{Ninja-Shell}
Home
Info
Upload
Command
View /etc/passwd
cPanel Reset Password
Filename: //lib//python3.9/test///support/__init__.py
"""Supporting definitions for the Python regression tests.""" if __name__ != 'test.support': raise ImportError('support must be imported from the test package') import collections.abc import contextlib import errno import fnmatch import functools import glob import importlib import importlib.util import os import platform import re import stat import struct import subprocess import sys import sysconfig import _thread import threading import time import types import unittest import warnings from .testresult import get_test_runner __all__ = [ # globals "PIPE_MAX_SIZE", "verbose", "max_memuse", "use_resources", "failfast", # exceptions "Error", "TestFailed", "TestDidNotRun", "ResourceDenied", # imports "import_module", "import_fresh_module", "CleanImport", # modules "unload", "forget", # io "record_original_stdout", "get_original_stdout", "captured_stdout", "captured_stdin", "captured_stderr", # filesystem "TESTFN", "SAVEDCWD", "unlink", "rmtree", "temp_cwd", "findfile", "create_empty_file", "can_symlink", "fs_is_case_insensitive", # unittest "is_resource_enabled", "requires", "requires_freebsd_version", "requires_linux_version", "requires_mac_ver", "check_syntax_error", "check_syntax_warning", "TransientResource", "time_out", "socket_peer_reset", "ioerror_peer_reset", "BasicTestRunner", "run_unittest", "run_doctest", "skip_unless_symlink", "requires_gzip", "requires_bz2", "requires_lzma", "bigmemtest", "bigaddrspacetest", "cpython_only", "get_attribute", "requires_IEEE_754", "skip_unless_xattr", "requires_zlib", "anticipate_failure", "load_package_tests", "detect_api_mismatch", "check__all__", "skip_if_buggy_ucrt_strfptime", "ignore_warnings", # sys "is_jython", "is_android", "check_impl_detail", "unix_shell", "setswitchinterval", # network "open_urlresource", # processes 'temp_umask', "reap_children", # threads "threading_setup", "threading_cleanup", "reap_threads", "start_threads", # miscellaneous "check_warnings", "check_no_resource_warning", "check_no_warnings", "EnvironmentVarGuard", "run_with_locale", "swap_item", "swap_attr", "Matcher", "set_memlimit", "SuppressCrashReport", "sortdict", "run_with_tz", "PGO", "missing_compiler_executable", "fd_count", "ALWAYS_EQ", "NEVER_EQ", "LARGEST", "SMALLEST", "LOOPBACK_TIMEOUT", "INTERNET_TIMEOUT", "SHORT_TIMEOUT", "LONG_TIMEOUT", ] # Timeout in seconds for tests using a network server listening on the network # local loopback interface like 127.0.0.1. # # The timeout is long enough to prevent test failure: it takes into account # that the client and the server can run in different threads or even different # processes. # # The timeout should be long enough for connect(), recv() and send() methods # of socket.socket. LOOPBACK_TIMEOUT = 5.0 if sys.platform == 'win32' and platform.machine() == 'ARM': # bpo-37553: test_socket.SendfileUsingSendTest is taking longer than 2 # seconds on Windows ARM32 buildbot LOOPBACK_TIMEOUT = 10 # Timeout in seconds for network requests going to the Internet. The timeout is # short enough to prevent a test to wait for too long if the Internet request # is blocked for whatever reason. # # Usually, a timeout using INTERNET_TIMEOUT should not mark a test as failed, # but skip the test instead: see transient_internet(). INTERNET_TIMEOUT = 60.0 # Timeout in seconds to mark a test as failed if the test takes "too long". # # The timeout value depends on the regrtest --timeout command line option. # # If a test using SHORT_TIMEOUT starts to fail randomly on slow buildbots, use # LONG_TIMEOUT instead. SHORT_TIMEOUT = 30.0 # Timeout in seconds to detect when a test hangs. # # It is long enough to reduce the risk of test failure on the slowest Python # buildbots. It should not be used to mark a test as failed if the test takes # "too long". The timeout value depends on the regrtest --timeout command line # option. LONG_TIMEOUT = 5 * 60.0 class Error(Exception): """Base class for regression test exceptions.""" class TestFailed(Error): """Test failed.""" class TestDidNotRun(Error): """Test did not run any subtests.""" class ResourceDenied(unittest.SkipTest): """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. """ @contextlib.contextmanager def _ignore_deprecated_imports(ignore=True): """Context manager to suppress package and module deprecation warnings when importing them. If ignore is False, this context manager has no effect. """ if ignore: with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", ".+ (module|package)", DeprecationWarning) yield else: yield def ignore_warnings(*, category): """Decorator to suppress deprecation warnings. Use of context managers to hide warnings make diffs more noisy and tools like 'git blame' less useful. """ def decorator(test): @functools.wraps(test) def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs): with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter('ignore', category=category) return test(self, *args, **kwargs) return wrapper return decorator def import_module(name, deprecated=False, *, required_on=()): """Import and return the module to be tested, raising SkipTest if it is not available. If deprecated is True, any module or package deprecation messages will be suppressed. If a module is required on a platform but optional for others, set required_on to an iterable of platform prefixes which will be compared against sys.platform. """ with _ignore_deprecated_imports(deprecated): try: return importlib.import_module(name) except ImportError as msg: if sys.platform.startswith(tuple(required_on)): raise raise unittest.SkipTest(str(msg)) def _save_and_remove_module(name, orig_modules): """Helper function to save and remove a module from sys.modules Raise ImportError if the module can't be imported. """ # try to import the module and raise an error if it can't be imported if name not in sys.modules: __import__(name) del sys.modules[name] for modname in list(sys.modules): if modname == name or modname.startswith(name + '.'): orig_modules[modname] = sys.modules[modname] del sys.modules[modname] def _save_and_block_module(name, orig_modules): """Helper function to save and block a module in sys.modules Return True if the module was in sys.modules, False otherwise. """ saved = True try: orig_modules[name] = sys.modules[name] except KeyError: saved = False sys.modules[name] = None return saved def anticipate_failure(condition): """Decorator to mark a test that is known to be broken in some cases Any use of this decorator should have a comment identifying the associated tracker issue. """ if condition: return unittest.expectedFailure return lambda f: f def load_package_tests(pkg_dir, loader, standard_tests, pattern): """Generic load_tests implementation for simple test packages. Most packages can implement load_tests using this function as follows: def load_tests(*args): return load_package_tests(os.path.dirname(__file__), *args) """ if pattern is None: pattern = "test*" top_dir = os.path.dirname( # Lib os.path.dirname( # test os.path.dirname(__file__))) # support package_tests = loader.discover(start_dir=pkg_dir, top_level_dir=top_dir, pattern=pattern) standard_tests.addTests(package_tests) return standard_tests def import_fresh_module(name, fresh=(), blocked=(), deprecated=False): """Import and return a module, deliberately bypassing sys.modules. This function imports and returns a fresh copy of the named Python module by removing the named module from sys.modules before doing the import. Note that unlike reload, the original module is not affected by this operation. *fresh* is an iterable of additional module names that are also removed from the sys.modules cache before doing the import. *blocked* is an iterable of module names that are replaced with None in the module cache during the import to ensure that attempts to import them raise ImportError. The named module and any modules named in the *fresh* and *blocked* parameters are saved before starting the import and then reinserted into sys.modules when the fresh import is complete. Module and package deprecation messages are suppressed during this import if *deprecated* is True. This function will raise ImportError if the named module cannot be imported. """ # NOTE: test_heapq, test_json and test_warnings include extra sanity checks # to make sure that this utility function is working as expected with _ignore_deprecated_imports(deprecated): # Keep track of modules saved for later restoration as well # as those which just need a blocking entry removed orig_modules = {} names_to_remove = [] _save_and_remove_module(name, orig_modules) try: for fresh_name in fresh: _save_and_remove_module(fresh_name, orig_modules) for blocked_name in blocked: if not _save_and_block_module(blocked_name, orig_modules): names_to_remove.append(blocked_name) fresh_module = importlib.import_module(name) except ImportError: fresh_module = None finally: for orig_name, module in orig_modules.items(): sys.modules[orig_name] = module for name_to_remove in names_to_remove: del sys.modules[name_to_remove] return fresh_module def get_attribute(obj, name): """Get an attribute, raising SkipTest if AttributeError is raised.""" try: attribute = getattr(obj, name) except AttributeError: raise unittest.SkipTest("object %r has no attribute %r" % (obj, name)) else: return attribute verbose = 1 # Flag set to 0 by regrtest.py use_resources = None # Flag set to [] by regrtest.py max_memuse = 0 # Disable bigmem tests (they will still be run with # small sizes, to make sure they work.) real_max_memuse = 0 junit_xml_list = None # list of testsuite XML elements failfast = False # _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 _force_run(path, func, *args): try: return func(*args) except OSError as err: if verbose >= 2: print('%s: %s' % (err.