* Allow unused ignores in "bleeding edge" CI
Where "bleeding edge" means the Twisted Trunk and Latest Deps jobs.
Follow up from #12531.
Resolves#12574.
* Use `--extras all` in latest deps mypy CI
Twisted trunk job already does this.
Missed in #12531.
* changelog
Over time we've begun to use newer versions of mypy, typeshed, stub
packages---and of course we've improved our own annotations. This makes
some type ignore comments no longer necessary. I have removed them.
There was one exception: a module that imports `select.epoll`. The
ignore is redundant on Linux, but I've kept it ignored for those of us
who work on the source tree using not-Linux. (#11771)
I'm more interested in the config line which enforces this. I want
unused ignores to be reported, because I think it's useful feedback when
annotating to know when you've fixed a problem you had to previously
ignore.
* Installing extras before typechecking
Lacking an easy way to install all extras generically, let's bite the bullet and
make install the hand-maintained `all` extra before typechecking.
Now that https://github.com/matrix-org/backend-meta/pull/6 is merged to
the release/v1 branch.
* Run "main" trial tests under poetry
Olddeps and twisted trunk tests are handled in separate PRs.
The PyPy config is a best-effort only; it's completely untested.
Pulled out from #12337.
* Changelog
Fixesmatrix-org/complement#330 (or it will, once we remove the old files).
It's not quite a lift-and-shift: I've also taken the opportunity to get rid of the custom CA that we used to use to sign the TLS certs, which has been superceded by the CA exposed by Complement.
Since #11811 there has been general Complement flakiness around networking.
It seems like tests are hitting the wrong containers. In an effort to diagnose
the cause of this, as well as reduce its impact on this project, set the
parallelsim to 1 (no parallelism) when running tests.
If this fixes the flakiness then this indicates the cause and I can diagnose
this further. If this doesn't fix the flakiness then that implies some kind
of test pollution which also helps to diagnose this further.
* CI: run Complement on the VM, not inside Docker
This requires https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/pull/289
We now run Complement on the VM instead of inside a Docker container.
This is to allow Complement to bind to any high-numbered port when it
starts up its own federation servers. We want to do this to allow for
more concurrency when running complement tests. Previously, Complement
only ever bound to `:8448` when running its own federation server. This
prevented multiple federation tests running at the same time as they would
fight each other on the port. This did however allow Complement to run
in Docker, as the host could just port forward `:8448` to allow homeserver
containers to communicate to Complement. Now that we are using random
ports however, we cannot use Docker to run Complement. This ends up
being a good thing because:
- Running Complement tests locally is closer to how they run in CI.
- Allows the `CI` env var to be removed in Complement.
- Slightly speeds up runs as we don't need to pull down the Complement
image prior to running tests. This assumes GHA caches actions sensibly.
* Changelog
* Full stop
* Update .github/workflows/tests.yml
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
* Review comments
* Update .github/workflows/tests.yml
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
PyNaCl's recent 1.5.0 release on PyPi includes arm64 wheels, which means our
arm64 docker images now build in a sensible amount of time, so we can skip the
amd64-only build.
* remove reference in comments to python3.6
* upgrade tox python env in script
* bump python version in example for completeness
* upgrade python version requirement in setup doc
* upgrade necessary python version in __init__.py
* upgrade python version in setup.py
* newsfragment
* drops refs to bionic and replace with focal
* bump refs to postgres 9.6 to 10
* fix hanging ci
* try installing tzdata first
* revert change made in b979f336
* ignore new random mypy error while debugging other error
* fix lint error for temporary workaround
* revert change to install list
* try passing env var
* export debian frontend var?
* move line and add comment
* bump pillow dependency
* bump lxml depenency
* install libjpeg-dev for pillow
* bump automat version to one compatible with py3.8
* add libwebp for pillow
* bump twisted trunk python version
* change suffix of newsfragment
* remove redundant python 3.7 checks
* lint
* remove python 3.6 and postgres 9.6 from github workflow
* remove python 3.6 env from tox
* newsfragment
* correct postgres version
* add py310 to tox env list
Setting `update_existing: true` in the `create-an-issue` GitHub Action
will avoid opening duplicate issues if an open issue already exists with
an identical title.
If no open issues match the title, then a new issue will be created.
This helps avoid spamming our issue tracker should there be a failure
when testing against Twisted's trunk.
This PR also pins the SHA of the `create-an-issue` action to mitigate
the risk of a malicious actor gaining access to JasonEtco's account.
See GitHub's page on security hardening third party actions for more:
https://docs.github.com/en/actions/learn-github-actions/security-hardening-for-github-actions#using-third-party-actions
Signed-off-by: Dan Callahan <danc@element.io>
This creates a GHA workflow which runs at 8am every day, and runs mypy, trial and sytest against Twisted's current trunk. If any of the jobs fail, it opens an issue.
A few things here:
* Build the debs for single distro for each PR, so that we can see if it breaks. Do the same for develop. Building all the debs ties up the GHA workers for ages.
* Stop building the debs for release branches. Again, it takes ages, and I don't think anyone is actually going to stop and look at them. We'll know they are working when we make an RC.
* Change the configs so that if we manually cancel a workflow, it actually does something.
Currently when a new build of the docs is created, an `index.html` file does not exist. Typically this would be generated from a`docs/README.md` file - which we have - however we're currently using [docs/README.md](394673055d/docs/README.md) to explain the docs and point to the website. It is not part of the content of the website. So we end up not having an `index.html` file, which will result in a 404 page if one tries to navigate to `https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/<docs_version>/index.html`.
This isn't a really problem for the default version of the documentation (currently `develop`), as [navigating to the top-level root](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/) of the website (without specifying a version) will [redirect](a77e6925f2/index.html (L2)) you to the Welcome and Overview page of the `develop` docs version.
However, ideally once we add a GUI for switching between versions, we'll want to send the user to `matrix-org.github.io/synapse/<version>/index.html`, which currently isn't generated.
This PR modifies the CI that builds the docs to simply copy the rendered [Welcome & Overview page](https://matrix-org.github.io/synapse/develop/welcome_and_overview.html) to `index.html`.
This PR will run a new "Deploy release-specific documentation" job whenever a push to a branch name matching `release-v*` occurs. Doing so will create/add to a folder named `vX.Y` on the `gh-pages` branch. Doing so will allow us to build up `major.minor` releases of the docs as we release Synapse.
This is especially useful for having a mechanism for keeping around documentation of old/removed features (for those running older versions of Synapse), without needing to clutter the latest copy of the docs.
After a [discussion](https://matrix.to/#/!XaqDhxuTIlvldquJaV:matrix.org/$rKmkBmQle8OwTlGcoyu0BkcWXdnHW3_oap8BMgclwIY?via=matrix.org&via=vector.modular.im&via=envs.net) in #synapse-dev, we wanted to use tags to trigger the documentation deployments, which I agreed with. However, I soon realised that the bash-foo required to turn a tag of `v1.2.3rc1` into `1.2` was a lot more complex than the branch's `release-v1.2`. So, I've gone with the latter for simplicity.
In the future we'll have some UI on the website to switch between versions, but for now you can simply just change 'develop' to 'v1.2' in the URL.
This implements similar behavior to sytest where a matching branch is used,
if one exists. This is useful when needing to modify both application code
and tests at the same time. The following rules are used to find a matching
complement branch:
1. Search for the branch name of the pull request. (E.g. feature/foo.)
2. Search for the base branch of the pull request. (E.g. develop or release-vX.Y.)
3. Search for the reference branch of the commit. (E.g. master or release-vX.Y.)
4. Fallback to 'master', the default complement branch name.
This PR updates the build tags that we perform Complement runs with to match our [buildkite pipeline](618b3e90bc/synapse/pipeline.yml (L570)), as well as adding `msc2403` (as it will be required once #9359 is merged). Build tags are what we use to determine which tests to run in Complement (really it determines which test files are compiled into the final binary).
I haven't put in a comment about updating the buildkite side here, as we've decided to migrate fully to GitHub Actions anyhow.