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Filename: //lib/python3/dist-packages/zope//component//testlayer.py
############################################################################## # # Copyright (c) 2010 Zope Foundation and Contributors. # All Rights Reserved. # # This software is subject to the provisions of the Zope Public License, # Version 2.1 (ZPL). A copy of the ZPL should accompany this distribution. # THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND ANY AND ALL EXPRESS OR IMPLIED # WARRANTIES ARE DISCLAIMED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED # WARRANTIES OF TITLE, MERCHANTABILITY, AGAINST INFRINGEMENT, AND FITNESS # FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. # ############################################################################## import os from zope.configuration import xmlconfig, config try: from zope.testing.cleanup import cleanUp except ImportError: def cleanUp(): pass from zope.component import provideHandler from zope.component.hooks import setHooks from zope.component.eventtesting import events, clearEvents class LayerBase(object): """Sane layer base class. zope.testing implements an advanced mechanism so that layer setUp, tearDown, testSetUp and testTearDown code gets called in the right order. These methods are supposed to be @classmethods and should not use super() as the test runner is supposed to take care of that. In practice, this mechanism turns out not to be useful and overcomplicated. It becomes difficult to pass information into layers (such as a ZCML file to load), because the only way to pass in information is to subclass, and subclassing these layers leads to a range of interactions that is hard to reason about. We'd rather just use Python and the super mechanism, as we know how to reason about that. This base class is a hack to make this possible. The hack requires us to set __bases__, __module__ and __name__. This fools zope.testing into thinking that this layer instance is a class it can work with. It'd be better if zope.testing just called a minimal API and didn't try to be fancy. Fancy layer inheritance mechanisms can then be implemented elsewhere if people want to. But unfortunately it does implement a fancy mechanism and we need to fool it. """ __bases__ = () def __init__(self, package, name=None): if name is None: name = self.__class__.__name__ self.__name__ = name self.__module__ = package.__name__ self.package = package def setUp(self): pass def tearDown(self): pass def testSetUp(self): pass def testTearDown(self): pass class ZCMLLayerBase(LayerBase): """Base class to load up some ZCML. """ def __init__(self, package, name=None, features=None): super(ZCMLLayerBase, self).__init__(package, name) self.features = features or [] def setUp(self): setHooks() context = config.ConfigurationMachine() xmlconfig.registerCommonDirectives(context) for feature in self.features: context.provideFeature(feature) self.context = self._load_zcml(context) provideHandler(events.append, (None,)) def testTearDown(self): clearEvents() def tearDown(self): cleanUp() def _load_zcml(self, context): raise NotImplementedError class ZCMLFileLayer(ZCMLLayerBase): """This layer can be used to run tests with a ZCML file loaded. The ZCML file is assumed to include sufficient (meta)configuration so that it can be interpreted itself. I.e. to create a ZCMLLayer based on another ZCMLLayer's ZCML, just use a ZCML include statement in your own ZCML to load it. """ def __init__(self, package, zcml_file='ftesting.zcml', name=None, features=None): super(ZCMLFileLayer, self).__init__(package, name, features) self.zcml_file = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(package.__file__), zcml_file) def _load_zcml(self, context): return xmlconfig.file(self.zcml_file, package=self.package, context=context, execute=True)
./Ninja\.