* Drop Python 3.7 support
* Fix lint and test
* Check for venv generation
* Update requirements
* Update oldest constaints and compatibility tests runtime
* add some missing types
* install pkg-config
* install pkg-config for docker too
* add pkg-config to plugins
* pkg-config when cryptography may need to be built
* deps cleanup
* more comments
* more tweaks
* Fix some typos (found by codespell)
Signed-off-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
* Remove typo fixes for some files which should not be modified
Signed-off-by: Stefan Weil <sw@weilnetz.de>
Fixes https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/8162.
I had to update the base of the Dockerfile to get a new enough version of Python 3. I also simplified things a lot and removed a lot of the comments that were essentially just describing how Dockerfiles work.
The most complicated changes here are in `testdata`. You can find a diff of the changes to `nginx.tar.gz` at https://gist.github.com/c7727db0cecf3f15f02439f085c73848.
The first problem was that there were some complaints from the new Apache/nginx/OpenSSL version about the 1024 bit RSA key so I updated `empty_cert.pem` both inside and outside of the tarball as well as the corresponding private key in the tarball to use a 2048 bit key.
The 2nd problem is trickier to understand. If you look at the output from nginx after loading the config from `lots/` you'll see it complaining about conflicting `server_name` directives for the directives I deleted. See https://dev.azure.com/certbot/certbot/_build/results?buildId=2578&view=logs&j=250aa146-b243-5f8f-bf86-17a529c9fb7e&t=9baa2014-9673-5e78-8f4f-7a463caf2bfa&l=1516.
After switching the tests to Python 3, tests on that domain started failing. What I believe to be happening is we were just lucky these tests were passing to begin with. In both the Apache and Nginx plugin, if there are conflicting virtual hosts like this, we just arbitrarily pick one. The relevant code here for nginx is 575092d603/certbot-nginx/certbot_nginx/_internal/configurator.py (L455)
I played around with a debugger and confirmed that before I removed the conflicting server names, there were two exact matches for the domain we were searching for here.
I think all that's going on is with the switch to Python 3, the vhost we happen to choose changes and "breaks" the test. I suspect this to be due to something like getting values out of a dict somewhere where the order of items in a dict while iterating over it is different between Python 2 and 3. I didn't track where this difference happens down, but I personally don't think it's a good use of time since I think the real problem here is that the nginx config being tested was invalid with conflicting `server` blocks.
I removed all references to the `server_name` causing conflicts in that nginx configuration because both server blocks had other domains that are being tested, but I could add either back if you prefer. You can see the `nginx_compat` test passing with these changes at https://dev.azure.com/certbot/certbot/_build/results?buildId=2587&view=logs&j=250aa146-b243-5f8f-bf86-17a529c9fb7e.
* update Dockerfile
* Fix apache_compat on py3.
* Update empty_cert.pem.
The command used here was `openssl req -key
certbot/certbot/tests/testdata/rsa2048_key.pem -new -subj '/CN=example.com'
-x509 >
certbot-compatibility-test/certbot_compatibility_test/testdata/empty_cert.pem`.
* update nginx.tar.gz
* Remove conflicting server_names
Clean up some places missed by #7544.
Found this when running test farm tests. They were working as of 5d90544, and I will truly shocked if subsequent changes (all to the windows installer) made them stop working.
* Release script needs to target new CHANGELOG location
* Clean up various other CHANGELOG path references
* Update windows paths for new certbot location
* Add certbot to packages list for windows installer
Summary of changes in this PR:
- Refactor files involved in the `certbot` module to be of a similar structure to every other package; that is, inside a directory inside the main repo root (see below).
- Make repo root README symlink to `certbot` README.
- Pull tests outside of the distributed module.
- Make `certbot/tests` not be a module so that `certbot` isn't added to Python's path for module discovery.
- Remove `--pyargs` from test calls, and make sure to call tests from repo root since without `--pyargs`, `pytest` takes directory names rather than package names as arguments.
- Replace mentions of `.` with `certbot` when referring to packages to install, usually editably.
- Clean up some unused code around executing tests in a different directory.
- Create public shim around main and make that the entry point.
New directory structure summary:
```
repo root ("certbot", probably, but for clarity all files I mention are relative to here)
├── certbot
│ ├── setup.py
│ ├── certbot
│ │ ├── __init__.py
│ │ ├── achallenges.py
│ │ ├── _internal
│ │ │ ├── __init__.py
│ │ │ ├── account.py
│ │ │ ├── ...
│ │ ├── ...
│ ├── tests
│ │ ├── account_test.py
│ │ ├── display
│ │ │ ├── __init__.py
│ │ │ ├── ...
│ │ ├── ... # note no __init__.py at this level
│ ├── ...
├── acme
│ ├── ...
├── certbot-apache
│ ├── ...
├── ...
