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don't use private TestCase._exc_info() method in parametric test...
don't use private TestCase._exc_info() method in parametric test In Python 2.6, the method is one line, returning sys.exc_info(), and has been removed in Python 2.7.

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sysinfo.py
191 lines | 6.2 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# encoding: utf-8
"""
Utilities for getting information about IPython and the system it's running in.
"""
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (C) 2008-2011 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 platform
import pprint
import sys
import subprocess
from ConfigParser import ConfigParser
from IPython.core import release
from IPython.utils import py3compat
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Globals
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
COMMIT_INFO_FNAME = '.git_commit_info.ini'
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Code
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
def pkg_commit_hash(pkg_path):
"""Get short form of commit hash given directory `pkg_path`
There should be a file called 'COMMIT_INFO.txt' in `pkg_path`. This is a
file in INI file format, with at least one section: ``commit hash``, and two
variables ``archive_subst_hash`` and ``install_hash``. The first has a
substitution pattern in it which may have been filled by the execution of
``git archive`` if this is an archive generated that way. The second is
filled in by the installation, if the installation is from a git archive.
We get the commit hash from (in order of preference):
* A substituted value in ``archive_subst_hash``
* A written commit hash value in ``install_hash`
* git output, if we are in a git repository
If all these fail, we return a not-found placeholder tuple
Parameters
----------
pkg_path : str
directory containing package
Returns
-------
hash_from : str
Where we got the hash from - description
hash_str : str
short form of hash
"""
# Try and get commit from written commit text file
pth = os.path.join(pkg_path, COMMIT_INFO_FNAME)
if not os.path.isfile(pth):
raise IOError('Missing commit info file %s' % pth)
cfg_parser = ConfigParser()
cfg_parser.read(pth)
try:
archive_subst = cfg_parser.get('commit hash', 'archive_subst_hash')
except Exception:
pass
else:
if not archive_subst.startswith('$Format'): # it has been substituted
return 'archive substitution', archive_subst
install_subst = cfg_parser.get('commit hash', 'install_hash')
if install_subst != '':
return 'installation', install_subst
# maybe we are in a repository
proc = subprocess.Popen('git rev-parse --short HEAD',
stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
cwd=pkg_path, shell=True)
repo_commit, _ = proc.communicate()
if repo_commit:
return 'repository', repo_commit.strip()
return '(none found)', '<not found>'
def pkg_info(pkg_path):
"""Return dict describing the context of this package
Parameters
----------
pkg_path : str
path containing __init__.py for package
Returns
-------
context : dict
with named parameters of interest
"""
src, hsh = pkg_commit_hash(pkg_path)
return dict(
ipython_version=release.version,
ipython_path=pkg_path,
commit_source=src,
commit_hash=hsh,
sys_version=sys.version,
sys_executable=sys.executable,
sys_platform=sys.platform,
platform=platform.platform(),
os_name=os.name,
)
@py3compat.doctest_refactor_print
def sys_info():
"""Return useful information about IPython and the system, as a string.
Example
-------
In [2]: print sys_info()
{'commit_hash': '144fdae', # random
'commit_source': 'repository',
'ipython_path': '/home/fperez/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/IPython',
'ipython_version': '0.11.dev',
'os_name': 'posix',
'platform': 'Linux-2.6.35-22-generic-i686-with-Ubuntu-10.10-maverick',
'sys_executable': '/usr/bin/python',
'sys_platform': 'linux2',
'sys_version': '2.6.6 (r266:84292, Sep 15 2010, 15:52:39) \\n[GCC 4.4.5]'}
"""
p = os.path
path = p.dirname(p.abspath(p.join(__file__, '..')))
return pprint.pformat(pkg_info(path))
def _num_cpus_unix():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Unix system."""
return os.sysconf("SC_NPROCESSORS_ONLN")
def _num_cpus_darwin():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Darwin system."""
p = subprocess.Popen(['sysctl','-n','hw.ncpu'],stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
return p.stdout.read()
def _num_cpus_windows():
"""Return the number of active CPUs on a Windows system."""
return os.environ.get("NUMBER_OF_PROCESSORS")
def num_cpus():
"""Return the effective number of CPUs in the system as an integer.
This cross-platform function makes an attempt at finding the total number of
available CPUs in the system, as returned by various underlying system and
python calls.
If it can't find a sensible answer, it returns 1 (though an error *may* make
it return a large positive number that's actually incorrect).
"""
# Many thanks to the Parallel Python project (http://www.parallelpython.com)
# for the names of the keys we needed to look up for this function. This
# code was inspired by their equivalent function.
ncpufuncs = {'Linux':_num_cpus_unix,
'Darwin':_num_cpus_darwin,
'Windows':_num_cpus_windows,
# On Vista, python < 2.5.2 has a bug and returns 'Microsoft'
# See http://bugs.python.org/issue1082 for details.
'Microsoft':_num_cpus_windows,
}
ncpufunc = ncpufuncs.get(platform.system(),
# default to unix version (Solaris, AIX, etc)
_num_cpus_unix)
try:
ncpus = max(1,int(ncpufunc()))
except:
ncpus = 1
return ncpus