This patch separates the use of database session in different MBS components
and do not mix them together.
In general, MBS components could be separated as the REST API (implemented
based on Flask) and non-REST API including the backend build workflow
(implemented as a fedmsg consumer on top of fedmsg-hub and running
independently) and library shared by them. As a result, there are two kind of
database session used in MBS, one is created and managed by Flask-SQLAlchemy,
and another one is created from SQLAclhemy Session API directly. The goal of
this patch is to make ensure session object is used properly in the right
place.
All the changes follow these rules:
* REST API related code uses the session object db.session created and
managed by Flask-SQLAlchemy.
* Non-REST API related code uses the session object created with SQLAlchemy
Session API. Function make_db_session does that.
* Shared code does not created a new session object as much as possible.
Instead, it accepts an argument db_session.
The first two rules are applicable to tests as well.
Major changes:
* Switch tests back to run with a file-based SQLite database.
* make_session is renamed to make_db_session and SQLAlchemy connection pool
options are applied for PostgreSQL backend.
* Frontend Flask related code uses db.session
* Shared code by REST API and backend build workflow accepts SQLAlchemy session
object as an argument. For example, resolver class is constructed with a
database session, and some functions accepts an argument for database session.
* Build workflow related code use session object returned from make_db_session
and ensure db.session is not used.
* Only tests for views use db.session, and other tests use db_session fixture
to access database.
* All argument name session, that is for database access, are renamed to
db_session.
* Functions model_tests_init_data, reuse_component_init_data and
reuse_shared_userspace_init_data, which creates fixture data for
tests, are converted into pytest fixtures from original function
called inside setup_method or a test method. The reason of this
conversion is to use fixture ``db_session`` rather than create a
new one. That would also benefit the whole test suite to reduce the
number of SQLAlchemy session objects.
Signed-off-by: Chenxiong Qi <cqi@redhat.com>
This seems to be better behaviour than simply rejecting the module build
completely. MBS still shows warning in the log that it cannot find
any compatible module, but the build continues with the base module
requested in the submitted modulemd.
GenericResolver.extract_modulemd is not removed, but deprecated. Call of it
will result in a deprecation message printed. Any new code should call
load_mmd.
Signed-off-by: Chenxiong Qi <cqi@redhat.com>
_record_ursine_rpms needs to get each collision module's koji_tag and
then get built RPMs from that koji_tag eventually. _get_module on each
individual resolver is called to get module metadata accordingly. So,
when running a local build, module metadata is got from remote MBS, and
for a MBS instance, connected database is queried.
Signed-off-by: Chenxiong Qi <cqi@redhat.com>
This resolve the stream collision by adding specific RPMs to
module-build-macros SRPM as Conflicts.
For more information about module stream collision, please refer to
docstring in utils/ursine.py
Signed-off-by: Chenxiong Qi <cqi@redhat.com>
Imagine we have "platform:f29.0.0" and "platform:f29.1.0" base modules.
We also have "DBI" module we want to build agaisnt "platform:f29.1.0".
This "DBI" module depends on "perl" module which is only build against
"platform:f29.0.0".
Currently, DBI build would fail to resolve the dependencies, because
it wouldn't find "perl" module, because it is built against different
platform stream.
This PR changes the MSE code to include buildrequired module builds built
against all the compatible platform streams.
It does so by introducing following changes:
- MSE code uses new get_base_module_mmds() method to find out all the
compatible platform modules. This needed new methods in DBResolver
and MBSResolver.
- For each buildrequired module defined by name:stream, the MSE code then
finds particular NSVC built against each compatible platform module.
Side effect of these code changes is that every module now must buildrequire
some base module.
koji now supports tags with max length of 256, we can use
more informative tag name instead of the hash one.
The new format of koji tag name is:
module-<name>-<stream>-<version>-<context>
However when the generated tag's length > (256 - len('build')), we
fallback to the old way of name in hash format (module-<hash>).
In this change, koji tag is always generated from MBS itself, even
with pdc resolver.
FIXES: #918#925