Merge branch 'fix/python_dependency_checker' into 'master'

Tools: Fix the Python dependency checker by skipping not installed dependency sub-trees

Closes IDF-4941

See merge request espressif/esp-idf!17917
pull/8968/head
Roland Dobai 2022-05-03 23:00:09 +08:00
commit b5c99bcc2c
2 zmienionych plików z 39 dodań i 16 usunięć

Wyświetl plik

@ -96,6 +96,7 @@ repos:
additional_dependencies:
- 'mypy==0.940'
- 'mypy-extensions==0.4.3'
- 'types-setuptools==57.4.14'
language: python
types: [python]
- id: check-copyright

Wyświetl plik

@ -8,8 +8,6 @@ import os
import re
import sys
PYTHON_PACKAGE_RE = re.compile(r'[^<>=~]+')
try:
import pkg_resources
except ImportError:
@ -18,6 +16,14 @@ except ImportError:
'setting up the required packages.')
sys.exit(1)
try:
from typing import Set
except ImportError:
# This is a script run during the early phase of setting up the environment. So try to avoid failure caused by
# Python version incompatibility. The supported Python version is checked elsewhere.
pass
PYTHON_PACKAGE_RE = re.compile(r'[^<>=~]+')
if __name__ == '__main__':
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='ESP-IDF Python package dependency checker')
@ -55,21 +61,37 @@ if __name__ == '__main__':
sys.exit(1)
constr_dict[name_m[0]] = con
# We need to constrain package dependencies as well. So all installed packages need to be checked.
# For example package A requires package B. We have only A in our requirements. But the newest version of B could
# broke at some time and in that case we add a constraint for B (on the server) but don't have to update the
# requirement file (in the ESP-IDF repo).
required_set |= set(i.key for i in pkg_resources.working_set)
not_satisfied = [] # in string form which will be printed
not_satisfied = []
for requirement in required_set:
# If there is a version-specific constraint for the requirement then use it. Otherwise, just use the
# requirement as is.
to_require = constr_dict.get(requirement, requirement)
try:
pkg_resources.require(to_require)
except pkg_resources.ResolutionError:
not_satisfied.append(to_require)
# already_checked set is used in order to avoid circular checks which would cause looping.
already_checked = set() # type: Set[pkg_resources.Requirement]
# required_set contains package names in string form without version constraints. If the package has a constraint
# specification (package name + version requirement) then use that instead. new_req_list is used to store
# requirements to be checked on each level of breath-first-search of the package dependency tree. The initial
# version is the direct dependencies deduced from the requirements arguments of the script.
new_req_list = [pkg_resources.Requirement.parse(constr_dict.get(i, i)) for i in required_set]
while new_req_list:
req_list = new_req_list
new_req_list = []
already_checked.update(req_list)
for requirement in req_list: # check one level of the dependency tree
try:
dependency_requirements = set(pkg_resources.get_distribution(requirement).requires())
# dependency_requirements are the direct dependencies of "requirement". They belong to the next level
# of the dependency tree. They will be checked only if they haven't been already. Note that the
# version is taken into account as well because packages can have different requirements for a given
# Python package. The dependencies need to be checked for all of them because they can be different.
new_req_list.extend(dependency_requirements - already_checked)
except pkg_resources.ResolutionError as e:
not_satisfied.append(' - '.join([str(requirement), str(e)]))
except IndexError:
# If the requirement is not installed because of a marker (requirement.marker), for example different
# operating system or python version, then pkg_resources.get_distribution() will fail with IndexError.
# We could avoid this by checking packaging.markers.Marker(requirement.marker).evaluate() but it would
# add dependency on packaging.
pass
if len(not_satisfied) > 0:
print('The following Python requirements are not satisfied:')