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py3: work around incompatibility between pytest, py3 inspect, and tg
Work around an issue that has been reported on
https://github.com/TurboGears/tg2/issues/118 :
.../site-packages/_pytest/doctest.py:381: in _mock_aware_unwrap
return real_unwrap(obj, stop=_is_mocked)
/usr/lib64/python3.7/inspect.py:511: in unwrap
while _is_wrapper(func):
/usr/lib64/python3.7/inspect.py:505: in _is_wrapper
return hasattr(f, '__wrapped__') and not stop(f)
.../site-packages/tg/support/objectproxy.py:19: in __getattr__
return getattr(self._current_obj(), attr)
.../site-packages/tg/request_local.py:240: in _current_obj
return getattr(context, self.name)
.../site-packages/tg/support/objectproxy.py:19: in __getattr__
return getattr(self._current_obj(), attr)
.../site-packages/tg/support/registry.py:72: in _current_obj
'thread' % self.____name__)
E TypeError: No object (name: context) has been registered for this thread
pytest's doctest support is (in _mock_aware_unwrap) using py3 inspect.
Inside inspect, _is_wrapper will do an innocent looking:
hasattr(f, '__wrapped__')
But if the code under test has un (unused) import of a tg context (such as
tg.request), it is no longer so innocent. tg will throw:
TypeError: No object (name: context) has been registered for this thread
(which in py2 would have caught by hasattr, but not in py3.)
pytest will thus fail already in the "collecting ..." phase.
To work around that, use the hack of pushing a tg context in the top level
pytest_configure.
Work around an issue that has been reported on
https://github.com/TurboGears/tg2/issues/118 :
.../site-packages/_pytest/doctest.py:381: in _mock_aware_unwrap
return real_unwrap(obj, stop=_is_mocked)
/usr/lib64/python3.7/inspect.py:511: in unwrap
while _is_wrapper(func):
/usr/lib64/python3.7/inspect.py:505: in _is_wrapper
return hasattr(f, '__wrapped__') and not stop(f)
.../site-packages/tg/support/objectproxy.py:19: in __getattr__
return getattr(self._current_obj(), attr)
.../site-packages/tg/request_local.py:240: in _current_obj
return getattr(context, self.name)
.../site-packages/tg/support/objectproxy.py:19: in __getattr__
return getattr(self._current_obj(), attr)
.../site-packages/tg/support/registry.py:72: in _current_obj
'thread' % self.____name__)
E TypeError: No object (name: context) has been registered for this thread
pytest's doctest support is (in _mock_aware_unwrap) using py3 inspect.
Inside inspect, _is_wrapper will do an innocent looking:
hasattr(f, '__wrapped__')
But if the code under test has un (unused) import of a tg context (such as
tg.request), it is no longer so innocent. tg will throw:
TypeError: No object (name: context) has been registered for this thread
(which in py2 would have caught by hasattr, but not in py3.)
pytest will thus fail already in the "collecting ..." phase.
To work around that, use the hack of pushing a tg context in the top level
pytest_configure.
bbd499c7b55e bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e 5ae8e644aa88 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 bbd499c7b55e ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 ac7e43325817 | .. _statistics:
=====================
Repository statistics
=====================
Kallithea has a *repository statistics* feature, disabled by default. When
enabled, the amount of commits per committer is visualized in a timeline. This
feature can be enabled using the ``Enable statistics`` checkbox on the
repository ``Settings`` page.
The statistics system makes heavy demands on the server resources, so
in order to keep a balance between usability and performance, statistics are
cached inside the database and gathered incrementally.
When Celery is disabled:
On each first visit to the summary page a set of 250 commits are parsed and
added to the statistics cache. This incremental gathering also happens on each
visit to the statistics page, until all commits are fetched.
Statistics are kept cached until additional commits are added to the
repository. In such a case Kallithea will only fetch the new commits when
updating its statistics cache.
When Celery is enabled:
On the first visit to the summary page, Kallithea will create tasks that will
execute on Celery workers. These tasks will gather all of the statistics until
all commits are parsed. Each task parses 250 commits, then launches a new
task.
|