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			3020 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			103 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			3020 lines
		
	
	
	
		
			103 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
	
	
| """Supporting definitions for the Python regression tests."""
 | |
| 
 | |
| if __name__ != 'test.support':
 | |
|     raise ImportError('support must be imported from the test package')
 | |
| 
 | |
| import asyncio.events
 | |
| import collections.abc
 | |
| import contextlib
 | |
| import datetime
 | |
| import errno
 | |
| import faulthandler
 | |
| import fnmatch
 | |
| import functools
 | |
| import gc
 | |
| import importlib
 | |
| import importlib.util
 | |
| import io
 | |
| import logging.handlers
 | |
| import nntplib
 | |
| import os
 | |
| import platform
 | |
| import re
 | |
| import shutil
 | |
| import socket
 | |
| import stat
 | |
| import struct
 | |
| import subprocess
 | |
| import sys
 | |
| import sysconfig
 | |
| import tempfile
 | |
| import _thread
 | |
| import threading
 | |
| import time
 | |
| import types
 | |
| import unittest
 | |
| import urllib.error
 | |
| import warnings
 | |
| 
 | |
| from .testresult import get_test_runner
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import multiprocessing.process
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     multiprocessing = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import zlib
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     zlib = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import gzip
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     gzip = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import bz2
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     bz2 = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import lzma
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     lzma = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| try:
 | |
|     import resource
 | |
| except ImportError:
 | |
|     resource = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| __all__ = [
 | |
|     # globals
 | |
|     "PIPE_MAX_SIZE", "verbose", "max_memuse", "use_resources", "failfast",
 | |
|     # exceptions
 | |
|     "Error", "TestFailed", "TestDidNotRun", "ResourceDenied",
 | |
|     # imports
 | |
|     "import_module", "import_fresh_module", "CleanImport",
 | |
|     # modules
 | |
|     "unload", "forget",
 | |
|     # io
 | |
|     "record_original_stdout", "get_original_stdout", "captured_stdout",
 | |
|     "captured_stdin", "captured_stderr",
 | |
|     # filesystem
 | |
|     "TESTFN", "SAVEDCWD", "unlink", "rmtree", "temp_cwd", "findfile",
 | |
|     "create_empty_file", "can_symlink", "fs_is_case_insensitive",
 | |
|     # unittest
 | |
|     "is_resource_enabled", "requires", "requires_freebsd_version",
 | |
|     "requires_linux_version", "requires_mac_ver", "check_syntax_error",
 | |
|     "check_syntax_warning",
 | |
|     "TransientResource", "time_out", "socket_peer_reset", "ioerror_peer_reset",
 | |
|     "transient_internet", "BasicTestRunner", "run_unittest", "run_doctest",
 | |
|     "skip_unless_symlink", "requires_gzip", "requires_bz2", "requires_lzma",
 | |
|     "bigmemtest", "bigaddrspacetest", "cpython_only", "get_attribute",
 | |
|     "requires_IEEE_754", "skip_unless_xattr", "requires_zlib",
 | |
|     "anticipate_failure", "load_package_tests", "detect_api_mismatch",
 | |
|     "check__all__", "skip_unless_bind_unix_socket",
 | |
|     "ignore_warnings",
 | |
|     # sys
 | |
|     "is_jython", "is_android", "check_impl_detail", "unix_shell",
 | |
|     "setswitchinterval",
 | |
|     # network
 | |
|     "HOST", "IPV6_ENABLED", "find_unused_port", "bind_port", "open_urlresource",
 | |
|     "bind_unix_socket",
 | |
|     # processes
 | |
|     'temp_umask', "reap_children",
 | |
|     # logging
 | |
|     "TestHandler",
 | |
|     # threads
 | |
|     "threading_setup", "threading_cleanup", "reap_threads", "start_threads",
 | |
|     # miscellaneous
 | |
|     "check_warnings", "check_no_resource_warning", "check_no_warnings",
 | |
|     "EnvironmentVarGuard",
 | |
|     "run_with_locale", "swap_item",
 | |
|     "swap_attr", "Matcher", "set_memlimit", "SuppressCrashReport", "sortdict",
 | |
|     "run_with_tz", "PGO", "missing_compiler_executable", "fd_count",
 | |
|     ]
 | |
| 
 | |
| class Error(Exception):
 | |
|     """Base class for regression test exceptions."""
 | |
| 
 | |
| class TestFailed(Error):
 | |
|     """Test failed."""
 | |
| 
 | |
| class TestDidNotRun(Error):
 | |
|     """Test did not run any subtests."""
 | |
| 
 | |
| class ResourceDenied(unittest.SkipTest):
 | |
|     """Test skipped because it requested a disallowed resource.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This is raised when a test calls requires() for a resource that
 | |
|     has not be enabled.  It is used to distinguish between expected
 | |
|     and unexpected skips.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def _ignore_deprecated_imports(ignore=True):
 | |
|     """Context manager to suppress package and module deprecation
 | |
|     warnings when importing them.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If ignore is False, this context manager has no effect.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if ignore:
 | |
|         with warnings.catch_warnings():
 | |
|             warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", ".+ (module|package)",
 | |
|                                     DeprecationWarning)
 | |
|             yield
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         yield
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def ignore_warnings(*, category):
 | |
|     """Decorator to suppress deprecation warnings.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Use of context managers to hide warnings make diffs
 | |
|     more noisy and tools like 'git blame' less useful.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def decorator(test):
 | |
|         @functools.wraps(test)
 | |
|         def wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
 | |
|             with warnings.catch_warnings():
 | |
|                 warnings.simplefilter('ignore', category=category)
 | |
|                 return test(self, *args, **kwargs)
 | |
|         return wrapper
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def import_module(name, deprecated=False, *, required_on=()):
 | |
|     """Import and return the module to be tested, raising SkipTest if
 | |
|     it is not available.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If deprecated is True, any module or package deprecation messages
 | |
|     will be suppressed. If a module is required on a platform but optional for
 | |
|     others, set required_on to an iterable of platform prefixes which will be
 | |
|     compared against sys.platform.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     with _ignore_deprecated_imports(deprecated):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             return importlib.import_module(name)
 | |
|         except ImportError as msg:
 | |
|             if sys.platform.startswith(tuple(required_on)):
 | |
|                 raise
 | |
|             raise unittest.SkipTest(str(msg))
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _save_and_remove_module(name, orig_modules):
 | |
|     """Helper function to save and remove a module from sys.modules
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Raise ImportError if the module can't be imported.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     # try to import the module and raise an error if it can't be imported
 | |
|     if name not in sys.modules:
 | |
|         __import__(name)
 | |
|         del sys.modules[name]
 | |
|     for modname in list(sys.modules):
 | |
|         if modname == name or modname.startswith(name + '.'):
 | |
|             orig_modules[modname] = sys.modules[modname]
 | |
|             del sys.modules[modname]
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _save_and_block_module(name, orig_modules):
 | |
|     """Helper function to save and block a module in sys.modules
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Return True if the module was in sys.modules, False otherwise.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     saved = True
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         orig_modules[name] = sys.modules[name]
 | |
|     except KeyError:
 | |
|         saved = False
 | |
|     sys.modules[name] = None
 | |
|     return saved
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def anticipate_failure(condition):
 | |
|     """Decorator to mark a test that is known to be broken in some cases
 | |
| 
 | |
|        Any use of this decorator should have a comment identifying the
 | |
|        associated tracker issue.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if condition:
 | |
|         return unittest.expectedFailure
 | |
|     return lambda f: f
 | |
| 
 | |
| def load_package_tests(pkg_dir, loader, standard_tests, pattern):
 | |
|     """Generic load_tests implementation for simple test packages.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Most packages can implement load_tests using this function as follows:
 | |
| 
 | |
|        def load_tests(*args):
 | |
|            return load_package_tests(os.path.dirname(__file__), *args)
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if pattern is None:
 | |
|         pattern = "test*"
 | |
|     top_dir = os.path.dirname(              # Lib
 | |
|                   os.path.dirname(              # test
 | |
|                       os.path.dirname(__file__)))   # support
 | |
|     package_tests = loader.discover(start_dir=pkg_dir,
 | |
|                                     top_level_dir=top_dir,
 | |
|                                     pattern=pattern)
 | |
|     standard_tests.addTests(package_tests)
 | |
|     return standard_tests
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def import_fresh_module(name, fresh=(), blocked=(), deprecated=False):
 | |
|     """Import and return a module, deliberately bypassing sys.modules.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This function imports and returns a fresh copy of the named Python module
 | |
|     by removing the named module from sys.modules before doing the import.
 | |
|     Note that unlike reload, the original module is not affected by
 | |
|     this operation.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     *fresh* is an iterable of additional module names that are also removed
 | |
|     from the sys.modules cache before doing the import.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     *blocked* is an iterable of module names that are replaced with None
 | |
|     in the module cache during the import to ensure that attempts to import
 | |
|     them raise ImportError.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The named module and any modules named in the *fresh* and *blocked*
 | |
|     parameters are saved before starting the import and then reinserted into
 | |
|     sys.modules when the fresh import is complete.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Module and package deprecation messages are suppressed during this import
 | |
|     if *deprecated* is True.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This function will raise ImportError if the named module cannot be
 | |
|     imported.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     # NOTE: test_heapq, test_json and test_warnings include extra sanity checks
 | |
|     # to make sure that this utility function is working as expected
 | |
|     with _ignore_deprecated_imports(deprecated):
 | |
|         # Keep track of modules saved for later restoration as well
 | |
|         # as those which just need a blocking entry removed
 | |
|         orig_modules = {}
 | |
|         names_to_remove = []
 | |
|         _save_and_remove_module(name, orig_modules)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             for fresh_name in fresh:
 | |
|                 _save_and_remove_module(fresh_name, orig_modules)
 | |
|             for blocked_name in blocked:
 | |
|                 if not _save_and_block_module(blocked_name, orig_modules):
 | |
|                     names_to_remove.append(blocked_name)
 | |
|             fresh_module = importlib.import_module(name)
 | |
|         except ImportError:
 | |
|             fresh_module = None
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             for orig_name, module in orig_modules.items():
 | |
|                 sys.modules[orig_name] = module
 | |
|             for name_to_remove in names_to_remove:
 | |
|                 del sys.modules[name_to_remove]
 | |
|         return fresh_module
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def get_attribute(obj, name):
 | |
|     """Get an attribute, raising SkipTest if AttributeError is raised."""
