While for some developers/veteran Linux users this might be obvious,
many people will probably find it hard to know why osc vc is using
editor X instead of Y though.
Additional changes:
* rename getbinaries --debug to --debuginfo to avoid conflicts
* switch conf['verbose'] from int to bool
The changes were needed because the new argparser behaves differently
and commands such as `osc ls` ran in verbose mode by default.
Cmdln.py is unmaintained for years and uses deprecated optparse.
Let's replace it with a simpler custom code. Also remove code
that generates man page, we'll replace it with a 3rd party tool.
Emojis were broken due to this commit.
The revert causes a change in behavior:
"\n" no longer gets resolved to a newline.
It is suggested to do the following instead:
$ osc <command> ... -m "first line
second line"
This reverts commit 16fda3115c.
Fixes the following error:
```
% osc
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/bin/osc", line 45, in <module>
r = babysitter.run(osccli)
File "/usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/osc/babysitter.py", line 67, in run
return prg.main(argv)
File "/usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/osc/cmdln.py", line 341, in main
self.postoptparse()
File "/usr/lib/python3.10/site-packages/osc/commandline.py", line 137, in postoptparse
if self._get_canonical_cmd_name(self.args[0]) == "help":
IndexError: list index out of range
```
* init command is working inside of a git repository
* downloadassets command fetches references assets from build description
* checkout is cloning from git
This applies when downloading multiple packages, typically the whole repo.
When downloading a single package, everything works as usual
and the subdir is not created.
They have identical names for all downloaded packages
and get overwritten by the last downloaded file.
Unless we dowload them into subdirs or prefix them with package name,
it makes no sense to download them.
The ':' character is used as a separator in Open Build Service
and constantly appears in directory names after running osc commands.
Windows do not support ':' as a valid character on file system.
This breaks not only osc but also basic commands such
as 'git clone' on a project that contains colons in paths.
That's why we decided to make osc unsupported on Windows.
The old code passes try_again=False to the recursive postoptparse
call when calling it from one of the exception handlers. This is
wrong because it can result in an incomplete conf.config dict (for
instance, if two apiurl sections have no user and no password and
no credentials_mgr_class option - see #761 ("Traceback config with
two backends and no username")).
Hence, Osc.postoptparse should only return if the conf.get_config
call succeeds. For this, unconditionally call Osc.postoptparse from
within the exception handlers. Note: this could potentially (although
quite unlikely) result in an endless recursion but in each recursive
call "user" interaction is required (that is, the user could simply
press CTRL+c) - so this should not be a problem.
Implementation note: this change breaks the API. Rationale: the
semantics of Osc.postoptparse changed. Hence, "pretending" to
honor the try_again parameter could result in unexpected behavior
(from the API consumer's POV). Hence, a traceback might be more
sensible.
Fixes: #761 ("Traceback config with two backends and no username")
Do not create an MR for the entire project if "osc mr" is invoked in
a package wc (only create an MR for the specific package instead).
Strictly speaking, the "breaks" the existing UI - but this rather seems
to be a "fix" than a "break";)
A workflow token can be created via "osc token --create --operation
workflow --scm-token <SCM_TOKEN>".
Triggering a workflow token via osc is probably unlikely - that's
why it is not yet implemented (it would also make the UI a bit
awkward because one has to specify a concrete http header).
Fixes: #943 ("implement osc token --operation=workflow")
The use of makeurl makes the code more readable/maintainable (IMHO)
and it also does proper percentage encoding of the query string (not
that the osc codebase cares much about it, though:/).
Newer rexml Ruby gem used on OBS server side uses stricter XPath parsing.
This change fixes incorrect XPath that was accepted by older rexml,
but not accepted by newer one.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Girko <ol@infoserver.lv>
The old code does not support the --binary option in combination
with the --verbose option. Specifying --binary and --verbose at
the same time results in a crash (because the binary listing
contains no <title>...</title> element).
In order to fix this, do not try to access a <title>...</title>
element when --binary and --verbose are both specified. Instead,
in this case, include information about the repo, arch, version,
and release of the corresponding binary element.
Fixes: #933 ("osc se -v -B crash")
The password store can be changed (without entering the password
again) via "osc config <apiurl> --select-password-store". This
command deletes the password from the current password store and
stores it in the selected password store.
Previously, the --select-password-store option had no meaningful
semantics. In order to use it, one always had to provide a password
and explicitly pass "pass" as the config option (the same could be
achieved by using --change-password). Hence, in a strict sense,
this change breaks the UI.
Without the slash splitting, "osc browse prj/pkg" interprets the
argument as a project, which is wrong. Hence, perform the slash
splitting (as most commands do).
Sccache is an alternate build caching system to ccache/icecream. It
supports C, C++ and Rust. It can optionally have distributed or remote
caches via redis, s3 object stores, memcached, azure storage or
google cloud storage.
This can help to significantly improve the performance of Rust rebuilds.
For example, Kanidm changes from 400s to 122s on a rebuild, and rust-lang
rebuilds improve from 7200s to 4770s. With some changes to the rust
packages especially this will be possible to speed up over version
changes as well.
See also: obs-build PR https://github.com/openSUSE/obs-build/pull/680
Most osc commands support slash notation for the specification of
a project package pair. That is, "osc <cmd> prj/pkg" has the same
semantics as "osc <cmd> prj pkg" (in most cases).
For consistency reasons, "osc creq" should also support the slash
notation for the action type's arguments. That is, for instance,
"osc creq -a submit src_prj/src_pkg dst_prj/dst_pkg" should have the
same effect as "osc creq -a submit src_prj src_pkg dst_prj dst_pkg".
