* Fully qualified docker image names for the main Dockerfile and Complement related.
* Fully qualified docker image names for Dockerfiles associated with building Debian release artifacts.
This one is harder and is separate from the other commit in case it wasn't correct or was unwanted. I decided to
do the expansion on the docker images in the Dockerfile itself, instead of the various source places that build
which distribution that is selected, as it would have been more invasive with the scripts breaking up the string
for tagging and such. This one is untested.
* Changelog
* Update docker/Dockerfile-workers
* Update docker/complement/Dockerfile
---------
Co-authored-by: reivilibre <olivier@librepush.net>
* Upgrade to new lockfile format
Now requires poetry >= 1.2.2 to read and poetry >= 1.3.0 to write.
Cheat sheet:
```
poetry --version
poetry show > scratch/before
pipx upgrade poetry
poetry --version
poetry show > scratch/after
diff scratch{before,after} && echo "no change!"
```
* Use Poetry 1.3.2 when reading or writing lockfile
* Remove unneeded(?) poetry dep for cibuildwheel
* Update docs
* Remove redundant call to setup-python
* Remove outdated comments related to Poetry 1.x
* Remove outdated docs line
was fixed in #13082
* Minor improvements to poetry cheat sheet
* Invoke setup-python-poetry with explicit version
Not sure about this. It's hardcoding versions everywhere.
* Changelog
* Check the lockfile is version 2.0
Might one day incorporate other checks like #14742
* Typo fixes, thanks Sean
Co-authored-by: Sean Quah <8349537+squahtx@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Sean Quah <8349537+squahtx@users.noreply.github.com>
Fixes#13655
This change uses ICU (International Components for Unicode) to improve boundary detection in user search.
This change also adds a new dependency on libicu-dev and pkg-config for the Debian packages, which are available in all supported distros.
The requirements file generated by `poetry export` isn't correctly processed by `pip install -r requirements.txt`. It contains twisted and treq, both pinned to 22.2.0.
When `pip` installs treq, it notices that `Twisted[tls]` is required. It then tries to acquire the latest twisted release, only to fail (because this hash isn't listed in the requirements file).From e.g. https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/runs/5977154990?check_suite_focus=true
> ```
> #15 9.204 Collecting Twisted[tls]>=18.7.0
> #15 9.205 ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==. These do not:
> #15 9.205 Twisted[tls]>=18.7.0 from 38622ff95b/Twisted-22.4.0-py3-none-any.whl (sha256)=f9f7a91f94932477a9fc3b169d57f54f96c6e74a23d78d9ce54039a7f48928a2 (from treq==22.2.0->-r /synapse/requirements.txt (line 724))
> #15 ERROR: executor failed running [/bin/sh -c pip install --prefix="/install" --no-warn-script-location -r /synapse/requirements.txt]: exit code: 1
> ```
The underlying pip issue is https://github.com/pypa/pip/issues/9644. A comment notes that one can avoid this behaviour with by `pip install`ing with the `--no-deps` flag. Let us do so.
(At first glance, the problem looks like https://github.com/python-poetry/poetry/issues/5311, but that was a bug in `poetry install`; this is `poetry export`, whose behaviour is fine AFAICS).
* Two scripts are basically entry_points already
* Move and rename scripts/* to synapse/_scripts/*.py
* Delete sync_room_to_group.pl
* Expose entry points in setup.py
* Update linter script and config
* Fixup scripts & docs mentioning scripts that moved
Co-authored-by: Andrew Morgan <1342360+anoadragon453@users.noreply.github.com>
The driver for this is to stop Complement complaining about it, but as far as I can tell it was pointless and needed to go away anyway.
I'm a bit unclear about what exactly VOLUME does, but I think what it means is that, if you don't override it with an explicit -v argument, then docker run will create a temporary volume, and copy things into it. The temporary volume is then deleted when the container finishes.
That only sounds useful if your image has something to copy into it (otherwise you may as well just use the default root filesystem), and our image notably doesn't copy anything into /data.
So... this wasn't doing anything, except annoying Complement?
* Add healthcheck startup delay by 5secs and reduced interval check to 15s
to reduce waiting time for docker aware edge routers bringing an
instance online
They don't make any sense on the intermediate builder image. The final
images needs them to be of use for anyone.
Signed-off-by: Johannes Wienke <languitar@semipol.de>
Make pip install faster in Docker build for [Complement](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement) testing.
If files have changed in a `COPY` command, Docker will invalidate all of the layers below. So I changed the order of operations to install all dependencies before we `COPY synapse /synapse/synapse/`. This allows Docker to use our cached layer of dependencies even when we change the source of Synapse and speed up builds dramatically! `53.5s` -> `3.7s` builds 🤘
As an alternative, I did try using BuildKit caches but this still took 30 seconds overall on that step. 15 seconds to gather the dependencies from the cache and another 15 seconds to `Installing collected packages`.
Fix https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/issues/9364
This removes the version pin of the `prometheus_client` dependency, in direct response to #8831. If merged, this will close#8831
As far as I can tell, no other changes are needed, but as I'm no synapse expert, I'm relying heavily on CI and maintainer reviews for this. My very primitive test of synapse with prometheus_client v0.9.0 on my home server didn't bring up any issues, so we'll see what happens.
Signed-off-by: Jordan Bancino
As mentioned in #7397, switching to a debian base should help with multi-arch work to save time on compiling. This is unashamedly based on #6373, but without the extra functionality. Switch python version back to generic 3.7 to always pull the latest. Essentially, keeping this as small as possible. The image is bigger though unfortunately.
Alpine Linux 3.8 is still supported, but it seems like
it's quite outdated now.
While Python should be the same on both, all other libraries, etc.,
are much newer in Alpine 3.9 and 3.10.
Signed-off-by: Slavi Pantaleev <slavi@devture.com>