__class__.__name__, err)) print('re-run %s%r' % (func.__name__, args)) os.chmod(path, stat.S_IRWXU) return func(*args) if sys.platform.startswith("win"): def _waitfor(func, pathname, waitall=False): # Perform the operation func(pathname) # Now setup the wait loop if waitall: dirname = pathname else: dirname, name = os.path.split(pathname) dirname = dirname or '.' # Check for `pathname` to be removed from the filesystem. # The exponential backoff of the timeout amounts to a total # of ~1 second after which the deletion is probably an error # anyway. # Testing on an i7@4.3GHz shows that usually only 1 iteration is # required when contention occurs. timeout = 0.001 while timeout < 1.0: # Note we are only testing for the existence of the file(s) in # the contents of the directory regardless of any security or # access rights. If we have made it this far, we have sufficient # permissions to do that much using Python's equivalent of the # Windows API FindFirstFile. # Other Windows APIs can fail or give incorrect results when # dealing with files that are pending deletion. L = os.listdir(dirname) if not (L if waitall else name in L): return # Increase the timeout and try again time.sleep(timeout) timeout *= 2 warnings.warn('tests may fail, delete still pending for ' + pathname, RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=4) def _unlink(filename): _waitfor(os.unlink, filename) def _rmdir(dirname): _waitfor(os.rmdir, dirname) def _rmtree(path): def _rmtree_inner(path): for name in _force_run(path, os.listdir, path): fullname = os.path.join(path, name) try: mode = os.lstat(fullname).st_mode except OSError as exc: print("support.rmtree(): os.lstat(%r) failed with %s" % (fullname, exc), file=sys.__stderr__) mode = 0 if stat.S_ISDIR(mode): _waitfor(_rmtree_inner, fullname, waitall=True) _force_run(fullname, os.rmdir, fullname) else: _force_run(fullname, os.unlink, fullname) _waitfor(_rmtree_inner, path, waitall=True) _waitfor(lambda p: _force_run(p, os.rmdir, p), path) def _longpath(path): try: import ctypes except ImportError: # No ctypes means we can't expands paths. pass else: buffer = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(len(path) * 2) length = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetLongPathNameW(path, buffer, len(buffer)) if length: return buffer[:length] return path else: _unlink = os.unlink _rmdir = os.rmdir def _rmtree(path): import shutil try: shutil.rmtree(path) return except OSError: pass def _rmtree_inner(path): for name in _force_run(path, os.listdir, path): fullname = os.path.join(path, name) try: mode = os.lstat(fullname).st_mode except OSError: mode = 0 if stat.S_ISDIR(mode): _rmtree_inner(fullname) _force_run(path, os.rmdir, fullname) else: _force_run(path, os.unlink, fullname) _rmtree_inner(path) os.rmdir(path) def _longpath(path): return path def unlink(filename): try: _unlink(filename) except (FileNotFoundError, NotADirectoryError): pass def rmdir(dirname): try: _rmdir(dirname) except FileNotFoundError: pass def rmtree(path): try: _rmtree(path) except FileNotFoundError: pass def make_legacy_pyc(source): """Move a PEP 3147/488 pyc file to its legacy pyc location. :param source: The file system path to the source file. The source file does not need to exist, however the PEP 3147/488 pyc file must exist. :return: The file system path to the legacy pyc file. """ pyc_file = importlib.util.cache_from_source(source) up_one = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(source)) legacy_pyc = os.path.join(up_one, source + 'c') os.rename(pyc_file, legacy_pyc) return legacy_pyc def forget(modname): """'Forget' a module was ever imported. This removes the module from sys.modules and deletes any PEP 3147/488 or legacy .pyc files. """ unload(modname) for dirname in sys.path: source = os.path.join(dirname, modname + '.py') # It doesn't matter if they exist or not, unlink all possible # combinations of PEP 3147/488 and legacy pyc files. unlink(source + 'c') for opt in ('', 1, 2): unlink(importlib.util.cache_from_source(source, optimization=opt)) # Check whether a gui is actually available def _is_gui_available(): if hasattr(_is_gui_available, 'result'): return _is_gui_available.result reason = None if sys.platform.startswith('win') and platform.win32_is_iot(): reason = "gui is not available on Windows IoT Core" elif sys.platform.startswith('win'): # if Python is running as a service (such as the buildbot service), # gui interaction may be disallowed import ctypes import ctypes.wintypes UOI_FLAGS = 1 WSF_VISIBLE = 0x0001 class USEROBJECTFLAGS(ctypes.Structure): _fields_ = [("fInherit", ctypes.wintypes.BOOL), ("fReserved", ctypes.wintypes.BOOL), ("dwFlags", ctypes.wintypes.DWORD)] dll = ctypes.windll.user32 h = dll.GetProcessWindowStation() if not h: raise ctypes.WinError() uof = USEROBJECTFLAGS() needed = ctypes.wintypes.DWORD() res = dll.GetUserObjectInformationW(h, UOI_FLAGS, ctypes.byref(uof), ctypes.sizeof(uof), ctypes.byref(needed)) if not res: raise ctypes.WinError() if not bool(uof.dwFlags & WSF_VISIBLE): reason = "gui not available (WSF_VISIBLE flag not set)" elif sys.platform == 'darwin': # The Aqua Tk implementations on OS X can abort the process if # being called in an environment where a window server connection # cannot be made, for instance when invoked by a buildbot or ssh # process not running under the same user id as the current console # user. To avoid that, raise an exception if the window manager # connection is not available. from ctypes import cdll, c_int, pointer, Structure from ctypes.util import find_library app_services = cdll.LoadLibrary(find_library("ApplicationServices")) if app_services.CGMainDisplayID() == 0: reason = "gui tests cannot run without OS X window manager" else: class ProcessSerialNumber(Structure): _fields_ = [("highLongOfPSN", c_int), ("lowLongOfPSN", c_int)] psn = ProcessSerialNumber() psn_p = pointer(psn) if ( (app_services.GetCurrentProcess(psn_p) < 0) or (app_services.SetFrontProcess(psn_p) < 0) ): reason = "cannot run without OS X gui process" # check on every platform whether tkinter can actually do anything if not reason: try: from tkinter import Tk root = Tk() root.withdraw() root.update() root.destroy() except Exception as e: err_string = str(e) if len(err_string) > 50: err_string = err_string[:50] + ' [...]' reason = 'Tk unavailable due to {}: {}'.format(type(e).__name__, err_string) _is_gui_available.reason = reason _is_gui_available.result = not reason return _is_gui_available.result def is_resource_enabled(resource): """Test whether a resource is enabled. Known resources are set by regrtest.py. If not running under regrtest.py, all resources are assumed enabled unless use_resources has been set. """ return use_resources is None or resource in use_resources def requires(resource, msg=None): """Raise ResourceDenied if the specified resource is not available.""" if not is_resource_enabled(resource): if msg is None: msg = "Use of the %r resource not enabled" % resource raise ResourceDenied(msg) if resource == 'gui' and not _is_gui_available(): raise ResourceDenied(_is_gui_available.reason) def _requires_unix_version(sysname, min_version): """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is `sysname` and the version is less than `min_version`. For example, @_requires_unix_version('FreeBSD', (7, 2)) raises SkipTest if the FreeBSD version is less than 7.2. """ import platform min_version_txt = '.'.join(map(str, min_version)) version_txt = platform.release().split('-', 1)[0] if platform.system() == sysname: try: version = tuple(map(int, version_txt.split('.'))) except ValueError: skip = False else: skip = version < min_version else: skip = False return unittest.skipIf( skip, f"{sysname} version {min_version_txt} or higher required, not " f"{version_txt}" ) def requires_freebsd_version(*min_version): """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is FreeBSD and the FreeBSD version is less than `min_version`. For example, @requires_freebsd_version(7, 2) raises SkipTest if the FreeBSD version is less than 7.2. """ return _requires_unix_version('FreeBSD', min_version) def requires_linux_version(*min_version): """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is Linux and the Linux version is less than `min_version`. For example, @requires_linux_version(2, 6, 32) raises SkipTest if the Linux version is less than 2.6.32. """ return _requires_unix_version('Linux', min_version) def requires_mac_ver(*min_version): """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is Mac OS X and the OS X version if less than min_version. For example, @requires_mac_ver(10, 5) raises SkipTest if the OS X version is lesser than 10.5. """ def decorator(func): @functools.wraps(func) def wrapper(*args, **kw): if sys.platform == 'darwin': version_txt = platform.mac_ver()[0] try: version = tuple(map(int, version_txt.split('.'))) except ValueError: pass else: if version < min_version: min_version_txt = '.'.join(map(str, min_version)) raise unittest.SkipTest( "Mac OS X %s or higher required, not %s" % (min_version_txt, version_txt)) return func(*args, **kw) wrapper.min_version = min_version return wrapper return decorator def system_must_validate_cert(f): """Skip the test on TLS certificate validation failures.""" @functools.wraps(f) def dec(*args, **kwargs): try: f(*args, **kwargs) except OSError as e: if "CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED" in str(e): raise unittest.SkipTest("system does not contain " "necessary certificates") raise return dec # 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 # A constant likely larger than the underlying OS socket buffer size, to make # writes blocking. # The socket buffer sizes can usually be tuned system-wide (e.g. through sysctl # on Linux), or on a per-socket basis (SO_SNDBUF/SO_RCVBUF). See issue #18643 # for a discussion of this number). SOCK_MAX_SIZE = 16 * 1024 * 1024 + 1 # decorator for skipping tests on non-IEEE 754 platforms requires_IEEE_754 = unittest.skipUnless( float.