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         attribute = getattr(obj, name)
 | |
|     except AttributeError:
 | |
|         raise unittest.SkipTest("object %r has no attribute %r" % (obj, name))
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return attribute
 | |
| 
 | |
| verbose = 1              # Flag set to 0 by regrtest.py
 | |
| use_resources = None     # Flag set to [] by regrtest.py
 | |
| max_memuse = 0           # Disable bigmem tests (they will still be run with
 | |
|                          # small sizes, to make sure they work.)
 | |
| real_max_memuse = 0
 | |
| junit_xml_list = None    # list of testsuite XML elements
 | |
| failfast = False
 | |
| 
 | |
| # _original_stdout is meant to hold stdout at the time regrtest began.
 | |
| # This may be "the real" stdout, or IDLE's emulation of stdout, or whatever.
 | |
| # The point is to have some flavor of stdout the user can actually see.
 | |
| _original_stdout = None
 | |
| def record_original_stdout(stdout):
 | |
|     global _original_stdout
 | |
|     _original_stdout = stdout
 | |
| 
 | |
| def get_original_stdout():
 | |
|     return _original_stdout or sys.stdout
 | |
| 
 | |
| def unload(name):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         del sys.modules[name]
 | |
|     except KeyError:
 | |
|         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _force_run(path, func, *args):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         return func(*args)
 | |
|     except OSError as err:
 | |
|         if verbose >= 2:
 | |
|             print('%s: %s' % (err.__class__.__name__, err))
 | |
|             print('re-run %s%r' % (func.__name__, args))
 | |
|         os.chmod(path, stat.S_IRWXU)
 | |
|         return func(*args)
 | |
| 
 | |
| if sys.platform.startswith("win"):
 | |
|     def _waitfor(func, pathname, waitall=False):
 | |
|         # Perform the operation
 | |
|         func(pathname)
 | |
|         # Now setup the wait loop
 | |
|         if waitall:
 | |
|             dirname = pathname
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             dirname, name = os.path.split(pathname)
 | |
|             dirname = dirname or '.'
 | |
|         # Check for `pathname` to be removed from the filesystem.
 | |
|         # The exponential backoff of the timeout amounts to a total
 | |
|         # of ~1 second after which the deletion is probably an error
 | |
|         # anyway.
 | |
|         # Testing on an i7@4.3GHz shows that usually only 1 iteration is
 | |
|         # required when contention occurs.
 | |
|         timeout = 0.001
 | |
|         while timeout < 1.0:
 | |
|             # Note we are only testing for the existence of the file(s) in
 | |
|             # the contents of the directory regardless of any security or
 | |
|             # access rights.  If we have made it this far, we have sufficient
 | |
|             # permissions to do that much using Python's equivalent of the
 | |
|             # Windows API FindFirstFile.
 | |
|             # Other Windows APIs can fail or give incorrect results when
 | |
|             # dealing with files that are pending deletion.
 | |
|             L = os.listdir(dirname)
 | |
|             if not (L if waitall else name in L):
 | |
|                 return
 | |
|             # Increase the timeout and try again
 | |
|             time.sleep(timeout)
 | |
|             timeout *= 2
 | |
|         warnings.warn('tests may fail, delete still pending for ' + pathname,
 | |
|                       RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=4)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _unlink(filename):
 | |
|         _waitfor(os.unlink, filename)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _rmdir(dirname):
 | |
|         _waitfor(os.rmdir, dirname)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _rmtree(path):
 | |
|         def _rmtree_inner(path):
 | |
|             for name in _force_run(path, os.listdir, path):
 | |
|                 fullname = os.path.join(path, name)
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     mode = os.lstat(fullname).st_mode
 | |
|                 except OSError as exc:
 | |
|                     print("support.rmtree(): os.lstat(%r) failed with %s" % (fullname, exc),
 | |
|                           file=sys.__stderr__)
 | |
|                     mode = 0
 | |
|                 if stat.S_ISDIR(mode):
 | |
|                     _waitfor(_rmtree_inner, fullname, waitall=True)
 | |
|                     _force_run(fullname, os.rmdir, fullname)
 | |
|                 else:
 | |
|                     _force_run(fullname, os.unlink, fullname)
 | |
|         _waitfor(_rmtree_inner, path, waitall=True)
 | |
|         _waitfor(lambda p: _force_run(p, os.rmdir, p), path)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _longpath(path):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             import ctypes
 | |
|         except ImportError:
 | |
|             # No ctypes means we can't expands paths.
 | |
|             pass
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             buffer = ctypes.create_unicode_buffer(len(path) * 2)
 | |
|             length = ctypes.windll.kernel32.GetLongPathNameW(path, buffer,
 | |
|                                                              len(buffer))
 | |
|             if length:
 | |
|                 return buffer[:length]
 | |
|         return path
 | |
| else:
 | |
|     _unlink = os.unlink
 | |
|     _rmdir = os.rmdir
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _rmtree(path):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             shutil.rmtree(path)
 | |
|             return
 | |
|         except OSError:
 | |
|             pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|         def _rmtree_inner(path):
 | |
|             for name in _force_run(path, os.listdir, path):
 | |
|                 fullname = os.path.join(path, name)
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     mode = os.lstat(fullname).st_mode
 | |
|                 except OSError:
 | |
|                     mode = 0
 | |
|                 if stat.S_ISDIR(mode):
 | |
|                     _rmtree_inner(fullname)
 | |
|                     _force_run(path, os.rmdir, fullname)
 | |
|                 else:
 | |
|                     _force_run(path, os.unlink, fullname)
 | |
|         _rmtree_inner(path)
 | |
|         os.rmdir(path)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def _longpath(path):
 | |
|         return path
 | |
| 
 | |
| def unlink(filename):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         _unlink(filename)
 | |
|     except (FileNotFoundError, NotADirectoryError):
 | |
|         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| def rmdir(dirname):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         _rmdir(dirname)
 | |
|     except FileNotFoundError:
 | |
|         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| def rmtree(path):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         _rmtree(path)
 | |
|     except FileNotFoundError:
 | |
|         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| def make_legacy_pyc(source):
 | |
|     """Move a PEP 3147/488 pyc file to its legacy pyc location.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     :param source: The file system path to the source file.  The source file
 | |
|         does not need to exist, however the PEP 3147/488 pyc file must exist.
 | |
|     :return: The file system path to the legacy pyc file.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     pyc_file = importlib.util.cache_from_source(source)
 | |
|     up_one = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(source))
 | |
|     legacy_pyc = os.path.join(up_one, source + 'c')
 | |
|     os.rename(pyc_file, legacy_pyc)
 | |
|     return legacy_pyc
 | |
| 
 | |
| def forget(modname):
 | |
|     """'Forget' a module was ever imported.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This removes the module from sys.modules and deletes any PEP 3147/488 or
 | |
|     legacy .pyc files.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     unload(modname)
 | |
|     for dirname in sys.path:
 | |
|         source = os.path.join(dirname, modname + '.py')
 | |
|         # It doesn't matter if they exist or not, unlink all possible
 | |
|         # combinations of PEP 3147/488 and legacy pyc files.
 | |
|         unlink(source + 'c')
 | |
|         for opt in ('', 1, 2):
 | |
|             unlink(importlib.util.cache_from_source(source, optimization=opt))
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Check whether a gui is actually available
 | |
| def _is_gui_available():
 | |
|     if hasattr(_is_gui_available, 'result'):
 | |
|         return _is_gui_available.result
 | |
|     reason = None
 | |
|     if sys.platform.startswith('win'):
 | |
|         # if Python is running as a service (such as the buildbot service),
 | |
|         # gui interaction may be disallowed
 | |
|         import ctypes
 | |
|         import ctypes.wintypes
 | |
|         UOI_FLAGS = 1
 | |
|         WSF_VISIBLE = 0x0001
 | |
|         class USEROBJECTFLAGS(ctypes.Structure):
 | |
|             _fields_ = [("fInherit", ctypes.wintypes.BOOL),
 | |
|                         ("fReserved", ctypes.wintypes.BOOL),
 | |
|                         ("dwFlags", ctypes.wintypes.DWORD)]
 | |
|         dll = ctypes.windll.user32
 | |
|         h = dll.GetProcessWindowStation()
 | |
|         if not h:
 | |
|             raise ctypes.WinError()
 | |
|         uof = USEROBJECTFLAGS()
 | |
|         needed = ctypes.wintypes.DWORD()
 | |
|         res = dll.GetUserObjectInformationW(h,
 | |
|             UOI_FLAGS,
 | |
|             ctypes.byref(uof),
 | |
|             ctypes.sizeof(uof),
 | |
|             ctypes.byref(needed))
 | |
|         if not res:
 | |
|             raise ctypes.WinError()
 | |
|         if not bool(uof.dwFlags & WSF_VISIBLE):
 | |
|             reason = "gui not available (WSF_VISIBLE flag not set)"
 | |
|     elif sys.platform == 'darwin':
 | |
|         # The Aqua Tk implementations on OS X can abort the process if
 | |
|         # being called in an environment where a window server connection
 | |
|         # cannot be made, for instance when invoked by a buildbot or ssh
 | |
|         # process not running under the same user id as the current console
 | |
|         # user.  To avoid that, raise an exception if the window manager
 | |
|         # connection is not available.
 | |
|         from ctypes import cdll, c_int, pointer, Structure
 | |
|         from ctypes.util import find_library
 | |
| 
 | |
|         app_services = cdll.LoadLibrary(find_library("ApplicationServices"))
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if app_services.CGMainDisplayID() == 0:
 | |
|             reason = "gui tests cannot run without OS X window manager"
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             class ProcessSerialNumber(Structure):
 | |
|                 _fields_ = [("highLongOfPSN", c_int),
 | |
|                             ("lowLongOfPSN", c_int)]
 | |
|             psn = ProcessSerialNumber()
 | |
|             psn_p = pointer(psn)
 | |
|             if (  (app_services.GetCurrentProcess(psn_p) < 0) or
 | |
|                   (app_services.SetFrontProcess(psn_p) < 0) ):
 | |
|                 reason = "cannot run without OS X gui process"
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # check on every platform whether tkinter can actually do anything
 | |
|     if not reason:
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             from tkinter import Tk
 | |
|             root = Tk()
 | |
|             root.withdraw()
 | |
|             root.update()
 | |
|             root.destroy()
 | |
|         except Exception as e:
 | |
|             err_string = str(e)
 | |
|             if len(err_string) > 50:
 | |
|                 err_string = err_string[:50] + ' [...]'
 | |
|             reason = 'Tk unavailable due to {}: {}'.format(type(e).__name__,
 | |
|                                                            err_string)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     _is_gui_available.reason = reason
 | |
|     _is_gui_available.result = not reason
 | |
| 
 | |
|     return _is_gui_available.result
 | |
| 
 | |
| def is_resource_enabled(resource):
 | |
|     """Test whether a resource is enabled.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Known resources are set by regrtest.py.  If not running under regrtest.py,
 | |
|     all resources are assumed enabled unless use_resources has been set.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return use_resources is None or resource in use_resources
 | |
| 
 | |
| def requires(resource, msg=None):
 | |
|     """Raise ResourceDenied if the specified resource is not available."""
 | |
|     if not is_resource_enabled(resource):
 | |
|         if msg is None:
 | |
|             msg = "Use of the %r resource not enabled" % resource
 | |
|         raise ResourceDenied(msg)
 | |
|     if resource == 'gui' and not _is_gui_available():
 | |
|         raise ResourceDenied(_is_gui_available.reason)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _requires_unix_version(sysname, min_version):
 | |
|     """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is `sysname` and the version is less
 | |
|     than `min_version`.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     For example, @_requires_unix_version('FreeBSD', (7, 2)) raises SkipTest if
 | |
|     the FreeBSD version is less than 7.2.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def decorator(func):
 | |
|         @functools.wraps(func)
 | |
|         def wrapper(*args, **kw):
 | |
|             if platform.system() == sysname:
 | |
|                 version_txt = platform.release().split('-', 1)[0]
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     version = tuple(map(int, version_txt.split('.')))
