len(y)) - (len(x) < len(y))
return (x > y) - (x < y)
# A constant likely larger than the underlying OS pipe buffer size, to
# make writes blocking.
# Windows limit seems to be around 512 B, and many Unix kernels have a
# 64 KiB pipe buffer size or 16 * PAGE_SIZE: take a few megs to be sure.
# (see issue #17835 for a discussion of this number).
PIPE_MAX_SIZE = 4 *1024 * 1024 + 1
try:
unicode
have_unicode = True
except NameError:
have_unicode = False
is_jython = sys.platform.startswith('java')
# 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_UNENCODABLE 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_UNENCODABLE = None
else:
# Japanese characters (I think - from bug 846133)
TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = 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_UNENCODABLE.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_UNENCODABLE
# Disambiguate TESTFN for parallel testing, while letting it remain a valid
# module name.
TESTFN = "{}_{}_tmp".format(TESTFN, os.getpid())
# Save the initial cwd
SAVEDCWD = os.getcwd()
@contextlib.contextmanager
def change_cwd(path, quiet=False):
"""Return a context manager that changes the current working directory.
Arguments:
path: the directory to use as the temporary current working directory.
quiet: if False (the default), the context manager raises an exception
on error. Otherwise, it issues only a warning and keeps the current
working directory the same.
"""
saved_dir = os.getcwd()
try:
os.chdir(path)
except OSError:
if not quiet:
raise
warnings.warn('tests may fail, unable to change CWD to: ' + path,
RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3)
try:
yield os.getcwd()
finally:
os.chdir(saved_dir)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def temp_cwd(name='tempcwd', quiet=False):
"""
Context manager that creates a temporary directory and set it as CWD.
The new CWD is created in the current directory and it's named *name*.
If *quiet* is False (default) and it's not possible to create or change
the CWD, an error is raised. If it's True, only a warning is raised
and the original CWD is used.
"""
if have_unicode and isinstance(name, unicode):
try:
name = name.encode(sys.getfilesystemencoding() or 'ascii')
except UnicodeEncodeError:
if not quiet:
raise unittest.SkipTest('unable to encode the cwd name with '
'the filesystem encoding.')
saved_dir = os.getcwd()
is_temporary = False
try:
os.mkdir(name)
os.chdir(name)
is_temporary = True
except OSError:
if not quiet:
raise
warnings.warn('tests may fail, unable to change the CWD to ' + name,
RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3)
try:
yield os.getcwd()
finally:
os.chdir(saved_dir)
if is_temporary:
rmtree(name)
def findfile(file, here=__file__, subdir=None):
"""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)."""
if os.path.isabs(file):
return file
if subdir is not None:
file = os.path.join(subdir, 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 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 make_bad_fd():
"""
Create an invalid file descriptor by opening and closing a file and return
its fd.
"""
file = open(TESTFN, "wb")
try:
return file.fileno()
finally:
file.close()
unlink(TESTFN)
def check_syntax_error(testcase, statement):
testcase.assertRaises(SyntaxError, compile, statement,
'', 'exec')
def open_urlresource(url, check=None):
import urlparse, urllib2
filename = urlparse.urlparse(url)[2].split('/')[-1] # '/': it's URL!
fn = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "data", filename)
def check_valid_file(fn):
f = open(fn)
if check is None:
return f
elif check(f):
f.seek(0)
return f
f.close()
if os.path.exists(fn):
f = check_valid_file(fn)
if f is not None:
return f
unlink(fn)
# Verify the requirement before downloading the file
requires('urlfetch')
print >> get_original_stdout(), '\tfetching %s ...' % url
f = urllib2.urlopen(url, timeout=15)
try:
with open(fn, "wb") as out:
s = f.read()
while s:
out.write(s)
s = f.read()
finally:
f.close()
f = check_valid_file(fn)
if f is not None:
return f
raise TestFailed('invalid resource "%s"' % fn)
class WarningsRecorder(object):
"""Convenience wrapper for the warnings list returned on
entry to the warnings.catch_warnings() context manager.
