Previously, running `./tools/run-dev.py` when provision was required
would lead to a warning along the lines of:
```
Before we run tests, we make sure your provisioning version
is correct by looking at var/provision_version, which is at
version 165.1, and we compare it to the version in source
control (version.py), which is 165.2.
It looks like you checked out a branch that has added
dependencies beyond what you last provisioned. Your command
is likely to fail until you add dependencies by provisioning.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
The assumption that we're trying to run tests might cause some
confusion, especially if its the first time you're seeing the
provision warning. Hence, we reword the first paragraph to avoid
making that assumption.
The second paragraph has also been slightly altered, since (1) it's
possible that we didn't checkout a different branch, but eg just
rebased with upstream and (2) we might not be on a VM.
The warning you'd get after this commit would be along the lines of:
```
Provisioning state check failed! This check compares
`var/provision_version` (currently 165.2) to the version in
source control (`version.py`), which is 164.6, to see if you
likely need to provision before this command can run
properly.
The branch you are currently on expects an older version of
dependencies than the version you provisioned last. This may
be ok, but it's likely that you either want to rebase your
branch on top of upstream/main or re-provision your machine.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
or along the lines of:
```
Provisioning state check failed! This check compares
`var/provision_version` (currently 165.2) to the version in
source control (`version.py`), which is 167.2, to see if you
likely need to provision before this command can run
properly.
The branch you are currently on has added dependencies beyond
what you last provisioned. Your command is likely to fail
until you add dependencies by provisioning.
Do this: `./tools/provision`
If you really know what you are doing, use --skip-provision-check to
run anyway.
```
This will be useful to let users enable/disable
sharing read receipts once we add that feature.
Note: Added "I've" to IGNORED_PHRASES in
tools/lib/capitalization.py to avoid capitalization
errors for the label text of this setting.
gitlint has a bunch of pinned requirements that hold back important
upgrades and conflict with other packages’ requirements. The gitlint
author has rejected proposals to unpin them because it might increase
the amount of maintenance he needs to do
(https://github.com/jorisroovers/gitlint/pull/133). That decision is
his to make, but _somebody_ needs to do the maintenance, so we
delegate it to Debian and Ubuntu. If that means using a significantly
older version of gitlint, that’s a tradeoff we need to make to keep
the rest of our requirements current.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
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>
We recently added a lot of new pages to our top navigation and
restructured top-navigation in general. This commit updates the
footer to reflect the recent changes to our top navigation.
We currently have created a copy of the
`clean_unused_caches.main` function in
`provision_inner.py` to clean the unused caches. But as
we have now converted the script into a python file we
can directly call that function.
This commit replaces that function (introduced in adc0ed4206) with
`clean_unused_caches.main`.
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>
This reverses the policy that was set, but incompletely enforced, by
commit 951514dd7d. The self-closing tag
syntax is clearer, more consistent, simpler to parse, compatible with
XML, preferred by Prettier, and (most importantly now) required by
FormatJS.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
We use GIPHY web SDK to create popover containing GIFs in a
grid format. Simply clicking on the GIFs will insert the GIF in the compose
box.
We add GIPHY logo to compose box action icons which opens the GIPHY
picker popover containing GIFs with "Powered by GIPHY"
attribution.
We should still display the `source` advice when not in Vagrant or a
Droplet, since that's an important hint for anyone using local
installation on Linux.
We move the "If you are using Vagrant..." text a bit after to
highlight things nicely for folks who are running tools outside
Vagrant.
Also tighten text to avoid line-wrapping on an 80 character console.
This also fixes the suggestions for the following words: disabled,
disables, disabling, implemented, implementing, implements, kept,
made, took, using.
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.
GitHub Actions supports doing more than just CI,
and so in some contexts it's less obvious that we're
talking about just the CI if we refer to it instead of CircleCI.
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>
This commit changes help message for skip-provision-check argument
used with various test commands. The message is changed with an
intention to be more clear about what this option actually does.
This commit is in series of various changes done to provide clarity
over the use of --force option which is renamed to
--skip-provision-check.
Fixes: #17455
This commit renames --force argument used with various tests to
--skip-provision-check. As a consequence of this name change all other
files that set --force option for the test commands have been updated.
This change is done in order to provide more clarity for using this
option for runnning tests.
This commit addresses issue #17455.
This commit moves --force option used with various tests to
test-scripts.py to have it alongside the logic that does provisioning
status assertion.
This is a step towards providing more clarity over use of this
argument with tests as asked in issue #17455.
The "Narrow to PM with" notification above the composebox was
double-escaped, mangling names with single quotes in them. This removes
the escaping in i18next, causing the name to be escaped only in
handlebars.