Proposed-by: darix
If there are existing requests that should be superseded, the old
code stores the Request instances in the myreqs list, which is
returned to the caller. However, the caller expects only request
ids instead of instances of class Request. Eventually, this results
in a type error - excerpt:
...
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/commandline.py", line 1892, in do_createrequest
change_request_state(apiurl, srid, 'superseded',
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/core.py", line 4322, in change_request_state
u = makeurl(apiurl,
File "/usr/lib/python3.8/site-packages/osc/core.py", line 3326, in makeurl
return urlunsplit((scheme, netloc, '/'.join([path] + list(l)), query, ''))
TypeError: sequence item 2: expected str instance, Request found
Hence, simply return the request ids instead of the Request instances.
Note: this changes the API of the Osc._submit_request method but
this is OK because it is not part of the public API.
When calling "osc creq -a prj1 foo prj2 bar -a submit prj1 bar prj2 bar",
the requests that could be superseded are calculated two times for the
prj2/bar package. Hence, they could end up two times in the "supersede"
list (see do_createrequest) In order to avoid duplicates, use a set
instead of a list.
Kudos to darix for pointing this out!
Note: it is a bit questionable if osc's current semantics makes sense
in the above example.
When creating a new request via the core.Request.create method, there is
no need to escape the data that is assigned to the "description" attribute
of a core.Request instance. Internally, core.Request.create ensures that
the data, which is POSTed to the api, is correctly escaped (the escaping
is implicitly done by ET (see core.Request.to_str)). Manually escaping the
description results in a double escaping (the escaped description is
escaped by ET again) - this is not the desired behavior.
Analogously, there is no need to escape the data that is passed to the
message parameter of the core.create_submit_request function because
core.create_submit_request takes care of escaping it.
Fixes: #869 ("Silly encoding of htmlencodable entities")
Currently, when trying to initialize a non existent (server-side)
project via "osc init <prj>", osc errors out (after creating the wc)
because it fails to retrieve the package list. However, there is no
need to retrieve the package list in the "osc init <prj>" case. Hence,
skip the package list retrieval. As a result, osc does not error out.
For the background, see the discussion in #858 ("osc fails to check
out an empty project as project") [1].
[1] https://github.com/openSUSE/osc/issues/858#issuecomment-722330024
This is faster in best case since the binary search does not need
to be executed on the server.
It also finds package names where no binary with that name exists.
(as for some multibuild cases)
Replace usage with better explanation. It was missing that it requires a
prefixed hostarch. Also workername is instead called workerid in the
API.
Usage help was before: osc workerinfo WORKER
Add actual example.
See also the fix for this in OBS API docs:
https://github.com/openSUSE/open-build-service/pull/10024
In the API a new request action release was implemented. This changes
enables the user to create a release request for non-maintenance projects
and to review / view the release requests
Without this patch, running an individual service that has parameters
defined in the _service file fails:
$ osc service run obs_scm
Please specify valid --scm=... options
Aborting: service call failed: /usr/lib/obs/service/obs_scm --outdir [snipped]
This is because although the service is defined in the _service file and
the "scm" parameter is set in it, the service wasn't being found in the
data structure and so the service executable wasn't being called with
the parameters supplied in the _service file. This patch corrects the
issue with the services data structure so that the service data isn't
overridden if it is defined in the _service file.
A side effect of this correction for services defined in the _service
file is that instead of overriding the service mode with '', the mode is
taken from the _service file. When using the "run" command, this would
mean that the call mode of None may not be in agreement with the service
mode defined in the file, e.g. "manual", and so the "run" command would
no longer cause it to run when it would before. We can take this
opportunity to define this as the correct behavior - the "run" command
now only runs services with "trylocal", "localonly", or no mode set -
and also ensure that other call mode commands result in sensible
behavior when called with a service name, for instance "osc service
manualrun download_files" will run only services with mode="manual" and
name="download"files" instead of all services with mode="manual".
Additionally, services that aren't defined in the _service file can be
called with a call mode command and will use that call mode rather than
None.
The "disabledrun" service commands is marked as deprecated but has no
explicit replacement. It is still a useful command for updating packages
manually or through a CI system without being forced to run all defined
services with the "runall" command. This change adds a new command
"manualrun" and a new mode "manual" which behave the same as the
deprecated "disabledrun" command and "disabled" mode but have clearer
meaning. "manualrun" does not attempt backwards-compatible behavior with
the "disabledrun" mode for "disabled" services because "disabled" mode
may eventually be removed or change meaning. The "localrun" command is
enhanced to consider the "serveronly" mode. Since "disabledrun" never
executed services with mode "serveronly", its docs are updated
accordingly.
Improve error message in do_service a bit. The old "Too few arguments."
was misleading (for instance, if a non-remote command was not executed
in a package wc).
Note: with the new logic we could also get rid of the
"raise oscerr.WrongArgs('Local directory is no package')" statement.
Add a --status-filter option to "osc results" that can be used to
show, for instance, only the repos where a package failed to build. As
a short circuit, a -f/--failed option is added, too.
Add a --brief option to "osc prjresults" and "osc results" that can be
used to get a more compact representation of the results. In case of
"osc results", --brief is ignored if the results for a package are
requested.
in do_results:
* add --brief option on prj level:
[packagename] [repo] [arch] [buildstatus]
* filter by --status-filter <long status name>
works on prj and pkg level
in do_prjresults:
* --brief
* assume len(state)>1 as long state
core.py
* filter packages by build status
* long status handling in get_prj_results
* brief output generation in get_prj_results