 | |
|                 except ValueError:
 | |
|                     pass
 | |
|                 else:
 | |
|                     if version < min_version:
 | |
|                         min_version_txt = '.'.join(map(str, min_version))
 | |
|                         raise unittest.SkipTest(
 | |
|                             "%s version %s or higher required, not %s"
 | |
|                             % (sysname, min_version_txt, version_txt))
 | |
|             return func(*args, **kw)
 | |
|         wrapper.min_version = min_version
 | |
|         return wrapper
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| def requires_freebsd_version(*min_version):
 | |
|     """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is FreeBSD and the FreeBSD version is
 | |
|     less than `min_version`.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     For example, @requires_freebsd_version(7, 2) raises SkipTest if the FreeBSD
 | |
|     version is less than 7.2.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return _requires_unix_version('FreeBSD', min_version)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def requires_linux_version(*min_version):
 | |
|     """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is Linux and the Linux version is
 | |
|     less than `min_version`.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     For example, @requires_linux_version(2, 6, 32) raises SkipTest if the Linux
 | |
|     version is less than 2.6.32.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return _requires_unix_version('Linux', min_version)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def requires_mac_ver(*min_version):
 | |
|     """Decorator raising SkipTest if the OS is Mac OS X and the OS X
 | |
|     version if less than min_version.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     For example, @requires_mac_ver(10, 5) raises SkipTest if the OS X version
 | |
|     is lesser than 10.5.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def decorator(func):
 | |
|         @functools.wraps(func)
 | |
|         def wrapper(*args, **kw):
 | |
|             if sys.platform == 'darwin':
 | |
|                 version_txt = platform.mac_ver()[0]
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     version = tuple(map(int, version_txt.split('.')))
 | |
|                 except ValueError:
 | |
|                     pass
 | |
|                 else:
 | |
|                     if version < min_version:
 | |
|                         min_version_txt = '.'.join(map(str, min_version))
 | |
|                         raise unittest.SkipTest(
 | |
|                             "Mac OS X %s or higher required, not %s"
 | |
|                             % (min_version_txt, version_txt))
 | |
|             return func(*args, **kw)
 | |
|         wrapper.min_version = min_version
 | |
|         return wrapper
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| HOST = "localhost"
 | |
| HOSTv4 = "127.0.0.1"
 | |
| HOSTv6 = "::1"
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def find_unused_port(family=socket.AF_INET, socktype=socket.SOCK_STREAM):
 | |
|     """Returns an unused port that should be suitable for binding.  This is
 | |
|     achieved by creating a temporary socket with the same family and type as
 | |
|     the 'sock' parameter (default is AF_INET, SOCK_STREAM), and binding it to
 | |
|     the specified host address (defaults to 0.0.0.0) with the port set to 0,
 | |
|     eliciting an unused ephemeral port from the OS.  The temporary socket is
 | |
|     then closed and deleted, and the ephemeral port is returned.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Either this method or bind_port() should be used for any tests where a
 | |
|     server socket needs to be bound to a particular port for the duration of
 | |
|     the test.  Which one to use depends on whether the calling code is creating
 | |
|     a python socket, or if an unused port needs to be provided in a constructor
 | |
|     or passed to an external program (i.e. the -accept argument to openssl's
 | |
|     s_server mode).  Always prefer bind_port() over find_unused_port() where
 | |
|     possible.  Hard coded ports should *NEVER* be used.  As soon as a server
 | |
|     socket is bound to a hard coded port, the ability to run multiple instances
 | |
|     of the test simultaneously on the same host is compromised, which makes the
 | |
|     test a ticking time bomb in a buildbot environment. On Unix buildbots, this
 | |
|     may simply manifest as a failed test, which can be recovered from without
 | |
|     intervention in most cases, but on Windows, the entire python process can
 | |
|     completely and utterly wedge, requiring someone to log in to the buildbot
 | |
|     and manually kill the affected process.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     (This is easy to reproduce on Windows, unfortunately, and can be traced to
 | |
|     the SO_REUSEADDR socket option having different semantics on Windows versus
 | |
|     Unix/Linux.  On Unix, you can't have two AF_INET SOCK_STREAM sockets bind,
 | |
|     listen and then accept connections on identical host/ports.  An EADDRINUSE
 | |
|     OSError will be raised at some point (depending on the platform and
 | |
|     the order bind and listen were called on each socket).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     However, on Windows, if SO_REUSEADDR is set on the sockets, no EADDRINUSE
 | |
|     will ever be raised when attempting to bind two identical host/ports. When
 | |
|     accept() is called on each socket, the second caller's process will steal
 | |
|     the port from the first caller, leaving them both in an awkwardly wedged
 | |
|     state where they'll no longer respond to any signals or graceful kills, and
 | |
|     must be forcibly killed via OpenProcess()/TerminateProcess().
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The solution on Windows is to use the SO_EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE socket option
 | |
|     instead of SO_REUSEADDR, which effectively affords the same semantics as
 | |
|     SO_REUSEADDR on Unix.  Given the propensity of Unix developers in the Open
 | |
|     Source world compared to Windows ones, this is a common mistake.  A quick
 | |
|     look over OpenSSL's 0.9.8g source shows that they use SO_REUSEADDR when
 | |
|     openssl.exe is called with the 's_server' option, for example. See
 | |
|     http://bugs.python.org/issue2550 for more info.  The following site also
 | |
|     has a very thorough description about the implications of both REUSEADDR
 | |
|     and EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE on Windows:
 | |
|     http://msdn2.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms740621(VS.85).aspx)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     XXX: although this approach is a vast improvement on previous attempts to
 | |
|     elicit unused ports, it rests heavily on the assumption that the ephemeral
 | |
|     port returned to us by the OS won't immediately be dished back out to some
 | |
|     other process when we close and delete our temporary socket but before our
 | |
|     calling code has a chance to bind the returned port.  We can deal with this
 | |
|     issue if/when we come across it.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     with socket.socket(family, socktype) as tempsock:
 | |
|         port = bind_port(tempsock)
 | |
|     del tempsock
 | |
|     return port
 | |
| 
 | |
| def bind_port(sock, host=HOST):
 | |
|     """Bind the socket to a free port and return the port number.  Relies on
 | |
|     ephemeral ports in order to ensure we are using an unbound port.  This is
 | |
|     important as many tests may be running simultaneously, especially in a
 | |
|     buildbot environment.  This method raises an exception if the sock.family
 | |
|     is AF_INET and sock.type is SOCK_STREAM, *and* the socket has SO_REUSEADDR
 | |
|     or SO_REUSEPORT set on it.  Tests should *never* set these socket options
 | |
|     for TCP/IP sockets.  The only case for setting these options is testing
 | |
|     multicasting via multiple UDP sockets.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Additionally, if the SO_EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE socket option is available (i.e.
 | |
|     on Windows), it will be set on the socket.  This will prevent anyone else
 | |
|     from bind()'ing to our host/port for the duration of the test.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if sock.family == socket.AF_INET and sock.type == socket.SOCK_STREAM:
 | |
|         if hasattr(socket, 'SO_REUSEADDR'):
 | |
|             if sock.getsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR) == 1:
 | |
|                 raise TestFailed("tests should never set the SO_REUSEADDR "   \
 | |
|                                  "socket option on TCP/IP sockets!")
 | |
|         if hasattr(socket, 'SO_REUSEPORT'):
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 if sock.getsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEPORT) == 1:
 | |
|                     raise TestFailed("tests should never set the SO_REUSEPORT "   \
 | |
|                                      "socket option on TCP/IP sockets!")
 | |
|             except OSError:
 | |
|                 # Python's socket module was compiled using modern headers
 | |
|                 # thus defining SO_REUSEPORT but this process is running
 | |
|                 # under an older kernel that does not support SO_REUSEPORT.
 | |
|                 pass
 | |
|         if hasattr(socket, 'SO_EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE'):
 | |
|             sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_EXCLUSIVEADDRUSE, 1)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     sock.bind((host, 0))
 | |
|     port = sock.getsockname()[1]
 | |
|     return port
 | |
| 
 | |
| def bind_unix_socket(sock, addr):
 | |
|     """Bind a unix socket, raising SkipTest if PermissionError is raised."""
 | |
|     assert sock.family == socket.AF_UNIX
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         sock.bind(addr)
 | |
|     except PermissionError:
 | |
|         sock.close()
 | |
|         raise unittest.SkipTest('cannot bind AF_UNIX sockets')
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_ipv6_enabled():
 | |
|     """Check whether IPv6 is enabled on this host."""
 | |
|     if socket.has_ipv6:
 | |
|         sock = None
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET6, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
 | |
|             sock.bind((HOSTv6, 0))
 | |
|             return True
 | |
|         except OSError:
 | |
|             pass
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             if sock:
 | |
|                 sock.close()
 | |
|     return False
 | |
| 
 | |
| IPV6_ENABLED = _is_ipv6_enabled()
 | |
| 
 | |
| def system_must_validate_cert(f):
 | |
|     """Skip the test on TLS certificate validation failures."""
 | |
|     @functools.wraps(f)
 | |
|     def dec(*args, **kwargs):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             f(*args, **kwargs)
 | |
|         except OSError as e:
 | |
|             if "CERTIFICATE_VERIFY_FAILED" in str(e):
 | |
|                 raise unittest.SkipTest("system does not contain "
 | |
|                                         "necessary certificates")
 | |
|             raise
 | |
|     return dec
 | |
| 
 | |
| # A constant likely larger than the underlying OS pipe buffer size, to
 | |
| # make writes blocking.
 | |
| # Windows limit seems to be around 512 B, and many Unix kernels have a
 | |
| # 64 KiB pipe buffer size or 16 * PAGE_SIZE: take a few megs to be sure.
 | |
| # (see issue #17835 for a discussion of this number).
 | |
| PIPE_MAX_SIZE = 4 * 1024 * 1024 + 1
 | |
| 
 | |
| # A constant likely larger than the underlying OS socket buffer size, to make
 | |
| # writes blocking.
 | |
| # The socket buffer sizes can usually be tuned system-wide (e.g. through sysctl
 | |
| # on Linux), or on a per-socket basis (SO_SNDBUF/SO_RCVBUF). See issue #18643
 | |
| # for a discussion of this number).
 | |
| SOCK_MAX_SIZE = 16 * 1024 * 1024 + 1
 | |
| 
 | |
| # decorator for skipping tests on non-IEEE 754 platforms
 | |
| requires_IEEE_754 = unittest.skipUnless(
 | |
|     float.__getformat__("double").startswith("IEEE"),
 | |
|     "test requires IEEE 754 doubles")
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_zlib = unittest.skipUnless(zlib, 'requires zlib')
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_gzip = unittest.skipUnless(gzip, 'requires gzip')
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_bz2 = unittest.skipUnless(bz2, 'requires bz2')
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_lzma = unittest.skipUnless(lzma, 'requires lzma')
 | |
| 
 | |
| is_jython = sys.platform.startswith('java')
 | |
| 
 | |
| is_android = hasattr(sys, 'getandroidapilevel')
 | |
| 
 | |
| if sys.platform != 'win32':
 | |
|     unix_shell = '/system/bin/sh' if is_android else '/bin/sh'
 | |
| else:
 | |
|     unix_shell = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Filename used for testing
 | |
| if os.name == 'java':
 | |
|     # Jython disallows @ in module names
 | |
|     TESTFN = '$test'
 | |
| else:
 | |
|     TESTFN = '@test'
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Disambiguate TESTFN for parallel testing, while letting it remain a valid
 | |
| # module name.
 | |
| TESTFN = "{}_{}_tmp".format(TESTFN, os.getpid())
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Define the URL of a dedicated HTTP server for the network tests.
 | |
| # The URL must use clear-text HTTP: no redirection to encrypted HTTPS.
 | |
| TEST_HTTP_URL = "http://www.pythontest.net"
 | |
| 
 | |
| # FS_NONASCII: non-ASCII character encodable by os.fsencode(),
 | |
| # or None if there is no such character.
 | |
| FS_NONASCII = None
 | |
| for character in (
 | |
|     # First try printable and common characters to have a readable filename.