__getformat__("double").startswith("IEEE"), "test requires IEEE 754 doubles") def requires_zlib(reason='requires zlib'): try: import zlib except ImportError: zlib = None return unittest.skipUnless(zlib, reason) def requires_gzip(reason='requires gzip'): try: import gzip except ImportError: gzip = None return unittest.skipUnless(gzip, reason) def requires_bz2(reason='requires bz2'): try: import bz2 except ImportError: bz2 = None return unittest.skipUnless(bz2, reason) def requires_lzma(reason='requires lzma'): try: import lzma except ImportError: lzma = None return unittest.skipUnless(lzma, reason) is_jython = sys.platform.startswith('java') is_android = hasattr(sys, 'getandroidapilevel') if sys.platform != 'win32': unix_shell = '/system/bin/sh' if is_android else '/bin/sh' else: unix_shell = None # Filename used for testing if os.name == 'java': # Jython disallows @ in module names TESTFN_ASCII = '$test' else: TESTFN_ASCII = '@test' # Disambiguate TESTFN for parallel testing, while letting it remain a valid # module name. TESTFN_ASCII = "{}_{}_tmp".format(TESTFN_ASCII, os.getpid()) # Define the URL of a dedicated HTTP server for the network tests. # The URL must use clear-text HTTP: no redirection to encrypted HTTPS. TEST_HTTP_URL = "http://www.pythontest.net" # FS_NONASCII: non-ASCII character encodable by os.fsencode(), # or an empty string if there is no such character. FS_NONASCII = '' for character in ( # First try printable and common characters to have a readable filename. # For each character, the encoding list are just example of encodings able # to encode the character (the list is not exhaustive). # U+00E6 (Latin Small Letter Ae): cp1252, iso-8859-1 '\u00E6', # U+0130 (Latin Capital Letter I With Dot Above): cp1254, iso8859_3 '\u0130', # U+0141 (Latin Capital Letter L With Stroke): cp1250, cp1257 '\u0141', # U+03C6 (Greek Small Letter Phi): cp1253 '\u03C6', # U+041A (Cyrillic Capital Letter Ka): cp1251 '\u041A', # U+05D0 (Hebrew Letter Alef): Encodable to cp424 '\u05D0', # U+060C (Arabic Comma): cp864, cp1006, iso8859_6, mac_arabic '\u060C', # U+062A (Arabic Letter Teh): cp720 '\u062A', # U+0E01 (Thai Character Ko Kai): cp874 '\u0E01', # Then try more "special" characters. "special" because they may be # interpreted or displayed differently depending on the exact locale # encoding and the font. # U+00A0 (No-Break Space) '\u00A0', # U+20AC (Euro Sign) '\u20AC', ): try: # If Python is set up to use the legacy 'mbcs' in Windows, # 'replace' error mode is used, and encode() returns b'?' # for characters missing in the ANSI codepage if os.fsdecode(os.fsencode(character)) != character: raise UnicodeError except UnicodeError: pass else: FS_NONASCII = character break # TESTFN_UNICODE is a non-ascii filename TESTFN_UNICODE = TESTFN_ASCII + "-\xe0\xf2\u0258\u0141\u011f" if sys.platform == 'darwin': # In Mac OS X's VFS API file names are, by definition, canonically # decomposed Unicode, encoded using UTF-8. See QA1173: # http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/qa/qa2001/qa1173.html import unicodedata TESTFN_UNICODE = unicodedata.normalize('NFD', TESTFN_UNICODE) TESTFN_ENCODING = sys.getfilesystemencoding() # TESTFN_UNENCODABLE is a filename (str type) that should *not* be able to be # encoded by the filesystem encoding (in strict mode). It can be None if we # cannot generate such filename. TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = None if os.name == 'nt': # skip win32s (0) or Windows 9x/ME (1) if sys.getwindowsversion().platform >= 2: # Different kinds of characters from various languages to minimize the # probability that the whole name is encodable to MBCS (issue #9819) TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = TESTFN_ASCII + "-\u5171\u0141\u2661\u0363\uDC80" try: TESTFN_UNENCODABLE.encode(TESTFN_ENCODING) except UnicodeEncodeError: pass else: print('WARNING: The filename %r CAN be encoded by the filesystem encoding (%s). ' 'Unicode filename tests may not be effective' % (TESTFN_UNENCODABLE, TESTFN_ENCODING)) TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = None # Mac OS X denies unencodable filenames (invalid utf-8) elif sys.platform != 'darwin': try: # ascii and utf-8 cannot encode the byte 0xff b'\xff'.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING) except UnicodeDecodeError: # 0xff will be encoded using the surrogate character u+DCFF TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = TESTFN_ASCII \ + b'-\xff'.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING, 'surrogateescape') else: # File system encoding (eg. ISO-8859-* encodings) can encode # the byte 0xff. Skip some unicode filename tests. pass # TESTFN_UNDECODABLE is a filename (bytes type) that should *not* be able to be # decoded from the filesystem encoding (in strict mode). It can be None if we # cannot generate such filename (ex: the latin1 encoding can decode any byte # sequence). On UNIX, TESTFN_UNDECODABLE can be decoded by os.fsdecode() thanks # to the surrogateescape error handler (PEP 383), but not from the filesystem # encoding in strict mode. TESTFN_UNDECODABLE = None for name in ( # b'\xff' is not decodable by os.fsdecode() with code page 932. Windows # accepts it to create a file or a directory, or don't accept to enter to # such directory (when the bytes name is used). So test b'\xe7' first: it is # not decodable from cp932. b'\xe7w\xf0', # undecodable from ASCII, UTF-8 b'\xff', # undecodable from iso8859-3, iso8859-6, iso8859-7, cp424, iso8859-8, cp856 # and cp857 b'\xae\xd5' # undecodable from UTF-8 (UNIX and Mac OS X) b'\xed\xb2\x80', b'\xed\xb4\x80', # undecodable from shift_jis, cp869, cp874, cp932, cp1250, cp1251, cp1252, # cp1253, cp1254, cp1255, cp1257, cp1258 b'\x81\x98', ): try: name.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING) except UnicodeDecodeError: TESTFN_UNDECODABLE = os.fsencode(TESTFN_ASCII) + name break if FS_NONASCII: TESTFN_NONASCII = TESTFN_ASCII + FS_NONASCII else: TESTFN_NONASCII = None TESTFN = TESTFN_NONASCII or TESTFN_ASCII # Save the initial cwd SAVEDCWD = os.getcwd() # Set by libregrtest/main.py so we can skip tests that are not # useful for PGO PGO = False # Set by libregrtest/main.py if we are running the extended (time consuming) # PGO task. If this is True, PGO is also True. PGO_EXTENDED = False @contextlib.contextmanager def temp_dir(path=None, quiet=False): """Return a context manager that creates a temporary directory. Arguments: path: the directory to create temporarily. If omitted or None, defaults to creating a temporary directory using tempfile.mkdtemp. quiet: if False (the default), the context manager raises an exception on error. Otherwise, if the path is specified and cannot be created, only a warning is issued. """ import tempfile dir_created = False if path is None: path = tempfile.mkdtemp() dir_created = True path = os.path.realpath(path) else: try: os.mkdir(path) dir_created = True except OSError as exc: if not quiet: raise warnings.warn(f'tests may fail, unable to create ' f'temporary directory {path!r}: {exc}', RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3) if dir_created: pid = os.getpid() try: yield path finally: # In case the process forks, let only the parent remove the # directory. The child has a different process id. (bpo-30028) if dir_created and pid == os.getpid(): rmtree(path) @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(os.path.realpath(path)) except OSError as exc: if not quiet: raise warnings.warn(f'tests may fail, unable to change the current working ' f'directory to {path!r}: {exc}', RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3) try: yield os.getcwd() finally: os.chdir(saved_dir) @contextlib.contextmanager def temp_cwd(name='tempcwd', quiet=False): """ Context manager that temporarily creates and changes the CWD. The function temporarily changes the current working directory after creating a temporary directory in the current directory with name *name*. If *name* is None, the temporary directory is created using tempfile.mkdtemp. If *quiet* is False (default) and it is not possible to create or change the CWD, an error is raised. If *quiet* is True, only a warning is raised and the original CWD is used. """ with temp_dir(path=name, quiet=quiet) as temp_path: with change_cwd(temp_path, quiet=quiet) as cwd_dir: yield cwd_dir if hasattr(os, "umask"): @contextlib.contextmanager def temp_umask(umask): """Context manager that temporarily sets the process umask.""" oldmask = os.umask(umask) try: yield finally: os.umask(oldmask) # TEST_HOME_DIR refers to the top level directory of the "test" package # that contains Python's regression test suite TEST_SUPPORT_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)) TEST_HOME_DIR = os.path.dirname(TEST_SUPPORT_DIR) # TEST_DATA_DIR is used as a target download location for remote resources TEST_DATA_DIR = os.path.join(TEST_HOME_DIR, "data") def findfile(filename, subdir=None): """Try to find a file on sys.path or in the test 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). Setting *subdir* indicates a relative path to use to find the file rather than looking directly in the path directories. """ if os.path.isabs(filename): return filename if subdir is not None: filename = os.path.join(subdir, filename) path = [TEST_HOME_DIR] + sys.path for dn in path: fn = os.path.join(dn, filename) if os.path.exists(fn): return fn return filename def create_empty_file(filename): """Create an empty file. If the file already exists, truncate it.""" fd = os.open(filename, os.O_WRONLY | os.O_CREAT | os.O_TRUNC) os.close(fd) def sortdict(dict): "Like repr(dict), but in sorted order." items = sorted(dict.items()) 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, errtext='', *, lineno=None, offset=None): with testcase.assertRaisesRegex(SyntaxError, errtext) as cm: compile(statement, '<test string>', 'exec') err = cm.exception testcase.assertIsNotNone(err.lineno) if lineno is not None: testcase.assertEqual(err.lineno, lineno) testcase.assertIsNotNone(err.offset) if offset is not None: testcase.assertEqual(err.offset, offset) def check_syntax_warning(testcase, statement, errtext='', *, lineno=1, offset=None): # Test also that a warning is emitted only once. with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns: warnings.simplefilter('always', SyntaxWarning) compile(statement, '<testcase>', 'exec') testcase.assertEqual(len(warns), 1, warns) warn, = warns testcase.assertTrue(issubclass(warn.category, SyntaxWarning), warn.category) if errtext: testcase.assertRegex(str(warn.message), errtext) testcase.assertEqual(warn.filename, '<testcase>') testcase.assertIsNotNone(warn.lineno) if lineno is not None: testcase.assertEqual(warn.lineno, lineno) # SyntaxWarning should be converted to SyntaxError when raised, # since the latter contains more information and provides better # error report. with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns: warnings.simplefilter('error', SyntaxWarning) check_syntax_error(testcase, statement, errtext, lineno=lineno, offset=offset) # No warnings are leaked when a SyntaxError is raised. testcase.assertEqual(warns, []) def open_urlresource(url, *args, **kw): import urllib.request, urllib.parse try: import gzip except ImportError: gzip = None check = kw.pop('check', None) filename = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[2].split('/')[-1] # '/': it's URL! fn = os.path.join(TEST_DATA_DIR, filename) def check_valid_file(fn): f = open(fn, *args, **kw) 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') if verbose: print('\tfetching %s ...' % url, file=get_original_stdout()) opener = urllib.request.build_opener() if gzip: opener.addheaders.append(('Accept-Encoding', 'gzip')) f = opener.open(url, timeout=INTERNET_TIMEOUT) if gzip and f.headers.get('Content-Encoding') == 'gzip': f = gzip.GzipFile(fileobj=f) 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 %r' % 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 = list(w) missing = [] for msg, cat in filters: seen = False for w in reraise[:]: warning = w.message # Filter out the matching messages if (re.match(msg, str(warning), re.I) and issubclass(warning.__class__, cat)): seen = True reraise.remove(w) if not seen and not quiet: # This filter caught nothing missing.append((msg, cat.__name__)) if reraise: raise AssertionError("unhandled warning %s" % 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_no_warnings(testcase, message='', category=Warning, force_gc=False): """Context manager to check that no warnings are emitted. This context manager enables a given warning within its scope and checks that no warnings are emitted even with that warning enabled. If force_gc is True, a garbage collection is attempted before checking for warnings. This may help to catch warnings emitted when objects are deleted, such as ResourceWarning. Other keyword arguments are passed to warnings.filterwarnings(). """ with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns: warnings.filterwarnings('always', message=message, category=category) yield if force_gc: gc_collect() testcase.assertEqual(warns, []) @contextlib.contextmanager def check_no_resource_warning(testcase): """Context manager to check that no ResourceWarning is emitted. Usage: with check_no_resource_warning(self): f = open(...) ... del f You must remove the object which may emit ResourceWarning before the end of the context manager. """ with check_no_warnings(testcase, category=ResourceWarning, force_gc=True): yield 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(collections.abc.MutableMapping): """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 __iter__(self): return iter(self._environ) def __len__(self): return len(self._environ) 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.items(): if not hasattr(value, attr): break if getattr(value, attr) != attr_value: break else: raise ResourceDenied("an optional resource is not available") # Context managers that raise ResourceDenied when various issues # with the Internet connection manifest themselves as exceptions. # XXX deprecate these and use transient_internet() instead time_out = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ETIMEDOUT) socket_peer_reset = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ECONNRESET) ioerror_peer_reset = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ECONNRESET) @contextlib.contextmanager def captured_output(stream_name): """Return a context manager used by captured_stdout/stdin/stderr that temporarily replaces the sys stream *stream_name* with a StringIO.""" import io orig_stdout = getattr(sys, stream_name) setattr(sys, stream_name, io.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 stdout: print("hello") self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), "hello\\n") """ return captured_output("stdout") def captured_stderr(): """Capture the output of sys.stderr: with captured_stderr() as stderr: print("hello", file=sys.stderr) self.assertEqual(stderr.getvalue(), "hello\\n") """ return captured_output("stderr") def captured_stdin(): """Capture the input to sys.stdin: with captured_stdin() as stdin: stdin.write('hello\\n') stdin.seek(0) # call test code that consumes from sys.stdin captured = input() self.assertEqual(captured, "hello") """ 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. """ import gc gc.collect() if is_jython: time.sleep(0.1) gc.collect() gc.collect() @contextlib.contextmanager def disable_gc(): import gc have_gc = gc.isenabled() gc.disable() try: yield finally: if have_gc: gc.enable() def python_is_optimized(): """Find if Python was built with optimizations.""" cflags = sysconfig.get_config_var('PY_CFLAGS') or '' final_opt = "" for opt in cflags.split(): if opt.startswith('-O'): final_opt = opt return final_opt not in ('', '-O0', '-Og') _header = 'nP' _align = '0n' if hasattr(sys, "getobjects"): _header = '2P' + _header _align = '0P' _vheader = _header + 'n' def calcobjsize(fmt): return struct.calcsize(_header + fmt + _align) def calcvobjsize(fmt): return struct.calcsize(_vheader + fmt + _align) _TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC = 1<<14 _TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = 1<<9 def check_sizeof(test, o, size): import _testinternalcapi 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 += _testinternalcapi.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.__name__ = func.__name__ inner.__doc__ = func.__doc__ return inner return decorator #======================================================================= # Decorator for running a function in a specific timezone, correctly # resetting it afterwards. def run_with_tz(tz): def decorator(func): def inner(*args, **kwds): try: tzset = time.tzset except AttributeError: raise unittest.SkipTest("tzset required") if 'TZ' in os.environ: orig_tz = os.environ['TZ'] else: orig_tz = None os.environ['TZ'] = tz tzset() # now run the function, resetting the tz on exceptions try: return func(*args, **kwds) finally: if orig_tz is None: del os.environ['TZ'] else: os.environ['TZ'] = orig_tz time.tzset() inner.__name__ = 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 class _MemoryWatchdog: """An object which periodically watches the process' memory consumption and prints it out. """ def __init__(self): self.procfile = '/proc/{pid}/statm'.format(pid=os.getpid()) self.started = False def start(self): try: f = open(self.procfile, 'r') except OSError as e: warnings.warn('/proc not available for stats: {}'.format(e), RuntimeWarning) sys.stderr.flush() return with f: watchdog_script = findfile("memory_watchdog.py") self.mem_watchdog = subprocess.Popen([sys.executable, watchdog_script], stdin=f, stderr=subprocess.DEVNULL) self.started = True def stop(self): if self.started: self.mem_watchdog.terminate() self.mem_watchdog.wait() def bigmemtest(size, memuse, dry_run=True): """Decorator for bigmem tests. 'size' is a requested size for the test (in arbitrary, test-interpreted units.) 