Start a document for developing modules for python3
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docsite/rst/developing_modules_python3.rst
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===========================
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Porting Modules to Python 3
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===========================
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Ansible modules are not the usual Python-3 porting exercise. There are two
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factors that make it harder to port them than most code:
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1. Many modules need to run on Python-2.4 in addition to Python-3.
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2. A lot of mocking has to go into unittesting a Python-3 module. So it's
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harder to test that your porting has fixed everything or to make sure that
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later commits haven't regressed.
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Which version of Python-3.x and which version of Python-2.x are our minimums?
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=============================================================================
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The short answer is Python-3.4 and Python-2.4 but please read on for more
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information.
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For Python-3 we are currently using Python-3.4 as a minimum. However, no long
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term supported Linux distributions currently ship with Python-3. When that
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occurs, we will probably take that as our minimum Python-3 version rather than
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Python-3.4. Thus far, Python-3 has been adding small changes that make it
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more compatible with Python-2 in its newer versions (For instance, Python-3.5
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added the ability to use percent-formatted byte strings.) so it should be more
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pleasant to use a newer version of Python-3 if it's available. At some point
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this will change but we'll just have to cross that bridge when we get to it.
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For Python-2 the default is for modules to run on Python-2.4. This allows
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users with older distributions that are stuck on Python-2.4 to manage their
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machines. Modules are allowed to drop support for Python-2.4 when one of
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their dependent libraries require a higher version of python. This is not an
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invitation to add unnecessary dependent libraries in order to force your
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module to be usable only with a newer version of Python. Instead it is an
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acknowledgment that some libraries (for instance, boto3 and docker-py) will
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only function with newer Python.
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.. note:: When will we drop support for Python-2.4?
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The only long term supported distro that we know of with Python-2.4 is
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RHEL5 (and its rebuilds like CentOS5) which is supported until April of
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2017. We will likely end our support for Python-2.4 in modules in an
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Ansible release around that time. We know of no long term supported
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distributions with Python-2.5 so the new minimum Python-2 version will
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likely be Python-2.6. This will let us take advantage of the
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forwards-compat features of Python-2.6 so porting and maintainance of
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Python-2/Python-3 code will be easier after that.
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Supporting only Python-2 or only Python-3
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=========================================
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Sometimes a module's dependent libraries only run on Python-2 or only run on
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Python-3. We do not yet have a strategy for these modules but we'll need to
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come up with one. I see three possibilities:
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1. We treat these libraries like any other libraries that may not be installed
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on the system. When we import them we check if the import was successful.
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If so, then we continue. If not we return an error about the library being
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missing. Users will have to find out that the library is unavailable on
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their version of Python either by searching for the library on their own or
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reading the requirements section in :command:`ansible-doc`.
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2. The shebang line is the only metadata that Ansible extracts from a module
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so we may end up using that to specify what we mean. Something like
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``#!/usr/bin/python`` means the module will run on both Python-2 and
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Python-3, ``#!/usr/bin/python2`` means the module will only run on
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Python-2, and ``#!/usr/bin/python3`` means the module will only run on
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Python-3. Ansible's code will need to be modified to accommodate this.
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For :command:`python2`, if ``ansible_python2_interpreter`` is not set, it
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will have to fallback to `` ansible_python_interpreter`` and if that's not
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set, fallback to ``/usr/bin/python``. For :command:`python3`, Ansible
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will have to first try ``ansible_python3_interpreter`` and then fallback to
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``/usr/bin/python3`` as normal.
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3. We add a way for Ansible to retrieve metadata about modules. The metadata
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will include the version of Python that is required.
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Methods 2 and 3 will both require that we modify modules or otherwise add this
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additional information somewhere.
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Tips, tricks, and idioms to adopt
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=================================
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Exceptions
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----------
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In code which already needs Python-2.6+ (For instance, because a library it
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depends on only runs on Python >= 2.6) it is okay to port directly to the new
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exception catching syntax::
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try:
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a = 2/0
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except ValueError as e:
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module.fail_json(msg="Tried to divide by zero!")
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For modules which also run on Python-2.4, we have to use an uglier
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construction to make this work under both Python-2.4 and Python-3::
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from ansible.module_utils.pycompat import get_exception
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[...]
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try:
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a = 2/0
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except ValueError:
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e = get_exception()
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module.fail_json(msg="Tried to divide by zero!")
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Octal numbers
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-------------
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In Python-2.4, octal literals are specified as ``0755``. In Python-3, that is
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invalid and octals must be specified as ``0o755``. To bridge this gap,
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modules should create their octals like this::
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# Can't use 0755 on Python-3 and can't use 0o755 on Python-2.4
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EXECUTABLE_PERMS = int('0755', 8)
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Compile Test
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------------
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We have travis compiling all modules with various versions of Python to check
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that the modules conform to the syntax at those versions. When you've
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ported a module so that its syntax works with Python-3, we need to modify
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.travis.yml so that the module is included in the syntax check. Here's the
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relevant section of .travis.yml::
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script:
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[...]
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- python3.4 -m compileall -fq system/ping.py
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- python3.5 -m compileall -fq system/ping.py
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At the moment this is a whitelist. Just add your newly ported module to that
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line. Eventually, not compiling on Python-3 will be the exception. When that
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occurs, we will move to a blacklist for listing which modules do not compile
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under Python-3.
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