 | |
|     # For each character, the encoding list are just example of encodings able
 | |
|     # to encode the character (the list is not exhaustive).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # U+00E6 (Latin Small Letter Ae): cp1252, iso-8859-1
 | |
|     '\u00E6',
 | |
|     # U+0130 (Latin Capital Letter I With Dot Above): cp1254, iso8859_3
 | |
|     '\u0130',
 | |
|     # U+0141 (Latin Capital Letter L With Stroke): cp1250, cp1257
 | |
|     '\u0141',
 | |
|     # U+03C6 (Greek Small Letter Phi): cp1253
 | |
|     '\u03C6',
 | |
|     # U+041A (Cyrillic Capital Letter Ka): cp1251
 | |
|     '\u041A',
 | |
|     # U+05D0 (Hebrew Letter Alef): Encodable to cp424
 | |
|     '\u05D0',
 | |
|     # U+060C (Arabic Comma): cp864, cp1006, iso8859_6, mac_arabic
 | |
|     '\u060C',
 | |
|     # U+062A (Arabic Letter Teh): cp720
 | |
|     '\u062A',
 | |
|     # U+0E01 (Thai Character Ko Kai): cp874
 | |
|     '\u0E01',
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Then try more "special" characters. "special" because they may be
 | |
|     # interpreted or displayed differently depending on the exact locale
 | |
|     # encoding and the font.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # U+00A0 (No-Break Space)
 | |
|     '\u00A0',
 | |
|     # U+20AC (Euro Sign)
 | |
|     '\u20AC',
 | |
| ):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         # If Python is set up to use the legacy 'mbcs' in Windows,
 | |
|         # 'replace' error mode is used, and encode() returns b'?'
 | |
|         # for characters missing in the ANSI codepage
 | |
|         if os.fsdecode(os.fsencode(character)) != character:
 | |
|             raise UnicodeError
 | |
|     except UnicodeError:
 | |
|         pass
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         FS_NONASCII = character
 | |
|         break
 | |
| 
 | |
| # TESTFN_UNICODE is a non-ascii filename
 | |
| TESTFN_UNICODE = TESTFN + "-\xe0\xf2\u0258\u0141\u011f"
 | |
| if sys.platform == 'darwin':
 | |
|     # In Mac OS X's VFS API file names are, by definition, canonically
 | |
|     # decomposed Unicode, encoded using UTF-8. See QA1173:
 | |
|     # http://developer.apple.com/mac/library/qa/qa2001/qa1173.html
 | |
|     import unicodedata
 | |
|     TESTFN_UNICODE = unicodedata.normalize('NFD', TESTFN_UNICODE)
 | |
| TESTFN_ENCODING = sys.getfilesystemencoding()
 | |
| 
 | |
| # TESTFN_UNENCODABLE is a filename (str type) that should *not* be able to be
 | |
| # encoded by the filesystem encoding (in strict mode). It can be None if we
 | |
| # cannot generate such filename.
 | |
| TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = None
 | |
| if os.name == 'nt':
 | |
|     # skip win32s (0) or Windows 9x/ME (1)
 | |
|     if sys.getwindowsversion().platform >= 2:
 | |
|         # Different kinds of characters from various languages to minimize the
 | |
|         # probability that the whole name is encodable to MBCS (issue #9819)
 | |
|         TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = TESTFN + "-\u5171\u0141\u2661\u0363\uDC80"
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             TESTFN_UNENCODABLE.encode(TESTFN_ENCODING)
 | |
|         except UnicodeEncodeError:
 | |
|             pass
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             print('WARNING: The filename %r CAN be encoded by the filesystem encoding (%s). '
 | |
|                   'Unicode filename tests may not be effective'
 | |
|                   % (TESTFN_UNENCODABLE, TESTFN_ENCODING))
 | |
|             TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = None
 | |
| # Mac OS X denies unencodable filenames (invalid utf-8)
 | |
| elif sys.platform != 'darwin':
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         # ascii and utf-8 cannot encode the byte 0xff
 | |
|         b'\xff'.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING)
 | |
|     except UnicodeDecodeError:
 | |
|         # 0xff will be encoded using the surrogate character u+DCFF
 | |
|         TESTFN_UNENCODABLE = TESTFN \
 | |
|             + b'-\xff'.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING, 'surrogateescape')
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         # File system encoding (eg. ISO-8859-* encodings) can encode
 | |
|         # the byte 0xff. Skip some unicode filename tests.
 | |
|         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| # TESTFN_UNDECODABLE is a filename (bytes type) that should *not* be able to be
 | |
| # decoded from the filesystem encoding (in strict mode). It can be None if we
 | |
| # cannot generate such filename (ex: the latin1 encoding can decode any byte
 | |
| # sequence). On UNIX, TESTFN_UNDECODABLE can be decoded by os.fsdecode() thanks
 | |
| # to the surrogateescape error handler (PEP 383), but not from the filesystem
 | |
| # encoding in strict mode.
 | |
| TESTFN_UNDECODABLE = None
 | |
| for name in (
 | |
|     # b'\xff' is not decodable by os.fsdecode() with code page 932. Windows
 | |
|     # accepts it to create a file or a directory, or don't accept to enter to
 | |
|     # such directory (when the bytes name is used). So test b'\xe7' first: it is
 | |
|     # not decodable from cp932.
 | |
|     b'\xe7w\xf0',
 | |
|     # undecodable from ASCII, UTF-8
 | |
|     b'\xff',
 | |
|     # undecodable from iso8859-3, iso8859-6, iso8859-7, cp424, iso8859-8, cp856
 | |
|     # and cp857
 | |
|     b'\xae\xd5'
 | |
|     # undecodable from UTF-8 (UNIX and Mac OS X)
 | |
|     b'\xed\xb2\x80', b'\xed\xb4\x80',
 | |
|     # undecodable from shift_jis, cp869, cp874, cp932, cp1250, cp1251, cp1252,
 | |
|     # cp1253, cp1254, cp1255, cp1257, cp1258
 | |
|     b'\x81\x98',
 | |
| ):
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         name.decode(TESTFN_ENCODING)
 | |
|     except UnicodeDecodeError:
 | |
|         TESTFN_UNDECODABLE = os.fsencode(TESTFN) + name
 | |
|         break
 | |
| 
 | |
| if FS_NONASCII:
 | |
|     TESTFN_NONASCII = TESTFN + '-' + FS_NONASCII
 | |
| else:
 | |
|     TESTFN_NONASCII = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Save the initial cwd
 | |
| SAVEDCWD = os.getcwd()
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Set by libregrtest/main.py so we can skip tests that are not
 | |
| # useful for PGO
 | |
| PGO = False
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def temp_dir(path=None, quiet=False):
 | |
|     """Return a context manager that creates a temporary directory.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Arguments:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       path: the directory to create temporarily.  If omitted or None,
 | |
|         defaults to creating a temporary directory using tempfile.mkdtemp.
 | |
| 
 | |
|       quiet: if False (the default), the context manager raises an exception
 | |
|         on error.  Otherwise, if the path is specified and cannot be
 | |
|         created, only a warning is issued.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     dir_created = False
 | |
|     if path is None:
 | |
|         path = tempfile.mkdtemp()
 | |
|         dir_created = True
 | |
|         path = os.path.realpath(path)
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             os.mkdir(path)
 | |
|             dir_created = True
 | |
|         except OSError as exc:
 | |
|             if not quiet:
 | |
|                 raise
 | |
|             warnings.warn(f'tests may fail, unable to create '
 | |
|                           f'temporary directory {path!r}: {exc}',
 | |
|                           RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3)
 | |
|     if dir_created:
 | |
|         pid = os.getpid()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         yield path
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         # In case the process forks, let only the parent remove the
 | |
|         # directory. The child has a diffent process id. (bpo-30028)
 | |
|         if dir_created and pid == os.getpid():
 | |
|             rmtree(path)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def change_cwd(path, quiet=False):
 | |
|     """Return a context manager that changes the current working directory.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Arguments:
 | |
| 
 | |
|       path: the directory to use as the temporary current working directory.
 | |
| 
 | |
|       quiet: if False (the default), the context manager raises an exception
 | |
|         on error.  Otherwise, it issues only a warning and keeps the current
 | |
|         working directory the same.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     saved_dir = os.getcwd()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         os.chdir(path)
 | |
|     except OSError as exc:
 | |
|         if not quiet:
 | |
|             raise
 | |
|         warnings.warn(f'tests may fail, unable to change the current working '
 | |
|                       f'directory to {path!r}: {exc}',
 | |
|                       RuntimeWarning, stacklevel=3)
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         yield os.getcwd()
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         os.chdir(saved_dir)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def temp_cwd(name='tempcwd', quiet=False):
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Context manager that temporarily creates and changes the CWD.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The function temporarily changes the current working directory
 | |
|     after creating a temporary directory in the current directory with
 | |
|     name *name*.  If *name* is None, the temporary directory is
 | |
|     created using tempfile.mkdtemp.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If *quiet* is False (default) and it is not possible to
 | |
|     create or change the CWD, an error is raised.  If *quiet* is True,
 | |
|     only a warning is raised and the original CWD is used.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     with temp_dir(path=name, quiet=quiet) as temp_path:
 | |
|         with change_cwd(temp_path, quiet=quiet) as cwd_dir:
 | |
|             yield cwd_dir
 | |
| 
 | |
| if hasattr(os, "umask"):
 | |
|     @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
|     def temp_umask(umask):
 | |
|         """Context manager that temporarily sets the process umask."""
 | |
|         oldmask = os.umask(umask)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             yield
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             os.umask(oldmask)
 | |
| 
 | |
| # TEST_HOME_DIR refers to the top level directory of the "test" package
 | |
| # that contains Python's regression test suite
 | |
| TEST_SUPPORT_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__))
 | |
| TEST_HOME_DIR = os.path.dirname(TEST_SUPPORT_DIR)
 | |
| 
 | |
| # TEST_DATA_DIR is used as a target download location for remote resources
 | |
| TEST_DATA_DIR = os.path.join(TEST_HOME_DIR, "data")
 | |
| 
 | |
| def findfile(filename, subdir=None):
 | |
|     """Try to find a file on sys.path or in the test directory.  If it is not
 | |
|     found the argument passed to the function is returned (this does not
 | |
|     necessarily signal failure; could still be the legitimate path).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Setting *subdir* indicates a relative path to use to find the file
 | |
|     rather than looking directly in the path directories.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if os.path.isabs(filename):
 | |
|         return filename
 | |
|     if subdir is not None:
 | |
|         filename = os.path.join(subdir, filename)
 | |
|     path = [TEST_HOME_DIR] + sys.path
 | |
|     for dn in path:
 | |
|         fn = os.path.join(dn, filename)
 | |
|         if os.path.exists(fn): return fn
 | |
|     return filename
 | |
| 
 | |
| def create_empty_file(filename):
 | |
|     """Create an empty file. If the file already exists, truncate it."""
 | |
|     fd = os.open(filename, os.O_WRONLY | os.O_CREAT | os.O_TRUNC)
 | |
|     os.close(fd)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def sortdict(dict):
 | |
|     "Like repr(dict), but in sorted order."
 | |
|     items = sorted(dict.items())
 | |
|     reprpairs = ["%r: %r" % pair for pair in items]
 | |
|     withcommas = ", ".join(reprpairs)
 | |
|     return "{%s}" % withcommas
 | |
| 
 | |
| def make_bad_fd():
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Create an invalid file descriptor by opening and closing a file and return
 | |
|     its fd.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     file = open(TESTFN, "wb")
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         return file.fileno()
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         file.close()
 | |
|         unlink(TESTFN)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def check_syntax_error(testcase, statement, errtext='', *, lineno=None, offset=None):
 | |
|     with testcase.assertRaisesRegex(SyntaxError, errtext) as cm:
 | |
|         compile(statement, '<test string>', 'exec')
 | |
|     err = cm.exception
 | |
|     testcase.assertIsNotNone(err.lineno)
 | |
|     if lineno is not None:
 | |
|         testcase.assertEqual(err.lineno, lineno)
 | |
|     testcase.assertIsNotNone(err.offset)
 | |
|     if offset is not None:
 | |
|         testcase.assertEqual(err.offset, offset)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def check_syntax_warning(testcase, statement, errtext='', *, lineno=1, offset=None):
 | |
|     # Test also that a warning is emitted only once.
