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tools.py
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"""Generic testing tools.
In particular, this module exposes a set of top-level assert* functions that
can be used in place of nose.tools.assert* in method generators (the ones in
nose can not, at least as of nose 0.10.4).
Authors
-------
- Fernando Perez <Fernando.Perez@berkeley.edu>
"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2009-2011 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
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
import os
import re
import sys
import tempfile
from contextlib import contextmanager
from io import StringIO
try:
# These tools are used by parts of the runtime, so we make the nose
# dependency optional at this point. Nose is a hard dependency to run the
# test suite, but NOT to use ipython itself.
import nose.tools as nt
has_nose = True
except ImportError:
has_nose = False
from IPython.config.loader import Config
from IPython.utils.process import find_cmd, getoutputerror
from IPython.utils.text import list_strings
from IPython.utils.io import temp_pyfile, Tee
from IPython.utils import py3compat
from IPython.utils.encoding import DEFAULT_ENCODING
from . import decorators as dec
from . import skipdoctest
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Make a bunch of nose.tools assert wrappers that can be used in test
# generators. This will expose an assert* function for each one in nose.tools.
_tpl = """
def %(name)s(*a,**kw):
return nt.%(name)s(*a,**kw)
"""
if has_nose:
for _x in [a for a in dir(nt) if a.startswith('assert')]:
exec _tpl % dict(name=_x)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Functions and classes
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# The docstring for full_path doctests differently on win32 (different path
# separator) so just skip the doctest there. The example remains informative.
doctest_deco = skipdoctest.skip_doctest if sys.platform == 'win32' else dec.null_deco
@doctest_deco
def full_path(startPath,files):
"""Make full paths for all the listed files, based on startPath.
Only the base part of startPath is kept, since this routine is typically
used with a script's __file__ variable as startPath. The base of startPath
is then prepended to all the listed files, forming the output list.
Parameters
----------
startPath : string
Initial path to use as the base for the results. This path is split
using os.path.split() and only its first component is kept.
files : string or list
One or more files.
Examples
--------
>>> full_path('/foo/bar.py',['a.txt','b.txt'])
['/foo/a.txt', '/foo/b.txt']
>>> full_path('/foo',['a.txt','b.txt'])
['/a.txt', '/b.txt']
If a single file is given, the output is still a list:
>>> full_path('/foo','a.txt')
['/a.txt']
"""
files = list_strings(files)
base = os.path.split(startPath)[0]
return [ os.path.join(base,f) for f in files ]
def parse_test_output(txt):
"""Parse the output of a test run and return errors, failures.
Parameters
----------
txt : str
Text output of a test run, assumed to contain a line of one of the
following forms::
'FAILED (errors=1)'
'FAILED (failures=1)'
'FAILED (errors=1, failures=1)'
Returns
-------
nerr, nfail: number of errors and failures.
"""
err_m = re.search(r'^FAILED \(errors=(\d+)\)', txt, re.MULTILINE)
if err_m:
nerr = int(err_m.group(1))
nfail = 0
return nerr, nfail
fail_m = re.search(r'^FAILED \(failures=(\d+)\)', txt, re.MULTILINE)
if fail_m:
nerr = 0
nfail = int(fail_m.group(1))
return nerr, nfail
both_m = re.search(r'^FAILED \(errors=(\d+), failures=(\d+)\)', txt,
re.MULTILINE)
if both_m:
nerr = int(both_m.group(1))
nfail = int(both_m.group(2))
return nerr, nfail
# If the input didn't match any of these forms, assume no error/failures
return 0, 0
# So nose doesn't think this is a test
parse_test_output.__test__ = False
def default_argv():
"""Return a valid default argv for creating testing instances of ipython"""
return ['--quick', # so no config file is loaded
# Other defaults to minimize side effects on stdout
'--colors=NoColor', '--no-term-title','--no-banner',
'--autocall=0']
def default_config():
"""Return a config object with good defaults for testing."""
config = Config()
config.TerminalInteractiveShell.colors = 'NoColor'
config.TerminalTerminalInteractiveShell.term_title = False,
config.TerminalInteractiveShell.autocall = 0
config.HistoryManager.hist_file = tempfile.mktemp(u'test_hist.sqlite')
config.HistoryManager.db_cache_size = 10000
return config
def ipexec(fname, options=None):
"""Utility to call 'ipython filename'.
Starts IPython witha minimal and safe configuration to make startup as fast
as possible.
Note that this starts IPython in a subprocess!
Parameters
----------
fname : str
Name of file to be executed (should have .py or .ipy extension).
options : optional, list
Extra command-line flags to be passed to IPython.
Returns
-------
(stdout, stderr) of ipython subprocess.
