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Ask git where its daemon is and use that#1697

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Merged
Byron merged 1 commit intogitpython-developers:mainfromEliahKagan:find-daemon
Oct 8, 2023

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@EliahKaganEliahKagan commentedOct 7, 2023
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This changes the test helpers on Windows to usegit --exec-path (with whatevergit GitPython is using) to find the directory that containsgit-daemon.exe, instead of findinggit-daemon.exe in a PATH search.

Because it is only on Windows that the tests rungit-daemon directly rather than usinggit daemon, this only affects Windows. Note that this doesnot affect Cygwin, which like other Unix-like systems usesgit daemon for the tests.

This change has three benefits:

  • The documentation is shortened and simplified, because the part on how to getgit-daemon working on Windows is removed.
  • The effort required to set up GitPython for testing is reduced because that no longer has to be done (but see below).
  • Users will not be tempted to put Git'slibexec\git-core directory in theirPATH. This directory contains a number of.dll files, which are there for the executables in the directory that use them. But Windows includes allPATH directories when searching forlibraries as well as programs, which can create very strange and confusing problems where completely unrelated programs end up using them instead of the versions of the libraries they should use.

Note, however, what it doesnot cover:

  • The tests that usegit-daemon are still skipped by default on Windows. These are exactly the tests that are skipped whenHIDE_WINDOWS_FREEZE_ERRORS is set toTrue, which is the case by default on Windows. I temporarily changed its default value toFalse to test this PR. That change is deliberately not included in this PR and probably should not be made without further accompanying changes. (Seethis comment, but also the information below about how the tests usually fail, which is not by freezing.)

  • The mechanism to skip them remains to be fixed. TheHIDE_WINDOWS_KNOWN_ERRORS andHIDE_WINDOWS_FREEZE_ERRORS variables are intended to be affected by the same-named environment variables, but this does not work properly. They areTrue by default, but the only way to use environment variables to set them to a false value isto define the environment variable with an empty value (since everything else, as a string, is truthy). In addition to being very unlikely to have been the intended behavior, this is also hard to do on Windows when using typical shells, because in bothcmd.exe and PowerShell setting an environment variable as empty actually removes the variable altogether. Rather than attempting to fix that here, I tested by temporarily changing the default value instead of using an environment variable.

  • The tests that usegit-daemon still usually fail on Windows. The failure mode is the same as when they are run withgit-daemon.exe in a directory inPATH, however. That is,whengit-daemon is not found it looks like this, whilewhen it is found by aPATH search it looks like this, andthe new way, finding it viagit --exec-path, looks similar. Note how all errors of this form occur in the logwith-no-git-daemon.txt:

    git.exc.GitCommandNotFound: Cmd('git-daemon') not found due to: FileNotFoundError('[WinError 2] The system cannot find the file specified')

    The files can be compared withdiff or withthis convenient diff tool. I would also be happy to produce diffs using a particular technique, on request. Those diffs were also produced before rebasing this to include the changes from#1693, since I had neglected by merge that on my Windows system before working on this, but I believe none of the changes there are able to affect this.

That is to say that this PR is very narrow in its scope of effects--it automates, and at least as reliably achieves, the desired effect of a setup step that had to be done manually before, but it doesn't address any of the other problems related to it.

One aspect of the way I did this change deserves special scrutiny; I've madea review comment about it.

This changes the test helpers on Windows to use "git --exec-path"(with whatever "git" GitPython is using) to find the directory thatcontains "git-daemon.exe", instead of finding it in a PATH search.
@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ def git_daemon_launched(base_path, ip, port):
# and then CANNOT DIE!
# So, invoke it as a single command.
daemon_cmd = [
"git-daemon",
osp.join(Git()._call_process("--exec-path"), "git-daemon"),
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I'm uneasy about having the test suite call the nonpublic_call_process method to do this. I want it to use the samegit as GitPython uses, including the effect of theGIT_PYTHON_GIT_EXECUTABLE (as well as any future nuances that might ever arise) automatically, whichGit().execute(["git", "--exec-path"]) would not do. If the command weregit exec-path orgit something --exec-path, then I thinkGit().exec_path() orGit.something(exec_path=True), respectively, could be used. But for agit command that has no subcommand and just passes an option, I don't know of a way to use GitPython's public interface to run it. It may be that I'm just missing something obvious here.

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That's definitely a shortcoming in theGit class' API, it does always assume a sub-command. This also makes it impossible to set configuration overrides, for instance, so finding a solution for this will have immediate benefits, and it would definitely be welcome.