Replaced methods/functions of moment.js with date-fns library.
The motive was to replace it with a smaller frontend timezone library.
Date-fns ~ 11.51 kb
moment.js ~ 217.87 kb
Some of the format strings change because date-fns encodes them
differently from how moment did.
Fixes#16373.
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>
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format.
Now including %d, %i, %u, and multi-line strings.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.com>
Use read-only types (List ↦ Sequence, Dict ↦ Mapping, Set ↦
AbstractSet) to guard against accidental mutation of the default
value.
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>
Generated by pyupgrade --py36-plus --keep-percent-format, but with the
NamedTuple changes reverted (see commit
ba7906a3c6, #15132).
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <anders@zulip.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
We now use the `--streamlined` options for `run-dev.py`
when we use `test_server_running` for `test-api` and
`test-js-with-casper` (and its experimental
replacement, `test-js-with-puppeteer`).
This means we don't slow anything down with
processes like thumbor, process_fts_updates, etc.,
which aren't meaningfully exercised by these tests.
We may eventually want some tests to meaningfully
exercise those processes, and when that day comes,
we will need to add an extra argument to
`test_server_running`, probably, but until then,
we just always set `--streamlined` in that codepath.
There is actually a tool called `./tools/test-run-dev`
that we run in CI, and it will use the full mode.
It just doesn't verify much stuff--it mostly polls
the server without testing specific features.
This seems to save about 1s of the startup time on a system I use
(~10.6s -> ~9.7s).
This will give help up write new digest only if the db rebuild
succeeds. We were relying on the caller to
be successful in building db, this was hacky and unreliable.
We write new db digest once the caller succeeds, this ensures
that we write new digest after every successful attempt.
This fixes the anomality we were facing that Databases were rebuild
on the 2nd provision attempt with no changes to files or migrations.
This was happening because we didn't write a new digest for db
after the first provision (The case of DB didn't exist).
During the 1st provision, we check the template_status() of
Database both Dev and Test, but database_exists() of Databases
obviously returned false, and we rebuild the database,
but forgot to write_new_digest and hence the anomaly in the
second provision explained above.
Yes, it's slightly janky to create an
argparse.Namespace object like this, but it
saves us from shelling out to a script whose
only real value-add is parsing a single
`threshold_days` argument.
This saves about 130ms for a no-op provision.
We now prevent these variations:
* <hr/>
* <hr />
* <br/>
* <br />
We could enforce similar consistency for other void
tags, if we wished, but these two are particularly
prevalent.
Since in travis we don't have root access so we used to add different
srv path. As now we shifted our production suites to Circle CI
we don't need that code so removed it.
Also we used a hacky code in commit-lint-message for travis which is
now of no use.
We now forbid tags of the form `<foo ... />` in most
places, and we also forbid it even for several void
tags.
We make exceptions for tags that are already formatted
in two different ways in our codebase. This is mostly
svg tags, plus these common cases:
- br
- hr
- img
- input
It would be nice to lock down a convention for these,
even though the HTML specification is unopinionated
on these. We'll probably want to stay flexible for
svg tags, since they are sometimes copy/pasted from
other sources (although it's probably rare enough for
them that we can tolerate just doing minor edits as
needed).
If folks put something like '<br/>' in the HTML,
we would think the tag's name was "br/" instead
of "br". I think we were assuming most folks
would write either "<br>" or <br />".
ASIDE:
We should probably have a consistent
preference among these styles:
* <br>
* <br/>
* <br />
I prefer the first.
The new tools now have more concise, more parallel names:
- rebuild-dev-database
- rebuild-test-database
The actual implementations are still pretty different:
rebuild-dev-database:
mostly delegates to 5 management scripts
rebuild-test-database:
is a very thin wrapper for generate-fixtures
We'll try to clean that up a bit soon.
This tool was part of a very ad hoc investigation
during 2017 into our JS dep dependencies.
It's very out of date, and it has a non-trivial
maintenance cost, as these type of tools seem
to come up in every code sweep.
Restart postgres service if provision is called in production test suite.
This is required because terminate-psql-sessions script (used
in tools/ci/setup-production) throws error if postgres service is not running.
Restart rabbitmq service if provision is called in production test suite.
This is done to start the node as Circle CI don't start services on installation.
Removed memcached restart as flush-memcached script (which is furthur
used in tools/ci/production) throws UNKNOWN READ FAILURE if memcached is restarted
in development.
We now have two functions related to digests
for processes:
is_digest_obsolete
write_digest_file
In most cases we now **wait** to write the
digest file until after we've successfully
run a process with its new inputs.
