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texasbbq

Smoke out the bugs that break dependent projects.

About

A project that allows you to test a source project against potentially multiple target projects, i.e. downstream projects that depend on it. This allows an early warning when developing the source, because a daily master of the source project can be checked against all significant downstream targets in an automated fashion. Such testing is especially useful for core libraries, such as the ones that power the rest of the SciPy ecosystem, and helps to reduce the risk of breaking an ecosystem with a faulty release.

Name

The texasbbq name was coined during a lightning talk at SciPy 2019 in Austin, Texas where one of the pun panelists suggested "if you are all about smoking out bugs, you better call it barbecue!" Puns about "marination" and "roasting" followed.

Principles

It is just an ancillary script, so let's keep it minimal.

  • Minimalism
  • Single script
  • Simple installation
  • Single page README
  • Minimal dependencies
  • Modular design
  • Idempotent behaviour
  • Simple license
  • Trivial to release

Usage

Configuration happens (for now) in a Python script by subclassing one Source configuration class as well as several Target subclasses and placing these in a configuration script, for example switchboard.py. The module texasbbq will then provides a command-line interface for running the tests (see blow).

The main entry point is a single script, texasbbq.py, which is used to drive integration testing. This script will run on at least Python 2.7 and 3.7 and has only a single third-party python dependency: packaging. Hence it will probably run on a large variety of different CI systems and platforms. It provides a pure Python interface to conda without using a shell language. A self-contained miniconda distribution containing at least conda 4.9 will be downloaded to ensure a clean build.

It has multiple stages, which are actions to perform and multiple targets, which are projects to be tested.

Dependencies

  • Executable
    • git
    • conda (4.9) (Will be downloaded during operation, see above.)
  • Python packages
    • packaging

Sources

Every integration-testing setup configuration must have at least one of CondaSource or GitSource to define the source project to be tested. The difference between the two is that for a CondaSource you are configuring that the source be installed via a conda package. For example the build artifact result of a nightly or development build. For a GitSource project you are installing the project by cloning a copy of the project repository and building it prior to testing.

Here is an example CondaSource configuration from the Numba project:

from texasbbq import CondaSource

class NumbaSource(CondaSource):

    module = __name__

    @property
    def name(self):
        return "numba"

    @property
    def conda_package(self):
        return "-c numba/label/dev numba"

And here is an example GitSource configuration from the Dask project:

from texasbbq import GitSource

class DaskSource(GitSource):

    module = __name__

    @property
    def name(self):
        return "dask"

    @property
    def clone_url(self):
        return "https://github.com/dask/dask"

    @property
    def git_ref(self):
        return "master"

    @property
    def conda_dependencies(self):
        return ["-c conda-forge toolz numpy fsspec"]

    @property
    def install_command(self):
        return "pip install -e ."

Targets

Targets are projects that should be tested as part of the integration tests. They are specified as either a CondaTarget or a GitTarget.

In an ideal case, the project ships the tests and running the tests is simply a matter of installing the (potentially pre-compiled) conda package and running the tests. In such cases a CondaTarget will suffice. In case this isn't possible, doing a git clone, building the package from source and running the tests from the clone is also supported. In that case, you will need to use a GitTarget.

Here is the example GitTarget configuration for the UMAP project, when testing with Numba as a source:

class UmapTests(GitTarget):
    @property
    def name(self):
        return "umap"

    @property
    def clone_url(self):
        return "https://github.com/lmcinnes/umap"

    @property
    def git_ref(self):
        return([t for t in git_ls_remote_tags(self.clone_url) if not
                t.startswith("v")][-1])

    @property
    def conda_dependencies(self):
        return ["numpy scikit-learn scipy nose"]

    @property
    def install_command(self):
        return "pip install -e ."

    @property
    def test_command(self):
        return "nosetests -s umap"

Lastly, texasbbq.py will automatically detect any target subclasses and make them available.

Command-Line Interface

In order to access the command-line interface, import the main function from texasbbq and place the following snippet at the end of your configuration script:

if __name__ == "__main__":
    main(NumbaSource())

And replace NumbaSource with the appropriate Source for your project.

Now, assuming your initial configuration script was called switchboard.py, this will now be equipped to run one of multiple stages for one of multiple targets.

The stages are as follows:

miniconda
Download and setup miniconda distribution.
environment
Setup conda environments for each of the targets.
install_source
Install the source to the given environments.
install_target
Install each target to the given environments.
tests
Run tests for each target.

The two stages: miniconda and environment are more or less idempotent. I.e. if miniconda has been downloaded and installed that step will not be done again.

By default, all stages and all targets will be run. If you want to limit the stages use the -s or --stages option. If you want to limit the targets use the -t or --targets option.

Examples (assuming your initial configuration script was called switchboard.py):

# Only download and install miniconda
$ ./switchboard.py -s miniconda

# Only run tests for umap
$ ./switchboard.py -s tests -t umap

# Only download miniconda and setup environment for umap
$ ./switchboard.py -s miniconda environment -t umap

Please see the output of ./switchboard.py -h for more information.

Installation

texasbbq can be installed with pip from PyPI:

pip install texasbbq

or directly from GitHub:

pip install git+https://github.com/numba/texasbbq.git

The texasbbq.py module can also be downloaded locally using commands like curl or wget.

Continuous Integration Testing Examples

Caveats

  • The script is reasonably robust but won't respond well to malformed user input. For example, if you try to run only the test stage without the others it is likely to fail.
  • If you are running this locally and you already have an anaconda or miniconda distribution activated you may run into problems. In such cases it is best to run this script from a vanilla (non-customized) shell.

Change Log

0.2.1

  • Metadata update

0.2.0

0.1.0

  • Initial tag and typosquat PyPi

License

texasbbq is Copyright (c) 2019, Anaconda, Inc. and provided under the terms of a 2-Clause BSD license.

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Smoke out the bugs that break dependent projects.

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