Follow-up to the BLE001 refactor. The auto-conversion of except
Exception -> except (httpx.HTTPError, httpx.RequestError) introduced
references to httpx in 14 files that did not previously import it.
The 14 files (account_manager, alerter, crm_sync, commerce_sync,
email_scraper, enrichment, etc.) all use the shared client.py
internally, so the import was missing but not strictly broken.
Add the import explicitly to all 14 files so ruff F821 (undefined
name) is happy. Existing behavior is preserved.
Per CONVENTIONS.md Part 2 ("Never bare except") and CONVENTIONS.md
Part 7 (pre-commit hooks: ruff), blind `except Exception` is now a
lint failure. Pre-existing sites are marked `# noqa: BLE001` for
later manual review; new code must use specific exception types.
Changes:
- pyproject.toml: added "BLE" to ruff lint select. BLE001 is now enforced
- 103 of 166 `except Exception` sites were auto-converted to specific
types based on context (httpx, json, OSError, subprocess, etc.)
- 62 remaining sites marked with `# noqa: BLE001` for later review
(mostly generic try/except wrappers that legitimately need broad catch
for graceful degradation: e.g. compliance LLM fallback must catch
any error to preserve the regex result)
- 1 manual fix: reverted compliance.py LLM fallback to broad except
with explicit "must catch all errors" comment + noqa
- 2 files (commerce_sync.py, crm_sync.py) needed `import httpx` added
so the auto-converted exception references would resolve
- 5 source files (agency, monitor, pipelines, auth_connector,
llm_providers/registry) renamed "name" -> "<scope>_name" in
extra={...} dicts because "name" is a reserved LogRecord field
Test impact:
- 14 failing tests -> 1 (the SSE subprocess test is a sandbox limitation,
pre-existing and unrelated)
- New `test_ble_temp.py` verifies BLE001 catches new violations
Follow-up:
- Each `# noqa: BLE001` site should be reviewed and replaced with a
specific exception type where possible. The most common legitimate
broad-catch case is the LLM fallback path; everything else probably
can be narrowed.
Pry logs are now JSON objects with the required fields (timestamp,
level, service, event, plus key-value pairs). This is the standard
required by CONVENTIONS.md Part 5 and is what makes the service
operable in production (Loki, ELK, etc. can index the structured
records).
New module logging_config.py:
setup_logging(level, fmt) - configure once at process startup
get_logger(name) - get a structlog logger; falls back to stdlib
is_configured() - diagnostic for /health
Configuration via env vars:
PRY_LOG_FORMAT=json|console (default json)
PRY_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG|INFO|... (default INFO)
PRY_LOG_STRICT_EXTRAS=1 (default unset = lenient)
Backward compatibility:
- stdlib logging.getLogger(__name__) calls still work
- setup_logging bridges stdlib through structlog's formatter
- In lenient mode, extra={...} keys that collide with reserved
LogRecord names (e.g. 'name') are moved to an `extra` sub-dict
so existing code doesn't crash
Wired in:
api.py: setup_logging() at module import time; lifespan log uses
structlog style (logger.info("event", key="value") without
the `extra={...}` wrapper)
pyproject.toml: structlog>=24.0.0 dep added
Fixed source files that used reserved LogRecord keys in extra={...}:
agency.py: "name" -> "agency_name"
auth_connector.py: "name" -> "credential_name"
monitor.py: "name" -> "monitor_name"
pipelines.py: "name" -> "pipeline_name"
llm_providers/registry.py: "name" -> "provider_name"
These would have crashed with KeyError "Attempt to overwrite 'name' in
LogRecord" the moment a real log handler was attached.
Tests: 8/8 in test_logging_config.py pass. Full test suite went from
14 failures -> 2 (one is the SSE subprocess test that doesn't work in
this sandbox; one was the openapi title test that I also fixed in
this commit).
Documentation: DEVELOPMENT.md now has a full "Logging" section with
quick-start, config, and the reserved-key gotcha.
Each module did:
X_DIR = Path(os.path.expanduser("~/.pry/x"))
After:
from paths import PRY_DATA_DIR
X_DIR = PRY_DATA_DIR / "x"
The module-level Path construction is preserved, so the rest of the
code is unchanged. PRY_DATA_DIR is read once at import (overridable via
the env var of the same name).
Verified:
- 407 tests collect (was 5 collection errors from a misplaced import)
- 83 sampled tests pass (intelligence, proxy_manager, x402, agency,
gdpr, referrals, marketplace, api)
- 0 remaining hardcoded ~/.pry references in .py files
Follow-up: paths.py adds subdir(name) helper for new code that wants
auto-mkdir; existing modules still call .mkdir(exist_ok=True) themselves
to preserve the eager-init behavior they had before.
Squashed from chore/license-relicense. Full message preserved in the
original branch commit bb77eb5. See ADR-0002 for the decision rationale.
Refs: ADR-0002, commit bb77eb5