* Use latest pylint in Python 3.7 (they dropped support for PY2)
* Make latest pylint happy
* Forced to upgrade to shellcheck 0.4.4
* Make shellcheck 0.4.4 happy
* Adopt reviewers' advice to reduce global disabled rules
* Expose the C-Core API in Cython layer
* Handle the object translation
* Create a separate package for Channelz specifically
* Handle nullptr and raise exception if seen one
* Translate C++ Channelz unit tests
* Adding 5 more invalid query unit tests
Adding peripheral utility for grpcio-channelz package
* Add to `pylint_code.sh`
* Add to Python build script
* Add to artifact build script
* Add to Bazel
* Add to Sphinx module list
PHP: add persistent list upper bounnd check
change upper bound from global to each target
add ref/unreef; Only delete ref_count=0; make the code cleaner
persistent map update after review
u2nd pdate after the review
See https://github.com/grpc/grpc/issues/15253 for more context. The
original behavior when running Python tests is to try to create a
virtual env with the specifed Python version. If there is an issue
with that, fallback to the system's default Python version. This leads to
misleading test results, so removing the fallback and failing the test
when virtual env fails to instantiate the specified Python version is
the new behavior.
With the upgrade of Kokoro macOS workers to Sierra, not all versions of
Python have a pip version new enough to have TLSv1.2. This change should
make macOS Python testing more resilient to environment changes.
Fix for issue #14815. Pinning to 9.0.3 doesn't work because pip fails to
recognize that as a valid version. Newer versions of pip have a fallback
on macOS to use SecureTransport instead of their outdated OpenSSL that
doesn't support TLSv1.2.
Fix for issue #14815. Pinning to 9.0.3 doesn't work because pip fails to
recognize that as a valid version. Newer versions of pip have a fallback
on macOS to use SecureTransport instead of their outdated OpenSSL that
doesn't support TLSv1.2.