* Now queue_workers.py sorts queue names and prints them on their own
line. Previously it's output was nondeterministic.
* Simplified grep strategy for removing the "test" worker.
This list was likely to end up out of date quickly, since it wasn't
documented that you need to update it when adding a queue. The best
solution is to just not require it to be updated.
Now that we no longer use node_modules at all in production (it's only
used to generate static assets), we don't include `node_modules` in
the production tarballs, and thus we shouldn't attempt to copy
`node_modules` out of the production tarballs when installing.
Fixes a regression introduced in
d71f2e7b9b.
This saves about a minute of downtime when using
upgrade-zulip-from-git in the default configuration.
It should also save several seconds of downtime when upgrading to a
production release tarball as well.
This indirectly causes the RabbitMQ node name for new Zulip
installations to default to zulip@localhost, which would eliminate the
persistent problems we have had
Fixes#194, #465, #1375, #1751.
Signed-off-by: Anders Kaseorg <andersk@mit.edu>
This adds a dependency on the realpath package on trusty; we could try
to remove it if needed, but given that realpath is included in
coreutils on Xenial (and presumably anything else modern), I think
it's reasonable to add it.
Fixes#1797.
Previously, success_stamp was touched whenever we used a particular
node_modules version; it makes more sense to only touch it when the
node_modules directory has actually changed.
get_package_names did not correctly strip the GitHub URLs from package
names, resulting in the "package names" for our dependencies installed
from Git being tracked with the complete sha1sum included in the name.
This meant that upgrading our virtualenvs incorrectly ended up
resorting to creating an entirely new virtualenv whenever we changed a
dependency that had previously been installed from GitHub URLs.
Now that we're no longer actively debugging this tool, there's no need
to have it print everything it's doing.
This will make `test-backend` a lot nicer to use.
generate-secrets.py now requires --development for development environment
setup or --production for production environment setup (and one of these
options is mandatory).
This solves the problem that it was somewhat easy to accidentally run
generate-secrets.py without the `-d` option while doing manual development
environment setup.
Fixes: #1911.