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I think the main hard part of adding such functionality is figuring out a way to do it that wouldn't be a breaking change. Most ordinary public-style method names could clash with someone's customgit commands (such as scripts named likegit-*), which GitPython is generally able to run and thus would begin to break after such a change. The most intuitive names for this, likeinvoke, would be especially likely to clash (I'm sure some people have agit-invoke script).

This also makes it impossible to set configuration overrides

Is this because only one-c can be passed by calling theGit instance withc=..., or for some other reason (or am I misunderstanding what you mean)? To use an example inspired bycheck-version.sh, and withg as agit.cmd.Git instance, I can cause-c versionsort.suffix=-pre to be passed, and in the correct position, with:

g(c="versionsort.suffix=-pre").tag(sort="-v:refname")

That runsgit -c versionsort.suffix=-pre tag --sort=-v:refname as desired, with-c versionsort.suffix=-pre before the subcommand name and--sort=-v:refname following it.

However, I can't pass more than one-c that way, because a single call can't pass the same keyword argument multiple times, and the preceding arguments are discarded with multiple calls, i.e., these do the same thing:

g(c="versionsort.suffix=-pre")(c="versionsort.suffix=-RC").tag(sort="-v:refname")
g(c="versionsort.suffix=-RC").tag(sort="-v:refname")

But I'm not sure this is the problem you're thinking of, because a solution for passing-c arguments and their operands, or for passing arbitrary argumentsbefore a subcommand, would not necessarily facilitate runninggitwithout a subcommand. Nor would a solution for runninggit without a subcommand necessarily allow a subcommand to be added in a user-friendly way supporting the keyword argument syntax for specifying the subcommand's own flags.

finding a solution for this will have immediate benefits

Can people just use_call_process?

For having GitPython rungit with arbitrarily specified arguments, the nonpublic_call_process method does that. Does its behavior differ from the desired behavior for doing so?

If not, then that method could be made public simply by documenting it as public, which would avoid breaking any customgit commands, because(a) it wouldn't change the actual behavior of GitPython at all, and(b) GitPython already doesn't support customgit commands that start with_, andgit itself doesn't support custom commands that start with- (since an attempt to invoke such a command would pass one or more options instead).

An example of where an attribute with a leading_ that is made public by documenting it as public, for the same reasons as we might want to do so here--that any other name might clash--is how types constructed with thecollections.namedtuple factory have public_make,_asdict,_replace,_fields, and_field_defaults attributes. (In contrast, although the_thread module is public, this is not really an example of this, because it is not named that way for a similar reason.)

On the other hand, there may be some reasons not to make_call_process public by declaring it so. The interface forcollections.namedtuple is simpler than forgit.cmd.Git, and also more widely known about because it is part of the standard library, so deviations from common naming conventions may be more discoverable. Also, intuitively, even if_call_process were public, its name suggests that its use from outside GitPython's own code would be rarer thanexecute. But using aGit object to run a non-git command should be rare, so if_call_process is public then it should be usedmore often thanexecute.

Making a "submethod" to rungit with literal arguments

One possibility, again whereg is aGit instance, could be to allowg.execute.git(*args), accepting zero or more separate positional arguments in place of*args that GitPython would immediately rungit with. I find this intuitive, and it could be achieved by making theexecute method a custom descriptor that works like a bound method, except that it also causesg.execute.git to resolve tog._call_process, andGit.execute.git to resolve toGit._call_process (so it also works explicitly passg to the unbound form, as methods are expected to support).

But the problem with this is that it is not obvious whether the "submethod" ought to continue being usable when a class that derives fromGit overridesexecute. Secondarily, I think having overrides turn into descriptors that also support.git would be complicated, and might go against assumptions people make about he effect of writing a subclass.

To be clear, the problem is not that overridingexecute affects thebehavior. That is already the case with_call_process and everything that uses it, and is probably the main reason for a subclass ofGit to overrideexecute. Rather, the question is whetherMyGit().execute.git(*args) andMyGit().execute.git(my_g, *args) should work and, if so, whether the complexity to make it work is justified.

Other ways, which also don't seem ideal

Other possibilities include:

  • Naming the method a single underscore:g._(*args). This seems unintuitive.
  • Versioning the interface, so something has to be passed when aGit object is constructed to enable new methods.
  • Keeping theGit class the same but providing a derived class ofGit that includes new methods.
  • Using a top-level function that receives theGit object as its first argument.
  • Using a top-level function that does not use theGit object.
  • Picking some name peopleprobably are not using as a customgit command (but the more reliably they are not, the less intuitive the command is, probably).
  • Not adding a feature for this, but adding a convenient way to get thegit command (relative or absolute path) that_call_process passes toexecute, and noting how to useexecute with it inexecute's docstring, elsewhere in the documentation, or both.