"""
def __init__(self, warnings_list):
self._warnings = warnings_list
self._last = 0
def __getattr__(self, attr):
if len(self._warnings) > self._last:
return getattr(self._warnings[-1], attr)
elif attr in warnings.WarningMessage._WARNING_DETAILS:
return None
raise AttributeError("%r has no attribute %r" % (self, attr))
@property
def warnings(self):
return self._warnings[self._last:]
def reset(self):
self._last = len(self._warnings)
def _filterwarnings(filters, quiet=False):
"""Catch the warnings, then check if all the expected
warnings have been raised and re-raise unexpected warnings.
If 'quiet' is True, only re-raise the unexpected warnings.
"""
# Clear the warning registry of the calling module
# in order to re-raise the warnings.
frame = sys._getframe(2)
registry = frame.f_globals.get('__warningregistry__')
if registry:
registry.clear()
with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w:
# Set filter "always" to record all warnings. Because
# test_warnings swap the module, we need to look up in
# the sys.modules dictionary.
sys.modules['warnings'].simplefilter("always")
yield WarningsRecorder(w)
# Filter the recorded warnings
reraise = [warning.message for warning in w]
missing = []
for msg, cat in filters:
seen = False
for exc in reraise[:]:
message = str(exc)
# Filter out the matching messages
if (re.match(msg, message, re.I) and
issubclass(exc.__class__, cat)):
seen = True
reraise.remove(exc)
if not seen and not quiet:
# This filter caught nothing
missing.append((msg, cat.__name__))
if reraise:
raise AssertionError("unhandled warning %r" % reraise[0])
if missing:
raise AssertionError("filter (%r, %s) did not catch any warning" %
missing[0])
@contextlib.contextmanager
def check_warnings(*filters, **kwargs):
"""Context manager to silence warnings.
Accept 2-tuples as positional arguments:
("message regexp", WarningCategory)
Optional argument:
- if 'quiet' is True, it does not fail if a filter catches nothing
(default True without argument,
default False if some filters are defined)
Without argument, it defaults to:
check_warnings(("", Warning), quiet=True)
"""
quiet = kwargs.get('quiet')
if not filters:
filters = (("", Warning),)
# Preserve backward compatibility
if quiet is None:
quiet = True
return _filterwarnings(filters, quiet)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def check_py3k_warnings(*filters, **kwargs):
"""Context manager to silence py3k warnings.
Accept 2-tuples as positional arguments:
("message regexp", WarningCategory)
Optional argument:
- if 'quiet' is True, it does not fail if a filter catches nothing
(default False)
Without argument, it defaults to:
check_py3k_warnings(("", DeprecationWarning), quiet=False)
"""
if sys.py3kwarning:
if not filters:
filters = (("", DeprecationWarning),)
else:
# It should not raise any py3k warning
filters = ()
return _filterwarnings(filters, kwargs.get('quiet'))
class CleanImport(object):
"""Context manager to force import to return a new module reference.
This is useful for testing module-level behaviours, such as
the emission of a DeprecationWarning on import.
Use like this:
with CleanImport("foo"):
importlib.import_module("foo") # new reference
"""
def __init__(self, *module_names):
self.original_modules = sys.modules.copy()
for module_name in module_names:
if module_name in sys.modules:
module = sys.modules[module_name]
# It is possible that module_name is just an alias for
# another module (e.g. stub for modules renamed in 3.x).
# In that case, we also need delete the real module to clear
# the import cache.
if module.__name__ != module_name:
del sys.modules[module.__name__]
del sys.modules[module_name]
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
sys.modules.update(self.original_modules)
class EnvironmentVarGuard(UserDict.DictMixin):
"""Class to help protect the environment variable properly. Can be used as
a context manager."""
