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mads
tests: stabilize Git committer in test_vcs_operations

Git tries to find out name and email in this order:

1. The author can be set e.g. via the `--author` option of `git commit`.
2. If set, the environment variables GIT_AUTHOR_NAME, GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL,
GIT_COMMITTER_NAME and GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL are taken.
3. If set, various (global) config files are considered.
4. Unless disabled by the user.useconfigonly config, the names and emails are
inferred from various system sources such as various fields from /etc/passwd,
/etc/mailname and the environment variable EMAIL.

The author can be provided on the command line (1), but that is not possible
for the committer.

It is not an option to modify Git’s configuration files, so the result of (3)
depends on the system the tests run on, which should be avoided. A follow-up
patch will try to instruct Git to not read the system Git configuration files.

(4) is also system-dependent. On some systems, (4) is disabled in the Git
configuration. If enabled, Git will try to infer the committer name from the
gecko field in /etc/passwd, but will fail if it is empty. The previous code
passed the environment variable EMAIL to provide the corresponding email
address.

By passing the names and emails via (2), we can set the author and committer
name and email uniformly and prevent Git from using the system-dependent ways
(3) and (4). This will replace the use of of EMAIL. The environment variables
were introduced in 2005, so there should be no backwards compatibility
problems.

The tests will specify --author explicitly in the cases where the actual name
matters. We just need default values that can be used for committing when we
don't care.

We set it as static defaults to:
Author: test_regular <test_regular@example.com>
Commit: test_admin <test_admin@example.com>

Based on changes and research by Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de>.
=======================
Database schema changes
=======================

Kallithea uses Alembic for :ref:`database migrations <upgrade_db>`
(upgrades and downgrades).

If you are developing a Kallithea feature that requires database schema
changes, you should make a matching Alembic database migration script:

1. :ref:`Create a Kallithea configuration and database <setup>` for testing
   the migration script, or use existing ``development.ini`` setup.

   Ensure that this database is up to date with the latest database
   schema *before* the changes you're currently developing. (Do not
   create the database while your new schema changes are applied.)

2. Create a separate throwaway configuration for iterating on the actual
   database changes::

    kallithea-cli config-create temp.ini

   Edit the file to change database settings. SQLite is typically fine,
   but make sure to change the path to e.g. ``temp.db``, to avoid
   clobbering any existing database file.

3. Make your code changes (including database schema changes in ``db.py``).

4. After every database schema change, recreate the throwaway database
   to test the changes::

    rm temp.db
    kallithea-cli db-create -c temp.ini --repos=/var/repos --user=doe --email doe@example.com --password=123456 --no-public-access --force-yes
    kallithea-cli repo-scan -c temp.ini

5. Once satisfied with the schema changes, auto-generate a draft Alembic
   script using the development database that has *not* been upgraded.
   (The generated script will upgrade the database to match the code.)

   ::

    alembic -c development.ini revision -m "area: add cool feature" --autogenerate

6. Edit the script to clean it up and fix any problems.

   Note that for changes that simply add columns, it may be appropriate
   to not remove them in the downgrade script (and instead do nothing),
   to avoid the loss of data. Unknown columns will simply be ignored by
   Kallithea versions predating your changes.

7. Run ``alembic -c development.ini upgrade head`` to apply changes to
   the (non-throwaway) database, and test the upgrade script. Also test
   downgrades.

   The included ``development.ini`` has full SQL logging enabled. If
   you're using another configuration file, you may want to enable it
   by setting ``level = DEBUG`` in section ``[handler_console_sql]``.

The Alembic migration script should be committed in the same revision as
the database schema (``db.py``) changes.

See the `Alembic documentation`__ for more information, in particular
the tutorial and the section about auto-generating migration scripts.

.. __: http://alembic.zzzcomputing.com/en/latest/


Troubleshooting
---------------

* If ``alembic --autogenerate`` responds "Target database is not up to
  date", you need to either first use Alembic to upgrade the database
  to the most recent version (before your changes), or recreate the
  database from scratch (without your schema changes applied).