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Migrate OpenWeaterMap to new library (support API 3.0) #116305
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Hey there @fabaff, @nzapponi, mind taking a look at this pull request as it has been labeled with an integration ( Code owner commandsCode owners of
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homeassistant/components/openweathermap/weather_update_coordinator.py
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Please add a link to the source code of the new library |
homeassistant/components/openweathermap/weather_update_coordinator.py
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…ator.py Co-authored-by: J. Nick Koston <nick@koston.org>
homeassistant/components/openweathermap/weather_update_coordinator.py
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Sorry, forgot to mention, they don't activate subscription immediately. I waited several hours. |
I added that, but don't know where to check is it working or not |
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
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- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
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We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
Please take a look at the requested changes, and use the Ready for review button when you are done, thanks 👍 |
weather_coordinator = WeatherUpdateCoordinator( | ||
owm, latitude, longitude, forecast_mode, hass | ||
owm_client, latitude, longitude, hass | ||
) | ||
|
||
await weather_coordinator.async_config_entry_first_refresh() |
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We should detect that they don't have the v3 api on their account and create an issue in the issue registry telling them what to do.
https://developers.home-assistant.io/docs/core/platform/repairs?_highlight=issue#creating-an-issue
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i see
i think i can add support of api v2.5 in the lib, then add a select in HA where you choose which api to use. Then add repair notification to move from 2.5 to 3.0. Although I can't detect is user has subscription or not.
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Sounds good. It should be a config entry option
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ok, i added support v2.5
added migration, all users will be migrated to onecall v2.5
updated config flow, you can choose between v2.5 and v3.0 (default)
if you choose 2.5, during init repair issue will be created
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sorry about mess with commit author emails, i will recreate pr later when everything will be done
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new keys (or rather new accounts) don't work with v2.5 already
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continue here #116870
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
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Hello @freekode,
When attempting to inspect the commits of your pull request for CLA signature status among all authors we encountered commit(s) which were not linked to a GitHub account, thus not allowing us to determine their status(es).
The commits that are missing a linked GitHub account are the following:
29b517e289211925550c0dad050e036220a68ca7
- This commit has something that looks like an email address (iam@frekode.org). Maybe try linking that to GitHub?.
Unfortunately, we are unable to accept this pull request until this situation is corrected.
Here are your options:
-
If you had an email address set for the commit that simply wasn't linked to your GitHub account you can link that email now and it will retroactively apply to your commits. The simplest way to do this is to click the link to one of the above commits and look for a blue question mark in a blue circle in the top left. Hovering over that bubble will show you what email address you used. Clicking on that button will take you to your email address settings on GitHub. Just add the email address on that page and you're all set. GitHub has more information about this option in their help center.
-
If you didn't use an email address at all, it was an invalid email, or it's one you can't link to your GitHub, you will need to change the authorship information of the commit and your global Git settings so this doesn't happen again going forward. GitHub provides some great instructions on how to change your authorship information in their help center.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
(substituting "Author Name" and "
git commit --amend --author="Author Name <email@address.com>"
email@address.com
" for your actual information) to set the authorship information. - If you made more than one commit and the commit with the missing authorship information is not the most recent one you have two options:
- You can re-create all commits missing authorship information. This is going to be the easiest solution for developers that aren't extremely confident in their Git and command line skills.
- You can use this script that GitHub provides to rewrite history. Please note: this should be used only if you are very confident in your abilities and understand its impacts.
- Whichever method you choose, I will come by to re-check the pull request once you push the fixes to this branch.
- If you only made a single commit you should be able to run
We apologize for this inconvenience, especially since it usually bites new contributors to Home Assistant. We hope you understand the need for us to protect ourselves and the great community we all have built legally. The best thing to come out of this is that you only need to fix this once and it benefits the entire Home Assistant and GitHub community.
Thanks, I look forward to checking this PR again soon! ❤️
Breaking change
Migration to new library with support of OneCall API (3.0)
Proposed change
Migrate new library
pyopenweathermap
I created specifically for Home Assistant. Currently, used pyowm library didn't have an update for a long time and seems dead.Remove forecast modes, one call allows to retrieve daily and hourly forecasts. Remove migration from V1 to V2 of config_flow, forecast mode isn't used anymore, there is no need for migration.
New lib https://github.com/freekode/pyopenweathermap
Type of change
Additional information
fixes APi 2.5 to be closed in June 2024 #115714
fixes New API keys for OpenWeatherMap OneCall do not work with API 2.5 #113000
Checklist
ruff format homeassistant tests
)If user exposed functionality or configuration variables are added/changed:
If the code communicates with devices, web services, or third-party tools:
Updated and included derived files by running:
python3 -m script.hassfest
.requirements_all.txt
.Updated by running
python3 -m script.gen_requirements_all
..coveragerc
.To help with the load of incoming pull requests: