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//usr/lib/python2.4/test/test_support.py
"""Supporting definitions for the Python regression tests.""" if __name__ != 'test.test_support': raise ImportError, 'test_support must be imported from the test package' import re import sys class Error(Exception): """Base class for regression test exceptions.""" class TestFailed(Error): """Test failed.""" class TestSkipped(Error): """Test skipped. This can be raised to indicate that a test was deliberatly skipped, but not because a feature wasn't available. For example, if some resource can't be used, such as the network appears to be unavailable, this should be raised instead of TestFailed. """ class ResourceDenied(TestSkipped): """Test skipped because it requested a disallowed resource. This is raised when a test calls requires() for a resource that has not be enabled. It is used to distinguish between expected and unexpected skips. """ verbose = 1 # Flag set to 0 by regrtest.py use_resources = None # Flag set to [] by regrtest.py # _original_stdout is meant to hold stdout at the time regrtest began. # This may be "the real" stdout, or IDLE's emulation of stdout, or whatever. # The point is to have some flavor of stdout the user can actually see. _original_stdout = None def record_original_stdout(stdout): global _original_stdout _original_stdout = stdout def get_original_stdout(): return _original_stdout or sys.stdout def unload(name): try: del sys.modules[name] except KeyError: pass def forget(modname): '''"Forget" a module was ever imported by removing it from sys.modules and deleting any .pyc and .pyo files.''' unload(modname) import os for dirname in sys.path: try: os.unlink(os.path.join(dirname, modname + os.extsep + 'pyc')) except os.error: pass # Deleting the .pyo file cannot be within the 'try' for the .pyc since # the chance exists that there is no .pyc (and thus the 'try' statement # is exited) but there is a .pyo file. try: os.unlink(os.path.join(dirname, modname + os.extsep + 'pyo')) except os.error: pass def is_resource_enabled(resource): """Test whether a resource is enabled. Known resources are set by regrtest.py.""" return use_resources is not None and resource in use_resources def requires(resource, msg=None): """Raise ResourceDenied if the specified resource is not available. If the caller's module is __main__ then automatically return True. The possibility of False being returned occurs when regrtest.py is executing.""" # see if the caller's module is __main__ - if so, treat as if # the resource was set if sys._getframe().f_back.f_globals.get("__name__") == "__main__": return if not is_resource_enabled(resource): if msg is None: msg = "Use of the `%s' resource not enabled" % resource raise ResourceDenied(msg) FUZZ = 1e-6 def fcmp(x, y): # fuzzy comparison function if type(x) == type(0.0) or type(y) == type(0.0): try: x, y = coerce(x, y) fuzz = (abs(x) + abs(y)) * FUZZ if abs(x-y) <= fuzz: return 0 except: pass elif type(x) == type(y) and type(x) in (type(()), type([])): for i in range(min(len(x), len(y))): outcome = fcmp(x[i], y[i]) if outcome != 0: return outcome return cmp(len(x), len(y)) return cmp(x, y) try: unicode have_unicode = 1 except NameError: have_unicode = 0 is_jython = sys.platform.startswith('java') import os # Filename used for testing if os.name == 'java': # Jython disallows @ in module names TESTFN = '$test' elif os.name == 'riscos': TESTFN = 'testfile' else: TESTFN = '@test' # Unicode name only used if TEST_FN_ENCODING exists for the platform. if have_unicode: # Assuming sys.getfilesystemencoding()!=sys.getdefaultencoding() # TESTFN_UNICODE is a filename that can be encoded using the # file system encoding, but *not* with the default (ascii) encoding if isinstance('', unicode): # python -U # XXX perhaps unicode() should accept Unicode strings? TESTFN_UNICODE = "@test-\xe0\xf2" else: # 2 latin characters. TESTFN_UNICODE = unicode("@test-\xe0\xf2", "latin-1") TESTFN_ENCODING = sys.getfilesystemencoding() # TESTFN_UNICODE_UNENCODEABLE is a filename that should *not* be # able to be encoded by *either* the default or filesystem encoding. # This test really only makes sense on Windows NT platforms # which have special Unicode support in posixmodule. if (not hasattr(sys, "getwindowsversion") or sys.getwindowsversion()[3] < 2): # 0=win32s or 1=9x/ME TESTFN_UNICODE_UNENCODEABLE = None else: # Japanese characters (I think - from bug 846133) TESTFN_UNICODE_UNENCODEABLE = eval('u"@test-\u5171\u6709\u3055\u308c\u308b"') try: # XXX - Note - should be using TESTFN_ENCODING here - but for # Windows, "mbcs" currently always operates as if in # errors=ignore' mode - hence we get '?' characters rather than # the exception. 