| Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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7059 failed clones
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7159 Update options for netex exports
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Custom clean on routes. Fixes #7227
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referential_stop_area_path
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6622 Ensure that the merge operation deals with loops well
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af83/6854-clean-up--destroy-routes-outside-referential
Clean up destroy routes outside referential. Fixes #6854
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af83/6884-tomtom-matrix--handle-error-when-response-doesn,t-inclu
Handle API error(s) in Tomtom matrix. Fixes #6884
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Gives us a single call site to trigger the destruction of vehicle
journeys, journey patterns, and routes without content.
This was previously done directly in the `#clean` method, but since it's
not needed during referential duplication (only during merges), we don't
want to enable it by default. Thus now to activate the same old
functionality, you would create a `CleanUp` like this:
CleanUp.new(methods: [:destroy_empty])
Refs #6854
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This method is coupled with a new virtual attribute that can be used in
the initializer like:
CleanUp.new(methods: [:destroy_routes])
The method will run all methods specified in the `:methods` list. The
plan is to replace the calls to `destroy_routes` etc. with a call to
this method. The result will be a more configurable clean-up process,
allowing users to selectively choose what to clean up by declaring what
methods in the `CleanUp` model to call.
Refs #6854
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Looks like I temporarily forgot that this method takes an ID.
Refs #6854
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Ensure that `JourneyPattern`s and `VehicleJourney`s associated with
orphaned routes get deleted in cascade.
Refs #6854
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This builds on `#destroy_vehicle_journeys_outside_referential` (which
will soon be removed in favour of this new method).
It destroys orphaned routes in a referential.
Refs #6854
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- Update the form
- Use policies and update the seeds accordingly
- Add a link in the navbar(s)
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And define policies
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I previously tried to correct a circular dependency problem in
a057276129b1f62b811743db3b8f867a05241ed3, but that didn't fix it (it was
intermittent, and came back).
After some wrangling, I've now deduced with some confidence that the
problem comes from `RouteWayCostCalculator`, which used
`TomTom::Matrix::RemoteError`. From the way it looks, this seems to mess
up the Rails autoloader since `tom_tom.rb` will try to load the `Matrix`
class from the `TomTom.matrix` call above. Or something.
In an attempt to fix the circular dependency error for real this time,
move the error class to a completely separate module from `Matrix`, and
refer to this when we need to use the error class.
Refs #6884
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We might not always get a nicely formatted JSON
`['error']['description']` response body. Sometimes, like for example
when you use an incorrect API key, even with an 'application/json'
content type, TomTom will respond with:
<h1>Developer Inactive</h1>
What?
In that case, the response has a 403 status. In addition to checking for
an error in the response, should also be checking for the HTTP status
code.
Log the status code in the exception to give us more information about
what went wrong.
Update our existing tests now that `#check_for_error_response` takes a
response object instead of a JSON string.
Refs #6884
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Refs #6884
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If there's an API error, we shouldn't update the route's `costs` field.
Let's say we've already calculated some costs for a route A. We then edit
and re-save A, which triggers a recalculation of the costs. Now the
TomTom API responds with an error. We don't want to overwrite our
existing costs with an empty array because they could still be useful.
In this case, we should instead keep the existing costs we already had.
To achieve this, move the `RemoteError` rescue into
`RouteWayCostCalculator`, leaving the error unhandled in
`TomTom.matrix`.
Refs #6884
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Occasionally, the following error would appear in our logs:
NoMethodError
RouteWayCostWorker/perform
Error message
NoMethodError: undefined method `each_with_index' for nil:NilClass
Stack trace (show Rails)
/app/lib/tom_tom/matrix.rb: 83:in `extract_costs_to_way_costs!'
/app/lib/tom_tom/matrix.rb: 23:in `matrix'
/app/lib/tom_tom.rb: 24:in `matrix'
/app/app/services/route_way_cost_calculator.rb: 8:in `calculate!'
/app/app/workers/route_way_cost_worker.rb: 12:in `perform'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 167:in `execute_job'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 139:in `block (5 levels) in process'
/var/lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq.rb: 36:in `block in <module:Sidekiq>'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 135:in `block (4 levels) in process'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 128:in `block in invoke'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 130:in `block in invoke'
…-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/server/active_record.rb: 6:in `call'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 130:in `block in invoke'
…idekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/server/logging.rb: 10:in `call'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 130:in `block in invoke'
…kiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/server/retry_jobs.rb: 74:in `call'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 130:in `block in invoke'
….0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/middleware/chain.rb: 133:in `invoke'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 134:in `block (3 levels) in process'
…/gems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/logging.rb: 32:in `with_context'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 132:in `block (2 levels) in process'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 183:in `stats'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 131:in `block in process'
/var/lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq.rb: 35:in `block in <module:Sidekiq>'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 126:in `process'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 82:in `process_one'
…ems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/processor.rb: 70:in `run'
…lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/util.rb: 17:in `watchdog'
…lib/gems/2.3.0/gems/sidekiq-4.2.10/lib/sidekiq/util.rb: 26:in `block in safe_thread'
My best guess is that this was caused by TomTom responding with an
error, which we weren't handling previously. In that case, the response
would be a JSON string, but include an `'error'` field instead of
`'matrix'` and `'summary'`. Thus, when we'd try to
`matrix_json['matrix']`, it would fail.
Add a new method that checks for errors before we try to parse
`WayCost`s. If a server error is detected, we log the message to the
Rails log and return an empty array.
Refs #6884
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