On 2/7/19 5:16 PM, Stephane Wirtel wrote: > On 02/06, Petr Viktorin wrote: >> On 2/6/19 8:43 AM, Stephane Wirtel wrote: >>> On 02/05, Barry Warsaw wrote: >>>> On Feb 5, 2019, at 02:24, Stephane Wirtel <stephane at wirtel.be> wrote: >>>> You’re welcome! I just pushed an update to add 3.8.0a1 to the set >>>> of Python’s (including git head). Do you think there’s a better way >>>> to publicize these images? >>> >>> I know that Julien Palard wanted a docker image with all the versions of >>> Python, see: https://github.com/docker-library/python/issues/373 >>> >>> For my part, I wanted to propose a docker image with the last version of >>> Python and try to use it for the detection of bugs in the main python >>> projects (django, numpy, flask, pandas, etc...) with a CI (example: >>> Gitlab-CI) >>> >>> First issue: pytest uses the ast module of python and since 3.8.0a1, the >>> tests do not pass -> new issue for pytest >> >> FWIW, we're preparing to rebuild all Fedora packages with the 3.8 >> alphas/betas, so everything's tested when 3.8.0 is released: >> https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Python3.8 > Hi Petr, > > Will you execute the tests of these packages? It's best practice to include the test suite in Fedora packages. Sometimes it's not – e.g. if the tests need network access, or all extra testing dependencies aren't available, or most frequently, the maintainer is just lazy. If you have a specific package in mind, I can check. Currently django & numpy get tested; flask & pandas don't. For 3.7, we did the rebuild much later in the cycle. The builds themselves caught async/await SyntaxErrors, and tests caught a lot of StopIteration leaking. At the time it felt like no one really knew what porting to 3.7.0 would look like – similar to how people didn't think "unicode" would be a big problem in py3k. That's what we're trying to avoid for 3.8.0. > I have a small discussion with Julien Palard and I wanted to create a > small CI where I will execute the tests of the updated packages from > the RSS feed of PyPI. > > The first one was pytest That sounds exciting! Something like that is on my "interesting possible projects" list, but alas, not at the top :(
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