The current timeouts are too long, and mean that if the GitHub cache
decides to act up, jobs get bogged down for 15min at a time. This has
happened 2-3 times already this week -- a tiny fraction of our total
workflows but really annoying when it happens to you. We can do better.
Installing deps on cache miss takes about ~4min, so it's not worth
waiting more than 4min for the deps cache. The black and mypy caches
save 1 and 2min, respectively, so wait only up to that long to download
them.
Using `${{ }}` to construct shell commands is risky, since the `${{ }}`
interpolation runs first and ignores shell quoting rules. This means
that shell commands that look safely quoted, like `echo "${{
github.event.issue.title }}"`, are actually vulnerable to shell
injection.
More details here:
https://github.blog/2023-08-09-four-tips-to-keep-your-github-actions-workflows-secure/
Ternary operators in GitHub Actions syntax are pretty ugly and hard to
read: `inputs.working-directory == '' && '.' ||
inputs.working-directory` means "if the condition is true, use `'.'` and
otherwise use the expression after the `||`".
This PR performs the ternary as few times as possible, assigning its
outcome to an env var we can then reuse as needed.
The previous caching configuration was attempting to cache poetry venvs
created in the default shared virtualenvs directory. However, all
langchain packages use `in-project = true` for their poetry virtualenv
setup, which moves the venv inside the package itself instead. This
meant that poetry venvs were not being cached at all.
This PR ensures that the venv gets cached by adding the in-project venv
directory to the cached directories list.
It also makes sure that the cache key *only* includes the lockfile being
installed, as opposed to *all lockfiles* (unnecessary cache misses) or
just the *top-level lockfile* (cache hits when it shouldn't).
# Add action to test with all dependencies installed
PR adds a custom action for setting up poetry that allows specifying a
cache key:
https://github.com/actions/setup-python/issues/505#issuecomment-1273013236
This makes it possible to run 2 types of unit tests:
(1) unit tests with only core dependencies
(2) unit tests with extended dependencies (e.g., those that rely on an
optional pdf parsing library)
As part of this PR, we're moving some pdf parsing tests into the
unit-tests section and making sure that these unit tests get executed
when running with extended dependencies.