GitHub appears to be deprecating addProjectNextItem by not allowing it to be used alongside projectV2 to get the project ID, so switching to using addProjectV2ItemById instead.
Update the "Build docker images" GitHub Actions workflow to use
`docker/metadata-action` to generate docker image tags, instead of a
custom shell script.
Signed-off-by: Henry <97804910+henryclw@users.noreply.github.com>
* Allow unused ignores in "bleeding edge" CI
Where "bleeding edge" means the Twisted Trunk and Latest Deps jobs.
Follow up from #12531.
Resolves#12574.
* Use `--extras all` in latest deps mypy CI
Twisted trunk job already does this.
Missed in #12531.
* changelog
Over time we've begun to use newer versions of mypy, typeshed, stub
packages---and of course we've improved our own annotations. This makes
some type ignore comments no longer necessary. I have removed them.
There was one exception: a module that imports `select.epoll`. The
ignore is redundant on Linux, but I've kept it ignored for those of us
who work on the source tree using not-Linux. (#11771)
I'm more interested in the config line which enforces this. I want
unused ignores to be reported, because I think it's useful feedback when
annotating to know when you've fixed a problem you had to previously
ignore.
* Installing extras before typechecking
Lacking an easy way to install all extras generically, let's bite the bullet and
make install the hand-maintained `all` extra before typechecking.
Now that https://github.com/matrix-org/backend-meta/pull/6 is merged to
the release/v1 branch.
* Run "main" trial tests under poetry
Olddeps and twisted trunk tests are handled in separate PRs.
The PyPy config is a best-effort only; it's completely untested.
Pulled out from #12337.
* Changelog
Fixesmatrix-org/complement#330 (or it will, once we remove the old files).
It's not quite a lift-and-shift: I've also taken the opportunity to get rid of the custom CA that we used to use to sign the TLS certs, which has been superceded by the CA exposed by Complement.
Since #11811 there has been general Complement flakiness around networking.
It seems like tests are hitting the wrong containers. In an effort to diagnose
the cause of this, as well as reduce its impact on this project, set the
parallelsim to 1 (no parallelism) when running tests.
If this fixes the flakiness then this indicates the cause and I can diagnose
this further. If this doesn't fix the flakiness then that implies some kind
of test pollution which also helps to diagnose this further.
* CI: run Complement on the VM, not inside Docker
This requires https://github.com/matrix-org/complement/pull/289
We now run Complement on the VM instead of inside a Docker container.
This is to allow Complement to bind to any high-numbered port when it
starts up its own federation servers. We want to do this to allow for
more concurrency when running complement tests. Previously, Complement
only ever bound to `:8448` when running its own federation server. This
prevented multiple federation tests running at the same time as they would
fight each other on the port. This did however allow Complement to run
in Docker, as the host could just port forward `:8448` to allow homeserver
containers to communicate to Complement. Now that we are using random
ports however, we cannot use Docker to run Complement. This ends up
being a good thing because:
- Running Complement tests locally is closer to how they run in CI.
- Allows the `CI` env var to be removed in Complement.
- Slightly speeds up runs as we don't need to pull down the Complement
image prior to running tests. This assumes GHA caches actions sensibly.
* Changelog
* Full stop
* Update .github/workflows/tests.yml
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
* Review comments
* Update .github/workflows/tests.yml
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
PyNaCl's recent 1.5.0 release on PyPi includes arm64 wheels, which means our
arm64 docker images now build in a sensible amount of time, so we can skip the
amd64-only build.