Flake8 Bugbear checks for some extra things that aren’t code style
errors, but are likely to introduce bugs or unexpected behaviour. A
good example is having mutable default function arguments, which get
shared between every call to the function and therefore mutating a value
in one place can unexpectedly cause it to change in another.
This commit enables all the extra warnings provided by Flake8 Bugbear,
except for:
- the line length one (because we already lint for that separately)
- B903 Data class should either be immutable or use `__slots__` because
this seems to false-positive on some of our custom exceptions
- B902 Invalid first argument 'cls' used for instance method because
some SQLAlchemy decorators (eg `declared_attr`) make things that
aren’t formally class methods take a class not an instance as their
first argument
It disables:
- _B306: BaseException.message is removed in Python 3_ because I think
our exceptions have a custom structure that means the `.message`
attribute is still present
Matches the work done in other repos:
- https://github.com/alphagov/notifications-admin/pull/3172/files
Years ago we started to implement a way to schedule a notification. We hit a problem but we never came up with a good solution and the feature never made it back to the top of the priority list.
This PR removes the code for scheduled_for. There will be another PR to drop the scheduled_notifications table and remove the schedule_notifications service permission
Unfortunately, I don't think we can remove the `scheduled_for` attribute from the notification.serialized method because out clients might fail if something is missing. For now I have left it in but defaulted the value to None.
This commit changes the code in post notification endpoint to handle a
serialised template (ie a `dict`) rather than a database object.
This is the first step towards being able to cache the template and not
hit the database on every request.
There should be no functional changes here, it’s just refactoring.
There are some changes to the tests where the signature of functions
has changed.
Importing of the template schema has to be done at a function level,
otherwise Marshmallow gets weird.
This commit also copies the `JSONModel` class from the admin app, which
turns serialised data (a dict made from JSON) into an object on which
certain predefined properties are allowed.
This means we can still do the caching of serialised data, without
having to change too much of the code in the app, or make it ugly by
sprinkling dict lookups everywhere.
We’re not copying all of JSONModel from the admin app, just the bits we
need. We don’t need to compare or hash these objects, they’re just used
for lookups. And redefining `__getattribute__` scares Leo.
We were checking this separately in two places in the code. Now
we will have this logic in one place, in validators.
Also pull in utils version that recognises crown depenency numbers
as international.
Code that is within a `with Python.raises(...)` context manager but
comes after the line that raises the exception doesn't get evaluated.
We had some assertions that we never being tested because of this, so
this ensures that they will always get run and fixes them where
necessary.
This commit modifies the code paths the admin app uses to send one off
emails and text messages to also accept letters.
This mostly worked already, the two changes were:
- making sure that one-off letters are processed by the correct task,
from the correct queue
- one-off letters sent from a service in research mode don’t get put on
a queue and go straight to `delivered` (because we don’t want to send
them for real)
The command takes a service id and a day, grabs the historical data for
that day (potentially out of notification_history), and pops it in
redis (for eight days, same as if it were written to manually).
also, prefix template usage key with "service" to make clear that it's
a service id, and not an individual template id.
We've run into issues with redis expiring keys while we try and write
to them - short lived redis TTLs aren't really sustainable for keys
where we mutate the state. Template usage is a hash contained in redis
where we increment a count keyed by template_id each time a message is
sent for that template. But if the key expires, hincrby (redis command
for incrementing a value in a hash) will re-create an empty hash.
This is no good, as we need the hash to be populated with the last
seven days worth of data, which we then increment further. We can't
tell whether the hincrby created the key, so a different approach
entirely was needed:
* New redis key: <service_id>-template-usage-<YYYY-MM-DD>. Note: This
YYYY-MM-DD is BTC time so it lines up nicely with ft_billing table
* Incremented to from process_notification - if it doesn't exist yet,
it'll be created then.
* Expiry set to 8 days every time it's incremented to.
Then, at read time, we'll just read the last eight days of keys from
Redis, and sum them up. This works because we're only ever incrementing
from that one place - never setting wholesale, never recreating the
data from scratch. So we know that if the data is in redis, then it is
good and accurate data.
One thing we *don't* know and *cannot* reason about is what no key in
redis means. It could be either of:
* This is the first message that the service has sent today.
* The key was deleted from redis for some reason.
Since we set the TTL to so long, we'll never be writing to a key that
previously expired. But if there is a redis (or operator) error and the
key is deleted, then we'll have bad data - after any data loss we'll
have to rebuild the data.
when functions get as big as that, it's confusing to try and work out what
things are what. By including a * as the first arg, we require that anyone
calling the function has to use kwargs to reference the parameters
* Alter config so an error will be raised if you forget to mock out a
celery call in one of your tests
* Remove an unneeded exception type that was masking errors