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[bug#53060] [PATCH 0/2] Allow the github updater to update git sources


From: Maxime Devos
Subject: [bug#53060] [PATCH 0/2] Allow the github updater to update git sources
Date: Mon, 17 Jan 2022 10:12:46 +0000
User-agent: Evolution 3.38.3-1

Ludovic Courtès schreef op zo 16-01-2022 om 23:19 [+0100]:
> Hi,
> 
> Maxime Devos <maximedevos@telenet.be> skribis:
> 
> > Follow-up to <https://issues.guix.gnu.org/50072>.
> > 
> > To test, you can do
> > 
> > $ make check
> > $ ./pre-inst-env guix refresh -t github -u zig
> > 
> > and verify that the version and sha256/base32 has been updated
> > (zig@0.9.0 doesn't work though; patches aren't applying cleanly).
> 
> Nice, applied!
> 
> One comment:
> 
> > +(define (call-with-releases thunk tags releases)
> > +  (mock ((guix http-client) http-fetch [...])
> > +        (parameterize ((%github-api "mock://"))
> > +          (thunk))))
> 
> I think the whole point of having the ‘%github-api’ parameter is that it
> allows us to mock the HTTP server instead of having to override bindings
> such as ‘http-fetch’.
> 
> I’d have a slight preference for doing that, similar to what is done in
> tests/cpan.scm for instance.  WDYT?

tests/cpan.scm uses 'with-http-server', which I do not find ideal
because the answers the HTTP server gives depend on the order the
HTTP server was queried, without verifying the URI.  Mocking
'http-fetch' allows me not to worry about ordering and allows verifying
the URI.

It might be possible to modify 'with-http-server' into something
(with-http-server*?) that allows looking at the HTTP headers and URI
and dynamically generate a response based on that.

Due to the mocking, %github-api isn't truly necessary, but having
"https://api.github.com"; in a single location helps avoiding typos
like writing "http://"; instead of "https://"; somewhere, or adjusting
the domain name if GitHub decided to change it for whatever reason
(hopefully unlikely?), or if Tor becomes very popular among the general
public and GitHub has an ".onion" address, then it could be changed to
the ".onion" address easily, ...

Greetings,
Maxime.

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