 | |
|     with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns:
 | |
|         warnings.simplefilter('always', SyntaxWarning)
 | |
|         compile(statement, '<testcase>', 'exec')
 | |
|     testcase.assertEqual(len(warns), 1, warns)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     warn, = warns
 | |
|     testcase.assertTrue(issubclass(warn.category, SyntaxWarning), warn.category)
 | |
|     if errtext:
 | |
|         testcase.assertRegex(str(warn.message), errtext)
 | |
|     testcase.assertEqual(warn.filename, '<testcase>')
 | |
|     testcase.assertIsNotNone(warn.lineno)
 | |
|     if lineno is not None:
 | |
|         testcase.assertEqual(warn.lineno, lineno)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # SyntaxWarning should be converted to SyntaxError when raised,
 | |
|     # since the latter contains more information and provides better
 | |
|     # error report.
 | |
|     with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns:
 | |
|         warnings.simplefilter('error', SyntaxWarning)
 | |
|         check_syntax_error(testcase, statement, errtext,
 | |
|                            lineno=lineno, offset=offset)
 | |
|     # No warnings are leaked when a SyntaxError is raised.
 | |
|     testcase.assertEqual(warns, [])
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def open_urlresource(url, *args, **kw):
 | |
|     import urllib.request, urllib.parse
 | |
| 
 | |
|     check = kw.pop('check', None)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     filename = urllib.parse.urlparse(url)[2].split('/')[-1] # '/': it's URL!
 | |
| 
 | |
|     fn = os.path.join(TEST_DATA_DIR, filename)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def check_valid_file(fn):
 | |
|         f = open(fn, *args, **kw)
 | |
|         if check is None:
 | |
|             return f
 | |
|         elif check(f):
 | |
|             f.seek(0)
 | |
|             return f
 | |
|         f.close()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if os.path.exists(fn):
 | |
|         f = check_valid_file(fn)
 | |
|         if f is not None:
 | |
|             return f
 | |
|         unlink(fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Verify the requirement before downloading the file
 | |
|     requires('urlfetch')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if verbose:
 | |
|         print('\tfetching %s ...' % url, file=get_original_stdout())
 | |
|     opener = urllib.request.build_opener()
 | |
|     if gzip:
 | |
|         opener.addheaders.append(('Accept-Encoding', 'gzip'))
 | |
|     f = opener.open(url, timeout=15)
 | |
|     if gzip and f.headers.get('Content-Encoding') == 'gzip':
 | |
|         f = gzip.GzipFile(fileobj=f)
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         with open(fn, "wb") as out:
 | |
|             s = f.read()
 | |
|             while s:
 | |
|                 out.write(s)
 | |
|                 s = f.read()
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         f.close()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     f = check_valid_file(fn)
 | |
|     if f is not None:
 | |
|         return f
 | |
|     raise TestFailed('invalid resource %r' % fn)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class WarningsRecorder(object):
 | |
|     """Convenience wrapper for the warnings list returned on
 | |
|        entry to the warnings.catch_warnings() context manager.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def __init__(self, warnings_list):
 | |
|         self._warnings = warnings_list
 | |
|         self._last = 0
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __getattr__(self, attr):
 | |
|         if len(self._warnings) > self._last:
 | |
|             return getattr(self._warnings[-1], attr)
 | |
|         elif attr in warnings.WarningMessage._WARNING_DETAILS:
 | |
|             return None
 | |
|         raise AttributeError("%r has no attribute %r" % (self, attr))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     @property
 | |
|     def warnings(self):
 | |
|         return self._warnings[self._last:]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def reset(self):
 | |
|         self._last = len(self._warnings)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _filterwarnings(filters, quiet=False):
 | |
|     """Catch the warnings, then check if all the expected
 | |
|     warnings have been raised and re-raise unexpected warnings.
 | |
|     If 'quiet' is True, only re-raise the unexpected warnings.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     # Clear the warning registry of the calling module
 | |
|     # in order to re-raise the warnings.
 | |
|     frame = sys._getframe(2)
 | |
|     registry = frame.f_globals.get('__warningregistry__')
 | |
|     if registry:
 | |
|         registry.clear()
 | |
|     with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w:
 | |
|         # Set filter "always" to record all warnings.  Because
 | |
|         # test_warnings swap the module, we need to look up in
 | |
|         # the sys.modules dictionary.
 | |
|         sys.modules['warnings'].simplefilter("always")
 | |
|         yield WarningsRecorder(w)
 | |
|     # Filter the recorded warnings
 | |
|     reraise = list(w)
 | |
|     missing = []
 | |
|     for msg, cat in filters:
 | |
|         seen = False
 | |
|         for w in reraise[:]:
 | |
|             warning = w.message
 | |
|             # Filter out the matching messages
 | |
|             if (re.match(msg, str(warning), re.I) and
 | |
|                 issubclass(warning.__class__, cat)):
 | |
|                 seen = True
 | |
|                 reraise.remove(w)
 | |
|         if not seen and not quiet:
 | |
|             # This filter caught nothing
 | |
|             missing.append((msg, cat.__name__))
 | |
|     if reraise:
 | |
|         raise AssertionError("unhandled warning %s" % reraise[0])
 | |
|     if missing:
 | |
|         raise AssertionError("filter (%r, %s) did not catch any warning" %
 | |
|                              missing[0])
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def check_warnings(*filters, **kwargs):
 | |
|     """Context manager to silence warnings.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Accept 2-tuples as positional arguments:
 | |
|         ("message regexp", WarningCategory)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Optional argument:
 | |
|      - if 'quiet' is True, it does not fail if a filter catches nothing
 | |
|         (default True without argument,
 | |
|          default False if some filters are defined)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Without argument, it defaults to:
 | |
|         check_warnings(("", Warning), quiet=True)
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     quiet = kwargs.get('quiet')
 | |
|     if not filters:
 | |
|         filters = (("", Warning),)
 | |
|         # Preserve backward compatibility
 | |
|         if quiet is None:
 | |
|             quiet = True
 | |
|     return _filterwarnings(filters, quiet)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def check_no_warnings(testcase, message='', category=Warning, force_gc=False):
 | |
|     """Context manager to check that no warnings are emitted.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This context manager enables a given warning within its scope
 | |
|     and checks that no warnings are emitted even with that warning
 | |
|     enabled.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If force_gc is True, a garbage collection is attempted before checking
 | |
|     for warnings. This may help to catch warnings emitted when objects
 | |
|     are deleted, such as ResourceWarning.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Other keyword arguments are passed to warnings.filterwarnings().
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warns:
 | |
|         warnings.filterwarnings('always',
 | |
|                                 message=message,
 | |
|                                 category=category)
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|         if force_gc:
 | |
|             gc_collect()
 | |
|     testcase.assertEqual(warns, [])
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def check_no_resource_warning(testcase):
 | |
|     """Context manager to check that no ResourceWarning is emitted.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Usage:
 | |
| 
 | |
|         with check_no_resource_warning(self):
 | |
|             f = open(...)
 | |
|             ...
 | |
|             del f
 | |
| 
 | |
|     You must remove the object which may emit ResourceWarning before
 | |
|     the end of the context manager.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     with check_no_warnings(testcase, category=ResourceWarning, force_gc=True):
 | |
|         yield
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class CleanImport(object):
 | |
|     """Context manager to force import to return a new module reference.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This is useful for testing module-level behaviours, such as
 | |
|     the emission of a DeprecationWarning on import.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Use like this:
 | |
| 
 | |
|         with CleanImport("foo"):
 | |
|             importlib.import_module("foo") # new reference
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self, *module_names):
 | |
|         self.original_modules = sys.modules.copy()
 | |
|         for module_name in module_names:
 | |
|             if module_name in sys.modules:
 | |
|                 module = sys.modules[module_name]
 | |
|                 # It is possible that module_name is just an alias for
 | |
|                 # another module (e.g. stub for modules renamed in 3.x).
 | |
|                 # In that case, we also need delete the real module to clear
 | |
|                 # the import cache.
 | |
|                 if module.__name__ != module_name:
 | |
|                     del sys.modules[module.__name__]
 | |
|                 del sys.modules[module_name]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __enter__(self):
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
 | |
|         sys.modules.update(self.original_modules)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class EnvironmentVarGuard(collections.abc.MutableMapping):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """Class to help protect the environment variable properly.  Can be used as
 | |
|     a context manager."""
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self):
 | |
|         self._environ = os.environ
 | |
|         self._changed = {}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __getitem__(self, envvar):
 | |
|         return self._environ[envvar]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __setitem__(self, envvar, value):
 | |
|         # Remember the initial value on the first access
 | |
|         if envvar not in self._changed:
 | |
|             self._changed[envvar] = self._environ.get(envvar)
 | |
|         self._environ[envvar] = value
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __delitem__(self, envvar):
 | |
|         # Remember the initial value on the first access
 | |
|         if envvar not in self._changed:
 | |
|             self._changed[envvar] = self._environ.get(envvar)
 | |
|         if envvar in self._environ:
 | |
|             del self._environ[envvar]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def keys(self):
 | |
|         return self._environ.keys()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __iter__(self):
 | |
|         return iter(self._environ)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __len__(self):
 | |
|         return len(self._environ)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def set(self, envvar, value):
 | |
|         self[envvar] = value
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def unset(self, envvar):
 | |
|         del self[envvar]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __enter__(self):
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
 | |
|         for (k, v) in self._changed.items():
 | |
|             if v is None:
 | |
|                 if k in self._environ:
 | |
|                     del self._environ[k]
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 self._environ[k] = v
 | |
|         os.environ = self._environ
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class DirsOnSysPath(object):
 | |
|     """Context manager to temporarily add directories to sys.path.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This makes a copy of sys.path, appends any directories given
 | |
|     as positional arguments, then reverts sys.path to the copied
 | |
|     settings when the context ends.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Note that *all* sys.path modifications in the body of the
 | |
|     context manager, including replacement of the object,
 | |
|     will be reverted at the end of the block.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self, *paths):
 | |
|         self.original_value = sys.path[:]
 | |
|         self.original_object = sys.path
 | |
|         sys.path.extend(paths)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __enter__(self):
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
 | |
|         sys.path = self.original_object
 | |
|         sys.path[:] = self.original_value
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class TransientResource(object):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """Raise ResourceDenied if an exception is raised while the context manager
 | |
|     is in effect that matches the specified exception and attributes."""
