I want to always run pytest in a fail-fast mode like --maxfail=1, regardless the code repository I am testing.
Mainly I am using for a config item which can be setup as an environment variable or a user homedir config file which would make it fail fast.
The following environment variable should do the job:
export PYTEST_ADDOPTS="-x"
More info:
How to change command line options defaults
Failure options
Related
With the bamboo version 9, you are able to run ssh task on multiple hosts within one step.
So you can define to run this on the maschines host1 and host2.
I want to use one deployment to roll this out to both maschines but with a slightly different config.
So my idea was to configure varibales to hold a specifiv value for each sytem.
So I tried to setup my variables like
Variable name
Value
host1_feature1
true
host2_feature1
false
Within the ssh task I would write this to do something like: feature1Var=$(echo "bamboo.$HOSTNAME_feature1")
Using echo $feature1Var will result in bamboo.host1_feature1 or bamboo.host2_feature1 depending on the host where it's currently deploying.
But when I try to access that variable in script with echo ${!feature1Var}, which should result in true or false depending, bamboo tells me that bash: line 2: bamboo.host1_feature1: invalid variable name and similar for host 2.
Anyone any clue how to solve this, desites multiple deployment or putting config in the ssh task?
I'm trying to get a local env to run/debug Python Lambdas with VSCode (windows). I'm using a provided HelloWorld example to get the hang of this but I'm not being able to invoke.
Steps used to setup SAM and invoke the Lambda:
I have Docker installed and running
I have installed the SAM CLI
My AWS credentials are in place and working
I have no connectivity issues and I'm able to connect to AWS normally
I create the SAM application (HelloWorld) with all the files and resources, I didn't change anything.
I run "sam build" and it finishes sucessfully
I run "sam local invoke" and it fails with timeout. I increased the timeout to 10s, still times out. The HelloWorld Lambda code only prints and does nothing else, so I'm guessing the code isn't the problem, but something else relating to the container or the SAM env itself.
C:\xxxxxxx\lambda-python3.8>sam build Your template contains a
resource with logical ID "ServerlessRestApi", which is a reserved
logical ID in AWS SAM. It could result in unexpected behaviors and is not recommended.
Building codeuri:
C:\xxxxxxx\lambda-python3.8\hello_world runtime: python3.8 metadata:
{} architecture: x86_64 functions: ['HelloWorldFunction'] Running
PythonPipBuilder:ResolveDependencies Running
PythonPipBuilder:CopySource
Build Succeeded
Built Artifacts : .aws-sam\build Built Template :
.aws-sam\build\template.yaml
C:\xxxxxxx\lambda-python3.8>sam local invoke Invoking
app.lambda_handler (python3.8) Skip pulling image and use local one:
public.ecr.aws/sam/emulation-python3.8:rapid-1.51.0-x86_64.
Mounting C:\xxxxxxx\lambda-python3.8.aws-sam\build\HelloWorldFunction
as /var/task:ro,delegated inside runtime container Function
'HelloWorldFunction' timed out after 10 seconds
No response from invoke container for HelloWorldFunction
Any hints on what's missing here?
Thanks.
Mostly, a lambda function gets timed out because of some resource dependency. Are you using any external resource, maybe db connection or some REST API call ?
Please put more prints in lambda_handler(your function handler), before calling any resource, then you might know where exactly it is waiting. Also increase the timeout to 1 minute or more because most of the external resource call over HTTPS will have 30 secs timeouts.
The log suggests that either the container wasn't started, or SAM couldn't connect to it.
Sometimes the hostname resolution on Windows can be affected by hosts file or system settings.
Try running the invoke command as follows (this will make the container ports bind to all interfaces):
sam local invoke --container-host-interface 0.0.0.0
...additionally try setting the container-host parameter (set to localhost by default):
sam local invoke --container-host-interface 0.0.0.0 --container-host host.docker.internal
The next piece of puzzle is incorporating these settings into VSCODE. This can to be done in two places:
create samconfig.toml in the root dir of the project with the following contents. This will allow running sam local invoke from the terminal without having to add the command line argument:
version=0.1
[default.local_invoke.parameters]
container_host_interface = "0.0.0.0"
update launch configuration as follows to enable VSCode debugging:
...
"sam": {
"localArguments": ["--container-host-interface","0.0.0.0"]
}
...
We're developing several Lagom-based Scala micro-services. They are configured using variable replacement in application.conf, eg.
mysql = {
url = "jdbc:mysql://"${?ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL}
During development, we set these variables as Java System Properties via a env.sbt file that calls System.setProperty("ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL", url). This is working fine.
Now I want to deploy this in a container to my local Docker installation. We are using the SbtReactiveAppPlugin to build the Docker image from build.sbt and simply run sbt Docker/publishLocal. This works as expected, a Docker image is created and I can fire it up.
However, passing in environment variables using the standard docker or docker-compose mechanisms does not seem to work. While I can see that the environment variables are set correctly inside the Docker container (verified using env on a bash and also by doing log.debug("ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL via env: " + sys.env("ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL")) inside the service), they are not used by the application.conf and not available in the configuration system. The values are empty/unset (verified through configuration.getString("ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL").toString() and the exceptions thrown by the mysql system and other systems).
The only way I've gotten it to work was by fudging this into the JAVA_OPTS via JAVA_OPTS=-D ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL=..... However, this seems like a hack, and doesn't appear to scale very well with dozens of environment parameters.
Am I missing something, is there a way to easily use the environment variables inside the Lagom application and application.conf?
Thanks!
I've used Lightbend config to configure Lagom services via environment variables in docker containers for many years, so know that it can be done and has been pretty straightforward in my experience.
With that in mind, when you say that they're not used by application.conf, do you mean that they're unset? Note that unless you're passing a very specific option as a Java property, configuration.getString("ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL") will not read from an environment variable, so checking that will not tell you anything about whether mysql.url is affected by the environment variable. configuration.getString("mysql.url") will give you a better idea of what's going on.
I suspect that in fact your Docker image is being built with the dev-mode properties hardcoded in, and since Java system properties take precedence over everything else, they're shadowing the environment variable.
You may find it useful to structure your application.conf along these lines:
mysql_database_url = "..." # Some reasonable default default for dev-mode
mysql_database_url = ${?ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL}
mysql {
url = "jdbc://"${mysql_database_url}
}
In this case, you have a reasonable default for a developer (probably including in the docs some instructions for running MySQL in a way compatible with that configuration). The default can then be overridden via setting a Java property (e.g. JAVA_OPTS=-Dmysql_database_url) or by setting the ENV_MYSQL_DATABASE_URL environment variable.
While I agree with the answer provided by Levi Ramsey, I would suggest you to use typesafe's config to load the your config
Adding Property in Scala Environment Properties
val sysProps = System.getProperties
sysProps.setProperty("current.date.time", LocalDateTime.now().toString())
i'm able to save this property.
I tried accessing this property(current.date.time) in log4j.properties like below
log4j.appender.file.File=C:/Users/vsami/Desktop/Demo_${current.date.time}.log
log4j.appender.file.File=C:/Users/vsami/Desktop/Demo_${env:current.date.time}.log
Log file is getting generated in above location like Demo_.log, Expected :- Demo_2019/11/27T13:21:00.log
Above implementation is not helping me in accessing variable from environment properties and generate log file with expected naming convention.
JVM has properties that can be passed via -D parameter at VM boot. -Dprop=value.
These properties can be read via System.getProperties API call. See docs for more info.
Environment variables are not specified on JVM boot and managed independently from VM by your boot environment (it can be shell, bash etc). You cannot change environment variables in already running VM. These variables can be read via System.getenv()
$ is a look up operator in log4j and can be used to resolve env variables with env: prefix or Main Arguments Lookup with prefix main:.
You could use main:current.date.time and initialise your value as following
MainMapLookup.setMainArguments(Array("--current.date.time", LocalDateTime.now().toString()));
Make sure that MainMapLookup is called before logging is initialised.
I have created Azure Batch pool with Linux Machine and specified Application Package for the Pool.
My command line is
command='python $AZ_BATCH_APP_PACKAGE_scriptv1_1/tasks/XXX/get_XXXXX_data.py',
python3: can't open file '$AZ_BATCH_APP_PACKAGE_scriptv1_1/tasks/XXX/get_XXXXX_data.py':
[Errno 2] No such file or directory
when i connect to node and look at working directory non of the Application Package files are present there.
How do i make sure that files from Application Package are available in working directory or I can invoke/execute files under Application Package from command line ?
Make sure that your async operation have proper await in place before you start using the package in your code.
Also please share your design \ pseudo-code scenario and how you are approaching it as a design?
Further to add:
Seems like this one is pool level package.
The error seems like that the application env variable is either incorrectly used or there is some other user level issue. Please checkout linmk below and specially the section where use of env variable is mentioned.
This seems like user level issue because In case of downloading the package resource, if there will be an error it will be visible to you via exception handler or at the tool level is you are using batch explorer \ Batch-labs or code level exception handling.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/batch/batch-application-packages
Reason \ Rationale:
If the pool level or the task application has error, an error-list will come back if there was an error in the application package then it will be returned as the UserError or and AppPackageError which will be visible in the exception handle of the code.
Key you can always RDP into your node and checkout the package availability: information here: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/batch/batch-api-basics#connecting-to-compute-nodes
I once created a small sample to help peeps around so this resource might help you to checkeout the use here.
Hope rest helps.
On Linux, the application package with version string is formatted as:
AZ_BATCH_APP_PACKAGE_{0}_{1}
On Windows it is formatted as:
AZ_BATCH_APP_PACKAGE_APPLICATIONID#version
Where 0 is the application name and 1 is the version.
$AZ_BATCH_APP_PACKAGE_scriptv1_1 will take you to the root folder where the application was unzipped.
Does this "exact" path exist in that location?
tasks/XXX/get_XXXXX_data.py
You can see more information here:
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/batch/batch-application-packages
Edit: Just saw this question: "or can I invoke/execute files under Application Package from command line"
Yes you can invoke and execute files from the application package directory with the environment variable above.
If you type env on the node you will see the environment variables that have been set.