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@MrKevinWeiss MrKevinWeiss commented Jul 12, 2023

For some strange reason, it seems like using

from module_a import module_b
from module_b import module_c

will not work... I guess any from imports must be an existing module and cannot be something brought in.
Note in this example module_b is usable just not "from" importable.

We have had some failing tests which I was able to reproduce locally.

In this case it is regarding the mock -> python2 and unittest.mock -> python3 abstraction.

One can use or print the imported mock, but cannot from x import y it.

The solution is to just import all the from x import y within the version abstraction branch.

It has been locally tested allowing mock to still be used.

The failure was discovered during RIOT release tests

For some strange reason, it seems like using

from module_a import module_b
from module_b import module_c

will not work... I guess any from imports must be an existing module
and cannot be something brought in.
Note the in this example module_b is usable just not importable.

We have had some failing tests which I was able to reproduce locally.

In this case it is regarding the mock -> python2 and unittest.mock
-> python3 abstraction.

One can use or print the imported mock, but cannot from x import y it.

The solution is to just import all the from x import y within the
version abstraction branch.

It has been locally tested allowing mock to still be used.
@MrKevinWeiss
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