Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-07 Thread Paul Gevers
Hi Mattia, all, On 07-01-2019 17:20, Mattia Rizzolo wrote: > On Mon, Jan 07, 2019 at 09:03:11AM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: >> Mattia Rizzolo writes: >>> On Sun, Jan 06, 2019 at 05:07:41PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: Now it turns out that there is a new migration problem, which is aplpy:

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-07 Thread Ole Streicher
Mattia Rizzolo writes: > On Mon, Jan 07, 2019 at 09:03:11AM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: >> The problem is that aplpy uses matplotlib, and the old matplotlib uses >> the deprecated numpy function np.asscalar(), which leads to a >> DeprecationWarning, which is (on purpose, by upstream) thrown as

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-07 Thread Ole Streicher
Mattia Rizzolo writes: > On Sun, Jan 06, 2019 at 05:07:41PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: >> Now it turns out that there is a new migration problem, which is aplpy: >> Current aplpy (2.0~rc2-2) CI test works well > > You probably mean aplpy 1.1.1-4. No, I meant the one above (although the unstable

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-06 Thread Mattia Rizzolo
On Sun, Jan 06, 2019 at 06:19:15PM +0100, Steffen Möller wrote: > > The reverse build deps of python-astropy in testing are pyregion and > > veusz. Veusz has the build-dep removed in unstable, but didn't migrate > > since 192 days. > This is because it does not build on arm64 and others >

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-06 Thread Steffen Möller
On 06.01.19 17:07, Ole Streicher wrote: Mattia Rizzolo writes: On Sat, Jan 05, 2019 at 08:30:28PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: This would remove one dependent party (release team) from the chain of blocking causes for the migration. Given your email on -mentors a few minutes ago I see

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-06 Thread Ole Streicher
Mattia Rizzolo writes: > On Sat, Jan 05, 2019 at 08:30:28PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: >> This would remove one dependent party (release team) from the chain of >> blocking causes for the migration. > > Given your email on -mentors a few minutes ago I see there are troubles > on removing

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Mattia Rizzolo
> >> (unnecessarily) blocks the numpy migration. Python-astropy already > >> has an RC bug, but its autoremoval from testing is still not even > >> announced yet. > > > > Maybe you could ask the release team to hasten the removal of > > python-astropy

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Scott Kitterman
On Saturday, January 05, 2019 08:30:28 PM Ole Streicher wrote: > Mattia Rizzolo writes: > > On Sat, Jan 05, 2019 at 04:02:35PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: > >> I'll do tonight. It however looks a bit suboptimal: when the CI test > >> with a new version fails for an old reverse dependency, then

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Ole Streicher
situation similar to the specific CI test). >> Python-astropy is however going to be removed completely; it has >> however some cruft rdeps left in unstable. So, it cannot removed from >> unstable now, and therefore still remains in testing and >> (unnecessarily) blocks the num

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Mattia Rizzolo
On Sat, Jan 05, 2019 at 04:15:04PM +0100, Ole Streicher wrote: > There is one more problem, which are transitional dependencies: > > The new python3-numpy version breaks (f.e.) python3-pyregion because of > the problem in python3-astropy. The new upload of python3-astropy fixes > this, so in

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Mattia Rizzolo
astropy in testing. Oh, sorry. I didn't realize python-astropy is a different source package… > Python-astropy is > however going to be removed completely; it has however some cruft rdeps > left in unstable. So, it cannot removed from unstable now, and therefore > still remains

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Ole Streicher
Mattia Rizzolo writes: > The way forward in cases like these is for the package that originally > cuased the breakage (i.e. numpy) to declare a versioned Breaks on the > borken and now fixed package (i.e. astropy (<< 3.1-1)). This way > britney and debci will know they have to test numpy and

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Ole Streicher
cannot removed from unstable now, and therefore still remains in testing and (unnecessarily) blocks the numpy migration. Python-astropy already has an RC bug, but its autoremoval from testing is still not even announced yet. The migration blocking CI tests seem to cause much more headaches than just "fix your bugs"... Best Ole

Re: Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Mattia Rizzolo
)On Sat, Jan 5, 2019 at 3:18 PM Ole Streicher wrote: > However, astropy cannot migrate now, to testing, since it depends on the > new numpy version (and therefore can only migrate after numpy). And > numpy is blocked by the CI failure of astropy ... > > Looks like a deadlock. Which will be

Numpy migration?

2019-01-05 Thread Ole Streicher
Hi all, Since a few days, a new RC is stalled in unstable: testing: 1:1.15.4-2 unstable: 1:1.16.0~rc1-3 The reason that it can't migrate is that it breaks the CI tests of several packages in testing. For example astropy (where I am the uploader), and its dependencies. The CI test failures were