- [Improvement] Add the `COMPOSE_PROJECT_STARTED` action and run `dev
stop` on `local start` (and vice versa).
- [Feature] Introduce `local/dev copyfrom` command to copy contents from
a container.
- [Bugfix] Fix a race condition that could prevent a newly provisioned
LMS container from starting due to a `FileExistsError` when creating
data folders.
- [Deprecation] Mark `tutor dev runserver` as deprecated in favor of
`tutor dev start`. Since `start` now supports bind-mounting and
breakpoint debugging, `runserver` is redundant and will be removed in a
future release.
- [Improvement] Allow breakpoint debugging when attached to a service
via `tutor dev start SERVICE`.
- [Security] Apply rate limiting security fix (see
[commit](b5723e416e)).
- [Feature] Introduce the ``-m/--mount`` option in ``local`` and ``dev``
commands to auto-magically bind-mount folders from the host.
- [Feature] Add `tutor dev quickstart` command, which is similar to
`tutor local quickstart`, except that it uses dev containers instead
of local production ones and includes some other small differences for
the convience of Open edX developers. This should remove some friction
from the Open edX development setup process, which previously required
that users provision using local producation containers (`tutor local
quickstart`) but then stop them and switch to dev containers (`tutor
local stop && tutor dev start -d`).
- 💥[Improvement] Make it possible to run `tutor k8s exec <command with
multiple arguments>` (#636). As a consequence, it is no longer
possible to run quoted commands: `tutor k8s exec "<some command>"`.
Instead, you should remove the quotes: `tutor k8s exec <some command>`.
- 💥[Deprecation] Drop support for the `TUTOR_EDX_PLATFORM_SETTINGS`
environment variable. It is now recommended to create a plugin
instead.
- 💥[Improvement] Complete overhaul of the plugin extension mechanism.
Tutor now has a hook-based Python API: actions can be triggered at
different points of the application life cycle and data can be modified
thanks to custom filters. The v0 plugin API is still supported, for
backward compatibility, but plugin developers are encouraged to migrate
their plugins to the new API. See the new plugin tutorial for more
information.
- [Improvement] Improved the output of `tutor plugins list`.
- [Feature] Add `tutor [dev|local|k8s] status` command, which provides
basic information about the platform's status.
Running `local start` while a dev platform is still running is a common sourse
of mistakes. Here we introduce a new action to automatically stop local and dev
projects whenever a project with a different name is started.
`copyfrom` copies data from a container to the local filesystem. It's similar
to bindmount, but less clunky, and more intuitive. Also, it plays along great
with `--mount`. Eventually we'll just get rid of the `bindmount` command and
the `--volume` option.
`tutor dev runserver` will be removed in a future release.
Developers are encouraged to use `tutor dev start` instead,
which is more flexible and provides a consistent interface
with `tutor local start`.
As part of this deprecation, we enable the `tty` and
`stdin_open` options on development docker-compose
services. This will allow developers to use `start`
for breakpoint debugging, which was previously only
availble via `runserver`. Several parallel PRs have
been merged in order to make the same change in the
development services of the official plugins.
Although `start` does not support the `--volume` option,
it supports a more-powerful `--mount` option. So, where
developers previously used:
tutor dev runserver --volume ...
to bind-mount host directories, they should now use:
tutor dev start --mount ...
Resolves https://github.com/overhangio/2u-tutor-adoption/issues/61
The `--mount` option is available both with `tutor local`
and `tutor dev` commands. It allows users to easily bind-mount containers from
the host to containers. Yes, I know, we already provide that possibility with
the `bindmount` command and the `--volume=/path/` option. But these suffer from
the following drawbacks:
- They are difficult to understand.
- The "bindmount" command name does not make much sense.
- It's not convenient to mount an arbitrary folder from the host to multiple
containers, such as the many lms/cms containers (web apps, celery workers and
job runners).
To address this situation, we now recommend to make use of --mount:
1. `--mount=service1[,service2,...]:/host/path:/container/path`: manually mount
`/host/path` to `/container/path` in container "service1" (and "service2").
2. `--mount=/host/path`: use the new v1 plugin API to discover plugins that
will detect this option and select the right containers in which to bind-mount
volumes. This is really nifty...
Close https://github.com/overhangio/2u-tutor-adoption/issues/43
Add `tutor dev quickstart` command, which is equivalent to
`tutor local quickstart`, but uses dev containers instead
of local production ones and includes some other small
differences for the convience of Open edX developers.
