According to `distutils/version.py`, StrictVersion is pretty strict in
what version numbers to accept:
> A version number consists of two or three dot-separated numeric
> components, with an optional "pre-release" tag on the end. The
> pre-release tag consists of the letter 'a' or 'b' followed by a number.
This assumption already fails for some pretty basic python libraries
itself, like setuptools, also available in `46.1.3.post20200610`, a
completely valid version number according to
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0440/#post-releases.
There doesn't seem to be a particular reason on why StrictVersion has
been used here, so let's use LooseVersion, to be compatible with these
versions.
Co-authored-by: Adrien Ferrand <adferrand@users.noreply.github.com>
This PR is an alternative to #7125.
Instead of disabling the strict mode on Pebble, this PR fixes the JWS payloads regarding RFC 8555 to be compliant, and allow certbot to work with Pebble v2.1.0+.
* Fix acme compliance to RFC 8555.
* Working mixin
* Activate back pebble strict mode
* Use mixin for type
* Update dependencies
* Fix also in fields_to_partial_json
* Update pebble
* Add changelog
Part of #7550
This PR makes appropriate corrections to run pylint on Python 3.
Why not keeping the dependencies unchanged and just run pylint on Python 3?
Because the old version of pylint breaks horribly on Python 3 because of unsupported version of astroid.
Why updating pylint + astroid to the latest version ?
Because this version only fixes some internal errors occuring during the lint of Certbot code, and is also ready to run gracefully on Python 3.8.
Why upgrading mypy ?
Because the old version does not support the new version of astroid required to run pylint correctly.
Why not upgrading mypy to its latest version ?
Because this latest version includes a new typshed version, that adds a lot of new type definitions, and brings dozens of new errors on the Certbot codebase. I would like to fix that in a future PR.
That said so, the work has been to find the correct set of new dependency versions, then configure pylint for sane configuration errors in our situation, disable irrelevant lintings errors, then fixing (or ignoring for good reason) the remaining mypy errors.
I also made PyLint and MyPy checks run correctly on Windows.
* Start configuration
* Reconfigure travis
* Suspend a check specific to python 3. Start fixing code.
* Repair call_args
* Fix return + elif lints
* Reconfigure development to run mainly on python3
* Remove incompatible Python 3.4 jobs
* Suspend pylint in some assertions
* Remove pylint in dev
* Take first mypy that supports typed-ast>=1.4.0 to limit the migration path
* Various return + else lint errors
* Find a set of deps that is working with current mypy version
* Update local oldest requirements
* Remove all current pylint errors
* Rebuild letsencrypt-auto
* Update mypy to fix pylint with new astroid version, and fix mypy issues
* Explain type: ignore
* Reconfigure tox, fix none path
* Simplify pinning
* Remove useless directive
* Remove debugging code
* Remove continue
* Update requirements
* Disable unsubscriptable-object check
* Disable one check, enabling two more
* Plug certbot dev version for oldest requirements
* Remove useless disable directives
* Remove useless no-member disable
* Remove no-else-* checks. Use elif in symetric branches.
* Add back assertion
* Add new line
* Remove unused pylint disable
* Remove other pylint disable
Part of #5775.
* Create _internal folder certbot-nginx
* Move configurator.py to _internal
* Move constants.py to _internal
* Move display_ops.py to _internal
* Move http_01.py to _internal
* Move nginxparser.py to _internal
* Move obj.py to _internal
* Move parser_obj.py to _internal
* Move parser.py to _internal
* Update location and references for tls_configs
* exclude parser_obj from coverage
Part of #5775. We don't use these docs anywhere, so delete them.
Removes:
- `certbot-nginx/readthedocs.org.requirements.txt`
- `certbot-nginx/docs/` folder
- docs include in `MANIFEST.in`
- docs dependencies in `setup.py`
* Remove unused nginx docs
* Add changelog entry about the removal
* Create _internal package for Certbot's non-public modules
* Move account.py to _internal
* Move auth_handler.py to _internal
* Move cert_manager.py to _internal
* Move client.py to _internal
* Move error_handler.py to _internal
* Move lock.py to _internal
* Move main.py to _internal
* Move notify.py to _internal
* Move ocsp.py to _internal
* Move renewal.py to _internal
* Move reporter.py to _internal
* Move storage.py to _internal
* Move updater.py to _internal
* update apache and nginx oldest requirements
* Keep the lock file as certbot.lock
* nginx oldest tests still need to rely on newer certbot
* python doesn't have good dependency resolution, so specify the transitive dependency
* update required minimum versions in nginx setup.py
Fixes#7368.
When updating the changelog, I replaced the line about running tests on Python 3.8 because I personally think that support for Python 3.8 is the most relevant information for our users/packagers about our changes in this area.
* List support for Python 3.8.
* Update changelog.
This PR is the second part of #6497 to ease the integration, following the new plan propose by @bmw here: #6497 (comment)
This PR creates the module certbot.compat.os, that delegates everything to os, and that will be the safeguard against problematic methods of the standard module. On top of that, a quality check wrapper is called in the lint tox environment. This wrapper calls pylint and ensures that standard os module is no used directly in the certbot codebase.
Finally local oldest requirements are updated to ensure that tests will take the new logic when running.
