For some reason I stopped having csv-metadata-quality available in
my poetry environment after install. It seems I need to add it as a
poetry tool script? I had already done this in setup.py years ago,
which works for regular python setup.py installs, but hadn't needed
to do it in poetry for a year or more that I've been using it, until
now.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --without-hashes --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
I am trying `--without-hashes` to work around an error on pip install
when running in CI:
ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==.
We used to only check fields that had "date" in their name because
we were using DSpace's default dc.date.* fields. Now we are using
dcterms.issued so I will add that one as well.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --without-hashes --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
I am trying `--without-hashes` to work around an error on pip install
when running in CI:
ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --without-hashes --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
I am trying `--without-hashes` to work around an error on pip install
when running in CI:
ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==.
We should also allow ISO 8601 extended in combined date and time
format. DSpace does not have a problem with dates in this format
and I have found some metadata that uses this date format.
For example: 2020-08-31T11:04:56Z
See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISO_8601
This reverts commit ca80340f7a.
Nope, we still need the --without-hashes because this still fails
on Python 3.7, but not 3.8 or 3.9. From looking around it seems
that nobody can agree whether poetry should handle this, pip should
handle it, or upstream projects should pin their dependencies.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
Trying to see if we no longer need --without-hashes since we don't
support Python 3.6 anymore.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --without-hashes --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
I am trying `--without-hashes` to work around an error on pip install
when running on Python 3.6 in Travis:
ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==.
Generated with poetry export:
$ poetry export --without-hashes -f requirements.txt > requirements.txt
$ poetry export --without-hashes --dev -f requirements.txt > requirements-dev.txt
I am trying `--without-hashes` to work around an error on pip install
when running on Python 3.6 in Travis:
ERROR: In --require-hashes mode, all requirements must have their versions pinned with ==.
I just came across some metadata that had unnecessary multi-value
separators at the end of a field, causing a blank value to be used.
For example: "Kenya||Tanzania||"