They're still pinned to specific versions, just the newest ones as of right now. This should avoid the need for the ARM64 build to compile any wheels that need native code.
Also, reorder how the pip packages are listed for easier maintenance.
Add building of ARM64 Docker image (via QEMU and buildx) and publish it to GitHub Packages Repository along with the AMD64 image as a multi-arch package.
Per discussion on issue #68, setting INFLUXDB_SSL to "false" is not useful here. This was probably copied over from the MQTT example service conf file, where it is supported (although essentially ignored).
The dish firmware stopped reporting the wedge fraction obstructed detail a few weeks ago, and now has apparently dropped it from the grpc protocol.
The core module now reports a sequence of None values for those fields, which is represented as "no data" in most of the database outputs. Without meaningful data in these fields, the obstruction_detail mode group is mostly useless, but the obstruction map was a much better representation of that data, anyway.
This should address issue #65.
I don't necessarily think all of these make the code better or easier to read, but it's easier to just go along with what the tools want, since they do generally make things better.
There should be no functional changes here.
Add CSV header and sqlite schema support for the newly added location group, along with the necessary functions in the starlink_grpc module to expose the field names and types for that group. This really should have gone in with the prior change.
Also, correct the order of the ping_latency and ping_loaded_latency groups in the CSV header, which was backwards. This would have resulted in an incorrect CSV header if both those groups were selected.
Add a new mode group, location, for physical location data. This requires access to the location data being enabled on the dish in order to return data; see README file for more details. At least for now, this functionality should be considered experimental.
This is being lumped into the "status" category for the purposes of database schema, but it's a separate grpc request from the other status data, and can fail at times when the other status request does not, so it has a separate function in the starlink_grpc module.
mypy complained about the signature of conditional def of get_args not matching the one from typing module, so I made it match, but apparently hadn't actually tested it with Python 3.7. It was just the return type hint, but it sill needs to parse at run time.
Also, fix up a few other (non-error) gripes from pylint.
Implement type hints for the data returned from status_data, history_stats, and history_bulk_data, and modify the *_field_names and *_field_types functions to make use of the same data.
This is complicated a little by the fact that the field names returned for sequences in the returned data are slightly different from those in *_field_names, for reasons that I'm sure made perfect sense to me at the time.
Should work with static type checkers on Python 3.8 and later. Python 3.7 is still supported for the run time, but possibly in a way that static type checking will not be able to understand.
This is for issue #57
Reword the is_snr_above_noise_floor description to be more consistent with the rest of the field docs.
Correct the order the status field groups in the docs for the functions that return them to reflect the actual order in which they are returned.
This adds alert_install_pending and alert_is_heating to the documentation at the top of the module. These alerts were added approximately forever ago, and get picked up automatically via reflection any time the scripts restart, so this is just to get the docs caught up.
This has now tripped up more than one user (see issues #47 and #53). There is a note in the README about this, but it's easy to miss if you don't read it thoroughly.
Not sure why I thought the InfluxDB 2.x client library accepted a bare host/port for the server, in addition to a full URL. It does not, as reported in issue #49. The 1.x client did, but it didn't take a URL for server, anyway.
This corrects the help text to indicate the URL argument specifies a... URL, and corrects the default to be something that could actually work.
While the scripts can mostly work with Python 3.5, the installation or pre-reqs gets really messy, per issue #45. Python 3.5 has been end-of-lifed for a while now, anyway.