'memuse' is the number of bytes per unit for the test, or a good estimate of it. For example, a test that needs two byte buffers, of 4 GiB each, could be decorated with @bigmemtest(size=_4G, memuse=2). The 'size' argument is normally passed to the decorated test method as an extra argument. If 'dry_run' is true, the value passed to the test method may be less than the requested value. If 'dry_run' is false, it means the test doesn't support dummy runs when -M is not specified. """ def decorator(f): def wrapper(self): size = wrapper.size memuse = wrapper.memuse if not real_max_memuse: maxsize = 5147 else: maxsize = size if ((real_max_memuse or not dry_run) and real_max_memuse < maxsize * memuse): raise unittest.SkipTest( "not enough memory: %.1fG minimum needed" % (size * memuse / (1024 ** 3))) if real_max_memuse and verbose: print() print(" ... expected peak memory use: {peak:.1f}G" .format(peak=size * memuse / (1024 ** 3))) watchdog = _MemoryWatchdog() watchdog.start() else: watchdog = None try: return f(self, maxsize) finally: if watchdog: watchdog.stop() wrapper.size = size wrapper.memuse = memuse 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 MAX_Py_ssize_t >= 2**63 - 1 and max_memuse >= 2**31: raise unittest.SkipTest( "not enough memory: try a 32-bit build instead") else: raise unittest.SkipTest( "not enough memory: %.1fG minimum needed" % (MAX_Py_ssize_t / (1024 ** 3))) 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 resource == 'gui' and not _is_gui_available(): return unittest.skip(_is_gui_available.reason) 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 = list(guards.values())[0] assert list(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 no_tracing(func): """Decorator to temporarily turn off tracing for the duration of a test.""" if not hasattr(sys, 'gettrace'): return func else: @functools.wraps(func) def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): original_trace = sys.gettrace() try: sys.settrace(None) return func(*args, **kwargs) finally: sys.settrace(original_trace) return wrapper def refcount_test(test): """Decorator for tests which involve reference counting. To start, the decorator does not run the test if is not run by CPython. After that, any trace function is unset during the test to prevent unexpected refcounts caused by the trace function. """ return no_tracing(cpython_only(test)) def _filter_suite(suite, pred): """Recursively filter test cases in a suite based on a predicate.""" newtests = [] for test in suite._tests: if isinstance(test, unittest.TestSuite): _filter_suite(test, pred) newtests.append(test) else: if pred(test): newtests.append(test) suite._tests = newtests def _run_suite(suite): """Run tests from a unittest.TestSuite-derived class.""" runner = get_test_runner(sys.stdout, verbosity=verbose, capture_output=(junit_xml_list is not None)) result = runner.run(suite) if junit_xml_list is not None: junit_xml_list.append(result.get_xml_element()) if not result.testsRun and not result.skipped: raise TestDidNotRun 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) # By default, don't filter tests _match_test_func = None _accept_test_patterns = None _ignore_test_patterns = None def match_test(test): # Function used by support.run_unittest() and regrtest --list-cases if _match_test_func is None: return True else: return _match_test_func(test.id()) def _is_full_match_test(pattern): # If a pattern contains at least one dot, it's considered # as a full test identifier. # Example: 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access'. # # ignore patterns which contain fnmatch patterns: '*', '?', '[...]' # or '[!...]'. For example, ignore 'test_access*'. return ('.' in pattern) and (not re.search(r'[?*\[\]]', pattern)) def set_match_tests(accept_patterns=None, ignore_patterns=None): global _match_test_func, _accept_test_patterns, _ignore_test_patterns if accept_patterns is None: accept_patterns = () if ignore_patterns is None: ignore_patterns = () accept_func = ignore_func = None if accept_patterns != _accept_test_patterns: accept_patterns, accept_func = _compile_match_function(accept_patterns) if ignore_patterns != _ignore_test_patterns: ignore_patterns, ignore_func = _compile_match_function(ignore_patterns) # Create a copy since patterns can be mutable and so modified later _accept_test_patterns = tuple(accept_patterns) _ignore_test_patterns = tuple(ignore_patterns) if accept_func is not None or ignore_func is not None: def match_function(test_id): accept = True ignore = False if accept_func: accept = accept_func(test_id) if ignore_func: ignore = ignore_func(test_id) return accept and not ignore _match_test_func = match_function def _compile_match_function(patterns): if not patterns: func = None # set_match_tests(None) behaves as set_match_tests(()) patterns = () elif all(map(_is_full_match_test, patterns)): # Simple case: all patterns are full test identifier. # The test.bisect_cmd utility only uses such full test identifiers. func = set(patterns).__contains__ else: regex = '|'.join(map(fnmatch.translate, patterns)) # The search *is* case sensitive on purpose: # don't use flags=re.IGNORECASE regex_match = re.compile(regex).match def match_test_regex(test_id): if regex_match(test_id): # The regex matches the whole identifier, for example # 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access'. return True else: # Try to match parts of the test identifier. # For example, split 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access' # into: 'test', 'test_os', 'FileTests' and 'test_access'. return any(map(regex_match, test_id.split("."))) func = match_test_regex return patterns, func 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)) _filter_suite(suite, match_test) _run_suite(suite) #======================================================================= # Check for the presence of docstrings. # Rather than trying to enumerate all the cases where docstrings may be # disabled, we just check for that directly def _check_docstrings(): """Just used to check if docstrings are enabled""" MISSING_C_DOCSTRINGS = (check_impl_detail() and sys.platform != 'win32' and not sysconfig.get_config_var('WITH_DOC_STRINGS')) HAVE_DOCSTRINGS = (_check_docstrings.__doc__ is not None and not MISSING_C_DOCSTRINGS) requires_docstrings = unittest.skipUnless(HAVE_DOCSTRINGS, "test requires docstrings") #======================================================================= # doctest driver. def run_doctest(module, verbosity=None, optionflags=0): """Run doctest on the given module. Return (#failures, #tests). If optional argument verbosity is not specified (or is None), pass 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 f, t = doctest.testmod(module, verbose=verbosity, optionflags=optionflags) if f: raise TestFailed("%d of %d doctests failed" % (f, t)) if verbose: print('doctest (%s) ... %d tests with zero failures' % (module.__name__, t)) return f, t #======================================================================= # Support for saving and restoring the imported modules. def print_warning(msg): # bpo-39983: Print into sys.__stderr__ to display the warning even # when sys.stderr is captured temporarily by a test for line in msg.splitlines(): print(f"Warning -- {line}", file=sys.__stderr__, flush=True) def modules_setup(): return sys.modules.copy(), def modules_cleanup(oldmodules): # Encoders/decoders are registered permanently within the internal # codec cache. If we destroy the corresponding modules their # globals will be set to None which will trip up the cached functions. encodings = [(k, v) for k, v in sys.modules.items() if k.startswith('encodings.')] sys.modules.clear() sys.modules.update(encodings) # XXX: This kind of problem can affect more than just encodings. In particular # extension modules (such as _ssl) don't cope with reloading properly. # Really, test modules should be cleaning out the test specific modules they # know they added (ala test_runpy) rather than relying on this function (as # test_importhooks and test_pkg do currently). # Implicitly imported *real* modules should be left alone (see issue 10556). sys.modules.update(oldmodules) #======================================================================= # Threading support to prevent reporting refleaks when running regrtest.py -R # Flag used by saved_test_environment of test.libregrtest.save_env, # to check if a test modified the environment. The flag should be set to False # before running a new test. # # For example, threading_cleanup() sets the flag is the function fails # to cleanup threads. environment_altered = False # 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(): return _thread._count(), threading._dangling.copy() def threading_cleanup(*original_values): global environment_altered _MAX_COUNT = 100 for count in range(_MAX_COUNT): values = _thread._count(), threading._dangling if values == original_values: break if not count: # Display a warning at the first iteration environment_altered = True dangling_threads = values[1] print_warning(f"threading_cleanup() failed to cleanup " f"{values[0] - original_values[0]} threads " f"(count: {values[0]}, " f"dangling: {len(dangling_threads)})") for thread in dangling_threads: print_warning(f"Dangling thread: {thread!r}") # Don't hold references to threads dangling_threads = None values = None time.sleep(0.01) gc_collect() 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. """ @functools.wraps(func) def decorator(*args): key = threading_setup() try: return func(*args) finally: threading_cleanup(*key) return decorator @contextlib.contextmanager def wait_threads_exit(timeout=None): """ bpo-31234: Context manager to wait until all threads created in the with statement exit. Use _thread.count() to check if threads exited. Indirectly, wait until threads exit the internal t_bootstrap() C function of the _thread module. threading_setup() and threading_cleanup() are designed to emit a warning if a test leaves running threads in the background. This context manager is designed to cleanup threads started by the _thread.start_new_thread() which doesn't allow to wait for thread exit, whereas thread.Thread has a join() method. """ if timeout is None: timeout = SHORT_TIMEOUT old_count = _thread._count() try: yield finally: start_time = time.monotonic() deadline = start_time + timeout while True: count = _thread._count() if count <= old_count: break if time.monotonic() > deadline: dt = time.monotonic() - start_time msg = (f"wait_threads() failed to cleanup {count - old_count} " f"threads after {dt:.1f} seconds " f"(count: {count}, old count: {old_count})") raise AssertionError(msg) time.sleep(0.010) gc_collect() def