executable's file size are # the only two pieces of information that identify a given executable on # the symbol server, so rarely changing timestamps can cause conflicts there # as well. We only upload symbols for official builds to the symbol server.
def GetFirstSundayOfMonth(year, month): """Returns the first sunday of the given month of the given year.
>>> GetFirstSundayOfMonth(2016, 2)
7
>>> GetFirstSundayOfMonth(2016, 3)
6
>>> GetFirstSundayOfMonth(2000, 1)
2 """
weeks = calendar.Calendar().monthdays2calendar(year, month) # Return the first day in the first week that is a Sunday. return [date_day[0] for date_day in weeks[0] if date_day[1] == 6][0]
def GetUnofficialBuildDate(build_date): """Gets the approximate build date given the specific build type.
if build_date.hour < 5: # The time is locked at 5:00 am in UTC to cause the build cache # invalidation to not happen exactly at midnight. Use the same calculation # as the day before. # See //base/build_time.cc.
build_date = build_date - datetime.timedelta(days=1)
build_date = datetime.datetime(build_date.year, build_date.month,
build_date.day, 5, 0, 0)
day = build_date.day
month = build_date.month
year = build_date.year
first_sunday = GetFirstSundayOfMonth(year, month) # If our build is after the first Sunday, we've already refreshed our build # cache on a quiet day, so just use that day. # Otherwise, take the first Sunday of the previous month. if day >= first_sunday:
day = first_sunday else:
month -= 1 if month == 0:
month = 12
year -= 1
day = GetFirstSundayOfMonth(year, month) return datetime.datetime(
year, month, day, build_date.hour, build_date.minute, build_date.second)
def main(): if doctest.testmod()[0]: return 1
argument_parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
argument_parser.add_argument( 'build_type', help='The type of build', choices=('official', 'default'))
args = argument_parser.parse_args()
# The mtime of the revision in build/util/LASTCHANGE is stored in a file # next to it. Read it, to get a deterministic time close to "now". # That date is then modified as described at the top of the file so that # it changes less frequently than with every commit. # This intentionally always uses build/util/LASTCHANGE's commit time even if # use_dummy_lastchange is set.
lastchange_file = os.path.join(THIS_DIR, 'util', 'LASTCHANGE.committime')
last_commit_timestamp = int(open(lastchange_file).read())
build_date = datetime.datetime.utcfromtimestamp(last_commit_timestamp)
# For official builds we want full fidelity time stamps because official # builds are typically added to symbol servers and Windows symbol servers # use the link timestamp as the prime differentiator, but for unofficial # builds we do lots of quantization to avoid churn. if args.build_type != 'official':
build_date = GetUnofficialBuildDate(build_date)
print(int(calendar.timegm(build_date.utctimetuple()))) return 0
Die Informationen auf dieser Webseite wurden
nach bestem Wissen sorgfältig zusammengestellt. Es wird jedoch weder Vollständigkeit, noch Richtigkeit,
noch Qualität der bereit gestellten Informationen zugesichert.
Bemerkung:
Die farbliche Syntaxdarstellung und die Messung sind noch experimentell.