resolve_environment is specific to ServiceLoader, the function
does not need to be on the global scope, it is a part of the
ServiceLoader object. The environment needs to be resolved
before we can make any service dicts, it belongs in the
constructor.
This is cleaning up the design a little and being clearer
about intent and scope of functions.
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
Moving service name and dict out of the function make_service_dict
and into __init__. We always call make_service_dict with those so
let's put them in the initialiser. Slightly cleaner design intent.
The whole purpose of the ServiceLoader is to take a
service name&service dictionary then validate, process and return
service dictionaries ready to be created.
This is also another step towards cleaning the code up so we can
interpolate and validate an extended dictionary.
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
While it can be set to ultimately a value of None, when a
config file is read in from stdin, it is not optional.
We kinda make use of it's ability to be set to None in our
tests but functionally and design wise, it is required.
If filename is not set, extends does not work.
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
Check for this in the init so we can remove the duplication of
raising in further functions.
A ServiceLoader isn't valid without one.
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
In particular it includes:
- some extension of CONTRIBUTING.md
- one fix for Python 2.6 in tests/integration/cli_test.py
- one fix for Python 3.3 in tests/integration/service_test.py
- removal of unused imports
Make stream_output Python 3-compatible
Signed-off-by: Frank Sachsenheim <funkyfuture@riseup.net>
If we get back an error that wasn't an APIError, it was causing the
thread to hang. This catch all, while I appreciate feels risky to
have a catch all, is better than not catching and silently failing,
with a never ending thread.
If something worse than an APIError has gone wrong, we want to stop
the incredible journey of what we're doing.
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>
In order to validate a service name that has been specified as an
integer we need to run that as a pre-process validation step
*before* we pass the config to be validated against the schema.
It is not possible to validate it *in* the schema, it causes a
type error. Even though a number is a valid service name, it
must be a cast as a string within the yaml to avoid type error.
Taken this opportunity to move the code design in a direction
towards:
1. pre-process
2. validate
3. construct
Signed-off-by: Mazz Mosley <mazz@houseofmnowster.com>