'Latin1' operates as we expect - ie, fails. # See [ 850997 ] mbcs encoding ignores errors TESTFN_UNICODE_UNENCODEABLE.encode("Latin1") except UnicodeEncodeError: pass else: print \ 'WARNING: The filename %r CAN be encoded by the filesystem. ' \ 'Unicode filename tests may not be effective' \ % TESTFN_UNICODE_UNENCODEABLE # Make sure we can write to TESTFN, try in /tmp if we can't fp = None try: fp = open(TESTFN, 'w+') except IOError: TMP_TESTFN = os.path.join('/tmp', TESTFN) try: fp = open(TMP_TESTFN, 'w+') TESTFN = TMP_TESTFN del TMP_TESTFN except IOError: print ('WARNING: tests will fail, unable to write to: %s or %s' % (TESTFN, TMP_TESTFN)) if fp is not None: fp.close() try: os.unlink(TESTFN) except: pass del os, fp from os import unlink def findfile(file, here=__file__): """Try to find a file on sys.path and the working directory. If it is not found the argument passed to the function is returned (this does not necessarily signal failure; could still be the legitimate path).""" import os if os.path.isabs(file): return file path = sys.path path = [os.path.dirname(here)] + path for dn in path: fn = os.path.join(dn, file) if os.path.exists(fn): return fn return file def verify(condition, reason='test failed'): """Verify that condition is true. If not, raise TestFailed. The optional argument reason can be given to provide a better error text. """ if not condition: raise TestFailed(reason) def vereq(a, b): """Raise TestFailed if a == b is false. This is better than verify(a == b) because, in case of failure, the error message incorporates repr(a) and repr(b) so you can see the inputs. Note that "not (a == b)" isn't necessarily the same as "a != b"; the former is tested. """ if not (a == b): raise TestFailed, "%r == %r" % (a, b) def sortdict(dict): "Like repr(dict), but in sorted order." items = dict.items() items.sort() reprpairs = ["%r: %r" % pair for pair in items] withcommas = ", ".join(reprpairs) return "{%s}" % withcommas def check_syntax(statement): try: compile(statement, '<string>', 'exec') except SyntaxError: pass else: print 'Missing SyntaxError: "%s"' % statement #======================================================================= # Preliminary PyUNIT integration. import unittest class BasicTestRunner: def run(self, test): result = unittest.TestResult() test(result) return result def run_suite(suite, testclass=None): """Run tests from a unittest.TestSuite-derived class.""" if verbose: runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(sys.stdout, verbosity=2) else: runner = BasicTestRunner() result = runner.run(suite) if not result.wasSuccessful(): if len(result.errors) == 1 and not result.failures: err = result.errors[0][1] elif len(result.failures) == 1 and not result.errors: err = result.failures[0][1] else: if testclass is None: msg = "errors occurred; run in verbose mode for details" else: msg = "errors occurred in %s.%s" \ % (testclass.__module__, testclass.__name__) raise TestFailed(msg) raise TestFailed(err) def run_unittest(*classes): """Run tests from unittest.TestCase-derived classes.""" suite = unittest.TestSuite() for cls in classes: if isinstance(cls, (unittest.TestSuite, unittest.TestCase)): suite.addTest(cls) else: suite.addTest(unittest.makeSuite(cls)) if len(classes)==1: testclass = classes[0] else: testclass = None run_suite(suite, testclass) #======================================================================= # doctest driver. def run_doctest(module, verbosity=None): """Run doctest on the given module. Return (#failures, #tests). If optional argument verbosity is not specified (or is None), pass test_support's belief about verbosity on to doctest. Else doctest's usual behavior is used (it searches sys.argv for -v). """ import doctest if verbosity is None: verbosity = verbose else: verbosity = None # Direct doctest output (normally just errors) to real stdout; doctest # output shouldn't be compared by regrtest. save_stdout = sys.stdout sys.stdout = get_original_stdout() try: f, t = doctest.testmod(module, verbose=verbosity) if f: raise TestFailed("%d of %d doctests failed" % (f, t)) finally: sys.stdout = save_stdout if verbose: print 'doctest (%s) ... %d tests with zero failures' % (module.__name__, t) return f, t def strip_python_stderr(stderr): """Strip the stderr of a Python process from potential debug output emitted by the interpreter. This will typically be run on the result of the communicate() method of a subprocess.Popen object. """ stderr = re.sub(r"\[\d+ refs\]\r?\n?$", "", stderr).strip() return stderr