join_thread(thread, timeout=None): """Join a thread. Raise an AssertionError if the thread is still alive after timeout seconds. """ if timeout is None: timeout = SHORT_TIMEOUT thread.join(timeout) if thread.is_alive(): msg = f"failed to join the thread in {timeout:.1f} seconds" raise AssertionError(msg) 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. """ global environment_altered # Need os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG): Windows is not supported if not (hasattr(os, 'waitpid') and hasattr(os, 'WNOHANG')): return # 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. while True: try: # Read the exit status of any child process which already completed pid, status = os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG) except OSError: break if pid == 0: break print_warning(f"reap_children() reaped child process {pid}") environment_altered = True @contextlib.contextmanager def start_threads(threads, unlock=None): import faulthandler threads = list(threads) started = [] try: try: for t in threads: t.start() started.append(t) except: if verbose: print("Can't start %d threads, only %d threads started" % (len(threads), len(started))) raise yield finally: try: if unlock: unlock() endtime = starttime = time.monotonic() for timeout in range(1, 16): endtime += 60 for t in started: t.join(max(endtime - time.monotonic(), 0.01)) started = [t for t in started if t.is_alive()] if not started: break if verbose: print('Unable to join %d threads during a period of ' '%d minutes' % (len(started), timeout)) finally: started = [t for t in started if t.is_alive()] if started: faulthandler.dump_traceback(sys.stdout) raise AssertionError('Unable to join %d threads' % len(started)) @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. The old value (or None if it doesn't exist) will be assigned to the target of the "as" clause, if there is one. """ if hasattr(obj, attr): real_val = getattr(obj, attr) setattr(obj, attr, new_val) try: yield real_val finally: setattr(obj, attr, real_val) else: setattr(obj, attr, new_val) try: yield finally: if hasattr(obj, attr): delattr(obj, attr) @contextlib.contextmanager def swap_item(obj, item, new_val): """Temporary swap out an item with a new object. Usage: with swap_item(obj, "item", 5): ... This will set obj["item"] to 5 for the duration of the with: block, restoring the old value at the end of the block. If `item` doesn't exist on `obj`, it will be created and then deleted at the end of the block. The old value (or None if it doesn't exist) will be assigned to the target of the "as" clause, if there is one. """ if item in obj: real_val = obj[item] obj[item] = new_val try: yield real_val finally: obj[item] = real_val else: obj[item] = new_val try: yield finally: if item in obj: del obj[item] def args_from_interpreter_flags(): """Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current settings in sys.flags and sys.warnoptions.""" return subprocess._args_from_interpreter_flags() def optim_args_from_interpreter_flags(): """Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current optimization settings in sys.flags.""" return subprocess._optim_args_from_interpreter_flags() class Matcher(object): _partial_matches = ('msg', 'message') def matches(self, d, **kwargs): """ Try to match a single dict with the supplied arguments. Keys whose values are strings and which are in self._partial_matches will be checked for partial (i.e. substring) matches. You can extend this scheme to (for example) do regular expression matching, etc. """ result = True for k in kwargs: v = kwargs[k] dv = d.get(k) if not self.match_value(k, dv, v): result = False break return result def match_value(self, k, dv, v): """ Try to match a single stored value (dv) with a supplied value (v). """ if type(v) != type(dv): result = False elif type(dv) is not str or k not in self._partial_matches: result = (v == dv) else: result = dv.find(v) >= 0 return result _can_symlink = None def can_symlink(): global _can_symlink if _can_symlink is not None: return _can_symlink symlink_path = TESTFN + "can_symlink" try: os.symlink(TESTFN, symlink_path) can = True except (OSError, NotImplementedError, AttributeError): can = False else: os.remove(symlink_path) _can_symlink = can return can def skip_unless_symlink(test): """Skip decorator for tests that require functional symlink""" ok = can_symlink() msg = "Requires functional symlink implementation" return test if ok else unittest.skip(msg)(test) _buggy_ucrt = None def skip_if_buggy_ucrt_strfptime(test): """ Skip decorator for tests that use buggy strptime/strftime If the UCRT bugs are present time.localtime().tm_zone will be an empty string, otherwise we assume the UCRT bugs are fixed See bpo-37552 [Windows] strptime/strftime return invalid results with UCRT version 17763.615 """ import locale global _buggy_ucrt if _buggy_ucrt is None: if(sys.platform == 'win32' and locale.getdefaultlocale()[1] == 'cp65001' and time.localtime().tm_zone == ''): _buggy_ucrt = True else: _buggy_ucrt = False return unittest.skip("buggy MSVC UCRT strptime/strftime")(test) if _buggy_ucrt else test class PythonSymlink: """Creates a symlink for the current Python executable""" def __init__(self, link=None): self.link = link or os.path.abspath(TESTFN) self._linked = [] self.real = os.path.realpath(sys.executable) self._also_link = [] self._env = None self._platform_specific() def _platform_specific(self): pass if sys.platform == "win32": def _platform_specific(self): import _winapi if os.path.lexists(self.real) and not os.path.exists(self.real): # App symlink appears to not exist, but we want the # real executable here anyway self.real = _winapi.GetModuleFileName(0) dll = _winapi.GetModuleFileName(sys.dllhandle) src_dir = os.path.dirname(dll) dest_dir = os.path.dirname(self.link) self._also_link.append(( dll, os.path.join(dest_dir, os.path.basename(dll)) )) for runtime in glob.glob(os.path.join(glob.escape(src_dir), "vcruntime*.dll")): self._also_link.append(( runtime, os.path.join(dest_dir, os.path.basename(runtime)) )) self._env = {k.upper(): os.getenv(k) for k in os.environ} self._env["PYTHONHOME"] = os.path.dirname(self.real) if sysconfig.is_python_build(True): self._env["PYTHONPATH"] = os.path.dirname(os.__file__) def __enter__(self): os.symlink(self.real, self.link) self._linked.append(self.link) for real, link in self._also_link: os.symlink(real, link) self._linked.append(link) return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb): for link in self._linked: try: os.remove(link) except IOError as ex: if verbose: print("failed to clean up {}: {}".format(link, ex)) def _call(self, python, args, env, returncode): cmd = [python, *args] p = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, env=env) r = p.communicate() if p.returncode != returncode: if verbose: print(repr(r[0])) print(repr(r[1]), file=sys.stderr) raise RuntimeError( 'unexpected return code: {0} (0x{0:08X})'.format(p.returncode)) return r def call_real(self, *args, returncode=0): return self._call(self.real, args, None, returncode) def call_link(self, *args, returncode=0): return self._call(self.link, args, self._env, returncode) _can_xattr = None def can_xattr(): import tempfile global _can_xattr if _can_xattr is not None: return _can_xattr if not hasattr(os, "setxattr"): can = False else: tmp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp() tmp_fp, tmp_name = tempfile.mkstemp(dir=tmp_dir) try: with open(TESTFN, "wb") as fp: try: # TESTFN & tempfile may use different file systems with # different capabilities os.setxattr(tmp_fp, b"user.test", b"") os.setxattr(tmp_name, b"trusted.foo", b"42") os.setxattr(fp.fileno(), b"user.test", b"") # Kernels < 2.6.39 don't respect setxattr flags. kernel_version = platform.release() m = re.match(r"2.6.(\d{1,2})", kernel_version) can = m is None or int(m.group(1)) >= 39 except OSError: can = False finally: unlink(TESTFN) unlink(tmp_name) rmdir(tmp_dir) _can_xattr = can return can def skip_unless_xattr(test): """Skip decorator for tests that require functional extended attributes""" ok = can_xattr() msg = "no non-broken extended attribute support" return test if ok else unittest.skip(msg)(test) def skip_if_pgo_task(test): """Skip decorator for tests not run in (non-extended) PGO task""" ok = not PGO or PGO_EXTENDED msg = "Not run for (non-extended) PGO task" return test if ok else unittest.skip(msg)(test) def fs_is_case_insensitive(directory): """Detects if the file system for the specified directory is case-insensitive.""" import tempfile with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(dir=directory) as base: base_path = base.name case_path = base_path.upper() if case_path == base_path: case_path = base_path.lower() try: return os.path.samefile(base_path, case_path) except FileNotFoundError: return False def detect_api_mismatch(ref_api, other_api, *, ignore=()): """Returns the set of items in ref_api not in other_api, except for a defined list of items to be ignored in this check. By default this skips private attributes beginning with '_' but includes all magic methods, i.e. those starting and ending in '__'. """ missing_items = set(dir(ref_api)) - set(dir(other_api)) if ignore: missing_items -= set(ignore) missing_items = set(m for m in missing_items if not m.startswith('_') or m.endswith('__')) return missing_items def check__all__(test_case, module, name_of_module=None, extra=(), blacklist=()): """Assert that the __all__ variable of 'module' contains all public names. The module's public names (its API) are detected automatically based on whether they match the public name convention and were defined in 'module'. The 'name_of_module' argument can specify (as a string or tuple thereof) what module(s) an API could be defined in in order to be detected as a public API. One case for this is when 'module' imports part of its public API from other modules, possibly a C backend (like 'csv' and its '_csv'). The 'extra' argument can be a set of names that wouldn't otherwise be automatically detected as "public", like objects without a proper '__module__' attribute. If provided, it will be added to the automatically detected ones. The 'blacklist' argument can be a set of names that must not be treated as part of the public API even though their names indicate otherwise. Usage: import bar import foo import unittest from test import support class MiscTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def test__all__(self): support.check__all__(self, foo) class OtherTestCase(unittest.TestCase): def test__all__(self): extra = {'BAR_CONST', 'FOO_CONST'} blacklist = {'baz'} # Undocumented name. # bar imports part of its API from _bar. support.check__all__(self, bar, ('bar', '_bar'), extra=extra, blacklist=blacklist) """ if name_of_module is None: name_of_module = (module.