In one place, for database migrations, we
continue to write the digest optimistically.
We'll want to fix this, but it requires a
little more code cleanup.
Here is the typical sequence of events:
NEVER RUN -
is_digest_obsolete returns True
quickly (we don't compute a hash)
write_digest_file does a write (duh)
AFTER NO CHANGES -
is_digest_obsolete returns False
after reading one file for old
hash and multiple files to compute
hash
most callers skip write_digest_file
(no files are changed)
AFTER SOME CHANGES -
is_digest_obsolete returns False
after doing full checks
most callers call write_digest_file
*after* running a process
There's no real reason to do the lazy import any
more, as we use this unconditionally inside `main`
(indirectly), and `provision_inner` runs after we
have set up the venv.
I make these all functions for consistency,
and in particular I want to continue to avoid
`glob.glob` calls until we are actually
computing hashes.
This is mostly a prep to allow us to do
hashing in two separate places:
- check hashes
- update hashes
We would only update hashes **after** running
processes anew.
For `provision_inner` I considered using a
class to put the three path-related helpers
into a mini namespace, but it felt too heavy.
It wouldn't be completely implausible here
to extract something like a JSON config
file that has a list of globs for each
process that we do path-hashing for, but I
want to clean up other stuff first.
We no longer need to maintain duplicate code
related to where we set up the emoji
cache directory.
And we no longer need two extra steps for
people doing advanced (i.e. manual) setup.
There was no clear benefit to having provision
build the cache directory for `build_emoji`,
when it was easy to make `build_emoji` more
self-sufficient. The `build_emoji` tool
was already importing the library that has
`run_as_root`, and it was already responsible
for 99% of the create-directory kind of tasks.
(We always call `build_emoji` unconditionally from
`provision`, so there's no rationale in terms
of avoiding startup time or something.)
ASIDE:
Its not completely clear to me why we need
to put this directory in "/srv", instead of
somewhere more local (like we already do for
Travis), but maybe it's just to be like
its siblings in "/srv":
node_modules
yarn.lock
zulip-emoji-cache
zulip-npm-cache
zulip-py3-venv
zulip-thumbor-venv
zulip-venv-cache
zulip-yarn
I guess the caches that we keep in var are
dev-only, although I think some of what's under
`zulip-emoji-cache` is also dev-only in nature?
./var/webpack-cache
./var/mypy-cache
In `docs/subsystems/emoji.md` we say this:
```
The `build_emoji` tool generates the set of files under
`static/generated/emoji` (or really, it generates the
`/srv/zulip-emoji-cache/<sha1>/emoji` tree, and
`static/generated/emoji` is a symlink to that tree;we do this in
order to cache old versions to make provisioning and production
deployments super fast in the common case that we haven't changed the
emoji tooling). [...]
```
I don't really understand that rationale for the development
case, since `static/generated` is as much ignored by `git` as
'/srv' is, without the complications of needing `sudo` to create it.
And in production, I'm not sure how much time we're really saving,
as it takes me about 1.4s to fully rebuild the cache in dev, not to
mention we're taking on upgrade risk by sharing files between versions.
If the directory `templates/zerver/emails/compiled/`
is missing, then we need to run `inline_email_css`
again.
This can happen if somebody gets overzealous about
cleaning untracked files.
This is more encapsulated and more efficient.
In the cases where `is_force` is `True` or
`pygments_data.json` is missing, we now avoid
the unnecessary step of importing `pygments`, at
least up front.
(Of course, we probably import that once we generate
the artifacts.)
If somebody is having issues with provision, it's
plausible they'll do something like `git clean -fX`
to clean up old artifacts of earlier provision runs,
as part of debugging things.
We defend against this by detecting the most obvious
symptom as cheaply as possible.
I remove `is_force` from `file_or_package_hash_updated`
and modernize its mypy annotations.
If `is_force` is `True`, we just now run the thing
we want to force-run without having to call
`file_or_package_hash_updated` to expensively
and riskily return `True`.
Another nice outcome of this change is that if
`file_or_package_hash_updated` returns `True`,
you can know that the file or package has
indeed been updated.
For the case of `build_pygments_data` we also
skip an `os.path.exists` check when `is_force`
is `True`.
We will short-circuit more logic in the next
few commits, as well as cleaning up some of
the long/wrapper lines in the `if` statements.
We change the message for skipping RabbitMQ
configuration to match nearby messages:
No need to run `tools/setup/build_pygments_data`.
No need to run `scripts/setup/inline_email_css.py`.
No need to run `scripts/setup/configure-rabbitmq.
No need to regenerate the dev DB.
No need to regenerate the test DB.
No need to run `manage.py compilemessages`.