This should remove some friction
from the Open edX development setup process, which previously
required that users provision using local producation
containers but then stop them and switch to dev containers:
* tutor local quickstart
* tutor local stop
* tutor dev start -d
Document the command and its improved workflow in
./docs/tutorials/nightly.rst
Fixes overhangio/2u-tutor-adoption#58
The entrypoint in the "openedx" Docker image was used only to define the
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE environment variable, based on SERVICE_VARIANT and
SETTINGS. We ditch SETTINGS in favour of defining explicitely
DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE.
The problem with the Docker entrypoint is that it was bypassed whenever we ran
`tutor local exec` or `tutor k8s exec`. By removing it we make it simpler for
end-users to run manage.py commands in kubernetes.
This is a very large refactoring which aims at making Tutor both more
extendable and more generic. Historically, the Tutor plugin system was
designed as an ad-hoc solution to allow developers to modify their own
Open edX platforms without having to fork Tutor. The plugin API was
simple, but limited, because of its ad-hoc nature. As a consequence,
there were many things that plugin developers could not do, such as
extending different parts of the CLI or adding custom template filters.
Here, we refactor the whole codebase to make use of a generic plugin
system. This system was inspired by the Wordpress plugin API and the
Open edX "hooks and filters" API. The various components are added to a
small core thanks to a set of actions and filters. Actions are callback
functions that can be triggered at different points of the application
lifecycle. Filters are functions that modify some data. Both actions and
filters are collectively named as "hooks". Hooks can optionally be
created within a certain context, which makes it easier to keep track of
which application created which callback.
This new hooks system allows us to provide a Python API that developers
can use to extend their applications. The API reference is added to the
documentation, along with a new plugin development tutorial.
The plugin v0 API remains supported for backward compatibility of
existing plugins.
Done:
- Do not load commands from plugins which are not enabled.
- Load enabled plugins once on start.
- Implement contexts for actions and filters, which allow us to keep track of
the source of every hook.
- Migrate patches
- Migrate commands
- Migrate plugin detection
- Migrate templates_root
- Migrate config
- Migrate template environment globals and filters
- Migrate hooks to tasks
- Generate hook documentation
- Generate patch reference documentation
- Add the concept of action priority
Close #499.
Previously, the `k8s exec` command did not support unknown "--options". This
made it impossible to launch, say, a django shell in the lms container.
While implementing this feature we saw an opportunity to simplify the way jobs
are handled in the k8s commands.
Close #636.
Another related issue is: https://github.com/overhangio/2u-tutor-adoption/issues/52
- [Security] Apply SAML security fix.
- [Improvement] In addition to the Docker build arguments
`EDX_PLATFORM_REPOSITORY` and `NPM_REGISTRY`, also support two corresponding
and identically-named `config.yml` values serving the same purpose.
Previously, the only way for Tutor users to use a fork of edx-platform
or a custom NPM registry was to use build args during the image build.
This is suboptimal in the case of automatically building images from
CI pipelines, which may want to auto-detect when an image needs to be
rebuilt based on config.yml changes.
In addition, the EDX_PLATFORM_VERSION build argument can already be
set via a corresponding config.yml parameter (OPENEDX_COMMON_VERSION),
so it's reasonable to follow that precedent and also introduce
config.yml parameters to correspond with the EDX_PLATFORM_REPOSITORY
and NPM_REGISTRY build arguments.
Thus, introduce two new configuration parameters:
- EDX_PLATFORM_REPOSITORY
- NPM_REGISTRY
These parameters can now optionally be used instead of the
aforementioned build args.
- [Bugfix] Fix dockerize on arm64 by switching to the [powerman/dockerize](https://github.com/powerman/dockerize) fork (#591).
- [Bugfix] Fix "Unexpected args" error during service initialization on Kubernetes (#611).
The version of dockerize that shipped with the "openedx" image was not
compatible with arm64. The original project is unmaintained, but there
is a fork that provides a version that is compatible with arm64.
This was tested on arm64 with buildx:
docker buildx build --tag=openedx --platform=linux/arm64 ~/.local/share/tutor/env/build/openedx
Close #591
- [Bugfix] Fix `local/k8s quickstart` commands when upgrading from an older release (#595).
- [Bugfix] Fix running the default exim-relay SMTP server on arm64 (#600).
- [Feature] Add `tutor k8s apply` comand, which is a direct interface with `kubectl apply`.
- [Feature] Add `openedx-dockerfile-minimal` patch, which you can use to install custom packages and run commands as root in the Docker image.
- [Security] Fix vulnerability in call to invalid enrollment API (see [commit](e9369cffde)).
- [Bugfix] Fix "Internal Server Error / AttributeError / object has no attribute 'get_metadata'" in learning MFE.
- [Improvement] Replace all links to github.com/edx by github.com/openedx, following the migration of all repositories.
- [Bugfix] Fix `k8s start caddy` command.
