On Sun, Aug 4, 2013 at 1:13 AM, Michał Górny <mgo...@gentoo.org> wrote: > We've been working with yac for a while to get the old twisted.eclass > converted to be compliant with distutils-r1 both in design > and in spirit. This is the first version we'd like to submit for review.
Thanks for doing this. If memory serves (and cvs log says it does) I'm to blame for the first version of this eclass so perhaps I should review this one :) twisted.eclass changed quite a bit since I last looked at it, though. I've reviewed the "One more bit of optimization" version. > 1. The eclass aims to be less conditional than the old one. Especially > we've dropped all the ${CATEGORY}/${PN} checks. The code still sets all > the funny defaults for Twisted suite but those aren't incremental > and can easily be overrode in ebuilds. And in most cases, they simple > are (SRC_URI, LICENSE). The original version just set those unconditionally, the conditionals I think you're referring to were added by Arfrever in revision 1.8. It's not clear to me why. Does someone on this list remember? > 2. The eclass comes with a pure bash-3.2 CamelCase converter > for changing PNs like 'twisted-foo' into 'TwistedFoo'. The relevant > code can be moved to eutils as portable replacements for bash-4 ${foo^} > and friends. That was considered when the original was committed but rejected as getting too messy. Two questions: have you tested this contraption with the oldest version of bash we still care about, and have you considered making it take the input as an argument and echoing the result (making it work the way versionator.eclass functions do)? If you want this to be usable as a portable utility function you'd have to write it that way, might as well do that from the start. I'm only ok with this code because we'll eventually end up requiring bash 4 at which point this can be written sanely. > 3. The eclass provides a reusable twisted-r1_python_test and sets it as > default python_test. If someone needs to override it, he can still call > it using the former name. Kind of a shame EXPORT_FUNCTIONS only works on actual phase functions. The rm -rf in there is slightly hacky: its target will legitimately not exist if this is the initial install or if we're not in a twisted-* package (in which case the package should probably not be hitting this function, but it will if not overridden). There's potential for confusion there if an upgrade drops or renames a twisted/plugins/twisted_blah.py file, but that seems like enough of an edge case it's not worth worrying about. I was going to recommend adding variables that control what gets copied and removed, but I can't think of any current users of such variables. So it's probably not worth the hassle. If I read this right it'll break if distutils_install_for_testing ever changes its mind on where to install (and its docstring says to use TEST_DIR, not which path that'll be). So I'd add a check for ${TEST_DIR}/lib being equal to $libdir after the call to distutils_install_for_testing, and print a noisy QA message about updating the eclass if they're different. > 4. Cache updating hack is based off twisted.eclass. Sadly, it's not > something we can do without postrm/postinst. Similarly to the old > eclass, TWISTED_PLUGINS needs to list the plugin locations. Since most > ebuilds install to twisted.plugins, it defaults to that. If an ebuild > does not install plugins at all, it needs to set empty TWISTED_PLUGINS. If I read that right you can just __import__(module), you don't need __import__(module, globals()). Also, maybe do the loop over plugin locations in bash. I think if you do that you don't need __import__ and sys.modules anymore, you can just generate "import $module" and "list(getPlugins(IPlugin, $module))". I wouldn't worry too much about using pkg_post* for this. It's what they're there for (twisted's isn't the only plugin system with a file like this, see for example gdk-pixbuf). It seems that if TWISTED_PLUGINS is set to the empty array, "[[ ${TWISTED_PLUGINS[@]} ]] || TWISTED_PLUGINS=( twisted.plugins )" will set it to twisted.plugins. Is that intentional? It's not necessarily a problem (you can just set TWISTED_PLUGINS back to the empty array after the inherit) but it's a bit confusing and I don't think it's what you intended (why bother with that conditional at all?) I was going to claim importing from twisted.plugin should never fail, but then I realized dev-python/twisted might want to use these functions too. I might add a comment to the functions operating on that array to remind people it might be the empty array. It wasn't immediately obvious to me upon reading the code it'd safely do nothing (today I learned "rm -f" (with no further arguments) successfully does nothing, while "rm" (with no arguments) fails because of a missing operand). -- Marien Zwart (marienz)