Windows seems to require this, otherwise this happens:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "tests/update.TestCase", line 737, in test_translate_per_build_anti_features
apps = fdroidserver.metadata.read_metadata(xref=True)
File "C:\Users\travis\build\fdroidtravis\fdroidserver\fdroidserver\metadata.py", line 813, in read_metadata
app = parse_metadata(metadatapath, appid in check_vcs, refresh)
File "C:\Users\travis\build\fdroidtravis\fdroidserver\fdroidserver\metadata.py", line 1023, in parse_metadata
parse_yaml_metadata(mf, app)
File "C:\Users\travis\build\fdroidtravis\fdroidserver\fdroidserver\metadata.py", line 1073, in parse_yaml_metadata
yamldata = yaml.safe_load(mf)
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\__init__.py", line 162, in safe_load
return load(stream, SafeLoader)
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\__init__.py", line 112, in load
loader = Loader(stream)
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\loader.py", line 34, in __init__
Reader.__init__(self, stream)
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\reader.py", line 85, in __init__
self.determine_encoding()
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\reader.py", line 124, in determine_encoding
self.update_raw()
File "C:\python37\lib\site-packages\yaml\reader.py", line 178, in update_raw
data = self.stream.read(size)
File "C:\python37\lib\encodings\cp1252.py", line 23, in decode
return codecs.charmap_decode(input,self.errors,decoding_table)[0]
UnicodeDecodeError: 'charmap' codec can't decode byte 0x81 in position 37: character maps to <undefined>
Since 24dd6740 UpdateCheckMode: Tags uses the found tag instead of
regenerating it from the AutoUpdateMode pattern making the pattern
superfluous. This adds support for dropping the pattern and a test case.
There are two version numbers used for NDKs: the "release" and the
"revision". The "release" is used in the download URL and zipball and the
"revision" is used in the source.properties and the gradle ndkVersion field.
Also, there are some builds which need multiple NDKs installed, so this
makes it possible to have a list of release/revision entries in build.ndk.
This does not yet add full support since _fdroidserver/build.py_ will also
need changes.
This is a vestige of implementing builds from a .fdroid.yml file directly
in the app's source repo. It was never fully complete and seems to not be
used in any apps in fdroiddata. This makes `fdroid build --all` runs much
faster since it does not need to do any git handling for apps that do not
have any new builds to run.
4e8e29794948689281a4e431080e37be9b06e775d330c
Now that the mismatch between 'builds' and 'Builds' has been fixed, it is
now possible to read metadata/*.yml files with a standard YAML parser like
PyYAML, then output them using `metadata.write_metadata()`. Other API
functions in fdroidserver should also work in this case.
I did this as I was working on fdroiddata!7860
The .txt format was the last place where the lowercase "builds" was used,
this converts references everywhere to be "Builds". This makes it possible
to load metadata YAML files with any YAML parser, then have it possible to
use fdroidserver methods on that data, like metadata.write_metadata().
The test files in tests/metadata/dump/*.yaml were manually edited by cutting
the builds: block and putting it the sort order for Builds: so the contents
should be unchanged.
```
sed -i \
-e 's/app\.builds/app.get('Builds', \[\])/g' \
-e "s/app\.get(Builds, \[\]) =/app\['Builds'] =/g" \
-e "s/app\.get(Builds, \[\]) =/app\['Builds'] =/g" \
-e "s/app\.get(Builds, \[\])/app.get('Builds', \[\])/g" \
-e "s/app\.get('Builds', \[\])\.append/app\['Builds'\].append/g" \
-e "s/app\['builds'\]/app.get('Builds', [])/g" \
*/*.*
```
Now that the description formatting is removed, there is no need to load
all of the app metadata before operating on a single one. This change
makes lint and rewritemeta only load the metadata for the apps it is actually
operating on. Before, it would always load all metadata files. #845closes#678
This ditches the custom common.get_extension() for straight core Python
methods. This should make the code closer to Python conventions. For
example, pathlib also includes the "." in the extension it returns.
Previously this was magically capturing the apps dict when passing it around as a
function. This also moved the code to the metadata module.
Add a test doing read_metadata where the linkresolver is used. This
happens when the apps we read have a [[app.id]] link to another app.
Liberapay was originally included using a numeric ID, since they had
not yet finalized the public URLs. Now it is a username. So this
logic prefers the username in Liberapay: field, and keeps the old
LiberapayID: to ease migration. LiberapayID: will not override
Liberapay:. Clients are expected to prefer Liberapay: over LiberapayID:
GitHub has specified FUNDING.yml, a file to include in a git repo for
pointing people to donation links. Since F-Droid also points people
to donation links, this parses them to fill out Donate:
and OpenCollective:. Specifying those in the metadata file takes
precedence over the FUNDING.yml. This follows the same pattern as how
`fdroid update` includes Fastlane/Triple-T metadata. This lets the
git repo maintain those specific donations links themselves.
https://help.github.com/en/articles/displaying-a-sponsor-button-in-your-repository#about-funding-files
The test file was generated using:
```python
import os, re, yaml
found = dict()
for root, dirs, files in os.walk('.'):
for f in files:
if f == 'FUNDING.yml':
with open(os.path.join(root, f)) as fp:
data = yaml.safe_load(fp)
for k, v in data.items():
if k not in found:
found[k] = set()
if not v:
continue
if isinstance(v, list):
for i in v:
found[k].add(i)
else:
found[k].add(v)
with open('gather-funding-names.yaml', 'w') as fp:
output = dict()
for k, v in found.items():
output[k] = sorted(v)
yaml.dump(output, fp, default_flow_style=False)
```
This converts float/int to string for things like commit: or versionName:.
For versionCode, which must be an integer, it throws an exception if the
data is any other type.
The url slug used by opencollective allows case variations, they all
lead back to the canonical lowercase variant though.
Apart from ascii characters and numbers only - and _ are allowed.