def __init__(self):
self._environ = os.environ
self._changed = {}
def __getitem__(self, envvar):
return self._environ[envvar]
def __setitem__(self, envvar, value):
# Remember the initial value on the first access
if envvar not in self._changed:
self._changed[envvar] = self._environ.get(envvar)
self._environ[envvar] = value
def __delitem__(self, envvar):
# Remember the initial value on the first access
if envvar not in self._changed:
self._changed[envvar] = self._environ.get(envvar)
if envvar in self._environ:
del self._environ[envvar]
def keys(self):
return self._environ.keys()
def set(self, envvar, value):
self[envvar] = value
def unset(self, envvar):
del self[envvar]
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
for (k, v) in self._changed.items():
if v is None:
if k in self._environ:
del self._environ[k]
else:
self._environ[k] = v
os.environ = self._environ
class DirsOnSysPath(object):
"""Context manager to temporarily add directories to sys.path.
This makes a copy of sys.path, appends any directories given
as positional arguments, then reverts sys.path to the copied
settings when the context ends.
Note that *all* sys.path modifications in the body of the
context manager, including replacement of the object,
will be reverted at the end of the block.
"""
def __init__(self, *paths):
self.original_value = sys.path[:]
self.original_object = sys.path
sys.path.extend(paths)
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
sys.path = self.original_object
sys.path[:] = self.original_value
class TransientResource(object):
"""Raise ResourceDenied if an exception is raised while the context manager
is in effect that matches the specified exception and attributes."""
def __init__(self, exc, **kwargs):
self.exc = exc
self.attrs = kwargs
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, type_=None, value=None, traceback=None):
"""If type_ is a subclass of self.exc and value has attributes matching
self.attrs, raise ResourceDenied. Otherwise let the exception
propagate (if any)."""
if type_ is not None and issubclass(self.exc, type_):
for attr, attr_value in self.attrs.iteritems():
if not hasattr(value, attr):
break
if getattr(value, attr) != attr_value:
break
else:
raise ResourceDenied("an optional resource is not available")
@contextlib.contextmanager
def transient_internet(resource_name, timeout=30.0, errnos=()):
"""Return a context manager that raises ResourceDenied when various issues
with the Internet connection manifest themselves as exceptions."""
default_errnos = [
('ECONNREFUSED', 111),
('ECONNRESET', 104),
('EHOSTUNREACH', 113),
('ENETUNREACH', 101),
('ETIMEDOUT', 110),
]
default_gai_errnos = [
('EAI_AGAIN', -3),
('EAI_FAIL', -4),
('EAI_NONAME', -2),
('EAI_NODATA', -5),
# Windows defines EAI_NODATA as 11001 but idiotic getaddrinfo()
# implementation actually returns WSANO_DATA i.e. 11004.
('WSANO_DATA', 11004),
]
denied = ResourceDenied("Resource '%s' is not available" % resource_name)
captured_errnos = errnos
gai_errnos = []
if not captured_errnos:
captured_errnos = [getattr(errno, name, num)
for (name, num) in default_errnos]
gai_errnos = [getattr(socket, name, num)
for (name, num) in default_gai_errnos]
def filter_error(err):
n = getattr(err, 'errno', None)
if (isinstance(err, socket.timeout) or
(isinstance(err, socket.gaierror) and n in gai_errnos) or
n in captured_errnos):
if not verbose:
sys.stderr.write(denied.args[0] + "\n")
raise denied
old_timeout = socket.getdefaulttimeout()
try:
if timeout is not None:
socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout)
yield
except IOError as err:
# urllib can wrap original socket errors multiple times (!), we must
# unwrap to get at the original error.
while True:
a = err.args
if len(a) >= 1 and isinstance(a[0], IOError):
err = a[0]
# The error can also be wrapped as args[1]:
# except socket.error as msg:
# raise IOError('socket error', msg).with_traceback(sys.exc_info()[2])
elif len(a) >= 2 and isinstance(a[1], IOError):
err = a[1]
else:
break
filter_error(err)
raise
# XXX should we catch generic exceptions and look for their
# __cause__ or __context__?
finally:
socket.setdefaulttimeout(old_timeout)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def captured_output(stream_name):
"""Return a context manager used by captured_stdout and captured_stdin
that temporarily replaces the sys stream *stream_name* with a StringIO."""
