Using `pyln-testing` with `python3.11` results in the following warning.
```
.../venv/lib/python3.11/site-packages/cheroot/__init__.py:7: DeprecationWarning: pkg_resources is deprecated as an API. See https://setuptools.pypa.io/en/latest/pkg_resources.html
import pkg_resources
```
I've updated the `cheroot`-dependency.
However, the changes will not take effect immediately because we are
facing an internal conflict.
This conflict comes from the following requirements
- `//contrib/pyln-testing/pyproject.toml` requires `cheroot`. We can pick
the requried version
- `./external/lnprototest/pyproject.toml` requires `pyln="^0.12"` requires
`cheroot="^8"
It appears we have to do a multi-stage upgrade here.
**Step 1**
This commit configures `./contrib/pyln-testing/pyproject.toml`
to require `cheroot=">=8 <=10`. This allows users of `pyln-testing`
to start using a new release of `cheroot` immediately.
However, we still require `cheroot="^8"` because of `lnprototests`.
Even after running `poetry install` in the project root the warning
will remain.
**Step 2**
Not a part of this commit.
Publish a new release of `pyln-testing` on PyPI.
Once this release is finished we can update
`./external/lnprototests/pyproject.toml` to use the new
version of `pyln-testing` and the warning will disappear.
We also document how the grpc test mode works, and why it currently
lacks coverage.
Changelog-Changed: pyln-testing: The grpc dependencies are now optional.
Having the grpc bindings in the pyln-testing package was always a bit
strange, however it came with additional issues. Due to the way that
protos are handled by protobuf, any name clash, independently of where
we import the protos, would cause an import error. This usually
happens in diamond-pattern dependencies, and so pull out the generated
files into their own package that everyone else can rely on.
Changelog-None
I need to update gprcio-tools, but it needs protobuf v4. Christian
added this restriction in a99509db36 to
"Update protobuf dependency to silence dependabot", but perhaps it's
time to actually update?
```
$ poetry update
Updating dependencies
Resolving dependencies... (1.0s)
Because pyln-testing (23.05rc2) @ file:///home/rusty/devel/cvs/lightning/contrib/pyln-testing depends on protobuf (>=3.20.3,<4)
and grpcio-tools (1.54.0) depends on protobuf (>=4.21.6,<5.0dev), pyln-testing (23.05rc2) @ file:///home/rusty/devel/cvs/lightning/contrib/pyln-testing is incompatible with grpcio-tools (1.54.0).
So, because cln-meta-project depends on both grpcio-tools (1.54.0) and pyln-testing (23.05rc2) @ file:///home/rusty/devel/cvs/lightning/contrib/pyln-testing, version solving failed.
```
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
This is just before the introduction of `get_json_id`, but has the
correct dependency constraints such that all packages can be updated
to >=v0.12 and we don't mix minor versions.
So this was quite a journey:
- We want relative depdendencies (using the `path` argument) whenever
developing locally. Otherwise we would have to install each
dependency every time we change a single character, which
undoubtedly would cause us to waste time trying to debug an issue
just because we forgot to install.
- When publishing however we want to rely on the version number,
since the repo context gets lost upon publishing, and path
dependencies cause failures.
The solution then it seems is to use `dev-dependencies` (not that
surprising once you find it) with relative paths, so that `poetry
install` uses these over the normal dependencies (no idea how they
dedup them) and use `dependencies` when publishing. The paths are
still in there when publishing, but `pip install` ignores them.
I checked that `poetry install` from an unrelated project doesn't
accidentally use the path dependencies, even when adding them as
dev-dependencies. This should hopefully also allow installing them
as a repo link, though I can't test that right now.
Mostly comments and docs: some places are actually paths, which
I have avoided changing. We may migrate them slowly, particularly
when they're user-visible.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>