python-molten fails to build with Python 3.10.0a7. =================================== FAILURES =================================== _____________ test_apps_can_be_injected_into_singleton_components ______________ def test_apps_can_be_injected_into_singleton_components(): # Given that I have a singleton component that requests the app class AClass: # noqa def __init__(self, app): self.app = app class AComponent: is_cacheable = True is_singleton = True def can_handle_parameter(self, parameter): return parameter.annotation is AClass def resolve(self, app: BaseApp): return AClass(app) app = App(components=[AComponent()]) # When I resolve that component def test(a_class: AClass): # Then its app property should be the app instance assert a_class.app is app resolver = app.injector.get_resolver() > resolver.resolve(test)() tests/test_app.py:501: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ params = {}, parameter = <Parameter "a_class: 'AClass'"> component = <molten.components.UploadedFileComponent object at 0x7fc6b9e22f50> @functools.wraps(fn) def resolved_fn(**params: Any) -> Any: for parameter in _get_parameters(fn): if parameter.name in params: continue # When Parameter is requested then we assume that the # caller actually wants the parameter that resolved the # current component that's being resolved. See QueryParam # or Header components for an example. if parameter.annotation is Parameter: params[parameter.name] = resolving_parameter continue # When a DependencyResolver is requested, then we assume # the caller wants this instance. if parameter.annotation is DependencyResolver: params[parameter.name] = self continue # If our instances contains an exact match for a type, # then we return that. This is used to inject the current # Request object among other things. try: params[parameter.name] = self.instances[parameter.annotation] continue except KeyError: pass for component in self.components: if component.can_handle_parameter(parameter): try: params[parameter.name] = self.instances[component] except KeyError: factory = self.resolve(component.resolve, resolving_parameter=parameter) params[parameter.name] = instance = factory() if getattr(component, "is_cacheable", True): self.instances[component] = instance break else: > raise DIError(f"cannot resolve parameter {parameter} of function {fn}") E molten.errors.DIError: cannot resolve parameter a_class: 'AClass' of function <function test_apps_can_be_injected_into_singleton_components.<locals>.test at 0x7fc6b9701a20> molten/dependency_injection.py:189: DIError ---------- coverage: platform linux, python 3.10.0-alpha-7 ----------- Coverage HTML written to dir htmlcov =========================== short test summary info ============================ FAILED tests/test_app.py::test_apps_can_be_injected_into_singleton_components ======================== 1 failed, 247 passed in 2.62s ========================= For the build logs, see: https://copr-be.cloud.fedoraproject.org/results/@python/python3.10/fedora-rawhide-x86_64/02143294-python-molten/ For all our attempts to build python-molten with Python 3.10, see: https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/g/python/python3.10/package/python-molten/ Testing and mass rebuild of packages is happening in copr. You can follow these instructions to test locally in mock if your package builds with Python 3.10: https://copr.fedorainfracloud.org/coprs/g/python/python3.10/ Let us know here if you have any questions. Python 3.10 will be included in Fedora 35. To make that update smoother, we're building Fedora packages with early pre-releases of Python 3.10. A build failure prevents us from testing all dependent packages (transitive [Build]Requires), so if this package is required a lot, it's important for us to get it fixed soon. We'd appreciate help from the people who know this package best, but if you don't want to work on this now, let us know so we can try to work around it on our side.
This is a mass-posted update. Sorry if it is not 100% accurate to this bugzilla. The Python 3.10 rebuild is in progress in a Koji side tag. If you manage to fix the problem, please commit the fix in the rawhide branch, but don't build the package in regular rawhide. You can either build the package in the side tag, with: $ fedpkg build --target=f35-python Or you can the build and we will eventually build it for you. Note that the rebuild is still in progress, so not all (build) dependencies of this package might be available right away. Thanks. See also https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/Python3.10 If you have general questions about the rebuild, please use this mailing list thread: https://lists.fedoraproject.org/archives/list/devel@lists.fedoraproject.org/thread/G47SGOYIQLRDTWGOSLSWERZSSHXDEDH5/
The f35-python side tag has been merged to Rawhide. From now on, build as you would normally build.
*** Bug 1969035 has been marked as a duplicate of this bug. ***
Hello, This is the first reminder (step 3 from https://docs.fedoraproject.org/en-US/fesco/Fails_to_build_from_source_Fails_to_install/#_package_removal_for_long_standing_ftbfs_and_fti_bugs). If you know about this problem and are planning on fixing it, please acknowledge so by setting the bug status to ASSIGNED. If you don't have time to maintain this package, consider orphaning it, so maintainers of dependent packages realize the problem.
Hello, Please note that this comment was generated automatically. If you feel that this output has mistakes, please contact me via email (mhroncok). All subpackages of a package against which this bug was filled are now installable or removed from Fedora 35. Thanks for taking care of it!
The needinfo request[s] on this closed bug have been removed as they have been unresolved for 500 days