Import tweaks and tests
This makes the code for `fdroid import` a bit more flexible and adds tests for the first time. It also comments out options in `examples/config.py` that just mirror the defaults to make it clear that they are defaults, and help illustrate other options (this is standard procedure in default config files).
More details in the commit messages.
See merge request !76
replace deprecated optparse with argparse
squashed and rebased merge request fdroid/fdroidserver!74
following guidelines from:
https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#upgrading-optparse-code
except, still using option = parse.parse_args() instead of args = ...
- using the following script in folder fdroidserver:
```
for i in *.py; do
sed -i -e 's/optparse/argparse/' \
-e 's/OptionParser/ArgumentParser/' \
-e 's/OptionError/ArgumentError/' \
-e 's/add_option/add_argument/' \
-e 's/(options, args) = parser/options = parser/' \
-e 's/options, args = parser/options = parser/' \
-e 's/Usage: %prog/%(prog)s/' $i;
done
```
- use ArgumentParser argument to replace (option, args) = parser.parse()
call
- use parser.error(msg) instead of raise ArgumentException as suggested
in https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#exiting-methods
- in fdroid catch ArgumentError instead of OptionError
See merge request !75
If for whatever reason the update check results in an older version that we
didn't package, don't "update" to that version if we already packaged newer
versions.
following guidelines from:
https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#upgrading-optparse-code
except, still using option = parse.parse_args() instead of args = ...
- using the following script in folder fdroidserver:
for i in *.py; do
sed -i -e 's/optparse/argparse/' \
-e 's/OptionParser/ArgumentParser/' \
-e 's/OptionError/ArgumentError/' \
-e 's/add_option/add_argument/' \
-e 's/(options, args) = parser/options = parser/' \
-e 's/options, args = parser/options = parser/' \
-e 's/Usage: %prog/%(prog)s/' $i;
done
- use ArgumentParser argument to replace (option, args) = parser.parse()
call
- use parser.error(msg) instead of raise ArgumentException as suggested
in https://docs.python.org/2/library/argparse.html#exiting-methods
- in fdroid catch ArgumentError instead of OptionError
CI: Split up package installing
Advantages:
* Easier to tell why we need each package
* apt-get install output is less scary/huge
* CI job is split in more, smaller steps easier to debug
See merge request !72
Advantages:
* Easier to tell why we need each package
* apt-get install output is less scary/huge
* CI job is split in more, smaller steps easier to debug
install build dependencies for Pillow
When Pillow is installed with pip, it needs to compile the C code against a few libraries, like libjpeg. Pillow is included in Debian/Ubuntu as 'python-imaging', so just install the build
dependencies of that, and it should all be golden.
See merge request !71
fdroid --version and shared tests between gitlab and jenkins
This adds a `fdroid --version` flag for people to easily see the exact version of fdroidserver in use. It'll also report the version using `git describe` when running from git.
The other moves the extended tests out of `./jenkins-build` into a common script for both gitlab-ci and jenkins.
See merge request !70
The tests use a little hack in order to cleanly import the fdroidserver
package locally like a regular package. pep8 doesn't see that, so this
changes the pep8 to skip E402 on *.TestCase
the `android` utility is pretty stupid, it doesn't really cache the
package index info. So each time it is run, it tries to fetch the
indexes from the network. This combines all android package installs
to a single command to make things run quicker.
This will report the version embedded in the module if it is installed, and
will report `git describe` if being run from git. If someone installs from
git using pip, this will probably report the version in setup.py, which
will be wrong. But that is not a documented install method, and I haven't
heard of anyone using it. The recommended way is to run straight from git.
Support XML, JSON, and YAML for metadata
Add support for app metadata files in JSON, XML, and YAML data formats. All of the formats use the exact same metadata tags, so there is no translation layer needed. They all just parse the data into the same internal data format: Python dicts. Supporting these standard formats will make it much easier for people to write recipes since they can choose a data format that they are familiar with. It also makes it much easier to generate metadata programmatically, since there are good libraries for working with all three formats in basically every language (unlike FDroid's .txt format).
Here are the same tags in .txt, JSON, XML, and YAML:
Source Code:https://github.com/SMSSecure/SMSSecure
"Source Code": "https://github.com/SMSSecure/SMSSecure",
<string name="Source Code">https://github.com/SMSSecure/SMSSecure</string>
Source Code: https://github.com/SMSSecure/SMSSecure
Looking for comments, suggestions, flames, etc. from @CiaranG, @mvdan, and everyone else.
See merge request !57
For a bit repo like f-droid.org, it makes sense to standardize on a single
format for metadata files. This adds support for enforcing a single data
format, or a reduced set of data formats. So f-droid.org would run like
this if it changed to YAML:
accepted_formats = ['txt', 'yaml']
Then once everything was converted to YAML, it could look like this:
accepted_formats = ['yaml']
In order to prevent confusion caused by multiple metadata files for a given
app, fdroid will exit with an error if it finds any app metadata file with
the same package ID as one that has already been parsed.
This puts process of setting up the defaults for the internal dict
that represents a parsed app into a single method that is reused for all
metadata formats.