"""
if options is None: options = []
# For these subprocess calls, eliminate all prompt printing so we only see
# output from script execution
prompt_opts = [ '--PromptManager.in_template=""',
'--PromptManager.in2_template=""',
'--PromptManager.out_template=""'
]
cmdargs = ' '.join(default_argv() + prompt_opts + options)
_ip = get_ipython()
test_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
ipython_cmd = find_cmd('ipython3' if py3compat.PY3 else 'ipython')
# Absolute path for filename
full_fname = os.path.join(test_dir, fname)
full_cmd = '%s %s %s' % (ipython_cmd, cmdargs, full_fname)
#print >> sys.stderr, 'FULL CMD:', full_cmd # dbg
out, err = getoutputerror(full_cmd)
# `import readline` causes 'ESC[?1034h' to be output sometimes,
# so strip that out before doing comparisons
if out:
out = re.sub(r'\x1b\[[^h]+h', '', out)
return out, err
def ipexec_validate(fname, expected_out, expected_err='',
options=None):
"""Utility to call 'ipython filename' and validate output/error.
This function raises an AssertionError if the validation fails.
Note that this starts IPython in a subprocess!
Parameters
----------
fname : str
Name of the file to be executed (should have .py or .ipy extension).
expected_out : str
Expected stdout of the process.
expected_err : optional, str
Expected stderr of the process.
options : optional, list
Extra command-line flags to be passed to IPython.
Returns
-------
None
"""
import nose.tools as nt
out, err = ipexec(fname, options)
#print 'OUT', out # dbg
#print 'ERR', err # dbg
# If there are any errors, we must check those befor stdout, as they may be
# more informative than simply having an empty stdout.
if err:
if expected_err:
nt.assert_equals(err.strip(), expected_err.strip())
else:
raise ValueError('Running file %r produced error: %r' %
(fname, err))
# If no errors or output on stderr was expected, match stdout
nt.assert_equals(out.strip(), expected_out.strip())
class TempFileMixin(object):
"""Utility class to create temporary Python/IPython files.
Meant as a mixin class for test cases."""
def mktmp(self, src, ext='.py'):
"""Make a valid python temp file."""
fname, f = temp_pyfile(src, ext)
self.tmpfile = f
self.fname = fname
def tearDown(self):
if hasattr(self, 'tmpfile'):
# If the tmpfile wasn't made because of skipped tests, like in
# win32, there's nothing to cleanup.
self.tmpfile.close()
try:
os.unlink(self.fname)
except:
# On Windows, even though we close the file, we still can't
# delete it. I have no clue why
pass
pair_fail_msg = ("Testing {0}\n\n"
"In:\n"
" {1!r}\n"
"Expected:\n"
" {2!r}\n"
"Got:\n"
" {3!r}\n")
def check_pairs(func, pairs):
"""Utility function for the common case of checking a function with a
sequence of input/output pairs.
Parameters
----------
func : callable
The function to be tested. Should accept a single argument.
pairs : iterable
A list of (input, expected_output) tuples.
Returns
-------
None. Raises an AssertionError if any output does not match the expected
value.
"""
name = getattr(func, "func_name", getattr(func, "__name__", "<unknown>"))
for inp, expected in pairs:
out = func(inp)
assert out == expected, pair_fail_msg.format(name, inp, expected, out)
if py3compat.PY3:
MyStringIO = StringIO
else:
# In Python 2, stdout/stderr can have either bytes or unicode written to them,
# so we need a class that can handle both.
class MyStringIO(StringIO):
def write(self, s):
s = py3compat.cast_unicode(s, encoding=DEFAULT_ENCODING)
super(MyStringIO, self).write(s)
notprinted_msg = """Did not find {0!r} in printed output (on {1}):
{2!r}"""
class AssertPrints(object):
"""Context manager for testing that code prints certain text.
Examples
--------
>>> with AssertPrints("abc", suppress=False):
... print "abcd"
... print "def"
...
abcd
def
"""
def __init__(self, s, channel='stdout', suppress=True):
self.s = s
self.channel = channel
self.suppress = suppress
def __enter__(self):
self.orig_stream = getattr(sys, self.channel)
self.buffer = MyStringIO()
self.tee = Tee(self.buffer, channel=self.channel)
setattr(sys, self.channel, self.buffer if self.suppress else self.tee)
def __exit__(self, etype, value, traceback):
self.tee.flush()
setattr(sys, self.channel, self.orig_stream)
printed = self.buffer.getvalue()
assert self.s in printed, notprinted_msg.format(self.s, self.channel, printed)
return False
class AssertNotPrints(AssertPrints):
"""Context manager for checking that certain output *isn't* produced.
Counterpart of AssertPrints"""
def __exit__(self, etype, value, traceback):
self.tee.flush()
setattr(sys, self.channel, self.orig_stream)
printed = self.buffer.getvalue()
assert self.s not in printed, notprinted_msg.format(self.s, self.channel, printed)
return False
@contextmanager
def mute_warn():
from IPython.utils import warn
save_warn = warn.warn
warn.warn = lambda *a, **kw: None
try:
yield
finally:
warn.warn = save_warn
@contextmanager
def make_tempfile(name):
""" Create an empty, named, temporary file for the duration of the context.
"""
f = open(name, 'w')
f.close()
try:
yield
finally:
os.unlink(name)