This fixes the breakage introduced by transport reshuffles.
It's still not great and I'd love to see context manager based sessions.
But it's good enough for now.
This commit breaks session handling (which matters with Bridge) and
regresses Bridge to an older code state. Both of these issues will be
rectified in subsequent commits.
Explanation of this big API reshuffle follows:
* protocols are moved to trezorlib.transport, and to a single common file.
* there is a cleaner definition of Transport and Protocol API (see below)
* fully valid mypy type hinting
* session handle counters and open handle counters mostly went away. Transports
and Protocols are meant to be "raw" APIs; TrezorClient will implement
context-handler-based sessions, session tracking, etc.
I'm calling this a "reshuffle" because it involved very small number of
code changes. Most of it is moving things around where they sit better.
The API changes are as follows.
Transport is now a thing that can:
* open and close sessions
* read and write protobuf messages
* enumerate and find devices
Some transports (all except bridge) are technically bytes-based and need
a separate protocol implementation (because we have two existing protocols,
although only the first one is actually used). Hence a protocol superclass.
Protocol is a thing that *also* can:
* open and close sessions
* read and write protobuf messages
For that, it requires a `handle`.
Handle is a physical layer for a protocol. It can:
* open and close some sort of device connection
(this is distinct from session! Connection is a channel over which you can
send data. Session is a logical arrangement on top of that; you can have
multiple sessions on a single connection.)
* read and write 64-byte chunks of data
With that, we introduce ProtocolBasedTransport, which simply delegates
the appropriate Transport functionality to respective Protocol methods.
hid and webusb transports are ProtocolBasedTransport-s that provide separate
device handles. HidHandle and WebUsbHandle existed before, but the distinction
of functionality between a Transport and its Handle was unclear. Some methods
were moved and now the handles implement the Handle API, while the transports
provide the enumeration parts of the Transport API, as well as glue between
the respective Protocols and Handles.
udp transport is also a ProtocolBasedTransport, but it acts as its own handle.
(That might be changed. For now, I went with the pre-existing structure.)
In addition, session_begin/end is renamed to begin/end_session to keep
consistent verb_noun naming.
This clarifies the intent: the project is licenced under terms
of LGPL version 3 only, but the standard headers cover only "3 or later",
so we had to rewrite them.
In the same step, we removed author information from individual files
in favor of "SatoshiLabs and contributors", and include an AUTHORS
file that lists the contributors.
Apologies to those whose names are missing; please contact us if you wish
to add your info to the AUTHORS file.
We can now selectively runxfail certain tests. This is useful for
accepting PRs into trezor-core:
1. trezor-core is going to get a pytest.ini that sets xfail_strict.
That means that if an `xfail`ed test actually passes, that will
break the test suite. So it will be visible when we implement
a feature for which tests exist.
2. To allow PRs to pass the test suite without touching python-trezor
directly, we add a new pytest.ini option: run_xfail.
This adds a list of markers which will ignore `xfail`.
So:
2.1 First, the python-trezor PR marks the tests with the name
of the feature. This commit already does that: Lisk tests
are marked `@pytest.mark.lisk`, NEMs are `@pytest.mark.nem`,
etc.
The tests will be also marked with `xfail`, because the
feature is not in core yet.
2.2 Then, the trezor-core PR implements the feature, which makes
the `xfail`ed tests pass. That breaks the test suite.
2.3 To fix the test suite, the core PR also adds a `run_xfail`
to `pytest.ini`: `run_xfail = lisk`.
(it can take a list: `run_xfail = lisk nem stellar`)
That will make the test suite behave as if the tests are not
`xfail`ed. If the feature is implemented correctly, the tests
will pass.
2.4 When the PR is accepted to core, the next step should be
a PR to python-trezor that removes the `xfail`s. After that,
we should also remove the `run_xfail` option, just to be tidy.