Thanks for all the effort on this! It looks great!
- The approach looks great!
- Heavy plus one on this. The pre-commit should be one of the ground
pillars of any standardisation. Having an extra file structure check could
be included too on top of `from` to eliminate new providers to follow the
consistent structure.
- I like the unit too over provider_tests. It is a great idea to eliminate
ambiguity. The other parts seem pretty pretty good.

Along with the latest improvements, these will be great additions!


On Sun, Feb 16, 2025 at 4:15 AM Rahul Vats <rah.sharm...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Thanks for the detailed explanation and for driving this effort—it looks
> like a solid improvement.
>
>    1.
>
>    I love the approach & new structure. I can't think of a better approach.
>    2.
>
>    I agree that adding a pre-commit check to enforce consistent imports is
>    a good idea. It will help maintain the new structure and prevent
>    regressions.
>    3.
>
>    For the naming, I’d prefer using unit instead of provider_tests to keep
>    it more intuitive and consistent with system and integration. This makes
>    the structure self-explanatory and easier for new contributors.
>
>
> Regards,
> Rahul Vats
>
> On Sun, 16 Feb 2025 at 03:50, Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:
>
> > > 2) no real opinion, seems useful. Let’s see if we can do it with a ruff
> > rule first? It _might_ be possible. (It is possible to extend the ruff
> > rules on a per subproject basis, check out task_sdk/pyproject.toml)
> >
> > I am not sure if we need ruff rule for it, as we have not yet enabled any
> > `ruff` airflow rules in airflow development (it is targeted so far for
> > users writing DAGs}
> >
> > I think it's more "airflow internal" rule not something that can be used
> > for general audience (which is pretty-much what ruff rules are about)
> >
> > Unfortunately - the current way ruff works does not allow local
> > "plugin" functionality to add new rules that would only be applicable to
> > the current project you are in. In the absence of that feature, having a
> > python pre-commit seem the next-best thing.
> >
> > J.
> >
> >
> > On Sat, Feb 15, 2025 at 10:50 PM Ash Berlin-Taylor <a...@apache.org>
> wrote:
> >
> > > 100%. It’s on my list to tackle very soon, it can’t get put off much
> > > longer.
> > >
> > > I have some thoughts (around back compat mostly) but they aren’t
> > collected
> > > yet, and I won’t derail this thread.
> > >
> > > > On 15 Feb 2025, at 21:43, Jarek Potiuk <ja...@potiuk.com> wrote:
> > > >
> > > > cc: @ashb @uranusjr @kaxil -> something for consideration in our
> > > > discussions on how to repackage airlfow soon. I keep on explaining
> why
> > > > running code in airflow.__init__.py is a bad idea and advocating for
> > > > removal of it and replace it with explicit initialization, yet that
> > topic
> > > > have not been discussed yet, but I will plan to start a discussion
> > about
> > > it
> > > > soon once we approach the packaging subject. I am not sure what's
> your
> > > > thinking is about this - I know you spent consirderable amount of
> time
> > on
> > > > doing all the "lazy initalization" dance all over the places, and I
> > think
> > > > it adds a lot of complexity to our code and only partially solves the
> > > > cicular imports problem. But I know @ashb has very strong feeling
> about
> > > > being able to do "from airlfow import Dag" - which more or less
> > requires
> > > > all this complexity. I just don't think it's worth it.
> > >
> > >
> >
>


-- 
Bugra Ozturk

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