import StringIO
orig_stdout = getattr(sys, stream_name)
setattr(sys, stream_name, StringIO.StringIO())
try:
yield getattr(sys, stream_name)
finally:
setattr(sys, stream_name, orig_stdout)
def captured_stdout():
"""Capture the output of sys.stdout:
with captured_stdout() as s:
print "hello"
self.assertEqual(s.getvalue(), "hello")
"""
return captured_output("stdout")
def captured_stderr():
return captured_output("stderr")
def captured_stdin():
return captured_output("stdin")
def gc_collect():
"""Force as many objects as possible to be collected.
In non-CPython implementations of Python, this is needed because timely
deallocation is not guaranteed by the garbage collector. (Even in CPython
this can be the case in case of reference cycles.) This means that __del__
methods may be called later than expected and weakrefs may remain alive for
longer than expected. This function tries its best to force all garbage
objects to disappear.
"""
gc.collect()
if is_jython:
time.sleep(0.1)
gc.collect()
gc.collect()
_header = '2P'
if hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount"):
_header = '2P' + _header
_vheader = _header + 'P'
def calcobjsize(fmt):
return struct.calcsize(_header + fmt + '0P')
def calcvobjsize(fmt):
return struct.calcsize(_vheader + fmt + '0P')
_TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC = 1<<14
_TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = 1<<9
def check_sizeof(test, o, size):
result = sys.getsizeof(o)
# add GC header size
if ((type(o) == type) and (o.__flags__ & _TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE) or\
((type(o) != type) and (type(o).__flags__ & _TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC))):
size += _testcapi.SIZEOF_PYGC_HEAD
msg = 'wrong size for %s: got %d, expected %d' \
% (type(o), result, size)
test.assertEqual(result, size, msg)
#=======================================================================
# Decorator for running a function in a different locale, correctly resetting
# it afterwards.
def run_with_locale(catstr, *locales):
def decorator(func):
def inner(*args, **kwds):
try:
import locale
category = getattr(locale, catstr)
orig_locale = locale.setlocale(category)
except AttributeError:
# if the test author gives us an invalid category string
raise
except:
# cannot retrieve original locale, so do nothing
locale = orig_locale = None
else:
for loc in locales:
try:
locale.setlocale(category, loc)
break
except:
pass
# now run the function, resetting the locale on exceptions
try:
return func(*args, **kwds)
finally:
if locale and orig_locale:
locale.setlocale(category, orig_locale)
inner.func_name = func.func_name
inner.__doc__ = func.__doc__
return inner
return decorator
#=======================================================================
# Big-memory-test support. Separate from 'resources' because memory use should be configurable.
# Some handy shorthands. Note that these are used for byte-limits as well
# as size-limits, in the various bigmem tests
_1M = 1024*1024
_1G = 1024 * _1M
_2G = 2 * _1G
_4G = 4 * _1G
MAX_Py_ssize_t = sys.maxsize
def set_memlimit(limit):
global max_memuse
global real_max_memuse
sizes = {
'k': 1024,
'm': _1M,
'g': _1G,
't': 1024*_1G,
}
m = re.match(r'(\d+(\.\d+)?) (K|M|G|T)b?$', limit,
re.IGNORECASE | re.VERBOSE)
if m is None:
raise ValueError('Invalid memory limit %r' % (limit,))
memlimit = int(float(m.group(1)) * sizes[m.group(3).lower()])
real_max_memuse = memlimit
if memlimit > MAX_Py_ssize_t:
memlimit = MAX_Py_ssize_t
if memlimit < _2G - 1:
raise ValueError('Memory limit %r too low to be useful' % (limit,))
max_memuse = memlimit
def bigmemtest(minsize, memuse, overhead=5*_1M):
"""Decorator for bigmem tests.
