view scripts/stats.xmlrpc.py @ 7695:2be7a8f66ea7

fix: windows install using pip mislocates share directory The setup code that tries to make the share install path absolute prependeds something like: c:\program files\python_venv to the paths. The equivalent on linux is recognized as an absolute path. On windows this is treated oddly. This resulted in the share files being placed in: c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\site-packages\program files\python_venv\share Roundup was unable to find the files there. On windows (where the platform starts with 'win') don't make the path absolute. This puts share in: c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\share and Roundup finds them. The translations and templates are found by the roundup-server. The docs are also installed under the share directory. The man pages are not installed as windows doesn't have groff to format the source documents. This is the second fix from issues getting Roundup running on windows discussed on mailing list by Simon Eigeldinger. Thread starts with: https://sourceforge.net/p/roundup/mailman/message/41557096/ subject: Installing Roundup on Windows 2023-10-05.
author John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org>
date Sun, 05 Nov 2023 23:01:29 -0500
parents 75da037d1c54
children
line wrap: on
line source

"""Count how many issues use each bpo field and print a report."""
""" sample output: https://github.com/psf/gh-migration/issues/5#issuecomment-935697646"""

import xmlrpc.client

from collections import defaultdict

class SpecialTransport(xmlrpc.client.SafeTransport):
    def send_content(self, connection, request_body):
        connection.putheader("Referer", "https://bugs.python.org/")
        connection.putheader("Origin", "https://bugs.python.org")
        connection.putheader("X-Requested-With", "XMLHttpRequest")
        xmlrpc.client.SafeTransport.send_content(self, connection, request_body)

# connect to bpo
roundup = xmlrpc.client.ServerProxy('https://bugs.python.org/xmlrpc',
                                    transport=SpecialTransport(),
                                    allow_none=True)

# map bpo classes -> propname
# the class is the name of the class (e.g. issue_type, keyword --
# also used in e.g. in https://bugs.python.org/keyword)
# the propname is the name used as attribute on the issue class
# (e.g. issue.type, issue.keywords)
classes = {
    # 'status': 'status',  # skip this
    'issue_type': 'type',
    'stage': 'stage',
    'component': 'components',
    'version': 'versions',
    'resolution': 'resolution',
    'priority': 'priority',
    'keyword': 'keywords',
}

# find the id for the 'open' status
open_id = roundup.lookup('status', 'open')

print(f'* Counting total issues...')
total_issues_num = len(roundup.filter('issue', None, {}))

print(f'* Counting open issues...')
# use this list to filter only the open issues
open_issues = roundup.filter('issue', None, {'status': open_id})
open_issues_num = len(open_issues)

# save the totals in a dict with this structure:
#   totals[propname][open/all][num/perc][name]
# where propname is e.g. 'keyword' and name is e.g. 'easy'
totals = defaultdict(lambda: {'all': {'perc': {}, 'num': {}},
                              'open': {'perc': {}, 'num': {}}})
for cls, propname in classes.items():
    print(f'* Counting <{cls}>...')
    # get the list of ids/names for the given class (e.g. 'easy' is 6)
    ids = roundup.list(cls, 'id')
    names = roundup.list(cls, 'name')
    for id, name in zip(ids, names):
        # filter and count on *all* issues with the given propname
        tot_all = len(roundup.filter('issue', None, {propname: id}))
        totals[propname]['all']['num'][name] = tot_all
        totals[propname]['all']['perc'][name] = tot_all / total_issues_num
        # filter and count on *open* issues with the given propname
        tot_open = len(roundup.filter('issue', open_issues, {propname: id}))
        totals[propname]['open']['num'][name] = tot_open
        totals[propname]['open']['perc'][name] = tot_open / open_issues_num


print(f'Issues (open/all): {open_issues_num}/{total_issues_num}')

# print a list of markdown tables for each bpo class name
for propname in classes.values():
    print(f'### {propname}')
    print('| bpo field | open | all |')
    print('| :--- | ---: | ---: |')
    # pick the dict for the given propname (e.g. keywords)
    proptots = totals[propname]
    names = proptots['open']['num']
    # sort the names (e.g. 'easy') in reverse order
    # based on the number of open issues
    for name in sorted(names, key=names.get, reverse=True):
        # get and print num/perc for all/open issues
        issues_all = proptots['all']['num'][name]
        issues_open = proptots['open']['num'][name]
        perc_all = proptots['all']['perc'][name]
        perc_open = proptots['open']['perc'][name]
        print(f'| {name:20} | {issues_open:>5} ({perc_open:5.1%}) |'
              f' {issues_all:>5} ({perc_all:5.1%}) |')
    # calc and print num/perc for all/open issues
    tot_issues_all = sum(proptots['all']['num'].values())
    tot_issues_open = sum(proptots['open']['num'].values())
    tot_perc_all = sum(proptots['all']['perc'].values())
    tot_perc_open = sum(proptots['open']['perc'].values())
    print(f'| **Total**            | {tot_issues_open:>5} ({tot_perc_open:5.1%}) |'
            f' {tot_issues_all:>5} ({tot_perc_all:5.1%}) |')


Roundup Issue Tracker: http://roundup-tracker.org/