__name__, ) elif isinstance(name_of_module, str): name_of_module = (name_of_module, ) expected = set(extra) for name in dir(module): if name.startswith('_') or name in blacklist: continue obj = getattr(module, name) if (getattr(obj, '__module__', None) in name_of_module or (not hasattr(obj, '__module__') and not isinstance(obj, types.ModuleType))): expected.add(name) test_case.assertCountEqual(module.__all__, expected) def suppress_msvcrt_asserts(verbose=False): try: import msvcrt except ImportError: return msvcrt.SetErrorMode(msvcrt.SEM_FAILCRITICALERRORS | msvcrt.SEM_NOALIGNMENTFAULTEXCEPT | msvcrt.SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX | msvcrt.SEM_NOOPENFILEERRORBOX) # CrtSetReportMode() is only available in debug build if hasattr(msvcrt, 'CrtSetReportMode'): for m in [msvcrt.CRT_WARN, msvcrt.CRT_ERROR, msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT]: if verbose: msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(m, msvcrt.CRTDBG_MODE_FILE) msvcrt.CrtSetReportFile(m, msvcrt.CRTDBG_FILE_STDERR) else: msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(m, 0) class SuppressCrashReport: """Try to prevent a crash report from popping up. On Windows, don't display the Windows Error Reporting dialog. On UNIX, disable the creation of coredump file. """ old_value = None old_modes = None def __enter__(self): """On Windows, disable Windows Error Reporting dialogs using SetErrorMode() and CrtSetReportMode(). On UNIX, try to save the previous core file size limit, then set soft limit to 0. """ if sys.platform.startswith('win'): # see http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms680621.aspx # GetErrorMode is not available on Windows XP and Windows Server 2003, # but SetErrorMode returns the previous value, so we can use that try: import msvcrt except ImportError: return self.old_value = msvcrt.SetErrorMode(msvcrt.SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX) msvcrt.SetErrorMode(self.old_value | msvcrt.SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX) # bpo-23314: Suppress assert dialogs in debug builds. # CrtSetReportMode() is only available in debug build. if hasattr(msvcrt, 'CrtSetReportMode'): self.old_modes = {} for report_type in [msvcrt.CRT_WARN, msvcrt.CRT_ERROR, msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT]: old_mode = msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, msvcrt.CRTDBG_MODE_FILE) old_file = msvcrt.CrtSetReportFile(report_type, msvcrt.CRTDBG_FILE_STDERR) self.old_modes[report_type] = old_mode, old_file else: try: import resource self.resource = resource except ImportError: self.resource = None if self.resource is not None: try: self.old_value = self.resource.getrlimit(self.resource.RLIMIT_CORE) self.resource.setrlimit(self.resource.RLIMIT_CORE, (0, self.old_value[1])) except (ValueError, OSError): pass if sys.platform == 'darwin': # Check if the 'Crash Reporter' on OSX was configured # in 'Developer' mode and warn that it will get triggered # when it is. # # This assumes that this context manager is used in tests # that might trigger the next manager. cmd = ['/usr/bin/defaults', 'read', 'com.apple.CrashReporter', 'DialogType'] proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) with proc: stdout = proc.communicate()[0] if stdout.strip() == b'developer': print("this test triggers the Crash Reporter, " "that is intentional", end='', flush=True) return self def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc): """Restore Windows ErrorMode or core file behavior to initial value.""" if self.old_value is None: return if sys.platform.startswith('win'): import msvcrt msvcrt.SetErrorMode(self.old_value) if self.old_modes: for report_type, (old_mode, old_file) in self.old_modes.items(): msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, old_mode) msvcrt.CrtSetReportFile(report_type, old_file) else: if self.resource is not None: try: self.resource.setrlimit(self.resource.RLIMIT_CORE, self.old_value) except (ValueError, OSError): pass def patch(test_instance, object_to_patch, attr_name, new_value): """Override 'object_to_patch'.'attr_name' with 'new_value'. Also, add a cleanup procedure to 'test_instance' to restore 'object_to_patch' value for 'attr_name'. The 'attr_name' should be a valid attribute for 'object_to_patch'. """ # check that 'attr_name' is a real attribute for 'object_to_patch' # will raise AttributeError if it does not exist getattr(object_to_patch, attr_name) # keep a copy of the old value attr_is_local = False try: old_value = object_to_patch.__dict__[attr_name] except (AttributeError, KeyError): old_value = getattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, None) else: attr_is_local = True # restore the value when the test is done def cleanup(): if attr_is_local: setattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, old_value) else: delattr(object_to_patch, attr_name) test_instance.addCleanup(cleanup) # actually override the attribute setattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, new_value) def run_in_subinterp(code): """ Run code in a subinterpreter. Raise unittest.SkipTest if the tracemalloc module is enabled. """ # Issue #10915, #15751: PyGILState_*() functions don't work with # sub-interpreters, the tracemalloc module uses these functions internally try: import tracemalloc except ImportError: pass else: if tracemalloc.is_tracing(): raise unittest.SkipTest("run_in_subinterp() cannot be used " "if tracemalloc module is tracing " "memory allocations") import _testcapi return _testcapi.run_in_subinterp(code) def check_free_after_iterating(test, iter, cls, args=()): class A(cls): def __del__(self): nonlocal done done = True try: next(it) except StopIteration: pass done = False it = iter(A(*args)) # Issue 26494: Shouldn't crash test.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it) # The sequence should be deallocated just after the end of iterating gc_collect() test.assertTrue(done) def missing_compiler_executable(cmd_names=[]): """Check if the compiler components used to build the interpreter exist. Check for the existence of the compiler executables whose names are listed in 'cmd_names' or all the compiler executables when 'cmd_names' is empty and return the first missing executable or None when none is found missing. """ from distutils import ccompiler, sysconfig, spawn, errors compiler = ccompiler.new_compiler() sysconfig.customize_compiler(compiler) if compiler.compiler_type == "msvc": # MSVC has no executables, so check whether initialization succeeds try: compiler.initialize() except errors.DistutilsPlatformError: return "msvc" for name in compiler.executables: if cmd_names and name not in cmd_names: continue cmd = getattr(compiler, name) if cmd_names: assert cmd is not None, \ "the '%s' executable is not configured" % name elif not cmd: continue if spawn.find_executable(cmd[0]) is None: return cmd[0] _is_android_emulator = None def setswitchinterval(interval): # Setting a very low gil interval on the Android emulator causes python # to hang (issue #26939). minimum_interval = 1e-5 if is_android and interval < minimum_interval: global _is_android_emulator if _is_android_emulator is None: _is_android_emulator = (subprocess.check_output( ['getprop', 'ro.kernel.qemu']).strip() == b'1') if _is_android_emulator: interval = minimum_interval return sys.setswitchinterval(interval) @contextlib.contextmanager def disable_faulthandler(): import faulthandler # use sys.__stderr__ instead of sys.stderr, since regrtest replaces # sys.stderr with a StringIO which has no file descriptor when a test # is run with -W/--verbose3. fd = sys.