PipelockProxy.prepare now accepts (bottle, slug, stage_dir) and derives
the yaml_path itself, so callers don't need to know the filename.
DockerBottleBackend.prepare_proxy becomes a one-line wrapper whose only
caller already has bottle and slug in scope, so it's inlined and
deleted.
Split pipelock config building from YAML rendering: pipelock_build_config
returns a dict, pipelock_render_yaml serializes it, and _build_pipelock_yaml
chains the two onto disk. Unchanged behavior — pipelock loads the same YAML.
The yaml test now asserts on the structured config dict, which is
robust to cosmetic YAML changes (key order, quoting). The two checks
that only make sense on the rendered output — file mode 0600 and
no-secret-leakage — stay against the on-disk content.
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>
Replace the hand-maintained INTEGRATION_NAMES classifier (and the
bespoke run_tests.py around it) with a directory-driven split:
tests/unit/ unit tests, always run
tests/integration/ Docker-dependent, skip cleanly without Docker
tests/canaries/ upstream-regression checks, opt-in via
CLAUDE_BOTTLE_RUN_CANARIES=1
The pinned-pipelock-image check moves to the canary suite — it tests
upstream packaging, not our code, so it shouldn't gate every dev push.
A scheduled canaries.yml workflow runs it weekly.
The manifest-runtime tests collapse the four assertRaises cases for
distinct 'runtime' values into one subTest loop and drop the
error-message-wording assertions; the contract is "any value is
rejected", not "the error literally contains 'auto-detect'".
Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 <noreply@anthropic.com>