Files @ 193138922d56
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Location: kallithea/scripts/shortlog.py

Mads Kiilerich
celery: introduce make_app instead of creating app at import time

It is dirty to instantiate things at import time (unless it really is basic
singletons).

In 0.5.1 (and earlier), such dirtyness made partial test execution fail when
other things had global side effects and things didn't use the usual import
order:

$ py.test kallithea/lib/
collecting ...
――― kallithea/lib/celerypylons/__init__.py ―――
kallithea/lib/celerypylons/__init__.py:58: in <module>
app.config_from_object(celery_config(tg.config))
kallithea/lib/celerypylons/__init__.py:28: in celery_config
assert config['celery.imports'] == 'kallithea.lib.celerylib.tasks', 'Kallithea Celery configuration has not been loaded'
data/env/lib/python2.7/site-packages/tg/configuration/tgconfig.py:31: in __getitem__
return self.config_proxy.current_conf()[key]
E KeyError: 'celery.imports'

Avoid that by running a "factory" function when the celery app actually is
needed.
#!/usr/bin/env python2
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-

"""
Kallithea script for generating a quick overview of contributors and their
commit counts in a given revision set.
"""
import argparse
import os
from collections import Counter

from . import contributor_data


def main():

    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='Generate a list of committers and commit counts.')
    parser.add_argument('revset',
                        help='revision set specifying the commits to count')
    args = parser.parse_args()

    repo_entries = [
        (contributor_data.name_fixes.get(name) or contributor_data.name_fixes.get(name.rsplit('<', 1)[0].strip()) or name).rsplit('<', 1)[0].strip()
        for name in (line.strip()
         for line in os.popen("""hg log -r '%s' -T '{author}\n'""" % args.revset).readlines())
        ]

    counter = Counter(repo_entries)
    for name, count in counter.most_common():
        if name == '':
            continue
        print('%4s %s' % (count, name))


if __name__ == '__main__':
    main()