These changes are all independent of each other; I just didn’t feel
like making dozens of commits for them.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Thumbor and tc-aws have been dragging their feet on Python 3 support
for years, and even the alphas and unofficial forks we’ve been running
don’t seem to be maintained anymore. Depending on these projects is
no longer viable for us.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We have disabled CircleCI and are using GitHub Actions for automated
testing.
docs: Changed context from CircleCI to Github Actions and wrote
some documentation specific to GH Actions.
tools: Replaced env checks for CIRCLECI with GITHUB_ACTION.
README: Use GitHub Actions build status badge.
When exception is raised inside an exception handler, Python 3
helpfully prints both tracebacks separated by “During handling of the
above exception, another exception occurred:”. But when we’re using
an exception handler to retry the same operation, multiple tracebacks
are just noise. Suppress the earlier one using PEP 409 syntax.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
The node package allow use to control xvfb apt package in puppeteer
tests. This help us create a fake display so we can run puppeteer in
headful (headless: false) mode, which is required to use the chrome
extension desktop capture API.
Doing service memcached start instead of restart fixed an issue on
focal build in GitHub actions, where it exits with code 1 when it
is done twice.It is done first in Install Dependencies step and then
again in last step where we call tools/ci/setup-backend again which
runs provision.
Furthermore, I don't belive there is a technical reason we use
restart over start; rather I think it was just a random choice with
the intend to just start the services in CI. I traced the code back
to commit 1f2f497cab if it helps.
Looking at the source code of memcached, the step that's failing is:
start-stop-daemon --stop --quiet --oknodo --pidfile $PIDFILE
which is equivilent to: service memcached stop, we can rule out the
service memcache start since it works. Ideally, we do figure out and
solve the issue of why memcached fails when executing service
memcached stop but I am not equipped with debugging it. And this
workaround seems reasonable rather than a "hacky" solution.
For the relevant code in memcached see:
https://github.com/memcached/memcached/blob/master/scripts/memcached-init.
Finally, the change to the rest of services is for consistency.
The automated tests running in CircleCI don't actually use the `zulip`
db, so we can skip running migrations on it in some CircleCI shards to
save time.
NOTE: This only effects build jobs that run provision, except the
`production-build` job where we skip building the dbs altogether.
Migrations still run on `focal-backend` build job to ensure
we are testing all our development setup code.
These files can’t use f-strings yet because they need to run in Python
2 or Python 3.5.
Generated by pyupgrade.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Fixes#2665.
Regenerated by tabbott with `lint --fix` after a rebase and change in
parameters.
Note from tabbott: In a few cases, this converts technical debt in the
form of unsorted imports into different technical debt in the form of
our largest files having very long, ugly import sequences at the
start. I expect this change will increase pressure for us to split
those files, which isn't a bad thing.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Automatically generated by the following script, based on the output
of lint with flake8-comma:
import re
import sys
last_filename = None
last_row = None
lines = []
for msg in sys.stdin:
m = re.match(
r"\x1b\[35mflake8 \|\x1b\[0m \x1b\[1;31m(.+):(\d+):(\d+): (\w+)", msg
)
if m:
filename, row_str, col_str, err = m.groups()
row, col = int(row_str), int(col_str)
if filename == last_filename:
assert last_row != row
else:
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
with open(filename) as f:
lines = f.readlines()
last_filename = filename
last_row = row
line = lines[row - 1]
if err in ["C812", "C815"]:
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 1] + "," + line[col - 1 :]
elif err in ["C819"]:
assert line[col - 2] == ","
lines[row - 1] = line[: col - 2] + line[col - 1 :].lstrip(" ")
if last_filename is not None:
with open(last_filename, "w") as f:
f.writelines(lines)
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulipchat.com>
Since we use this option in our docker-zulip project also
so rather than using it as a test suite option we made it
more specific i.e. --build-release-tarball-only.
Some UTF-8 characters (★ for example) are not displayed correctly, with
fonts-liberation. Puppeteer recommends[1] installing fonts-freefont-ttf in
their docs on running Puppeteer in docker.
Provisioning forward is sufficient. There's no need to remove the
new font and replace it with the old font, I think.
[1]: https://github.com/puppeteer/puppeteer/blob/master/docs/troubleshooting.md#running-puppeteer-in-docker