- Remove outdated options, quiet some logging - Don't add authors yet -- need to add maintainers first - Add GitHub token option to update_libraries
6.0 KiB
Management Commands
import_commit_counts
Imports commit counts for all libraries, broken down by month, and saves them to the database. The command uses the Github API to retrieve commit data and is intended for a one-time import.
- Saves
CommitDataobjects, one per month, with a count of the number of commits made to the specified branch (or themasterbranch) of each Library object. - If there is already a
CommitDatarecord for that library-month-branch, this command will overwrite thecommit_countfield, not increment it. - Idempotent.
Options
Here are the options you can use:
--branch: Specify the branch you want to count commits for. Defaults tomaster.--token: Pass a GitHub API token. If not passed, will use the value insettings.GITHUB_TOKEN.
Example:
./manage.py import_commit_counts
Output:
...
{"message": "commit_data_updated", "commit_data_pk": 721, "obj_created": true, "library": "Math/Statistical Distributions", "branch": "master", "logger": "libraries.github", "level": "info", "timestamp": "2023-05-25T22:13:58.074730Z"}
Updated Math/Statistical Distributions commits; 247 monthly counts added
import_library_version_docs_urls
This command retrieves and stores the documentation URLs for specific or all library versions in the database. It provides a way to keep the database updated with the most current URLs for the documentation of each library version.
- This command cycles through all Versions in the database, or specified versions using the
--versionoption. - For each version, the command calls a celery task that retrieves and stores the library version documentation url paths from S3.
- If a library version's documentation URL cannot be found, the command will skip and continue with the next library version.
Options
Here are the options you can use:
--version: Specify the version for which you want to retrieve documentation URLs. You can provide a specific version number (example: '1.81.0') or a partial version number to process all versions that contain the partial version number (example: '--version=1.7' would process 1.70.0, 1.71.0, 1.72.0, etc.). If no version is specified, all active versions will be processed.--min-version: Specify the minimum version for which you want to retrieve documentation URLs. The default is defined in the settings file.
Example:
./manage.py get_library_version_documentation_urls --version=1.81.0
Output:
Processing version 1.81.0...
...
Processing version 1.81.0...
Could not get docs url for Math/Statistical Distributions (1.81.0).
...
This command is idempotent; running it multiple times with the same arguments will not change the result after the first run.
import_library_versions
Connect Library objects to the Boost versions (AKA "release") that included them using information from the main Boost GitHub repo and the library repos. Functions of this command:
- Prints out any versions or libraries that were skipped at the end.
- Idempotent.
Options
Here are the options you can use:
--release: Full or partial Boost version (release) number. Ifreleaseis passed, the command will import all libraries for the versions that contain the passed-in release number. If not passed, the command will import libraries for all active versions newer than the min-release.--min-release: Specify the minimum version for which you want to retrieve documentation URLs. The default is defined in the settings file.--token: Pass a GitHub API token. If not passed, will use the value insettings.GITHUB_TOKEN.
Example:
./manage.py import_library_versions
Output:
Saved library version Log (boost-1.16.1).
Processing version boost-0.9.27...
Processing module python...
Saved library version Python (boost-0.9.27). Created? False
User stefan@seefeld.name added as a maintainer of Python (boost-0.9.27)
{"message": "User username added as a maintainer of Python (boost-0.9.27)", "logger": "libraries.github", "level": "info", "timestamp": "2023-05-17T21:24:39.046029Z"}
Updated maintainers for Python (boost-0.9.27).
Saved library version Python (boost-0.9.27).
Skipped disjoint_sets in boost-1.57.0: Could not find library in database by gitmodule name
Skipped signals in boost-1.57.0: Could not find library in database by gitmodule name
import_versions
Import Boost version (AKA "release") information from the Boost GitHub repo. Functions of this command:
- Retrieves Boost tags: It collects all the Boost tags from the main Github repo, excluding beta releases and release candidates. For each tag, it gathers the associated data. If it's a full release, the data is in the tag; otherwise, the data is in the commit.
- Updates local database: For each tag, it creates or updates a Version instance in the local database.
- Adds the download links from Artifactory for the release downloads
- Idempotent.
Options
Here are the options you can use:
--delete-versions: Deletes all existing Version instances in the database before importing new ones.--token: Pass a GitHub API token. If not passed, will use the value insettings.GITHUB_TOKEN.--verbose: Print output information
Example:
./manage.py import_versions
Output:
Saved version boost-1.82.0. Created: True
Skipping boost-1.82.0.beta1, not a full release
Saved version boost-1.81.0. Created: True
Skipping boost-1.81.0.beta1, not a full release
...
update_libraries
Runs the library update script, which cycles through the repos listed in the Boost library and syncs their information.
Synced information:
- Most library information comes from
meta/libraries.jsonstored in each Boost library repo - Library data and metadata from GitHub is saved to our database
- Categories are updated, if needed
- Library categories are updated, if need be.
- Issues and Pull Requests are synced
For local development: Run with the --local flag.
NOTE: Can take upwards of a half hour to run if the --local flag is not passed.