This also changes the pylance pin from `==0.23.2` to `~=0.23.2` which
should allow the pylance dependency to float a little. The pylance
dependency is actually not used for much anymore and so it should be
tolerant of patch changes.
* Make `npm run docs` fail if there are any warnings. This will catch
items missing from the API reference.
* Add a check in our CI to make sure `npm run dos` runs without warnings
and doesn't generate any new files (indicating it might be out-of-date.
* Hide constructors that aren't user facing.
* Remove unused enum `WriteMode`.
Closes#2068
Some Rust jobs (such as
[Rust/linux](https://github.com/lancedb/lancedb/actions/runs/13019232960/job/36315830779))
take almost minutes. This can be a bit of a bottleneck.
* Two fixes to make caches more effective
* Check in `Cargo.lock` so that dependencies don't change much between
runs
* Added a new CI job to validate we can build without a lockfile
* Altered build commands so they don't have contradictory features and
therefore don't trigger multiple builds
Sadly, I don't think there's much to be done for windows-arm64, as much
of the compile time is because the base image is so bare we need to
install the build tools ourselves.
We upgraded the toolchain in #1960, but didn't realize we hardcoded it
in `npm-publish.yml`. I found if I just removed the hard-coded
toolchain, it selects the correct one.
This didn't fully fix Windows Arm, so I created a follow-up issue here:
https://github.com/lancedb/lancedb/issues/1975
* Upgrades our toolchain file to v1.83.0, since many dependencies now
have MSRV of 1.81.0
* Reverts Rust changes from #1946 that were working around this in a
dumb way
* Adding an MSRV check
* Reduce MSRV back to 1.78.0
fixes that all `neon pack-build` packs are named
`vectordb-linux-x64-musl-*.tgz` even when cross-compiling
adds 2nd param:
`TARGET_TRIPLE=${2:-x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu}`
`npm run pack-build -- -t $TARGET_TRIPLE`
* Test that we can insert subschemas (omit nullable columns) in Python.
* More work is needed to support this in Node. See:
https://github.com/lancedb/lancedb/issues/1832
* Test that we can insert data with nullable schema but no nulls in
non-nullable schema.
* Add `"null"` option for `on_bad_vectors` where we fill with null if
the vector is bad.
* Make null values not considered bad if the field itself is nullable.
This is done as setup for a PR that will fix the OpenAI dependency
issue.
* [x] FTS examples
* [x] Setup mock openai
* [x] Ran `npm audit fix`
* [x] sentences embeddings test
* [x] Double check formatting of docs examples
* Labelled jobs `vectordb` and `lancedb` so it's clear which package
they are for
* Fix permission issue in aarch64 Linux `vectordb` build that has been
blocking release for two months.
* Added Slack notifications for failure of these publish jobs.
This doesn't actually block a python-only release since this step runs
after the version bump has been pushed but it still would be nice for
the git job to finish successfully.
This PR changes the release process. Some parts are more complex, and
other parts I've simplified.
## Simplifications
* Combined `Create Release Commit` and `Create Python Release Commit`
into a single workflow. By default, it does a release of all packages,
but you can still choose to make just a Python or just Node/Rust release
through the arguments. This will make it rarer that we create a Node
release but forget about Python or vice-versa.
* Releases are automatically generated once a tag is pushed. This
eliminates the manual step of creating the release.
* Release notes are automatically generated and changes are categorized
based on the PR labels.
* Removed the use of `LANCEDB_RELEASE_TOKEN` in favor of just using
`GITHUB_TOKEN` where it wasn't necessary. In the one place it is
necessary, I left a comment as to why it is.
* Reused the version in `python/Cargo.toml` so we don't have two
different versions in Python LanceDB.
## New changes
* We now can create `preview` / `beta` releases. By default `Create
Release Commit` will create a preview release, but you can select a
"stable" release type and it will create a full stable release.
* For Python, pre-releases go to fury.io instead of PyPI
* `bump2version` was deprecated, so upgraded to `bump-my-version`. This
also seems to better support semantic versioning with pre-releases.
* `ci` changes will now be shown in the changelog, allowing changes like
this to be visible to users. `chore` is still hidden.
## Versioning
**NOTE**: unlike how it is in lance repo right now, the version in main
is the last one released, including beta versions.
---------
Co-authored-by: Lance Release <lance-dev@lancedb.com>
Co-authored-by: Weston Pace <weston.pace@gmail.com>
I've been noticing a lot of friction with the current toolchain for
'/nodejs'. Particularly with the usage of eslint and prettier.
[Biome](https://biomejs.dev/) is an all in one formatter & linter that
replaces the need for two different ones that can potentially clash with
one another.
I've been using it in the
[nodejs-polars](https://github.com/pola-rs/nodejs-polars) repo for quite
some time & have found it much more pleasant to work with.
---
One other small change included in this PR:
use [ts-jest](https://www.npmjs.com/package/ts-jest) so we can run our
tests without having to rebuild typescript code first