Old xml.etree.cElementTree versions (python2) reorder the attributes
while recent xml.etree.cElementTree versions (python3) keep the
document order.
Example:
python3:
>>> ET.tostring(ET.fromstring('<foo y="foo" x="bar"/>'))
b'<foo y="foo" x="bar" />'
>>>
python2:
>>> ET.tostring(ET.fromstring('<foo y="foo" x="bar"/>'))
'<foo x="bar" y="foo" />'
>>>
So far, the testsuite compared two serialized XML documents via a simple
string comparison. For instance via,
self.assertEqual(actual_serialized_xml, expected_serialized_xml) where
the expected_serialized_xml is, for instance, a hardcoded str. Obviously,
this would only work for python2 or python3.
In order to support both python versions, we first parse both XML
documents and then compare the corresponding trees (this is OK because
we do not care about comments etc.).
A related issue is the way how the testsuite compares data that is "send"
to the API. So far, this was a plain bytes comparison. Again, this won't
work in case of XML documents (see above). Moreover, we have currently
no notion to "indicate" that the transmitted data is an XML document.
As a workaround, we keep the plain bytes comparison and in case it fails,
we try an xml comparison (see above) as a last resort. Strictly speaking,
this is "wrong" (there might be cases (in the future) where we want to
ensure that the transmitted XML data is bit identical to a fixture file)
but a reasonable comprise for now.
Fixes: #751 ("[python3.8] Testsuite fails")
For now, we assume that if the "exp" keyword argument is specified,
then it is a str. In this case, we simply encode it (using the utf-8
encoding).
Also, simplify the code a bit (get rid of the if-statement that is
always executed).
Importing `cElementTree` has been deprecated since Python 3.3 -
importing `ElementTree` automatically uses the fastest
implementation available - and is finally removed in Python 3.9.
Importing cElementTree directly (not as part of xml) is an even
older relic, it's for Ye Time Before ElementTree Was Added To
Python and it was instead an external module...which was before
Python 2.5.
We still need to work with Python 2.7 for now, so we use a try/
except to handle both 2.7 and 3.9 cases. Also, let's not repeat
this import 12 times in one file for some reason.
Signed-off-by: Adam Williamson <awilliam@redhat.com>
This checks if the filename of a downloaded file has
been modified (for example by a MITM attack) to contain
slashes. This could mean that the file is compromised
and that the attacker tries to overwrite system files.
split the code of do_dependson into two separate commands (just for
the osc help overview)
They are doing the opposite of each other.
Duplicate code was moved to _dependson()
do_whatdependson and do_dependson just call _dependson with an option
reverse set to None or 1.
add new regex and check for missing arguments.
The error message in python3 differs from the one in python2.
python3:
do_api() missing 1 required positional argument: 'url'
python2:
do_api() takes exactly 4 arguments (3 given)
To be compatible with python2 two checks are needed.
Callers of core.print_buildlog should properly quote the project, package,
repo, and arch parameters. Actually, doing this at the caller's level
is pretty insane but this way, we do not break the existing API (of
core.print_buildlog).
In the future, we should move all the quoting logic into core.makeurl
(even if this breaks the API).
Add ccache option to the oscrc (default: disabled). If enabled, the
--ccache option is always passed to the build script (if invoked via
osc.build.main).
Improve deployment via travis. Unfortunately, style + semantics changes
are in a single commit... but let's not be too picky. See also the
discussion in [1].
[1] https://github.com/openSUSE/osc/pull/739
* `.travis.yml`
- Reformatted for easier reading
- Used `before_*` statements instead of script chains
- Publish only source packages
* `setup.py`
- Reformatted for easier reading
- Use README contents for `long_description` to have a nice description on PyPI
- Added classifiers
- Added explicit package dependencies
* fixes#658
* fixes#708
The repodata.RepoDataQueryResult is supposed to be a bytes API and
that's what our users (see build module) expect.
Note that the repodata.RepoDataQueryResult.path method still returns
a str. That's what the rpmquery.RpmQuery, debquery.DebQuery, and
archquery.ArchQuery classes also do (if the "path" was initially
passed as a str).
Fixes: #760 ("osc build fails when called with --prefer-pkgs where the
passed directory is a repodata repository or a subdirectory of one")
The packagequery.PackageQueryResult class is supposed to provide a
bytes API. Hence, packagequery.PackageQueryResult.evr() should return
bytes instead of a str. Also, adjust the single caller in the build
module.
This is a follow-up commit for commit
6dbf103e10 ("Use html.escape instead
removed cgi.escape"), which breaks the python2 backward compatibility
(since the "html" module is not available by default) and also breaks
the code in general (due to missing html imports).
The fix is based on the proposed fix in [1].
Fixes: boo#1166537 ("osc rq accept - forwarding request causes backtrace")
[1] https://github.com/openSUSE/osc/pull/764
Fixes:
`Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/osc", line 41, in <module>
r = babysitter.run(osccli)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/babysitter.py", line 64, in run
return prg.main(argv)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/cmdln.py", line 344, in main
return self.cmd(args)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/cmdln.py", line 367, in cmd
retval = self.onecmd(argv)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/cmdln.py", line 501, in onecmd
return self._dispatch_cmd(handler, argv)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/cmdln.py", line 1232, in _dispatch_cmd
return handler(argv[0], opts, *args)
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/commandline.py", line 1458, in do_submitrequest
result = create_submit_request(apiurl,
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/core.py", line 4244, in create_submit_request
cgi.escape(message))
AttributeError: module 'cgi' has no attribute 'escape'
`
`cgi.escape` was deprecated in python 3.2