A hack that shouldn't be used

By the way, it turns out there actuallyis a way I could have used the "public" interface to achieve the effect ofg._call_process("--exec-path"). Becausegit accepts a-- after this option with no change in behavior, we can fool GitPython into thinking-- is the subcommand. Where againg is aGit instance:

>>>getattr(g(exec_path=True),"--")()'C:/Users/ek/scoop/apps/git/2.42.0.2/mingw64/libexec/git-core'

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However, I can't pass more than one-c that way, because a single call can't pass the same keyword argument multiple times, and the preceding arguments are discarded with multiple calls

That's interesting! I wasn't even aware this works. Also I don't know how this interacts with the maybe more typical usage ofrepo.git.subcommand(), or is something likerepo.git(c="foo=bar").subcommand() possible?

Regarding the multi-issue, maybe it already works like this?

g(c=["versionsort.suffix=-pre","other=baz"]).tag(sort="-v:refname")

To be clear, the problem is not that overridingexecute affects thebehavior. That is already the case with_call_process and everything that uses it, and is probably the main reason for a subclass ofGit to overrideexecute. Rather, the question is whetherMyGit().execute.git(*args) andMyGit().execute.git(my_g, *args) should work and, if so, whether the complexity to make it work is justified.

Do you think it's common to subclassGit? I'd argue that this was never intended and I'd rather forbid it than think about it. And if it can't be prohibited officially, maybe it's possible to document it as "unsupported" which allows subclasses to break if they happen. Of course, that itself would be a breaking change, but I wonder anyone would notice.

Also, apologies in advance if what I say here doesn't make much sense or seems to ignore something you already mentioned - I am quite ignorant as to howGit (the class) is truly working and I really don't know what's best.

But simply making_call_process public officially seemed like the easiest while safe-enough way to go to me.

PS:>>> getattr(g(exec_path=True), "--")() is wonderfully creative :D.

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That's interesting! I wasn't even aware this works. Also I don't know how this interacts with the maybe more typical usage ofrepo.git.subcommand(), or is something likerepo.git(c="foo=bar").subcommand() possible?

g(c=["versionsort.suffix=-pre","other=baz"]).tag(sort="-v:refname")

That does work! This treated bothpre andRC1 as lower versions than their corresponding stable versions:

g(c=["versionsort.suffix=-pre","versionsort.suffix=-RC"]).tag(sort="-v:refname")

It does also work withrepo.git(...).subcommand(...):

>>>importlogging>>>logging.basicConfig(level=logging.INFO)>>>importgit>>>git.Git.GIT_PYTHON_TRACE=True>>>r=git.Repo("../Flood")>>>r.git(c=["versionsort.suffix=-pre","versionsort.suffix=-RC"]).tag(sort="-v:refname")INFO:git.cmd:git-cversionsort.suffix=-pre-cversionsort.suffix=-RCtag--sort=-v:refname'unletterspaced\nline-height\nletterspaced\nalpha-6\nalpha-5\nalpha-4\nalpha-3\nalpha-2\nalpha-1\nalpha-0'

(The repo I tested on doesn't have tags whose order is affected by versionsort, but the debugging output shows that both-c ... are passed and in the correct positions.)

Do you think it's common to subclassGit?

I'm not sure, but it may be possible to effectively search at least code on GitHub and elsewhere where rich code searching is implemented to figure it out. For a lot of stuff using popular projects like GitPython, I find such searching hard, because one gets lots of code in forks and vendored copies of the project. But if GitPython is never itself inheriting fromGit or testing for that, it may be reasonably easy to find that sort of thing.

If I figure anything out about that, I'll let you know. I would intuitively expect to be able to inherit from it.

But simply making_call_process public officially seemed like the easiest while safe-enough way to go to me.

Yes. If that's acceptable, then I think it should be strongly considered before doing anything more complicated that also expands the GitPython public interface. A further argument for preferring this to other approaches is that it is already referenced in some public methods' docstrings.

PS:>>> getattr(g(exec_path=True), "--")() is wonderfully creative :D.

:) I guess there's an interesting question about whether the-- "attribute" ofGit instances should be considered public on the grounds that its name does not start with an underscore. 😺

Actually, I had meant to be joking, just then, but it checks out:

ek@Kip:~$catx.pyglobals()["--"]="Hello, world!"ek@Kip:~$python3.11-c'from x import *; print(globals()["--"])'Hello,world!
ek@Kip:~$caty.pyglobals()["_--"]="Hello, world!"ek@Kip:~$python3.11-c'from y import *; print(globals()["_--"])'Traceback (mostrecentcalllast):File"<string>",line1,in<module>KeyError:'_--'

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If I figure anything out about that, I'll let you know. I would intuitively expect to be able to inherit from it.