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self, exc, **kwargs):
 | |
|         self.exc = exc
 | |
|         self.attrs = kwargs
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __enter__(self):
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __exit__(self, type_=None, value=None, traceback=None):
 | |
|         """If type_ is a subclass of self.exc and value has attributes matching
 | |
|         self.attrs, raise ResourceDenied.  Otherwise let the exception
 | |
|         propagate (if any)."""
 | |
|         if type_ is not None and issubclass(self.exc, type_):
 | |
|             for attr, attr_value in self.attrs.items():
 | |
|                 if not hasattr(value, attr):
 | |
|                     break
 | |
|                 if getattr(value, attr) != attr_value:
 | |
|                     break
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 raise ResourceDenied("an optional resource is not available")
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Context managers that raise ResourceDenied when various issues
 | |
| # with the Internet connection manifest themselves as exceptions.
 | |
| # XXX deprecate these and use transient_internet() instead
 | |
| time_out = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ETIMEDOUT)
 | |
| socket_peer_reset = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ECONNRESET)
 | |
| ioerror_peer_reset = TransientResource(OSError, errno=errno.ECONNRESET)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def transient_internet(resource_name, *, timeout=30.0, errnos=()):
 | |
|     """Return a context manager that raises ResourceDenied when various issues
 | |
|     with the Internet connection manifest themselves as exceptions."""
 | |
|     default_errnos = [
 | |
|         ('ECONNREFUSED', 111),
 | |
|         ('ECONNRESET', 104),
 | |
|         ('EHOSTUNREACH', 113),
 | |
|         ('ENETUNREACH', 101),
 | |
|         ('ETIMEDOUT', 110),
 | |
|         # socket.create_connection() fails randomly with
 | |
|         # EADDRNOTAVAIL on Travis CI.
 | |
|         ('EADDRNOTAVAIL', 99),
 | |
|     ]
 | |
|     default_gai_errnos = [
 | |
|         ('EAI_AGAIN', -3),
 | |
|         ('EAI_FAIL', -4),
 | |
|         ('EAI_NONAME', -2),
 | |
|         ('EAI_NODATA', -5),
 | |
|         # Encountered when trying to resolve IPv6-only hostnames
 | |
|         ('WSANO_DATA', 11004),
 | |
|     ]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     denied = ResourceDenied("Resource %r is not available" % resource_name)
 | |
|     captured_errnos = errnos
 | |
|     gai_errnos = []
 | |
|     if not captured_errnos:
 | |
|         captured_errnos = [getattr(errno, name, num)
 | |
|                            for (name, num) in default_errnos]
 | |
|         gai_errnos = [getattr(socket, name, num)
 | |
|                       for (name, num) in default_gai_errnos]
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def filter_error(err):
 | |
|         n = getattr(err, 'errno', None)
 | |
|         if (isinstance(err, socket.timeout) or
 | |
|             (isinstance(err, socket.gaierror) and n in gai_errnos) or
 | |
|             (isinstance(err, urllib.error.HTTPError) and
 | |
|              500 <= err.code <= 599) or
 | |
|             (isinstance(err, urllib.error.URLError) and
 | |
|                  (("ConnectionRefusedError" in err.reason) or
 | |
|                   ("TimeoutError" in err.reason) or
 | |
|                   ("EOFError" in err.reason))) or
 | |
|             n in captured_errnos):
 | |
|             if not verbose:
 | |
|                 sys.stderr.write(denied.args[0] + "\n")
 | |
|             raise denied from err
 | |
| 
 | |
|     old_timeout = socket.getdefaulttimeout()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         if timeout is not None:
 | |
|             socket.setdefaulttimeout(timeout)
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|     except nntplib.NNTPTemporaryError as err:
 | |
|         if verbose:
 | |
|             sys.stderr.write(denied.args[0] + "\n")
 | |
|         raise denied from err
 | |
|     except OSError as err:
 | |
|         # urllib can wrap original socket errors multiple times (!), we must
 | |
|         # unwrap to get at the original error.
 | |
|         while True:
 | |
|             a = err.args
 | |
|             if len(a) >= 1 and isinstance(a[0], OSError):
 | |
|                 err = a[0]
 | |
|             # The error can also be wrapped as args[1]:
 | |
|             #    except socket.error as msg:
 | |
|             #        raise OSError('socket error', msg).with_traceback(sys.exc_info()[2])
 | |
|             elif len(a) >= 2 and isinstance(a[1], OSError):
 | |
|                 err = a[1]
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 break
 | |
|         filter_error(err)
 | |
|         raise
 | |
|     # XXX should we catch generic exceptions and look for their
 | |
|     # __cause__ or __context__?
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         socket.setdefaulttimeout(old_timeout)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def captured_output(stream_name):
 | |
|     """Return a context manager used by captured_stdout/stdin/stderr
 | |
|     that temporarily replaces the sys stream *stream_name* with a StringIO."""
 | |
|     import io
 | |
|     orig_stdout = getattr(sys, stream_name)
 | |
|     setattr(sys, stream_name, io.StringIO())
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         yield getattr(sys, stream_name)
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         setattr(sys, stream_name, orig_stdout)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def captured_stdout():
 | |
|     """Capture the output of sys.stdout:
 | |
| 
 | |
|        with captured_stdout() as stdout:
 | |
|            print("hello")
 | |
|        self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), "hello\\n")
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return captured_output("stdout")
 | |
| 
 | |
| def captured_stderr():
 | |
|     """Capture the output of sys.stderr:
 | |
| 
 | |
|        with captured_stderr() as stderr:
 | |
|            print("hello", file=sys.stderr)
 | |
|        self.assertEqual(stderr.getvalue(), "hello\\n")
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return captured_output("stderr")
 | |
| 
 | |
| def captured_stdin():
 | |
|     """Capture the input to sys.stdin:
 | |
| 
 | |
|        with captured_stdin() as stdin:
 | |
|            stdin.write('hello\\n')
 | |
|            stdin.seek(0)
 | |
|            # call test code that consumes from sys.stdin
 | |
|            captured = input()
 | |
|        self.assertEqual(captured, "hello")
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return captured_output("stdin")
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def gc_collect():
 | |
|     """Force as many objects as possible to be collected.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     In non-CPython implementations of Python, this is needed because timely
 | |
|     deallocation is not guaranteed by the garbage collector.  (Even in CPython
 | |
|     this can be the case in case of reference cycles.)  This means that __del__
 | |
|     methods may be called later than expected and weakrefs may remain alive for
 | |
|     longer than expected.  This function tries its best to force all garbage
 | |
|     objects to disappear.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     gc.collect()
 | |
|     if is_jython:
 | |
|         time.sleep(0.1)
 | |
|     gc.collect()
 | |
|     gc.collect()
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def disable_gc():
 | |
|     have_gc = gc.isenabled()
 | |
|     gc.disable()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         if have_gc:
 | |
|             gc.enable()
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def python_is_optimized():
 | |
|     """Find if Python was built with optimizations."""
 | |
|     cflags = sysconfig.get_config_var('PY_CFLAGS') or ''
 | |
|     final_opt = ""
 | |
|     for opt in cflags.split():
 | |
|         if opt.startswith('-O'):
 | |
|             final_opt = opt
 | |
|     return final_opt not in ('', '-O0', '-Og')
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| _header = 'nP'
 | |
| _align = '0n'
 | |
| if hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount"):
 | |
|     _header = '2P' + _header
 | |
|     _align = '0P'
 | |
| _vheader = _header + 'n'
 | |
| 
 | |
| def calcobjsize(fmt):
 | |
|     return struct.calcsize(_header + fmt + _align)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def calcvobjsize(fmt):
 | |
|     return struct.calcsize(_vheader + fmt + _align)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| _TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC = 1<<14
 | |
| _TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE = 1<<9
 | |
| 
 | |
| def check_sizeof(test, o, size):
 | |
|     import _testcapi
 | |
|     result = sys.getsizeof(o)
 | |
|     # add GC header size
 | |
|     if ((type(o) == type) and (o.__flags__ & _TPFLAGS_HEAPTYPE) or\
 | |
|         ((type(o) != type) and (type(o).__flags__ & _TPFLAGS_HAVE_GC))):
 | |
|         size += _testcapi.SIZEOF_PYGC_HEAD
 | |
|     msg = 'wrong size for %s: got %d, expected %d' \
 | |
|             % (type(o), result, size)
 | |
|     test.assertEqual(result, size, msg)
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Decorator for running a function in a different locale, correctly resetting
 | |
| # it afterwards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def run_with_locale(catstr, *locales):
 | |
|     def decorator(func):
 | |
|         def inner(*args, **kwds):
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 import locale
 | |
|                 category = getattr(locale, catstr)
 | |
|                 orig_locale = locale.setlocale(category)
 | |
|             except AttributeError:
 | |
|                 # if the test author gives us an invalid category string
 | |
|                 raise
 | |
|             except:
 | |
|                 # cannot retrieve original locale, so do nothing
 | |
|                 locale = orig_locale = None
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 for loc in locales:
 | |
|                     try:
 | |
|                         locale.setlocale(category, loc)
 | |
|                         break
 | |
|                     except:
 | |
|                         pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|             # now run the function, resetting the locale on exceptions
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 return func(*args, **kwds)
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 if locale and orig_locale:
 | |
|                     locale.setlocale(category, orig_locale)
 | |
|         inner.__name__ = func.__name__
 | |
|         inner.__doc__ = func.__doc__
 | |
|         return inner
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Decorator for running a function in a specific timezone, correctly
 | |
| # resetting it afterwards.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def run_with_tz(tz):
 | |
|     def decorator(func):
 | |
|         def inner(*args, **kwds):
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 tzset = time.tzset
 | |
|             except AttributeError:
 | |
|                 raise unittest.SkipTest("tzset required")
 | |
|             if 'TZ' in os.environ:
 | |
|                 orig_tz = os.environ['TZ']
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 orig_tz = None
 | |
|             os.environ['TZ'] = tz
 | |
|             tzset()
 | |
| 
 | |
|             # now run the function, resetting the tz on exceptions
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 return func(*args, **kwds)
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 if orig_tz is None:
 | |
|                     del os.environ['TZ']
 | |
|                 else:
 | |
|                     os.environ['TZ'] = orig_tz
 | |
|                 time.tzset()
 | |
| 
 | |
|         inner.__name__ = func.__name__
 | |
|         inner.__doc__ = func.__doc__
 | |
|         return inner
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Big-memory-test support. Separate from 'resources' because memory use
 | |
| # should be configurable.
