- Switched from yapf to black
- Reconfigure isort for black
- Resolve black/pylint idiosyncrasies
Note: I used `--experimental-string-processing` because black was
producing "implicit string concatenation", similar to what described
here: https://github.com/psf/black/issues/1837. While currently this
feature is experimental, it will be enabled by default:
https://github.com/psf/black/issues/2188. After running black with the
new string processing so that the generated code merges these `"hello" "
world"` strings concatenations, then I removed
`--experimental-string-processing` for stability, and regenerated the
code again.
To the reviewer: don't even try to open "Files Changed" tab 😄 It's
better to review commit-by-commit, and ignore `run black and isort`.
* Run 2to3 on tools directory
* Delete github_stats_tracking
* Re-run 2to3
* Remove unused script
* Remove unused script
* Remove unused line count utility
* Yapf. Isort
* Remove accidentally included file
* Migrate tools/distrib directory to python 3
* Remove unnecessary shebang
* Restore line_count directory
* Immediately convert subprocess.check_output output to string
* Take care of Python 2 shebangs
* Invoke scripts using a Python 3 interpreter
* Yapf. Isort
* Try installing Python 3 first
* See if we have any Python 3 versions installed
* Add Python 3.7 to Windows path
* Try adding a symlink
* Try to symlink differently
* Install six for Python 3
* Run run_interop_tests with python 3
* Try installing six in python3.7 explicitly
* Revert "Try installing six in python3.7 explicitly"
This reverts commit 2cf60d72f3.
* And debug some more
* Fix issue with jobset.py
* Add debug for CI failure
* Revert microbenchmark changes
This removes all of the node code and tests from the repo, along with the
scripts for running Node unit tests, performance tests, and artifact builds.
The scripts for running tests from the grpc-node repository are untouched.
This makes grpc.early_adopter much more independent of RPC
Framework and cleaner at the cost of reexporting most of the
interfaces and writing several delegation classes.