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vcs: Use a thread scoped cache invalidation context to cache repository objects....
vcs: Use a thread scoped cache invalidation context to cache repository objects. Without this change the cache is on a process scope. If running with multiple threads this leads to sharing the cached object between threads. This will cause exceptions if multiple threads are trying to access the same curl object. Even worse it allows multiple threads to operate on the same repository object concurrently.

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hooks.rst
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Hooks

Within |RCM| there are two types of supported hooks.

  • Internal built-in hooks: The internal |hg| or |git| hooks are triggered by different VCS operations, like push, pull, or clone and are non-configurable, but you can add your own VCS hooks, see :ref:`custom-hooks`.
  • User defined hooks: User defined hooks centre around the lifecycle of certain actions such are |repo| creation, user creation etc. The actions these hooks trigger can be rejected based on the API permissions of the user calling them.

Those custom hooks can be called using |RCT|, see :ref:`rc-tools`. To create a custom hook, see the :ref:`event-listener` section.

Making your Extension listen for Events

To create a hook to work with a plugin or extension, you need configure a listener in the :file:`/home/{user}/{instance-id}/rcextensions/__init__.py` file, and use the load_extension method.

Use the following example to create your extensions. In this example:

  • The hook is calling the ('my_post_push_extension.py') extension.
  • The hook is listening to |RCM| for pushes to |repos|.
  • This highlighted code is the hook, and configured in the __init__.py file.
  • It is inserted into the def _pushhook(*args, **kwargs) section, if it is not in the default __ini__.py file, use the below non-highlighted section to create it.

Once your plugin and hook are configured, restart your instance of |RCM| and your event listener will triggered as soon as a user pushes to a |repo|.