Fixes https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/8134.
* Test on Python 3.9.
* Mention Python 3.9 support in changelog.
* s/\( *'Pro.*3\.\)8\(',\)/\18\2\n\19\2/
* undo changes to tox.ini
* Move more tests to Python 3.9
* Update PyYAML and packages which pinned it back
* Upgrade typed-ast
* Use <= to "pin" dnspython
* Fix lint by telling pylint it cannot be trusted
* Disable mypy on RFC plugin
* add comment about <= support
* Remove python_version from mypy.ini.
* Fix magic_typing
* Ignore msvcrt usage.
* make mypy happier
* clean up changes
* Add type for reporter queue
* More mypy fixes
* Fix pyrfc3339 str.
* Remove unused import.
* Make certbot.util mypy work in both Pythons
* Fix typo
* Fixed a few linting warnings for if not x in y.
These should have been caught by pylint, but weren't.
* Replaced "x in y.keys()" with "x in y".
It's much faster, and more Pythonic.
random25863.example.org appears in multiple port 80 virtualhosts in the
nginx testdata tarball and also is in the nginx-roundtrip-testdata.
Certbot doesn't handle these properly, which results in random test
failures.
This commit ensures that random25863.example.org only appears in a
single virtualhost and should ensure that the tests pass consistently.
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
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>
* Fix dangerous default argument
* Remove unused imports
* Remove unnecessary comprehension
* Use literal syntax to create data structure
* Use literal syntax instead of function calls to create data structure
Co-authored-by: deepsource-autofix[bot] <62050782+deepsource-autofix[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
As pylint is evolving, it improves its accuracy, and several pylint error suppression (`# pylint: disable=ERROR) added in certbot codebase months or years ago are not needed anymore to make it happy.
There is a (disabled by default) pylint error to detect the useless suppressions (pylint-ception: `useless-suppression`). It is not working perfectly (it has also false-positives ...) but it is a good start to clean the codebase.
This PR removes several of these useless suppressions as detected by the current pylint version we use.
* Remove useless suppress
* Remove useless lines
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
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
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
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
Part of #5775. We don't use these docs anywhere, so delete them.
Removes:
- `certbot-compatibility-test/readthedocs.org.requirements.txt`
- `certbot-compatibility-test/docs/` folder
- docs include in `MANIFEST.in`
- docs dependencies in `setup.py`
Part of #5775. Methodology similar to #7528. Also refactors NGINX test util to use certbot.tests.util.ConfigTestCase.
* refactor nginx tests to no longer rely on certbot.configuration internals
* Move configuration.py to _internal
* Don't call core constants from nginx plugin
* Move constants.py to _internal/
* Move ENHANCEMENTS from now-internal constants to public plugins.enhancements
* Update display.enhancements.ask from its 2015 comment
`certbot-compatibility-test` is using code in `acme` that I proposed making private and not trivially importable in https://github.com/certbot/certbot/issues/5775.
To fix it, I switched to using Certbot's test utilities which I proposed keeping public to help with writing tests for plugins. When doing this I had to change the name of the key because `rsa1024_key.pem` doesn't exist in Certbot.
I also deleted the keys in `certbot-compatibility-test`'s testdata because because they are unused.