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protect kernelapp/qtconsole from invalid connection files...
protect kernelapp/qtconsole from invalid connection files (clean error/exit, rather than crash) also use stdlib json to load connection file, not zmq.jsonapi, which can be jsonlib2, which will return Longs, causing TraitError.

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globalipapp.py
232 lines | 8.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
"""Global IPython app to support test running.
We must start our own ipython object and heavily muck with it so that all the
modifications IPython makes to system behavior don't send the doctest machinery
into a fit. This code should be considered a gross hack, but it gets the job
done.
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
from __future__ import print_function
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2009-2010 The IPython Development Team
#
# Distributed under the terms of the BSD License. The full license is in
# the file COPYING, distributed as part of this software.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Imports
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# stdlib
import __builtin__ as builtin_mod
import os
import sys
# our own
from . import tools
from IPython.utils import io
from IPython.utils import py3compat
from IPython.frontend.terminal.interactiveshell import TerminalInteractiveShell
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
class StreamProxy(io.IOStream):
"""Proxy for sys.stdout/err. This will request the stream *at call time*
allowing for nose's Capture plugin's redirection of sys.stdout/err.
Parameters
----------
name : str
The name of the stream. This will be requested anew at every call
"""
def __init__(self, name):
self.name=name
@property
def stream(self):
return getattr(sys, self.name)
def flush(self):
self.stream.flush()
# Hack to modify the %run command so we can sync the user's namespace with the
# test globals. Once we move over to a clean magic system, this will be done
# with much less ugliness.
class py_file_finder(object):
def __init__(self,test_filename):
self.test_filename = test_filename
def __call__(self,name,win32=False):
from IPython.utils.path import get_py_filename
try:
return get_py_filename(name,win32=win32)
except IOError:
test_dir = os.path.dirname(self.test_filename)
new_path = os.path.join(test_dir,name)
return get_py_filename(new_path,win32=win32)
def _run_ns_sync(self,arg_s,runner=None):
"""Modified version of %run that syncs testing namespaces.
This is strictly needed for running doctests that call %run.
"""
#print('in run_ns_sync', arg_s, file=sys.stderr) # dbg
finder = py_file_finder(arg_s)
return get_ipython().magic_run_ori(arg_s, runner, finder)
class ipnsdict(dict):
"""A special subclass of dict for use as an IPython namespace in doctests.
This subclass adds a simple checkpointing capability so that when testing
machinery clears it (we use it as the test execution context), it doesn't
get completely destroyed.
In addition, it can handle the presence of the '_' key in a special manner,
which is needed because of how Python's doctest machinery operates with
'_'. See constructor and :meth:`update` for details.
"""
def __init__(self,*a):
dict.__init__(self,*a)
self._savedict = {}
# If this flag is True, the .update() method will unconditionally
# remove a key named '_'. This is so that such a dict can be used as a
# namespace in doctests that call '_'.
self.protect_underscore = False
def clear(self):
dict.clear(self)
self.update(self._savedict)
def _checkpoint(self):
self._savedict.clear()
self._savedict.update(self)
def update(self,other):
self._checkpoint()
dict.update(self,other)
if self.protect_underscore:
# If '_' is in the namespace, python won't set it when executing
# code *in doctests*, and we have multiple doctests that use '_'.
# So we ensure that the namespace is always 'clean' of it before
# it's used for test code execution.
# This flag is only turned on by the doctest machinery, so that
# normal test code can assume the _ key is updated like any other
# key and can test for its presence after cell executions.
self.pop('_', None)
# The builtins namespace must *always* be the real __builtin__ module,
# else weird stuff happens. The main ipython code does have provisions
# to ensure this after %run, but since in this class we do some
# aggressive low-level cleaning of the execution namespace, we need to
# correct for that ourselves, to ensure consitency with the 'real'
# ipython.
self['__builtins__'] = builtin_mod
def __delitem__(self, key):
"""Part of the test suite checks that we can release all
references to an object. So we need to make sure that we're not
keeping a reference in _savedict."""
dict.__delitem__(self, key)
try:
del self._savedict[key]
except KeyError:
pass
def get_ipython():
# This will get replaced by the real thing once we start IPython below
return start_ipython()
# A couple of methods to override those in the running IPython to interact
# better with doctest (doctest captures on raw stdout, so we need to direct
# various types of output there otherwise it will miss them).
def xsys(self, cmd):
"""Replace the default system call with a capturing one for doctest.
"""
# We use getoutput, but we need to strip it because pexpect captures
# the trailing newline differently from commands.getoutput
print(self.getoutput(cmd, split=False).rstrip(), end='', file=sys.stdout)
sys.stdout.flush()
def _showtraceback(self, etype, evalue, stb):
"""Print the traceback purely on stdout for doctest to capture it.
"""
print(self.InteractiveTB.stb2text(stb), file=sys.stdout)
def start_ipython():
"""Start a global IPython shell, which we need for IPython-specific syntax.
"""
global get_ipython
# This function should only ever run once!
if hasattr(start_ipython, 'already_called'):
return
start_ipython.already_called = True
# Store certain global objects that IPython modifies
_displayhook = sys.displayhook
_excepthook = sys.excepthook
_main = sys.modules.get('__main__')
# Create custom argv and namespaces for our IPython to be test-friendly
config = tools.default_config()
# Create and initialize our test-friendly IPython instance.
shell = TerminalInteractiveShell.instance(config=config,
user_ns=ipnsdict(),
user_global_ns={}
)
# A few more tweaks needed for playing nicely with doctests...
# remove history file
shell.tempfiles.append(config.HistoryManager.hist_file)
# These traps are normally only active for interactive use, set them
# permanently since we'll be mocking interactive sessions.
shell.builtin_trap.activate()
# Modify the IPython system call with one that uses getoutput, so that we
# can capture subcommands and print them to Python's stdout, otherwise the
# doctest machinery would miss them.
shell.system = py3compat.MethodType(xsys, shell)
shell._showtraceback = py3compat.MethodType(_showtraceback, shell)
# IPython is ready, now clean up some global state...
# Deactivate the various python system hooks added by ipython for
# interactive convenience so we don't confuse the doctest system
sys.modules['__main__'] = _main
sys.displayhook = _displayhook
sys.excepthook = _excepthook
# So that ipython magics and aliases can be doctested (they work by making
# a call into a global _ip object). Also make the top-level get_ipython
# now return this without recursively calling here again.
_ip = shell
get_ipython = _ip.get_ipython
builtin_mod._ip = _ip
builtin_mod.get_ipython = get_ipython
# To avoid extra IPython messages during testing, suppress io.stdout/stderr
io.stdout = StreamProxy('stdout')
io.stderr = StreamProxy('stderr')
return _ip