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This repo contains a number of tools Open edX uses for working with GitHub repositories.

Project description

This repo contains a number of tools Open edX engineers use for working with GitHub repositories.

The set of tools has grown over the years. Some are old and in current use, some have fallen out of use, some are quite new.

Setting up GitHub authentication

Most of these make GitHub API calls, and so will need GitHub credentials in order to not be severely rate-limited. Edit (or create) ~/.netrc so that it has an entry like this:

machine api.github.com
  login your_user_name
  password ghp_XyzzyfGXFooBar8nBqQuuxY9brgXYz4Xyzzy

Change the login to your GitHub user name. The password is a Personal Access Token you get from https://github.com/settings/tokens. Visit that page, click “Generate new token.” It will prompt you for your password, then you’ll see a scary list of scopes. Check the “repo” option and click “Generate token.” Copy the token that appears. Paste it into your ~/.netrc in the “password” entry.

Working in the repo

This project uses uv for dependency management. See details at UV_QUICK_REFERENCE

To work on these tools:

  1. Install uv if you haven’t already:

    curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh
  2. Install dependencies:

    make sync

    Or directly with uv:

    uv sync --all-extras --dev
  3. Run tests:

    make test
  4. Older tools were Python files run from the root of the repo. Now we are being more disciplined and putting code into importable modules with entry points in pyproject.toml.

  5. Simple tools can go into an existing subdirectory of edx_repo_tools. Follow the structure of existing tools you find here. More complex tools, or ones that need unusual third-party requirements, should go into a new subdirectory of edx_repo_tools.

  6. Add a new entry point in pyproject.toml under [project.scripts] for your command:

    [project.scripts]
    new_tool = "edx_repo_tools.new_tool_dir.new_tool:main"
  7. If your tool needs additional third-party requirements, add them to the [project.optional-dependencies] section in pyproject.toml with a name matching your tool. For example:

    [project.optional-dependencies]
    new_tool = [
        "some-package",
        "another-package",
    ]

    Users can then install your tool with:

    uv sync --extra new_tool

Updating Dependencies

To update all dependencies to their latest compatible versions:

make upgrade

This command will: 1. Sync common constraints from edx-lint repository 2. Update the uv.lock file with the latest versions

Or you can run the steps manually:

make sync-constraints  # Sync organization-wide constraints
uv lock --upgrade      # Update lock file

Managing Constraints

This repository uses organization-wide constraints from the edx-lint repository to ensure consistency across all Open edX projects. These constraints (like Django<6.0) are automatically downloaded and applied.

To manually sync constraints:

make sync-constraints

Or directly:

uv run python sync_constraints.py

Important: Do not manually edit the [tool.uv.constraint-dependencies] section in pyproject.toml. Use the sync_constraints.py script to update constraints, which preserves local constraints while updating common ones.

Active Tools

check_requirements_failures

Check repositories in a GitHub organization for the status of their automated Python requirements upgrade workflows. This tool tracks the failure rate of the last 10 workflow runs, when requirements PRs were last merged, and release information. This helps identify repositories where the upgrade workflow may be failing or stalled.

See the check_requirements_failures README in its subfolder.

repo_checks

See the repo_checks README in its subfolder.

Older Tools

There are many programs in this repo in various stages of disrepair. A few of them are described in this repo’s older README.md file. Others are not described at all, but may be useful, or have useful tidbits in the code.

Feedback

Please send any feedback to oscm@edx.org.

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