This way if flaky python tests fail,
it is possible to rerun them without having to rerun library compilation.
Python test jobs will redownload already built library artifact
and compile the bindings against it.
This further reduces the cognitive overload of having many ways to do
something. The same is very easily done using composition. Followup
from 82ace72527.
`install_python_bindings.py` was not used by CI
and scripts, except for `scripts/run-python-test.sh`
which only used it to invoke `cargo`.
Instead of using an additional script,
run cargo directly.
The documentation is updated to remove
references to `install_python_bindings.py`.
The section "Installing bindings from source"
was in fact incorrect as it suggested
running `tox --devenv` first and only then
compiling the library with `install_python_bindings.py`.
Now it explicitly says to run cargo first
and then install the package without using `tox`.
`tox` is still used for running the tests
and setting up development environment.
* fix(imex): transfer::get_backup must always free ongoing process
When the ongoing process is cancelled it is still the responsibility
of whoever took out the ongoing process to free it. This code was
only freeing the ongoing process when completed normally but not when
cancelled.
* add changelog
Recommended file size is used for recoding media.
For the upper size, we rely on the provider to tell us back
if the message cannot be delivered to some recipients.
This allows to send large files, such as APKs,
when using providers that don't have such strict limits.
This removes the message that needed to be supplied to LogExt::log_err
calls. This was from a time before we adopted anyhow and now we are
better off using anyhow::Context::context for the message: it is more
consistent, composes better and is less custom.
The benefit of the composition can be seen in the FFI calls which need
to both log the error as well as return it to the caller via
the set_last_error mechanism.
It also removes the LogExt::ok_or_log_msg funcion for the same reason,
the message is obsoleted by anyhow's context.
This moves us back to a released version;
- Ticket is now opaque, need to use accessor functions.
- Ticket now ensures it is valid itself, no need to inspect it's
inners. Deserialisation would fail if it was bad.
- The git version was accidentally used with default-features enabled
and thus pulled in a few too many dependencies. They are now gone.
This ensures that the BackupProvider will be stopped as soon as the
struct is dropped and the imex progress error event is emitted. This
makes it easier to use and also makes sure that the ffi call
dc_backup_provider_unref() does not lead to dangling resources.
cargo-zigbuild is replaced with a simple zig-cc wrapper.
cargo-zigbuild still tries to use i386-linux-musl triple,
while in zig 0.11 x86-linux-musl should be used [1].
This also gives us more control over compilation flags used
and prevents changes due to cargo-zigbuild upgrades,
as its version was not pinned.
[1] Merged PR "all: rename i386 to x86 "
<https://github.com/ziglang/zig/pull/13101>
This uses the new iroh API to connect to all provider addresses
concurrently. It simplifies the implementation as well as we no
longer need to try the addresses manually.
* deps: Update iroh, remove default-net patch
The released version of default-net is now sufficient and iroh makes
sure this dependency is recent enough.
* Update cargo-deny config
* Newer version of spin, previous has been yanked
When trying IP addresses from the ticket, have a very rough sort order
in which to try them. Basically assume most local wifi's are
somewhere on 192.168.0.0/16 so prefer those first.