This adds a `Livecheck::Options` class, which is intended to house
various configuration options that are set in `livecheck` blocks,
conditionally set by livecheck at runtime, etc. The general idea is
that when we add features involving configurations options (e.g., for
livecheck, strategies, curl, etc.), we can make changes to `Options`
without needing to modify parameters for strategy `find_versions`
methods, `Strategy` methods like `page_headers` and `page_content`,
etc. This is something that I've been trying to improve over the years
and `Options` should help to reduce maintenance overhead in this area
while also strengthening type signatures.
`Options` replaces the existing `homebrew_curl` option (which related
strategies pass to `Strategy` methods and on to `curl_args`) and the
new `url_options` (which contains `post_form` or `post_json` values
that are used to make `POST` requests). I recently added `url_options`
as a temporary way of enabling `POST` support without `Options` but
this restores the original `Options`-based implementation.
Along the way, I added a `homebrew_curl` parameter to the `url` DSL
method, allowing us to set an explicit value in `livecheck` blocks.
This is something that we've needed in some cases but I also intend
to replace implicit/inferred `homebrew_curl` usage with explicit
values in `livecheck` blocks once this is available for use. My
intention is to eventually remove the implicit behavior and only rely
on explicit values. That will align with how `homebrew_curl` options
work for other URLs and makes the behavior clear just from looking at
the `livecheck` block.
Lastly, this removes the `unused` rest parameter from `find_versions`
methods. I originally added `unused` as a way of handling parameters
that some `find_versions` methods have but others don't (e.g., `cask`
in `ExtractPlist`), as this allowed us to pass various arguments to
`find_versions` methods without worrying about whether a particular
parameter is available. This isn't an ideal solution and I originally
wanted to handle this situation by only passing expected arguments to
`find_versions` methods but there was a technical issue standing in
the way. I recently found an answer to the issue, so this also
replaces the existing `ExtractPlist` special case with generic logic
that checks the parameters for a strategy's `find_versions` method
and only passes expected arguments.
Replacing the aforementioned `find_versions` parameters with `Options`
ensures that the remaining parameters are fairly consistent across
strategies and any differences are handled by the aforementioned
logic. Outside of `ExtractPlist`, the only other difference is that
some `find_versions` methods have a `provided_content` parameter but
that's currently only used by tests (though it's intended for caching
support in the future). I will be renaming that parameter to `content`
in an upcoming PR and expanding it to the other strategies, which
should make them all consistent outside of `ExtractPlist`.
This updates `ElectronBuilder` to use `Yaml#find_versions`, as the
only code unique to that strategy is to restrict regex usage and
use default version-finding logic when a `strategy` block isn't
provided. This is similar to how we have various strategies that
use `PageMatch#find_versions` internally.
This allows us to remove `ElectronBuilder#versions_from_content`
entirely, along with the related tests. I've added support for
`provided_content` to `ElectronBuilder#find_versions` as a way of
adding tests and maintaining code coverage.
The `ElectronBuilder` strategy uses `YAML#safe_load` to parse YAML
content and this limits deserialization to appropriate classes. We
recently encountered a `Tried to load unspecified class: Time` error
when using the `ElectronBuilder` strategy on a `latest-mac.yml` file
containing `releaseDate: 2022-12-01T02:02:46.419Z`.
The electron-builder YAML files we usually encounter use single
quotes around the `releaseDate` value to ensure it's treated as a
string (e.g., `releaseDate: '2022-10-12T17:55:26.718Z'`) and this is
what we do in `electron_builder_spec.rb`. The aforementioned YAML
file doesn't use single quotes around the value, so it's treated as
a timestamp and apparently this makes Psych use `Time` (which
`#safe_load` doesn't allow by default).
Seeing as we can't control the YAML content and there's a chance we
may encounter other files like this in the future, this commit
modifies the related `#safe_load` call to allow `Time` (and `Date`
for good measure). This will resolve the aforementioned error and
allow the `ElectronBuilder` strategy to work as expected in this
scenario.
There are times where a regex isn't needed in a `strategy` block and
these changes explicitly handle that situation.
This allows the Symbol Proc format used in some `Sparkle` `livecheck`
blocks (e.g., `strategy :sparkle, &:version`) to continue working
instead of failing with a "wrong number of arguments (given 1,
expected 0)" error. This error would occur because a Symbol Proc only
only expects one argument (e.g., an `Item`, not an `Item` and a
regex/nil).
There's an argument to be made for avoiding the Symbol Proc format
for `strategy` blocks but I haven't found a way of selectively
disabling the Style/SymbolProc cop only for a `strategy` DSL method
call. That is to say, if we don't use the Symbol Proc format, `brew
style` will give a "Pass &:version as an argument to strategy instead
of a block." offense.
Besides that, this also replaces the `block` type signatures in
livecheck strategies with `T.untyped`. Sorbet doesn't know how to
handle a `Proc` with a variable number of arguments and can't be
taught how (i.e., `T.any` with a `Proc` signature for each variation
doesn't work). The aforementioned changes cause Sorbet to complain
about there being both too many and too few arguments, so the only
way to win is not to play the game. Hopefully we can restore the
`block` type signatures in the future (if upstream resolves this
years-old issue) but `T.untyped` seems to be our only option for now.
This modifies cask-related livecheck strategies to allow passing a
regex into a `strategy` block, when appropriate. These strategies
were outliers that explicitly rejected a regex even if a `strategy`
block was used, forcing any regex to be inlined in the `strategy`
block (instead of being defined using `#regex`).
With these changes, all `strategy` blocks will be able to accept a
regex, further simplifying the mental model. This also helps to
better align the various `find_versions` and `versions_from_*`
methods across strategies.
Valid `strategy` block return types currently vary between
strategies. Some only accept a string whereas others accept a string
or array of strings. [`strategy` blocks also accept a `nil` return
(to simplify early returns) but this was already standardized across
strategies.]
While some strategies only identify one version by default (where a
string is an appropriate return type), it could be that a strategy
block identifies more than one version. In this situation, the
strategy would need to be modified to accept (and work with) an
array from a `strategy` block.
Rather than waiting for this to become a problem, this modifies all
strategies to standardize on allowing `strategy` blocks to return a
string or array of strings (even if only one of these is currently
used in practice). Standardizing valid return types helps to further
simplify the mental model for `strategy` blocks and reduce cognitive
load.
This commit extracts related logic from `#find_versions` into
methods like `#versions_from_content`, which is conceptually similar
to `PageMatch#page_matches` (renamed to `#versions_from_content`
for consistency). This allows us to write tests for the related code
without having to make network requests (or stub them) at this point.
In general, this also helps to better align the structure of
strategies and how the various `#find_versions` methods work with
versions.
There's still more planned work to be done here but this is a step
in the right direction.