Releases: fedora-infra/fedora-messaging
Releases · fedora-infra/fedora-messaging
fedora-messaging v1.3.0
v1.3.0 (2019-01-24)
API Changes
- The
Message._body
attribute is renamed tobody
, and is now
part of the public API (PR#119).
Contributors
Many thanks to the contributors of bug reports, pull requests, and pull
request reviews for this release:
- Aurélien Bompard
- Jeremy Cline
v1.2.0
v1.2.0 (2019-01-21)
Features
- The
fedora_messaging.api.consume
API now accepts a "queues"
keyword which specifies the queues to declare and consume from, and
the "fedora-messaging" CLI makes use of this
(PR#107) - Utilities were added in the :py
schema_utils
module to help write
the Python API of your message schemas
(PR#108) - No long require "--exchange", "--queue-name", and "--routing-key" to
all be specified when using "fedora-messaging consume". If one is
not supplied, a default is chosen. These defaults are documented in
the command's manual page
(PR#117)
Bug Fixes
- Fix the "consumer" setting in config.toml.example to point to a real
Python path
(PR#104) - fedora-messaging consume now actually uses the --queue-name and
--routing-key parameter provided to it, and --routing-key can now be
specified multiple times as was documented
(PR#105) - Fix the equality check on
fedora_messaging.message.Message
objects
to exclude the 'sent-at' header
(PR#109) - Documentation for consumers indicated any callable object was
acceptable to use as a callback as long as it accepted a single
positional argument (the message). However, the implementation
required that the callable be a function or a class, which it then
instantiated. This has been fixed and you may now use any callable
object, such as a method or an instance of a class that implements
__call__
(PR#110) - Fix an issue where the fedora-messaging CLI would only log if a
configuration file was explicitly supplied
(PR#113)
Contributors
Many thanks to the contributors of bug reports, pull requests, and pull
request reviews for this release:
- Aurélien Bompard
- Jeremy Cline
- Sebastian Wojciechowski
- Tomas Tomecek
fedora-messaging v1.1.0
v1.1.0 (2018-11-13)
Features
- Initial work on a serialization format for
fedora_messaging.message.Message
and APIs for loading and storing messages. This is intended to make it easy to record and replay messages for testing purposes (#84). - Add a module,
fedora_messaging.testing
, to add useful test helpers. Check out the module documentation for details\ (#100)
Contributors
Many thanks to the contributors of bug reports, pull requests, and pull
request reviews for this release:
- Jeremy Cline
- Sebastian Wojciechowski
v1.0.1
v1.0.0
v1.0.0 (2018-10-10)
API Changes
- The unused
exchange
parameter from the PublisherSession was
removed
(PR#56) - The
setupRead
API in the Twisted protocol has been removed and
replaced withconsume
andcancel
APIs which allow for multiple
consumers with multiple callbacks
(PR#72) - The name of the entry point is now used to identify the message type
(PR#89)
Features
- Ensure proper TLS client cert checking with
service_identity
(PR#51) - Support Python 3.7
(PR#53) - Compatibility with Click 7.x
(PR#86) - The complete set of valid severity levels is now available at
fedora_messaging.api.SEVERITIES
(PR#60) - A
queue
attribute is present on received messages with the name of
the queue it arrived on
(PR#65) - The wire format of fedora-messaging is now documented
(PR#88)
Development Changes
- Use towncrier to generate
the release notes
(PR#67) - Check that our dependencies have Free licenses
(PR#68) - Test coverage is now at 97%.
Other Changes
- The library is available in Fedora as
fedora-messaging
.
v1.0.0b1
v1.0.0b1
API Changes
fedora_messaging.message.Message.summary
is now a property rather than a method (#25).- The non-functional
--amqp-url
parameter has been removed from the CLI (#49).
Features
- Configuration parsing failures now produce point to the line and column of the parsing error (#21).
fedora_messaging.message.Message
now come with a set of standard accessors (#32).- Consumers can now specify whether a message should be re-queued when halting (#44).
- An example consumer that prints to standard output now ships with fedora-messaging. It can be used by running
fedora-messaging consume --callback="fedora_messaging.example:printer"
(#40). fedora_messaging.message.Message
now have aseverity
associated with them (#48).
Bug Fixes
- Fix an issue where invalid or missing configuration files resulted in a traceback rather than a formatted error message from the CLI (#21).
- Client authentication with x509 now works with both the synchronous API and the Twisted API (#29, #35).
fedora_messaging.api.publish
no longer raises apika.exceptions.ChannelClosed
exception. Instead, it raises afedora_messaging.exceptions.ConnectionException
(#31).fedora_messaging.api.consume
is now documented to raise aValueError
when the callback isn't callable (#47).
Development Features
- The fedora-messaging code base is now compliant with the Black Python formatter and this is enforced with continuous integration.
- Test coverage is moving up and to the right.
Many thanks to the contributors of bug reports, pull requests, and pull
request reviews for this release:
- Aurélien Bompard
- Clement Verna
- Ken Dreyer
- Jeremy Cline
- Miroslav Suchý
- Patrick Uiterwijk
- Sebastian Wojciechowski