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Some handy shorthands. Note that these are used for byte-limits as well
 | |
| # as size-limits, in the various bigmem tests
 | |
| _1M = 1024*1024
 | |
| _1G = 1024 * _1M
 | |
| _2G = 2 * _1G
 | |
| _4G = 4 * _1G
 | |
| 
 | |
| MAX_Py_ssize_t = sys.maxsize
 | |
| 
 | |
| def set_memlimit(limit):
 | |
|     global max_memuse
 | |
|     global real_max_memuse
 | |
|     sizes = {
 | |
|         'k': 1024,
 | |
|         'm': _1M,
 | |
|         'g': _1G,
 | |
|         't': 1024*_1G,
 | |
|     }
 | |
|     m = re.match(r'(\d+(\.\d+)?) (K|M|G|T)b?$', limit,
 | |
|                  re.IGNORECASE | re.VERBOSE)
 | |
|     if m is None:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('Invalid memory limit %r' % (limit,))
 | |
|     memlimit = int(float(m.group(1)) * sizes[m.group(3).lower()])
 | |
|     real_max_memuse = memlimit
 | |
|     if memlimit > MAX_Py_ssize_t:
 | |
|         memlimit = MAX_Py_ssize_t
 | |
|     if memlimit < _2G - 1:
 | |
|         raise ValueError('Memory limit %r too low to be useful' % (limit,))
 | |
|     max_memuse = memlimit
 | |
| 
 | |
| class _MemoryWatchdog:
 | |
|     """An object which periodically watches the process' memory consumption
 | |
|     and prints it out.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self):
 | |
|         self.procfile = '/proc/{pid}/statm'.format(pid=os.getpid())
 | |
|         self.started = False
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def start(self):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             f = open(self.procfile, 'r')
 | |
|         except OSError as e:
 | |
|             warnings.warn('/proc not available for stats: {}'.format(e),
 | |
|                           RuntimeWarning)
 | |
|             sys.stderr.flush()
 | |
|             return
 | |
| 
 | |
|         with f:
 | |
|             watchdog_script = findfile("memory_watchdog.py")
 | |
|             self.mem_watchdog = subprocess.Popen([sys.executable, watchdog_script],
 | |
|                                                  stdin=f,
 | |
|                                                  stderr=subprocess.DEVNULL)
 | |
|         self.started = True
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def stop(self):
 | |
|         if self.started:
 | |
|             self.mem_watchdog.terminate()
 | |
|             self.mem_watchdog.wait()
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def bigmemtest(size, memuse, dry_run=True):
 | |
|     """Decorator for bigmem tests.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     'size' is a requested size for the test (in arbitrary, test-interpreted
 | |
|     units.) 'memuse' is the number of bytes per unit for the test, or a good
 | |
|     estimate of it. For example, a test that needs two byte buffers, of 4 GiB
 | |
|     each, could be decorated with @bigmemtest(size=_4G, memuse=2).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The 'size' argument is normally passed to the decorated test method as an
 | |
|     extra argument. If 'dry_run' is true, the value passed to the test method
 | |
|     may be less than the requested value. If 'dry_run' is false, it means the
 | |
|     test doesn't support dummy runs when -M is not specified.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def decorator(f):
 | |
|         def wrapper(self):
 | |
|             size = wrapper.size
 | |
|             memuse = wrapper.memuse
 | |
|             if not real_max_memuse:
 | |
|                 maxsize = 5147
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 maxsize = size
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if ((real_max_memuse or not dry_run)
 | |
|                 and real_max_memuse < maxsize * memuse):
 | |
|                 raise unittest.SkipTest(
 | |
|                     "not enough memory: %.1fG minimum needed"
 | |
|                     % (size * memuse / (1024 ** 3)))
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if real_max_memuse and verbose:
 | |
|                 print()
 | |
|                 print(" ... expected peak memory use: {peak:.1f}G"
 | |
|                       .format(peak=size * memuse / (1024 ** 3)))
 | |
|                 watchdog = _MemoryWatchdog()
 | |
|                 watchdog.start()
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 watchdog = None
 | |
| 
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 return f(self, maxsize)
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 if watchdog:
 | |
|                     watchdog.stop()
 | |
| 
 | |
|         wrapper.size = size
 | |
|         wrapper.memuse = memuse
 | |
|         return wrapper
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| def bigaddrspacetest(f):
 | |
|     """Decorator for tests that fill the address space."""
 | |
|     def wrapper(self):
 | |
|         if max_memuse < MAX_Py_ssize_t:
 | |
|             if MAX_Py_ssize_t >= 2**63 - 1 and max_memuse >= 2**31:
 | |
|                 raise unittest.SkipTest(
 | |
|                     "not enough memory: try a 32-bit build instead")
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 raise unittest.SkipTest(
 | |
|                     "not enough memory: %.1fG minimum needed"
 | |
|                     % (MAX_Py_ssize_t / (1024 ** 3)))
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             return f(self)
 | |
|     return wrapper
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # unittest integration.
 | |
| 
 | |
| class BasicTestRunner:
 | |
|     def run(self, test):
 | |
|         result = unittest.TestResult()
 | |
|         test(result)
 | |
|         return result
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _id(obj):
 | |
|     return obj
 | |
| 
 | |
| def requires_resource(resource):
 | |
|     if resource == 'gui' and not _is_gui_available():
 | |
|         return unittest.skip(_is_gui_available.reason)
 | |
|     if is_resource_enabled(resource):
 | |
|         return _id
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return unittest.skip("resource {0!r} is not enabled".format(resource))
 | |
| 
 | |
| def cpython_only(test):
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Decorator for tests only applicable on CPython.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return impl_detail(cpython=True)(test)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def impl_detail(msg=None, **guards):
 | |
|     if check_impl_detail(**guards):
 | |
|         return _id
 | |
|     if msg is None:
 | |
|         guardnames, default = _parse_guards(guards)
 | |
|         if default:
 | |
|             msg = "implementation detail not available on {0}"
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             msg = "implementation detail specific to {0}"
 | |
|         guardnames = sorted(guardnames.keys())
 | |
|         msg = msg.format(' or '.join(guardnames))
 | |
|     return unittest.skip(msg)
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _parse_guards(guards):
 | |
|     # Returns a tuple ({platform_name: run_me}, default_value)
 | |
|     if not guards:
 | |
|         return ({'cpython': True}, False)
 | |
|     is_true = list(guards.values())[0]
 | |
|     assert list(guards.values()) == [is_true] * len(guards)   # all True or all False
 | |
|     return (guards, not is_true)
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Use the following check to guard CPython's implementation-specific tests --
 | |
| # or to run them only on the implementation(s) guarded by the arguments.
 | |
| def check_impl_detail(**guards):
 | |
|     """This function returns True or False depending on the host platform.
 | |
|        Examples:
 | |
|           if check_impl_detail():               # only on CPython (default)
 | |
|           if check_impl_detail(jython=True):    # only on Jython
 | |
|           if check_impl_detail(cpython=False):  # everywhere except on CPython
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     guards, default = _parse_guards(guards)
 | |
|     return guards.get(platform.python_implementation().lower(), default)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def no_tracing(func):
 | |
|     """Decorator to temporarily turn off tracing for the duration of a test."""
 | |
|     if not hasattr(sys, 'gettrace'):
 | |
|         return func
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         @functools.wraps(func)
 | |
|         def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
 | |
|             original_trace = sys.gettrace()
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 sys.settrace(None)
 | |
|                 return func(*args, **kwargs)
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 sys.settrace(original_trace)
 | |
|         return wrapper
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def refcount_test(test):
 | |
|     """Decorator for tests which involve reference counting.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     To start, the decorator does not run the test if is not run by CPython.
 | |
|     After that, any trace function is unset during the test to prevent
 | |
|     unexpected refcounts caused by the trace function.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     return no_tracing(cpython_only(test))
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _filter_suite(suite, pred):
 | |
|     """Recursively filter test cases in a suite based on a predicate."""
 | |
|     newtests = []
 | |
|     for test in suite._tests:
 | |
|         if isinstance(test, unittest.TestSuite):
 | |
|             _filter_suite(test, pred)
 | |
|             newtests.append(test)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             if pred(test):
 | |
|                 newtests.append(test)
 | |
|     suite._tests = newtests
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _run_suite(suite):
 | |
|     """Run tests from a unittest.TestSuite-derived class."""
 | |
|     runner = get_test_runner(sys.stdout,
 | |
|                              verbosity=verbose,
 | |
|                              capture_output=(junit_xml_list is not None))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     result = runner.run(suite)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if junit_xml_list is not None:
 | |
|         junit_xml_list.append(result.get_xml_element())
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if not result.testsRun and not result.skipped:
 | |
|         raise TestDidNotRun
 | |
|     if not result.wasSuccessful():
 | |
|         if len(result.errors) == 1 and not result.failures:
 | |
|             err = result.errors[0][1]
 | |
|         elif len(result.failures) == 1 and not result.errors:
 | |
|             err = result.failures[0][1]
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             err = "multiple errors occurred"
 | |
|             if not verbose: err += "; run in verbose mode for details"
 | |
|         raise TestFailed(err)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| # By default, don't filter tests
 | |
| _match_test_func = None
 | |
| _match_test_patterns = None
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def match_test(test):
 | |
|     # Function used by support.run_unittest() and regrtest --list-cases
 | |
|     if _match_test_func is None:
 | |
|         return True
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return _match_test_func(test.id())
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _is_full_match_test(pattern):
 | |
|     # If a pattern contains at least one dot, it's considered
 | |
|     # as a full test identifier.
 | |
|     # Example: 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access'.
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # Reject patterns which contain fnmatch patterns: '*', '?', '[...]'
 | |
|     # or '[!...]'. For example, reject 'test_access*'.
 | |
|     return ('.' in pattern) and (not re.search(r'[?*\[\]]', pattern))
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def set_match_tests(patterns):
 | |
|     global _match_test_func, _match_test_patterns
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if patterns == _match_test_patterns:
 | |
|         # No change: no need to recompile patterns.
 | |
|         return
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if not patterns:
 | |
|         func = None
 | |
|         # set_match_tests(None) behaves as set_match_tests(())
 | |
|         patterns = ()
 | |
|     elif all(map(_is_full_match_test, patterns)):
 | |
|         # Simple case: all patterns are full test identifier.
 | |
|         # The test.bisect_cmd utility only uses such full test identifiers.
 | |
|         func = set(patterns).__contains__
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         regex = '|'.join(map(fnmatch.translate, patterns))
 | |
|         # The search *is* case sensitive on purpose:
 | |
|         # don't use flags=re.IGNORECASE
 | |
|         regex_match = re.compile(regex).match
 | |
| 
 | |
|         def match_test_regex(test_id):
 | |
|             if regex_match(test_id):
 | |
|                 # The regex matches the whole identifier, for example
 | |
|                 # 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access'.
 | |
|                 return True
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 # Try to match parts of the test identifier.
 | |
|                 # For example, split 'test.test_os.FileTests.test_access'
 | |
|                 # into: 'test', 'test_os', 'FileTests' and 'test_access'.
 | |
|                 return any(map(regex_match, test_id.split(".")))
 | |
| 
 | |
|         func = match_test_regex
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Create a copy since patterns can be mutable and so modified later
 | |
|     _match_test_patterns = tuple(patterns)
 | |
|     _match_test_func = func
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def run_unittest(*classes):
 | |
|     """Run tests from unittest.TestCase-derived classes."""
 | |
|     valid_types = (unittest.TestSuite, unittest.TestCase)
 | |
|     suite = unittest.TestSuite()
 | |
|     for cls in classes:
 | |
|         if isinstance(cls, str):
 | |
|             if cls in sys.modules:
 | |
|                 suite.addTest(unittest.findTestCases(sys.modules[cls]))
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 raise ValueError("str arguments must be keys in sys.modules")
 | |
|         elif isinstance(cls, valid_types):
 | |
|             suite.addTest(cls)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             suite.addTest(unittest.makeSuite(cls))
 | |
|     _filter_suite(suite, match_test)
 | |
|     _run_suite(suite)
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Check for the presence of docstrings.
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Rather than trying to enumerate all the cases where docstrings may be
 | |
| # disabled, we just check for that directly
 | |
| 
 | |
| def _check_docstrings():
 | |
|     """Just used to check if docstrings are enabled"""
 | |
| 
 | |
| MISSING_C_DOCSTRINGS = (check_impl_detail() and
 | |
|                         sys.platform != 'win32' and
 | |
|                         not sysconfig.get_config_var('WITH_DOC_STRINGS'))
 | |
| 
 | |
| HAVE_DOCSTRINGS = (_check_docstrings.__doc__ is not None and
 | |
|                    not MISSING_C_DOCSTRINGS)
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_docstrings = unittest.skipUnless(HAVE_DOCSTRINGS,
 | |
|                                           "test requires docstrings")
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # doctest driver.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def run_doctest(module, verbosity=None, optionflags=0):
 | |
|     """Run doctest on the given module.  Return (#failures, #tests).
 | |
| 
 | |
|     If optional argument verbosity is not specified (or is None), pass
 | |
|     support's belief about verbosity on to doctest.  Else doctest's
 | |
|     usual behavior is used (it searches sys.argv for -v).