__stderr__.fileno() is_enabled = faulthandler.is_enabled() try: faulthandler.disable() yield finally: if is_enabled: faulthandler.enable(file=fd, all_threads=True) def fd_count(): """Count the number of open file descriptors. """ if sys.platform.startswith(('linux', 'freebsd')): try: names = os.listdir("/proc/self/fd") # Subtract one because listdir() internally opens a file # descriptor to list the content of the /proc/self/fd/ directory. return len(names) - 1 except FileNotFoundError: pass MAXFD = 256 if hasattr(os, 'sysconf'): try: MAXFD = os.sysconf("SC_OPEN_MAX") except OSError: pass old_modes = None if sys.platform == 'win32': # bpo-25306, bpo-31009: Call CrtSetReportMode() to not kill the process # on invalid file descriptor if Python is compiled in debug mode try: import msvcrt msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode except (AttributeError, ImportError): # no msvcrt or a release build pass else: old_modes = {} for report_type in (msvcrt.CRT_WARN, msvcrt.CRT_ERROR, msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT): old_modes[report_type] = msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, 0) try: count = 0 for fd in range(MAXFD): try: # Prefer dup() over fstat(). fstat() can require input/output # whereas dup() doesn't. fd2 = os.dup(fd) except OSError as e: if e.errno != errno.EBADF: raise else: os.close(fd2) count += 1 finally: if old_modes is not None: for report_type in (msvcrt.CRT_WARN, msvcrt.CRT_ERROR, msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT): msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, old_modes[report_type]) return count class SaveSignals: """ Save and restore signal handlers. This class is only able to save/restore signal handlers registered by the Python signal module: see bpo-13285 for "external" signal handlers. """ def __init__(self): import signal self.signal = signal self.signals = signal.valid_signals() # SIGKILL and SIGSTOP signals cannot be ignored nor caught for signame in ('SIGKILL', 'SIGSTOP'): try: signum = getattr(signal, signame) except AttributeError: continue self.signals.remove(signum) self.handlers = {} def save(self): for signum in self.signals: handler = self.signal.getsignal(signum) if handler is None: # getsignal() returns None if a signal handler was not # registered by the Python signal module, # and the handler is not SIG_DFL nor SIG_IGN. # # Ignore the signal: we cannot restore the handler. continue self.handlers[signum] = handler def restore(self): for signum, handler in self.handlers.items(): self.signal.signal(signum, handler) def with_pymalloc(): import _testcapi return _testcapi.WITH_PYMALLOC class FakePath: """Simple implementing of the path protocol. """ def __init__(self, path): self.path = path def __repr__(self): return f'<FakePath {self.path!r}>' def __fspath__(self): if (isinstance(self.path, BaseException) or isinstance(self.path, type) and issubclass(self.path, BaseException)): raise self.path else: return self.path class _ALWAYS_EQ: """ Object that is equal to anything. """ def __eq__(self, other): return True def __ne__(self, other): return False ALWAYS_EQ = _ALWAYS_EQ() class _NEVER_EQ: """ Object that is not equal to anything. """ def __eq__(self, other): return False def __ne__(self, other): return True def __hash__(self): return 1 NEVER_EQ = _NEVER_EQ() @functools.total_ordering class _LARGEST: """ Object that is greater than anything (except itself). """ def __eq__(self, other): return isinstance(other, _LARGEST) def __lt__(self, other): return False LARGEST = _LARGEST() @functools.total_ordering class _SMALLEST: """ Object that is less than anything (except itself). """ def __eq__(self, other): return isinstance(other, _SMALLEST) def __gt__(self, other): return False SMALLEST = _SMALLEST() def maybe_get_event_loop_policy(): """Return the global event loop policy if one is set, else return None.""" import asyncio.events return asyncio.events._event_loop_policy # Helpers for testing hashing. NHASHBITS = sys.hash_info.width # number of bits in hash() result assert NHASHBITS in (32, 64) # Return mean and sdev of number of collisions when tossing nballs balls # uniformly at random into nbins bins. By definition, the number of # collisions is the number of balls minus the number of occupied bins at # the end. def collision_stats(nbins, nballs): n, k = nbins, nballs # prob a bin empty after k trials = (1 - 1/n)**k # mean # empty is then n * (1 - 1/n)**k # so mean # occupied is n - n * (1 - 1/n)**k # so collisions = k - (n - n*(1 - 1/n)**k) # # For the variance: # n*(n-1)*(1-2/n)**k + meanempty - meanempty**2 = # n*(n-1)*(1-2/n)**k + meanempty * (1 - meanempty) # # Massive cancellation occurs, and, e.g., for a 64-bit hash code # 1-1/2**64 rounds uselessly to 1.0. Rather than make heroic (and # error-prone) efforts to rework the naive formulas to avoid those, # we use the `decimal` module to get plenty of extra precision. # # Note: the exact values are straightforward to compute with # rationals, but in context that's unbearably slow, requiring # multi-million bit arithmetic. import decimal with decimal.localcontext() as ctx: bits = n.bit_length() * 2 # bits in n**2 # At least that many bits will likely cancel out. # Use that many decimal digits instead. ctx.prec = max(bits, 30) dn = decimal.Decimal(n) p1empty = ((dn - 1) / dn) ** k meanempty = n * p1empty occupied = n - meanempty collisions = k - occupied var = dn*(dn-1)*((dn-2)/dn)**k + meanempty * (1 - meanempty) return float(collisions), float(var.sqrt()) class catch_unraisable_exception: """ Context manager catching unraisable exception using sys.unraisablehook. Storing the exception value (cm.unraisable.exc_value) creates a reference cycle. The reference cycle is broken explicitly when the context manager exits. Storing the object (cm.unraisable.object) can resurrect it if it is set to an object which is being finalized. Exiting the context manager clears the stored object. Usage: with support.catch_unraisable_exception() as cm: # code creating an "unraisable exception" ... # check the unraisable exception: use cm.unraisable ... # cm.unraisable attribute no longer exists at this point # (to break a reference cycle) """ def __init__(self): self.unraisable = None self._old_hook = None def _hook(self, unraisable): # Storing unraisable.object can resurrect an object which is being # finalized. Storing unraisable.exc_value creates a reference cycle. self.unraisable = unraisable def __enter__(self): self._old_hook = sys.unraisablehook sys.unraisablehook = self._hook return self def __exit__(self, *exc_info): sys.unraisablehook = self._old_hook del self.unraisable class catch_threading_exception: """ Context manager catching threading.Thread exception using threading.excepthook. Attributes set when an exception is catched: * exc_type * exc_value * exc_traceback * thread See threading.excepthook() documentation for these attributes. These attributes are deleted at the context manager exit. Usage: with support.catch_threading_exception() as cm: # code spawning a thread which raises an exception ... # check the thread exception, use cm attributes: # exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback, thread ... # exc_type, exc_value, exc_traceback, thread attributes of cm no longer # exists at this point # (to avoid reference cycles) """ def __init__(self): self.exc_type = None self.exc_value = None self.exc_traceback = None self.thread = None self._old_hook = None def _hook(self, args): self.exc_type = args.exc_type self.exc_value = args.exc_value self.exc_traceback = args.exc_traceback self.thread = args.thread def __enter__(self): self._old_hook = threading.excepthook threading.excepthook = self._hook return self def __exit__(self, *exc_info): threading.excepthook = self._old_hook del self.exc_type del self.exc_value del self.exc_traceback del self.thread def wait_process(pid, *, exitcode, timeout=None): """ Wait until process pid completes and check that the process exit code is exitcode. Raise an AssertionError if the process exit code is not equal to exitcode. If the process runs longer than timeout seconds (SHORT_TIMEOUT by default), kill the process (if signal.SIGKILL is available) and raise an AssertionError. The timeout feature is not available on Windows. """ if os.name != "nt": import signal if timeout is None: timeout = SHORT_TIMEOUT t0 = time.monotonic() sleep = 0.001 max_sleep = 0.1 while True: pid2, status = os.waitpid(pid, os.WNOHANG) if pid2 != 0: break # process is still running dt = time.monotonic() - t0 if dt > SHORT_TIMEOUT: try: os.kill(pid, signal.SIGKILL) os.waitpid(pid, 0) except OSError: # Ignore errors like ChildProcessError or PermissionError pass raise AssertionError(f"process {pid} is still running " f"after {dt:.1f} seconds") sleep = min(sleep * 2, max_sleep) time.sleep(sleep) else: # Windows implementation pid2, status = os.waitpid(pid, 0) exitcode2 = os.waitstatus_to_exitcode(status) if exitcode2 != exitcode: raise AssertionError(f"process {pid} exited with code {exitcode2}, " f"but exit code {exitcode} is expected") # sanity check: it should not fail in practice if pid2 != pid: raise AssertionError(f"pid {pid2} != pid {pid}") def use_old_parser(): import _testinternalcapi config = _testinternalcapi.get_configs() return (config['config']['_use_peg_parser'] == 0) def skip_if_new_parser(msg): return unittest.skipIf(not use_old_parser(), msg) @contextlib.contextmanager def save_restore_warnings_filters(): old_filters = warnings.filters[:] try: yield finally: warnings.filters[:] = old_filters def skip_if_broken_multiprocessing_synchronize(): """ Skip tests if the multiprocessing.synchronize module is missing, if there is no available semaphore implementation, or if creating a lock raises an OSError (on Linux only). """ # Skip tests if the _multiprocessing extension is missing. import_module('_multiprocessing') # Skip tests if there is no available semaphore implementation: # multiprocessing.synchronize requires _multiprocessing.SemLock. synchronize = import_module('multiprocessing.synchronize') if sys.platform == "linux": try: # bpo-38377: On Linux, creating a semaphore fails with OSError # if the current user does not have the permission to create # a file in /dev/shm/ directory. synchronize.Lock(ctx=None) except OSError as exc: raise unittest.SkipTest(f"broken multiprocessing SemLock: {exc!r}") @contextlib.contextmanager def adjust_int_max_str_digits(max_digits): """Temporarily change the integer string conversion length limit.""" current = sys.get_int_max_str_digits() try: sys.set_int_max_str_digits(max_digits) yield finally: sys.set_int_max_str_digits(current)
./Ninja\.