'minsize' is the minimum useful size for the test (in arbitrary,
test-interpreted units.) 'memuse' is the number of 'bytes per size' for
the test, or a good estimate of it. 'overhead' specifies fixed overhead,
independent of the testsize, and defaults to 5Mb.
The decorator tries to guess a good value for 'size' and passes it to
the decorated test function. If minsize * memuse is more than the
allowed memory use (as defined by max_memuse), the test is skipped.
Otherwise, minsize is adjusted upward to use up to max_memuse.
"""
def decorator(f):
def wrapper(self):
if not max_memuse:
# If max_memuse is 0 (the default),
# we still want to run the tests with size set to a few kb,
# to make sure they work. We still want to avoid using
# too much memory, though, but we do that noisily.
maxsize = 5147
self.assertFalse(maxsize * memuse + overhead > 20 * _1M)
else:
maxsize = int((max_memuse - overhead) / memuse)
if maxsize < minsize:
# Really ought to print 'test skipped' or something
if verbose:
sys.stderr.write("Skipping %s because of memory "
"constraint\n" % (f.__name__,))
return
# Try to keep some breathing room in memory use
maxsize = max(maxsize - 50 * _1M, minsize)
return f(self, maxsize)
wrapper.minsize = minsize
wrapper.memuse = memuse
wrapper.overhead = overhead
return wrapper
return decorator
def precisionbigmemtest(size, memuse, overhead=5*_1M, dry_run=True):
def decorator(f):
def wrapper(self):
if not real_max_memuse:
maxsize = 5147
else:
maxsize = size
if ((real_max_memuse or not dry_run)
and real_max_memuse < maxsize * memuse):
if verbose:
sys.stderr.write("Skipping %s because of memory "
"constraint\n" % (f.__name__,))
return
return f(self, maxsize)
wrapper.size = size
wrapper.memuse = memuse
wrapper.overhead = overhead
return wrapper
return decorator
def bigaddrspacetest(f):
"""Decorator for tests that fill the address space."""
def wrapper(self):
if max_memuse < MAX_Py_ssize_t:
if verbose:
sys.stderr.write("Skipping %s because of memory "
"constraint\n" % (f.__name__,))
else:
return f(self)
return wrapper
#=======================================================================
# unittest integration.
class BasicTestRunner:
def run(self, test):
result = unittest.TestResult()
test(result)
return result
def _id(obj):
return obj
def requires_resource(resource):
if is_resource_enabled(resource):
return _id
else:
return unittest.skip("resource {0!r} is not enabled".format(resource))
def cpython_only(test):
"""
Decorator for tests only applicable on CPython.
"""
return impl_detail(cpython=True)(test)
def impl_detail(msg=None, **guards):
if check_impl_detail(**guards):
return _id
if msg is None:
guardnames, default = _parse_guards(guards)
if default:
msg = "implementation detail not available on {0}"
else:
msg = "implementation detail specific to {0}"
guardnames = sorted(guardnames.keys())
msg = msg.format(' or '.join(guardnames))
return unittest.skip(msg)
def _parse_guards(guards):
# Returns a tuple ({platform_name: run_me}, default_value)
if not guards:
return ({'cpython': True}, False)
is_true = guards.values()[0]
assert guards.values() == [is_true] * len(guards) # all True or all False
return (guards, not is_true)
# Use the following check to guard CPython's implementation-specific tests --
# or to run them only on the implementation(s) guarded by the arguments.
def check_impl_detail(**guards):
"""This function returns True or False depending on the host platform.
