"""Generic testing tools. Authors ------- - Fernando Perez """ from __future__ import absolute_import # Copyright (c) IPython Development Team. # Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License. import os import re import sys import tempfile from contextlib import contextmanager from io import StringIO from subprocess import Popen, PIPE try: from unittest.mock import patch except ImportError: # Python 2 compatibility from mock import patch 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 traitlets.config.loader import Config from IPython.utils.process import get_output_error_code 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 # 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 f = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(suffix=u'test_hist.sqlite', delete=False) config.HistoryManager.hist_file = f.name f.close() config.HistoryManager.db_cache_size = 10000 return config def get_ipython_cmd(as_string=False): """ Return appropriate IPython command line name. By default, this will return a list that can be used with subprocess.Popen, for example, but passing `as_string=True` allows for returning the IPython command as a string. Parameters ---------- as_string: bool Flag to allow to return the command as a string. """ ipython_cmd = [sys.executable, "-m", "IPython"] if as_string: ipython_cmd = " ".join(ipython_cmd) return ipython_cmd def ipexec(fname, options=None, commands=()): """Utility to call 'ipython filename'. Starts IPython with a 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. commands : optional, list Commands to send in on stdin Returns ------- (stdout, stderr) of ipython subprocess. """ if options is None: options = [] cmdargs = default_argv() + options test_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__) ipython_cmd = get_ipython_cmd() # Absolute path for filename full_fname = os.path.join(test_dir, fname) full_cmd = ipython_cmd + cmdargs + [full_fname] env = os.environ.copy() # FIXME: ignore all warnings in ipexec while we have shims # should we keep suppressing warnings here, even after removing shims? env['PYTHONWARNINGS'] = 'ignore' # env.pop('PYTHONWARNINGS', None) # Avoid extraneous warnings appearing on stderr for k, v in env.items(): # Debug a bizarre failure we've seen on Windows: # TypeError: environment can only contain strings if not isinstance(v, str): print(k, v) p = Popen(full_cmd, stdout=PIPE, stderr=PIPE, stdin=PIPE, env=env) out, err = p.communicate(input=py3compat.str_to_bytes('\n'.join(commands)) or None) out, err = py3compat.bytes_to_str(out), py3compat.bytes_to_str(err) # `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, commands=()): """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, commands) #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_equal("\n".join(err.strip().splitlines()), "\n".join(expected_err.strip().splitlines())) else: raise ValueError('Running file %r produced error: %r' % (fname, err)) # If no errors or output on stderr was expected, match stdout nt.assert_equal("\n".join(out.strip().splitlines()), "\n".join(expected_out.strip().splitlines())) 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 def __enter__(self): return self def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback): self.tearDown() 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__", "")) 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) _re_type = type(re.compile(r'')) notprinted_msg = """Did not find {0!r} in printed output (on {1}): ------- {2!s} ------- """ 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 if isinstance(self.s, (py3compat.string_types, _re_type)): self.s = [self.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): try: if value is not None: # If an error was raised, don't check anything else return False self.tee.flush() setattr(sys, self.channel, self.orig_stream) printed = self.buffer.getvalue() for s in self.s: if isinstance(s, _re_type): assert s.search(printed), notprinted_msg.format(s.pattern, self.channel, printed) else: assert s in printed, notprinted_msg.format(s, self.channel, printed) return False finally: self.tee.close() printed_msg = """Found {0!r} in printed output (on {1}): ------- {2!s} ------- """ class AssertNotPrints(AssertPrints): """Context manager for checking that certain output *isn't* produced. Counterpart of AssertPrints""" def __exit__(self, etype, value, traceback): try: if value is not None: # If an error was raised, don't check anything else self.tee.close() return False self.tee.flush() setattr(sys, self.channel, self.orig_stream) printed = self.buffer.getvalue() for s in self.s: if isinstance(s, _re_type): assert not s.search(printed),printed_msg.format( s.pattern, self.channel, printed) else: assert s not in printed, printed_msg.format( s, self.channel, printed) return False finally: self.tee.close() @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) def fake_input(inputs): """Temporarily replace the input() function to return the given values Use as a context manager: with fake_input(['result1', 'result2']): ... Values are returned in order. If input() is called again after the last value was used, EOFError is raised. """ it = iter(inputs) def mock_input(prompt=''): try: return next(it) except StopIteration: raise EOFError('No more inputs given') input_name = '%s.%s' % (py3compat.builtin_mod_name, 'input' if py3compat.PY3 else 'raw_input') return patch(input_name, mock_input) def help_output_test(subcommand=''): """test that `ipython [subcommand] -h` works""" cmd = get_ipython_cmd() + [subcommand, '-h'] out, err, rc = get_output_error_code(cmd) nt.assert_equal(rc, 0, err) nt.assert_not_in("Traceback", err) nt.assert_in("Options", out) nt.assert_in("--help-all", out) return out, err def help_all_output_test(subcommand=''): """test that `ipython [subcommand] --help-all` works""" cmd = get_ipython_cmd() + [subcommand, '--help-all'] out, err, rc = get_output_error_code(cmd) nt.assert_equal(rc, 0, err) nt.assert_not_in("Traceback", err) nt.assert_in("Options", out) nt.assert_in("Class parameters", out) return out, err