##// END OF EJS Templates
Adds configuration options to use Google Drive content manager...
Adds configuration options to use Google Drive content manager Adds the key contentmanager_js_source to webapp_settings that allows for specifying the content manager JavaScript source file. Also adds a NotebookManager subclass, ClientSideNotebookManager, which does minimal logic. This class is used when the JavaScript content manager doesn't use the Python notebook manager, but rather implements that logic client side, as is the case for the Google Drive based content manager. A sample command line that uses the Google Drive content manager, and the ClientSideNotebookManager, is ipython notebook --NotebookApp.webapp_settings="{'contentmanager_js_source': 'base/js/drive_contentmanager'}" --NotebookApp.notebook_manager_class="IPython.html.services.notebooks.clientsidenbmanager.ClientSideNotebookManager"

File last commit:

r12400:695d4711
r18639:28c27a69
Show More
test_launcher.py
58 lines | 2.0 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Tests for kernel utility functions
Authors
-------
* MinRK
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2011, the IPython Development Team.
#
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
#
# The full license is in the file COPYING.txt, distributed with this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Third-party imports
import nose.tools as nt
# Our own imports
from IPython.kernel.launcher import swallow_argv
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes and functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def test_swallow_argv():
tests = [
# expected , argv , aliases, flags
(['-a', '5'], ['-a', '5'], None, None),
(['5'], ['-a', '5'], None, ['a']),
([], ['-a', '5'], ['a'], None),
([], ['-a', '5'], ['a'], ['a']),
([], ['--foo'], None, ['foo']),
([], ['--foo'], ['foobar'], []),
([], ['--foo', '5'], ['foo'], []),
([], ['--foo=5'], ['foo'], []),
(['--foo=5'], ['--foo=5'], [], ['foo']),
(['5'], ['--foo', '5'], [], ['foo']),
(['bar'], ['--foo', '5', 'bar'], ['foo'], ['foo']),
(['bar'], ['--foo=5', 'bar'], ['foo'], ['foo']),
(['5','bar'], ['--foo', '5', 'bar'], None, ['foo']),
(['bar'], ['--foo', '5', 'bar'], ['foo'], None),
(['bar'], ['--foo=5', 'bar'], ['foo'], None),
]
for expected, argv, aliases, flags in tests:
stripped = swallow_argv(argv, aliases=aliases, flags=flags)
message = '\n'.join(['',
"argv: %r" % argv,
"aliases: %r" % aliases,
"flags : %r" % flags,
"expected : %r" % expected,
"returned : %r" % stripped,
])
nt.assert_equal(expected, stripped, message)