Skip to content

in task response, do not error when there's no screenshot if task is still in progress #318

in task response, do not error when there's no screenshot if task is still in progress

in task response, do not error when there's no screenshot if task is still in progress #318

Workflow file for this run

name: Run tests and pre-commit
# Run this job on pushes to `main`, and for pull requests. If you don't specify
# `branches: [main], then this actions runs _twice_ on pull requests, which is
# annoying.
on:
workflow_call:
pull_request:
push:
branches: [main]
jobs:
test:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
# Service containers to run with `container-job`
services:
# Label used to access the service container
postgres:
# Docker Hub image
image: postgres
# Provide the password for postgres
env:
POSTGRES_USER: skyvern
POSTGRES_DATABASE: skyvern
POSTGRES_HOST_AUTH_METHOD: trust
# Set health checks to wait until postgres has started
options: >-
--health-cmd pg_isready
--health-interval 10s
--health-timeout 5s
--health-retries 5
ports:
# Maps tcp port 5432 on service container to the host
- 5432:5432
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v3
# If you wanted to use multiple Python versions, you'd have specify a matrix in the job and
# reference the matrixe python version here.
- uses: actions/setup-python@v4
with:
python-version: "3.11"
# Cache the installation of Poetry itself, e.g. the next step. This prevents the workflow
# from installing Poetry every time, which can be slow. Note the use of the Poetry version
# number in the cache key, and the "-0" suffix: this allows you to invalidate the cache
# manually if/when you want to upgrade Poetry, or if something goes wrong. This could be
# mildly cleaner by using an environment variable, but I don't really care.
- name: cache poetry install
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: ~/.local
key: poetry-1.7.1
# Install Poetry. You could do this manually, or there are several actions that do this.
# `snok/install-poetry` seems to be minimal yet complete, and really just calls out to
# Poetry's default install script, which feels correct. I pin the Poetry version here
# because Poetry does occasionally change APIs between versions and I don't want my
# actions to break if it does.
#
# The key configuration value here is `virtualenvs-in-project: true`: this creates the
# venv as a `.venv` in your testing directory, which allows the next step to easily
# cache it.
- uses: snok/install-poetry@v1
with:
version: 1.7.1
virtualenvs-create: true
virtualenvs-in-project: true
# Cache your dependencies (i.e. all the stuff in your `pyproject.toml`). Note the cache
# key: if you're using multiple Python versions, or multiple OSes, you'd need to include
# them in the cache key. I'm not, so it can be simple and just depend on the poetry.lock.
- name: cache deps
id: cache-deps
uses: actions/cache@v3
with:
path: .venv
key: pydeps-${{ hashFiles('**/poetry.lock') }}
# Install dependencies. `--no-root` means "install all dependencies but not the project
# itself", which is what you want to avoid caching _your_ code. The `if` statement
# ensures this only runs on a cache miss.
- run: poetry install --no-interaction --no-root
if: steps.cache-deps.outputs.cache-hit != 'true'
# Now install _your_ project. This isn't necessary for many types of projects -- particularly
# things like Django apps don't need this. But it's a good idea since it fully-exercises the
# pyproject.toml and makes that if you add things like console-scripts at some point that
# they'll be installed and working.
- run: poetry install --no-interaction
# Finally, run pre-commit.
- uses: pre-commit/action@v3.0.0
fe-lint-build:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
defaults:
run:
working-directory: ./skyvern-frontend
steps:
- name: Check out Git repository
uses: actions/checkout@v4
- name: Set up Node.js
uses: actions/setup-node@v4
with:
node-version: 20
- name: Install Node.js dependencies
run: npm ci
- name: Run linter
run: npm run lint
- name: Run build
run: npm run build