Modernize our package metadata in the following ways: * switch from description-file to long_description with the file attribute, and specify an explicit content type and encoding * replace the home-page parameter with the newer general url one * add specific labelled project links for improved navigation from PyPI's summary sidebar * add commandline keyword to help folks searching * use the specific license metadata in addition to the corresponding trove classifier for it * make sure wheels when built also incorporate the LICENSE and AUTHORS files so that we're not distributing them without a copy of the license text * stop flagging wheels as "universal" now that git-review no longer supports Python 2.7 * drop the old Sphinx integration config for PBR now that it's no longer needed https://setuptools.readthedocs.io/en/latest/userguide/declarative_config.html Also update old openstack.org URLs throughout contributor docs and examples/comments to newer opendev.org counterparts. Remove the old redundant HACKING.rst file as well as a lingering MANIFEST.in from the times before PBR was a thing. Replace the CONTRIBUTING.rst with a shorter one cribbed from bindep. Add the test profile to the one entry in bindep.txt to make it more apparent that's not a runtime dependency of git-review. Adjust some old "OpenStack, LLC." copyrights as indicated by the foundation's "Legal Issues FAQ." Change-Id: Ie45d4d73ba7b5a860f09cc4f1d849587761d846c
1.8 KiB
Contribution Overview
OpenDev's tools are hosted within the OpenDev collaboratory, and development for them uses workflows described in the OpenDev Infrastructure Manual:
http://docs.opendev.org/opendev/manual/developers.html
Defect reporting and task tracking takes place here:
https://storyboard.openstack.org/#!/project/opendev/git-review
Developing git-review
Either install bindep and run
bindep test
to check you have the needed tools, or review
bindep.txt
by hand.
Running Tests
The testing system is based on a combination of tox and testr. The canonical approach to running tests is to simply run the command tox. This will create virtual environments, populate them with dependencies and run all of the tests that OpenStack CI systems run. Behind the scenes, tox is running testr run --parallel, but is set up such that you can supply any additional testr arguments that are needed to tox. For example, you can run: tox -- --analyze-isolation to cause tox to tell testr to add --analyze-isolation to its argument list.
It is also possible to run the tests inside of a virtual environment you have created, or it is possible that you have all of the dependencies installed locally already. If you'd like to go this route, the requirements are listed in requirements.txt and the requirements for testing are in test-requirements.txt. Installing them via pip, for instance, is simply:
pip install -r requirements.txt -r test-requirements.txt
In you go this route, you can interact with the testr command directly. Running testr run will run the entire test suite. testr run --parallel will run it in parallel (this is the default incantation tox uses.) More information about testr can be found at: https://testrepository.readthedocs.io/en/latest/