- [Bugfix] Fix authentication in development due to missing SameSite policy on session ID cookie.
- [Bugfix] Display properly themed favicon.ico image in LMS, Studio and microfrontends.
- [Bugfix] Fix "LazyStaticAbsoluteUrl is not JSON serializable" error when sending bulk emails.
- [Bugfix] Fix `tutor local importdemocourse` fails when platform is not up.
In development, it was no longer possible to authenticate to the lms. Ater
signing in, the session ID could not be dropped, and thus the user was not
signed in, although no error was logged -- just a warning in the browser
console.
This problem was caused by the fact that the SameSite policy was set to "None"
in development.
Previously, we were redirecting all /*favicon.ico requests to the default
favicon. This meant that the favicon might not necessarily be correctly themed,
most notably in MFEs. Here, we resolve this issue by redirecting to the
theme-agnostic theming/asset/* url. Also, we restrict the overly generic regexp
for favicon url matching. We verified that we did not miss any url by running
the following command on the demo server:
tutor local logs caddy | grep --only-matching "host.*favicon.ico" | sort | uniq
The LazyStaticAbsoluteUrl object was breaking bulk emails again with the
following stacktrace:
2022-01-11 13:50:10,591 ERROR 12 [celery.app.trace] [user None] [ip None] trace.py:255 - Task lms.djangoapps.instructor_task.tasks.send_bulk_course_email[26b93357-018a-408f-b3f7-b69722447c5b] raised unexpected: EncodeError(TypeError('Object of type LazyStaticAbsoluteUrl is not JSON serializable'))
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/kombu/serialization.py", line 50, in _reraise_errors
yield
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/kombu/serialization.py", line 221, in dumps
payload = encoder(data)
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/kombu/utils/json.py", line 69, in dumps
return _dumps(s, cls=cls or _default_encoder,
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/simplejson/__init__.py", line 398, in dumps
return cls(
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/simplejson/encoder.py", line 296, in encode
chunks = self.iterencode(o, _one_shot=True)
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/simplejson/encoder.py", line 378, in iterencode
return _iterencode(o, 0)
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/kombu/utils/json.py", line 59, in default
return super(JSONEncoder, self).default(o)
File "/openedx/venv/lib/python3.8/site-packages/simplejson/encoder.py", line 272, in default
raise TypeError('Object of type %s is not JSON serializable' %
TypeError: Object of type LazyStaticAbsoluteUrl is not JSON serializable
The point of that lazy object was to link to the lms logo even when a custom
theme was enabled. Luckily, we no longer need this lazy evaluation because we
now have theme-agnostic urls that point to static asset (see
https://github.com/openedx/edx-platform/pull/29461).
See:
https://discuss.overhang.io/t/error-while-sending-bulk-emails-lazystaticabsoluteurl-is-not-json-serializable/2176/
upgrading.
- [Bugfix] During upgrade, make sure that environment is up-to-date
prior to prompting to rebuild the custom images.
- [Bugfix] Fix ownership of mysql data, in particular when upgrading a
Kubernetes cluster to Maple.
- [Bugfix] Ensure that ``tutor k8s upgrade`` is run during ``tutor k8s
quickstart``, when necessary.
- 💥[Bugfix] By default, detect the current version during ``tutor
k8s/local upgrade``.
- [Bugfix] Fix upgrading from Lilac to Maple on Kubernetes by deleting
deployments and services.
`upgrade` had several issues, which are summarized here:
https://discuss.overhang.io/t/confusing-instructions-during-upgrade/2281/7
- The docs say that you should run quickstart, but what most people will see is
the big command tutor local upgrade --from=lilac verbatim paragraph.
- The local upgrade command should be very explicit about the fact that users
need to run quickstart.
- Maybe the name of the local upgrade command should be improved.
- When upgrading tutor from one major release to the next, there should be a
more explicit warning to inform users of what they are doing (see this other
conversation 1)
- We should tell people that they almost certainly need to enable the tutor and
the mfe plugins, if they are not enabled during upgrade.
- A link to all of the breaking changes from the changelog should be
prominently displayed during upgrade.
- The docs should emphasize that upgrading from one major release to the next
is potentially a risky endeavor and that downgrading is not possible. The docs
should also link to the changelog.
This commit has grown slightly beyond the intended scope, but the changes should be mostly positive.
In theory, we can assign ownership of mysql data to just any user. But in
Lilac, mysql was running with user 999. When upgrading to Maple, on Kubernetes,
the fsGroupChangePolicy was causing a change of the data *group* (to 1000) but
not of the user. This was causing a crash with the following error:
[ERROR] InnoDB: The error means mysqld does not have the access rights to the directory.