Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

lstn scan not failing without any output #170

Open
jadoonf opened this issue Mar 22, 2023 · 5 comments
Open

lstn scan not failing without any output #170

jadoonf opened this issue Mar 22, 2023 · 5 comments
Assignees
Labels
bug Something isn't working

Comments

@jadoonf
Copy link
Member

jadoonf commented Mar 22, 2023

Describe the bug

Running lstn scan with this package.json fails without any output locally.
However, the same project works fine with the listendev/action@scan action (logs)

Please include:

  • lstn version 0.3.1
  • macOS ventura 13.0

Steps to reproduce the behavior

  1. Clone https://github.com/garnet-org/demos.git
  2. Run lstn scan .
  3. View output

Expected vs actual behavior

Instead of returning verdicts, it fails without any output in the local terminal.
image

@jadoonf jadoonf added the bug Something isn't working label Mar 22, 2023
@fntlnz
Copy link
Contributor

fntlnz commented Mar 23, 2023

This is likely caused by connection issues to the npm registry, maybe a timeout issue or something like that.

I'll investigate further.

Another thing I remember is that we didn't experience this in easylstn (the prototype before scan). I noticed that this problem exists in to as well when you do things like this.

lstn to --endpoint https://npm-staging.listen.dev react '*'

So I suspect that also doing the dependencies one at time (as opposed to doing them in bulk) will also be beneficial.

Additionally, doing them one at time allows us to have the nice progress output (like we showcased in easylstn) and in case of any failure we only skip the dependencies with an actual problem vs all of them.

@fntlnz
Copy link
Contributor

fntlnz commented Mar 26, 2023

This happens because of the --timeout flag which is setup at 60 seconds by default.

NPM registry connections are strictly related to this since most of the time that connection is the slowest part of the process. The previous statement is proven by the fact that this happens locally but not on the action. Most of the times 60 seconds are more than enough on the action but not locally.

To improve this, I propose to have a better "progress tracker" that prints the errors and shows "where we are" while processing the request.

@jadoonf
Copy link
Member Author

jadoonf commented Mar 28, 2023

@fntlnz the proposed solution in #187 was tested for the earlier case, and it is working now! so this solution would solve our issue for now.

@leodido
Copy link
Contributor

leodido commented Mar 28, 2023

@jadoonf the one in #187 is not a solution to this problem, even if it gives you the perception of solving it...

The problem here is that the default --timeout (60 seconds) MAY be too little and the CLI doesn't have a progress indicator that lets users understand that.

I see 2 separate topics here:

  1. giving commands a progress indicator (that has nothing to do with the fact that the requests happen in parallel or not) (see Progress indicator #190)
  2. always communicating we are exiting because of a short timeout (by always propagating deadline errors up the chain)

So, as a recap: this issue is easily solved without code changes just by raising the timeout (eg., --timeout 3000).

@leodido
Copy link
Contributor

leodido commented Mar 28, 2023

To prove this is a problem regarding the timeout (and it's also a flaky problem): see my output.

I run lstn scan ciao1/ where ciao1/ directory contains the package.json file of the demos repository.
image
image
image

image

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
bug Something isn't working
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging a pull request may close this issue.

3 participants