I am definitely happy to make this a non-feature, or at least document that subclass behaviour might change unannounced.

@EliahKaganEliahKagan marked this pull request as ready for reviewOctober 7, 2023 16:38
@ByronByron added this to thev3.1.38 - Bugfixes milestoneOct 8, 2023
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Thanks so much for your help! Despite a small improvement, it's much appreciated and I see how it will help to get the tests on windows to work.

Sincegitoxide also has tests that rely ongit daemon to run which work on Windows, I'd believe that getting these to work should generally possible.

Regarding the implementation of Windows- and test-specific environment variables, I hope their implementation can be adjusted to be usable on Windows as well.

Thanks for everything.

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@@ -182,7 +182,7 @@ def git_daemon_launched(base_path, ip, port):
# and then CANNOT DIE!
# So, invoke it as a single command.
daemon_cmd = [
"git-daemon",
osp.join(Git()._call_process("--exec-path"), "git-daemon"),
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That's definitely a shortcoming in theGit class' API, it does always assume a sub-command. This also makes it impossible to set configuration overrides, for instance, so finding a solution for this will have immediate benefits, and it would definitely be welcome.

EliahKagan reacted with thumbs up emoji
@ByronByron merged commit8107cbf intogitpython-developers:mainOct 8, 2023
@EliahKaganEliahKagan deleted the find-daemon branchOctober 8, 2023 07:03
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EliahKagan commentedOct 9, 2023
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Regarding the implementation of Windows- and test-specific environment variables, I hope their implementation can be adjusted to be usable on Windows as well.

I've described this in#1698 and proposed a fix as part of#1700.

(In the longer term, I hope these can be eliminated or at least moved,along with all associated test-specific logic, out of thegit module, either of which would solve#790.)

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[![MendRenovate](https://app.renovatebot.com/images/banner.svg)](https://renovatebot.com)This PR contains the following updates:| Package | Change | Age | Adoption | Passing | Confidence ||---|---|---|---|---|---|| [GitPython](https://togithub.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython) |`==3.1.37` -> `==3.1.40` |[![age](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/age/pypi/GitPython/3.1.40?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/)|[![adoption](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/adoption/pypi/GitPython/3.1.40?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/)|[![passing](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/compatibility/pypi/GitPython/3.1.37/3.1.40?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/)|[![confidence](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/confidence/pypi/GitPython/3.1.37/3.1.40?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/)|---### Release Notes<details><summary>gitpython-developers/GitPython 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in[https://github.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1689](https://togithub.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1689)- Clarify Git.execute and Popen arguments by[@&#8203;EliahKagan](https://togithub.com/EliahKagan) in[https://github.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1688](https://togithub.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1688)- Ask git where its daemon is and use that by[@&#8203;EliahKagan](https://togithub.com/EliahKagan) in[https://github.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1697](https://togithub.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1697)- Fix bugs affecting exception wrapping in rmtree callback by[@&#8203;EliahKagan](https://togithub.com/EliahKagan) in[https://github.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1700](https://togithub.com/gitpython-developers/GitPython/pull/1700)- Fix dynamically-set **all** variable by[@&#8203;DeflateAwning](https://togithub.com/DeflateAwning) 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EliahKagan added a commit to EliahKagan/GitPython that referenced this pull requestOct 24, 2023
This removes the Windows-specific information in the warningmessage in git_daemon_launched.After the associated functionality was updated ingitpython-developers#1684 and thewarning message was abridged accordingly, the functionality wasupdated again ingitpython-developers#1697, causing the message to be outdated and nolonger helpeful (since having git-daemon.exe in a PATH directory isno longer necessary or useful), without any corresponding change tothe message.
EliahKagan added a commit to EliahKagan/GitPython that referenced this pull requestOct 24, 2023
This removes the Windows-specific information in the warningmessage in git_daemon_launched.After the associated functionality was updated ingitpython-developers#1684 and thewarning message was abridged accordingly, the functionality wasupdated again ingitpython-developers#1697, causing the message to be outdated and nolonger helpeful (since having git-daemon.exe in a PATH directory isno longer necessary or useful), without any corresponding change tothe message.
EliahKagan added a commit to EliahKagan/GitPython that referenced this pull requestOct 24, 2023
This removes the Windows-specific information in the warningmessage in git_daemon_launched.After the associated functionality was updated ingitpython-developers#1684 and thewarning message was abridged accordingly, the functionality wasupdated again ingitpython-developers#1697, causing the message to be outdated and nolonger helpeful (since having git-daemon.exe in a PATH directory isno longer necessary or useful), without any corresponding change tothe message.
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