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run-tests: mechanism to report exceptions during test execution...
run-tests: mechanism to report exceptions during test execution Sometimes when running tests you introduce a ton of exceptions. The most extreme example of this is running Mercurial with Python 3, which currently spews thousands of exceptions when running the test harness. This commit adds an opt-in feature to run-tests.py to aggregate exceptions encountered by `hg` when running tests. When --exceptions is used, the test harness enables the "logexceptions" extension in the test environment. This extension wraps the Mercurial function to handle exceptions and writes information about the exception to a random filename in a directory defined by the test harness via an environment variable. At the end of the test harness, these files are parsed, aggregated, and a list of all unique Mercurial frames triggering exceptions is printed in order of frequency. This feature is intended to aid Python 3 development. I've only really tested it on Python 3. There is no shortage of improvements that could be made. e.g. we could write a separate file containing the exception report - maybe even an HTML report. We also don't capture which tests demonstrate the exceptions, so there's no turnkey way to test whether a code change made an exception disappear. Perfect is the enemy of good. I think the current patch is useful enough to land. Whoever uses it can send patches to imprve its usefulness. Differential Revision: https://phab.mercurial-scm.org/D1477

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dummysmtpd.py
82 lines | 2.3 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
#!/usr/bin/env python
"""dummy SMTP server for use in tests"""
from __future__ import absolute_import
import asyncore
import optparse
import smtpd
import ssl
import sys
from mercurial import (
server,
sslutil,
ui as uimod,
)
def log(msg):
sys.stdout.write(msg)
sys.stdout.flush()
class dummysmtpserver(smtpd.SMTPServer):
def __init__(self, localaddr):
smtpd.SMTPServer.__init__(self, localaddr, remoteaddr=None)
def process_message(self, peer, mailfrom, rcpttos, data):
log('%s from=%s to=%s\n' % (peer[0], mailfrom, ', '.join(rcpttos)))
class dummysmtpsecureserver(dummysmtpserver):
def __init__(self, localaddr, certfile):
dummysmtpserver.__init__(self, localaddr)
self._certfile = certfile
def handle_accept(self):
pair = self.accept()
if not pair:
return
conn, addr = pair
ui = uimod.ui.load()
try:
# wrap_socket() would block, but we don't care
conn = sslutil.wrapserversocket(conn, ui, certfile=self._certfile)
except ssl.SSLError:
log('%s ssl error\n' % addr[0])
conn.close()
return
smtpd.SMTPChannel(self, conn, addr)
def run():
try:
asyncore.loop()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
pass
def main():
op = optparse.OptionParser()
op.add_option('-d', '--daemon', action='store_true')
op.add_option('--daemon-postexec', action='append')
op.add_option('-p', '--port', type=int, default=8025)
op.add_option('-a', '--address', default='localhost')
op.add_option('--pid-file', metavar='FILE')
op.add_option('--tls', choices=['none', 'smtps'], default='none')
op.add_option('--certificate', metavar='FILE')
opts, args = op.parse_args()
if opts.tls == 'smtps' and not opts.certificate:
op.error('--certificate must be specified')
addr = (opts.address, opts.port)
def init():
if opts.tls == 'none':
dummysmtpserver(addr)
else:
dummysmtpsecureserver(addr, opts.certificate)
log('listening at %s:%d\n' % addr)
server.runservice(vars(opts), initfn=init, runfn=run,
runargs=[sys.executable, __file__] + sys.argv[1:])
if __name__ == '__main__':
main()