Examples:
if check_impl_detail(): # only on CPython (default)
if check_impl_detail(jython=True): # only on Jython
if check_impl_detail(cpython=False): # everywhere except on CPython
"""
guards, default = _parse_guards(guards)
return guards.get(platform.python_implementation().lower(), default)
def _run_suite(suite):
"""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:
err = "multiple errors occurred"
if not verbose:
err += "; run in verbose mode for details"
raise TestFailed(err)
def run_unittest(*classes):
"""Run tests from unittest.TestCase-derived classes."""
valid_types = (unittest.TestSuite, unittest.TestCase)
suite = unittest.TestSuite()
for cls in classes:
if isinstance(cls, str):
if cls in sys.modules:
suite.addTest(unittest.findTestCases(sys.modules[cls]))
else:
raise ValueError("str arguments must be keys in sys.modules")
elif isinstance(cls, valid_types):
suite.addTest(cls)
else:
suite.addTest(unittest.makeSuite(cls))
_run_suite(suite)
#=======================================================================
# Check for the presence of docstrings.
HAVE_DOCSTRINGS = (check_impl_detail(cpython=False) or
sys.platform == 'win32' or
sysconfig.get_config_var('WITH_DOC_STRINGS'))
requires_docstrings = unittest.skipUnless(HAVE_DOCSTRINGS,
"test requires docstrings")
#=======================================================================
# 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
#=======================================================================
# Threading support to prevent reporting refleaks when running regrtest.py -R
# NOTE: we use thread._count() rather than threading.enumerate() (or the
# moral equivalent thereof) because a threading.Thread object is still alive
# until its __bootstrap() method has returned, even after it has been
# unregistered from the threading module.
# thread._count(), on the other hand, only gets decremented *after* the
# __bootstrap() method has returned, which gives us reliable reference counts
# at the end of a test run.
def threading_setup():
if thread:
return thread._count(),
else:
return 1,
def threading_cleanup(nb_threads):
if not thread:
return
_MAX_COUNT = 10
for count in range(_MAX_COUNT):
n = thread._count()
if n == nb_threads:
break
time.sleep(0.1)
# XXX print a warning in case of failure?
def reap_threads(func):
"""Use this function when threads are being used. This will
ensure that the threads are cleaned up even when the test fails.
If threading is unavailable this function does nothing.
"""
if not thread:
return func
@functools.wraps(func)
def decorator(*args):
key = threading_setup()
try:
return func(*args)
finally:
threading_cleanup(*key)
return decorator
def reap_children():
"""Use this function at the end of test_main() whenever sub-processes
are started. This will help ensure that no extra children (zombies)
stick around to hog resources and create problems when looking
for refleaks.
"""
# Reap all our dead child processes so we don't leave zombies around.
# These hog resources and might be causing some of the buildbots to die.
if hasattr(os, 'waitpid'):
any_process = -1
while True:
try:
# This will raise an exception on Windows. That's ok.
pid, status = os.waitpid(any_process, os.WNOHANG)
if pid == 0:
break
except:
break
@contextlib.contextmanager
def swap_attr(obj, attr, new_val):
"""Temporary swap out an attribute with a new object.
Usage:
with swap_attr(obj, "attr", 5):
...
This will set obj.attr to 5 for the duration of the with: block,
restoring the old value at the end of the block. If `attr` doesn't
exist on `obj`, it will be created and then deleted at the end of the
block.
"""
if hasattr(obj, attr):
real_val = getattr(obj, attr)
setattr(obj, attr, new_val)
try:
yield
finally:
setattr(obj, attr, real_val)
else:
setattr(obj, attr, new_val)
try:
yield
finally:
delattr(obj, attr)
def py3k_bytes(b):
"""Emulate the py3k bytes() constructor.
NOTE: This is only a best effort function.
"""
try:
# memoryview?
return b.tobytes()
except AttributeError:
try:
# iterable of ints?
return b"".join(chr(x) for x in b)
except TypeError:
return bytes(b)
def args_from_interpreter_flags():
"""Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current
settings in sys.flags."""
import subprocess
return subprocess._args_from_interpreter_flags()
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(br"\[\d+ refs\]\r?\n?$", b"", stderr).strip()
return stderr