* Add executable permissions
* Add the delegate certbot.compat.os module, add check coding style to enforce usage of certbot.compat.os instead of standard os
* Load certbot.compat.os instead of os
* Move existing compat test
* Update local oldest requirements
* Import sys
* Update account_test.py
* Update os.py
* Update os.py
* Update local oldest requirements
* Implement the new linter_plugin
* Fix local oldest for nginx
* Remove check coding style
* Update linter_plugin.py
* Add several comments
* Update the setup.py
* Add documentation
* Update acme dependencies
* Update certbot/compat/os.py
* Update docs/contributing.rst
* Update linter_plugin.py
* Handle os.path. Simplify checker.
* Add a comment to a reference implementation
* Update changelog
* Fix module registering
* Update docs/contributing.rst
* Update config and changelog
So merging the study from @bmw and me, here is what happened.
Each invocation of `certbot.logger.post_arg_parse_setup` create a file handler on `letsencrypt.log`. This function also set an atexit handler invoking `logger.shutdown()`, that have the effect to close all logger file handler not already closed at this point. This method is supposed to be called when a python process is close to exit, because it makes all logger unable to write new logs on any handler.
Before #6667 and this PR, for tests, the atexit handle would be triggered only at the end of the pytest process. It means that each test that launches `certbot.logger.post_arg_parse_setup` add a new file handler. These tests were typically connecting the file handler on a `letsencrypt.log` located in a temporary directory, and this directory and content was wipped out at each test tearDown. As a consequence, the file handles, not cleared from the logger, were accumulating in the logger, with all of them connected to a deleted file log, except the last one that was just created by the current test. Considering the number of tests concerned, there were ~300 file handler at the end of pytest execution.
One can see that, on prior #6667, by calling `print(logger.getLogger().handlers` on the `tearDown` of these tests, and see the array growing at each test execution.
Even if this represent a memory leak, this situation was not really a problem on Linux: because a file can be deleted before it is closed, it was only meaning that a given invocation of `logger.debug` for instance, during the tests, was written in 300 log files. The overhead is negligeable. On Windows however, the file handlers were failing because you cannot delete a file before it is closed.
It was one of the reason for #6667, that added a call to `logging.shutdown()` at each test tearDown, with the consequence to close all file handlers. At this point, Linux is not happy anymore. Any call to `logger.warn` will generate an error for each closed file handler. As a file handler is added for each test, the number of errors grows on each test, following an arithmetical suite divergence.
On `test_sdists.py`, that is using the bare setuptools test suite without output capturing, we can see the damages. The total output takes 216000 lines, and 23000 errors are generated. A decent machine can support this load, but a not a small AWS instance, that is crashing during the execution. Even with pytest, the captured output and the memory leak become so large that segfaults are generated.
On the current PR, the problem is solved, by resetting the file handlers array on the logging system on each test tearDown. So each fileHandler is properly closed, and removed from the stack. They do not participate anymore in the logging system, and can be garbage collected. Then we stay on always one file handler opened at any time, and tests can succeed on AWS instances.
For the record, here is all the places where the logging system is called and fail if there is still file handlers closed but not cleaned (extracted from the original huge output before correction):
```
Logged from file account.py, line 116
Logged from file account.py, line 178
Logged from file client.py, line 166
Logged from file client.py, line 295
Logged from file client.py, line 415
Logged from file client.py, line 422
Logged from file client.py, line 480
Logged from file client.py, line 503
Logged from file client.py, line 540
Logged from file client.py, line 601
Logged from file client.py, line 622
Logged from file client.py, line 750
Logged from file cli.py, line 220
Logged from file cli.py, line 226
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 101
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 127
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 147
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 261
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 283
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 307
Logged from file crypto_util.py, line 336
Logged from file disco.py, line 116
Logged from file disco.py, line 124
Logged from file disco.py, line 134
Logged from file disco.py, line 138
Logged from file disco.py, line 141
Logged from file dns_common_lexicon.py, line 45
Logged from file dns_common_lexicon.py, line 61
Logged from file dns_common_lexicon.py, line 67
Logged from file dns_common.py, line 316
Logged from file dns_common.py, line 64
Logged from file eff.py, line 60
Logged from file eff.py, line 73
Logged from file error_handler.py, line 105
Logged from file error_handler.py, line 110
Logged from file error_handler.py, line 87
Logged from file hooks.py, line 248
Logged from file main.py, line 1071
Logged from file main.py, line 1075
Logged from file main.py, line 1189
Logged from file ops.py, line 122
Logged from file ops.py, line 325
Logged from file ops.py, line 338
Logged from file reporter.py, line 55
Logged from file selection.py, line 110
Logged from file selection.py, line 118
Logged from file selection.py, line 123
Logged from file selection.py, line 176
Logged from file selection.py, line 231
Logged from file selection.py, line 310
Logged from file selection.py, line 66
Logged from file standalone.py, line 101
Logged from file standalone.py, line 88
Logged from file standalone.py, line 97
Logged from file standalone.py, line 98
Logged from file storage.py, line 52
Logged from file storage.py, line 59
Logged from file storage.py, line 75
Logged from file util.py, line 56
Logged from file webroot.py, line 165
Logged from file webroot.py, line 186
Logged from file webroot.py, line 187
Logged from file webroot.py, line 204
Logged from file webroot.py, line 223
Logged from file webroot.py, line 234
Logged from file webroot.py, line 235
Logged from file webroot.py, line 237
Logged from file webroot.py, line 91
```
* Reapply #6667
* Make setuptools delegates tests execution to pytest, like in acme module.
* Clean handlers at each tearDown to avoid memory leaks.
* Update changelog