```
* refactor certbot/ and certbot/tests/ to use the same structure as the other packages
* git grep -lE "\-e(\s+)\." | xargs sed -i -E "s/\-e(\s+)\./-e certbot/g"
* git grep -lE "\.\[dev\]" | xargs sed -i -E "s/\.\[dev\]/certbot[dev]/g"
* git grep -lE "\.\[dev3\]" | xargs sed -i -E "s/\.\[dev3\]/certbot[dev3]/g"
* Remove replacement of certbot into . in install_and_test.py
* copy license back out to main folder
* remove linter_plugin.py and CONTRIBUTING.md from certbot/MANIFEST.in because these files are not under certbot/
* Move README back into main folder, and make the version inside certbot/ a symlink
* symlink certbot READMEs the other way around
* move testdata into the public api certbot zone
* update source_paths in tox.ini to certbot/certbot to find the right subfolder for tests
* certbot version has been bumped down a directory level
* make certbot tests directory not a package and import sibling as module
* Remove unused script cruft
* change . to certbot in test_sdists
* remove outdated comment referencing a command that doesn't work
* Install instructions should reference an existing file
* update file paths in Dockerfile
* some package named in tox.ini were manually specified, change those to certbot
* new directory format doesn't work easily with pyargs according to http://doc.pytest.org/en/latest/goodpractices.html#tests-as-part-of-application-code
* remove other instance of pyargs
* fix up some references in _release.sh by searching for ' . ' and manual check
* another stray . in tox.ini
* fix paths in tools/_release.sh
* Remove final --pyargs call, and now-unnecessary call to modules instead of local files, since that's fixed by certbot's code being one layer deeper
* Create public shim around main and make that the entry point
* without pyargs, tests cannot be run from an empty directory
* Remove cruft for running certbot directly from main
* Have main shim take real arg
* add docs/api file for main, and fix up main comment
* Update certbot/docs/install.rst
Co-Authored-By: Brad Warren <bmw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Fix comments in readthedocs requirements files to refer to current package
* Update .[docs] reference in contributing.rst
* Move plugins tests to certbot tests directory
* add certbot tests to MANIFEST.in so packagers can run python setup.py test
* move examples directory inside certbot/
* Move CHANGELOG into certbot, and create a top-level symlink
* Remove unused sys and logging from main shim
* nginx http01 test no longer relies on certbot plugins common test
Inspired by #7180, there's no reason for these tests to be running on old stable. This upgrades them to the latest stable version of Debian.
You can see tests passing with these changes at https://travis-ci.com/certbot/certbot/builds/116844923.
This will immediately address the breakage reported in #6682 and tracked at #6685. Virtualenv downloads the latest pip, which causes issues, so tell virtualenv to not download the latest pip.
I added the flag preemptively to other files as well, they're in separate commits so it will be easy to revert any spots we don't want.
I've confirmed that this fixes the issue on a machine that fails with the version of certbot-auto currently in master: recent version of virtualenv, python 2.7.
* Update changelog
* Use an environment variable instead of a flag for compatibility with old versions
* Run build.py
Certbot relies heavily on bash scripts to deploy a development environment and to execute tests. This is fine for Linux systems, including Travis, but problematic for Windows machines.
This PR converts all theses scripts into Python, to make them platform independant.
As a consequence, tox-win.ini is not needed anymore, and tox can be run indifferently on Windows or on Linux using a common tox.ini. AppVeyor is updated accordingly to execute tests for acme, certbot and all dns plugins. Other tests are not executed as they are for Docker, unsupported Apache/Nginx/Postfix plugins (for now) or not relevant for Windows (explicit Linux distribution tests or pylint).
Another PR will be done on certbot website to update how a dev environment can be set up.
* Replace several shell scripts by python equivalent.
* Correction on tox coverage
* Extend usage of new python scripts
* Various corrections
* Replace venv construction bash scripts by python equivalents
* Update tox.ini
* Unicode lines to compare files
* Put modifications on letsencrypt-auto-source instead of generated scripts
* Add executable permissions for Linux.
* Merge tox win tests into main tox
* Skip lock_test on Windows
* Correct appveyor config
* Update appveyor.yml
* Explicit coverage py27 or py37
* Avoid to cover non supported certbot plugins on Windows
* Update tox.ini
* Remove specific warnings during CI
* No cover on a debug code for tests only.
* Update documentation and help script on venv/venv3.py
* Customize help message for Windows
* Quote correctly executable path with potential spaces in it.
* Copy pipstrap from upstream
We now use tools/pip_install_editable.sh which installs our packages using the
pinned versions from certbot-auto.
We also use letsencrypt-auto-source/letsencrypt-auto instead of certbot-auto in
the root to:
1. Make sure OS bootstrappers are up to date with master.
2. Copy letsencrypt-auto-source into our tree so it can be used by
tools/pip_install_editable.sh later.