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     import doctest
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if verbosity is None:
 | |
|         verbosity = verbose
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         verbosity = None
 | |
| 
 | |
|     f, t = doctest.testmod(module, verbose=verbosity, optionflags=optionflags)
 | |
|     if f:
 | |
|         raise TestFailed("%d of %d doctests failed" % (f, t))
 | |
|     if verbose:
 | |
|         print('doctest (%s) ... %d tests with zero failures' %
 | |
|               (module.__name__, t))
 | |
|     return f, t
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Support for saving and restoring the imported modules.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def modules_setup():
 | |
|     return sys.modules.copy(),
 | |
| 
 | |
| def modules_cleanup(oldmodules):
 | |
|     # Encoders/decoders are registered permanently within the internal
 | |
|     # codec cache. If we destroy the corresponding modules their
 | |
|     # globals will be set to None which will trip up the cached functions.
 | |
|     encodings = [(k, v) for k, v in sys.modules.items()
 | |
|                  if k.startswith('encodings.')]
 | |
|     sys.modules.clear()
 | |
|     sys.modules.update(encodings)
 | |
|     # XXX: This kind of problem can affect more than just encodings. In particular
 | |
|     # extension modules (such as _ssl) don't cope with reloading properly.
 | |
|     # Really, test modules should be cleaning out the test specific modules they
 | |
|     # know they added (ala test_runpy) rather than relying on this function (as
 | |
|     # test_importhooks and test_pkg do currently).
 | |
|     # Implicitly imported *real* modules should be left alone (see issue 10556).
 | |
|     sys.modules.update(oldmodules)
 | |
| 
 | |
| #=======================================================================
 | |
| # Threading support to prevent reporting refleaks when running regrtest.py -R
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Flag used by saved_test_environment of test.libregrtest.save_env,
 | |
| # to check if a test modified the environment. The flag should be set to False
 | |
| # before running a new test.
 | |
| #
 | |
| # For example, threading_cleanup() sets the flag is the function fails
 | |
| # to cleanup threads.
 | |
| environment_altered = False
 | |
| 
 | |
| # NOTE: we use thread._count() rather than threading.enumerate() (or the
 | |
| # moral equivalent thereof) because a threading.Thread object is still alive
 | |
| # until its __bootstrap() method has returned, even after it has been
 | |
| # unregistered from the threading module.
 | |
| # thread._count(), on the other hand, only gets decremented *after* the
 | |
| # __bootstrap() method has returned, which gives us reliable reference counts
 | |
| # at the end of a test run.
 | |
| 
 | |
| def threading_setup():
 | |
|     return _thread._count(), threading._dangling.copy()
 | |
| 
 | |
| def threading_cleanup(*original_values):
 | |
|     global environment_altered
 | |
| 
 | |
|     _MAX_COUNT = 100
 | |
| 
 | |
|     for count in range(_MAX_COUNT):
 | |
|         values = _thread._count(), threading._dangling
 | |
|         if values == original_values:
 | |
|             break
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if not count:
 | |
|             # Display a warning at the first iteration
 | |
|             environment_altered = True
 | |
|             dangling_threads = values[1]
 | |
|             print("Warning -- threading_cleanup() failed to cleanup "
 | |
|                   "%s threads (count: %s, dangling: %s)"
 | |
|                   % (values[0] - original_values[0],
 | |
|                      values[0], len(dangling_threads)),
 | |
|                   file=sys.stderr)
 | |
|             for thread in dangling_threads:
 | |
|                 print(f"Dangling thread: {thread!r}", file=sys.stderr)
 | |
|             sys.stderr.flush()
 | |
| 
 | |
|             # Don't hold references to threads
 | |
|             dangling_threads = None
 | |
|         values = None
 | |
| 
 | |
|         time.sleep(0.01)
 | |
|         gc_collect()
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def reap_threads(func):
 | |
|     """Use this function when threads are being used.  This will
 | |
|     ensure that the threads are cleaned up even when the test fails.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     @functools.wraps(func)
 | |
|     def decorator(*args):
 | |
|         key = threading_setup()
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             return func(*args)
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             threading_cleanup(*key)
 | |
|     return decorator
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def wait_threads_exit(timeout=60.0):
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     bpo-31234: Context manager to wait until all threads created in the with
 | |
|     statement exit.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Use _thread.count() to check if threads exited. Indirectly, wait until
 | |
|     threads exit the internal t_bootstrap() C function of the _thread module.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     threading_setup() and threading_cleanup() are designed to emit a warning
 | |
|     if a test leaves running threads in the background. This context manager
 | |
|     is designed to cleanup threads started by the _thread.start_new_thread()
 | |
|     which doesn't allow to wait for thread exit, whereas thread.Thread has a
 | |
|     join() method.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     old_count = _thread._count()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         start_time = time.monotonic()
 | |
|         deadline = start_time + timeout
 | |
|         while True:
 | |
|             count = _thread._count()
 | |
|             if count <= old_count:
 | |
|                 break
 | |
|             if time.monotonic() > deadline:
 | |
|                 dt = time.monotonic() - start_time
 | |
|                 msg = (f"wait_threads() failed to cleanup {count - old_count} "
 | |
|                        f"threads after {dt:.1f} seconds "
 | |
|                        f"(count: {count}, old count: {old_count})")
 | |
|                 raise AssertionError(msg)
 | |
|             time.sleep(0.010)
 | |
|             gc_collect()
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def join_thread(thread, timeout=30.0):
 | |
|     """Join a thread. Raise an AssertionError if the thread is still alive
 | |
|     after timeout seconds.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     thread.join(timeout)
 | |
|     if thread.is_alive():
 | |
|         msg = f"failed to join the thread in {timeout:.1f} seconds"
 | |
|         raise AssertionError(msg)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def reap_children():
 | |
|     """Use this function at the end of test_main() whenever sub-processes
 | |
|     are started.  This will help ensure that no extra children (zombies)
 | |
|     stick around to hog resources and create problems when looking
 | |
|     for refleaks.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     global environment_altered
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Need os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG): Windows is not supported
 | |
|     if not (hasattr(os, 'waitpid') and hasattr(os, 'WNOHANG')):
 | |
|         return
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # Reap all our dead child processes so we don't leave zombies around.
 | |
|     # These hog resources and might be causing some of the buildbots to die.
 | |
|     while True:
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             # Read the exit status of any child process which already completed
 | |
|             pid, status = os.waitpid(-1, os.WNOHANG)
 | |
|         except OSError:
 | |
|             break
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if pid == 0:
 | |
|             break
 | |
| 
 | |
|         print("Warning -- reap_children() reaped child process %s"
 | |
|               % pid, file=sys.stderr)
 | |
|         environment_altered = True
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def start_threads(threads, unlock=None):
 | |
|     threads = list(threads)
 | |
|     started = []
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             for t in threads:
 | |
|                 t.start()
 | |
|                 started.append(t)
 | |
|         except:
 | |
|             if verbose:
 | |
|                 print("Can't start %d threads, only %d threads started" %
 | |
|                       (len(threads), len(started)))
 | |
|             raise
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             if unlock:
 | |
|                 unlock()
 | |
|             endtime = starttime = time.monotonic()
 | |
|             for timeout in range(1, 16):
 | |
|                 endtime += 60
 | |
|                 for t in started:
 | |
|                     t.join(max(endtime - time.monotonic(), 0.01))
 | |
|                 started = [t for t in started if t.is_alive()]
 | |
|                 if not started:
 | |
|                     break
 | |
|                 if verbose:
 | |
|                     print('Unable to join %d threads during a period of '
 | |
|                           '%d minutes' % (len(started), timeout))
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             started = [t for t in started if t.is_alive()]
 | |
|             if started:
 | |
|                 faulthandler.dump_traceback(sys.stdout)
 | |
|                 raise AssertionError('Unable to join %d threads' % len(started))
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def swap_attr(obj, attr, new_val):
 | |
|     """Temporary swap out an attribute with a new object.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Usage:
 | |
|         with swap_attr(obj, "attr", 5):
 | |
|             ...
 | |
| 
 | |
|         This will set obj.attr to 5 for the duration of the with: block,
 | |
|         restoring the old value at the end of the block. If `attr` doesn't
 | |
|         exist on `obj`, it will be created and then deleted at the end of the
 | |
|         block.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         The old value (or None if it doesn't exist) will be assigned to the
 | |
|         target of the "as" clause, if there is one.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if hasattr(obj, attr):
 | |
|         real_val = getattr(obj, attr)
 | |
|         setattr(obj, attr, new_val)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             yield real_val
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             setattr(obj, attr, real_val)
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         setattr(obj, attr, new_val)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             yield
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             if hasattr(obj, attr):
 | |
|                 delattr(obj, attr)
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def swap_item(obj, item, new_val):
 | |
|     """Temporary swap out an item with a new object.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Usage:
 | |
|         with swap_item(obj, "item", 5):
 | |
|             ...
 | |
| 
 | |
|         This will set obj["item"] to 5 for the duration of the with: block,
 | |
|         restoring the old value at the end of the block. If `item` doesn't
 | |
|         exist on `obj`, it will be created and then deleted at the end of the
 | |
|         block.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         The old value (or None if it doesn't exist) will be assigned to the
 | |
|         target of the "as" clause, if there is one.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if item in obj:
 | |
|         real_val = obj[item]
 | |
|         obj[item] = new_val
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             yield real_val
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             obj[item] = real_val
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         obj[item] = new_val
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             yield
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             if item in obj:
 | |
|                 del obj[item]
 | |
| 
 | |
| def strip_python_stderr(stderr):
 | |
|     """Strip the stderr of a Python process from potential debug output
 | |
|     emitted by the interpreter.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This will typically be run on the result of the communicate() method
 | |
|     of a subprocess.Popen object.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     stderr = re.sub(br"\[\d+ refs, \d+ blocks\]\r?\n?", b"", stderr).strip()
 | |
|     return stderr
 | |
| 
 | |
| requires_type_collecting = unittest.skipIf(hasattr(sys, 'getcounts'),
 | |
|                         'types are immortal if COUNT_ALLOCS is defined')
 | |
| 
 | |
| def args_from_interpreter_flags():
 | |
|     """Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current
 | |
|     settings in sys.flags and sys.warnoptions."""
 | |
|     return subprocess._args_from_interpreter_flags()
 | |
| 
 | |
| def optim_args_from_interpreter_flags():
 | |
|     """Return a list of command-line arguments reproducing the current
 | |
|     optimization settings in sys.flags."""
 | |
|     return subprocess._optim_args_from_interpreter_flags()
 | |
| 
 | |
| #============================================================
 | |
| # Support for assertions about logging.
 | |
| #============================================================
 | |
| 
 | |
| class TestHandler(logging.handlers.BufferingHandler):
 | |
|     def __init__(self, matcher):
 | |
|         # BufferingHandler takes a "capacity" argument
 | |
|         # so as to know when to flush. As we're overriding
 | |
|         # shouldFlush anyway, we can set a capacity of zero.
 | |
|         # You can call flush() manually to clear out the
 | |
|         # buffer.
 | |
|         logging.handlers.BufferingHandler.__init__(self, 0)
 | |
|         self.matcher = matcher
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def shouldFlush(self):
 | |
|         return False
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def emit(self, record):
 | |
|         self.format(record)
 | |
|         self.buffer.append(record.__dict__)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def matches(self, **kwargs):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         Look for a saved dict whose keys/values match the supplied arguments.
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         result = False
 | |
|         for d in self.buffer:
 | |
|             if self.matcher.matches(d, **kwargs):
 | |
|                 result = True
 | |
|                 break
 | |
|         return result
 | |
| 
 | |
| class Matcher(object):
 | |
| 
 | |
|     _partial_matches = ('msg', 'message')
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def matches(self, d, **kwargs):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         Try to match a single dict with the supplied arguments.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         Keys whose values are strings and which are in self._partial_matches
 | |
|         will be checked for partial (i.e. substring) matches. You can extend
 | |
|         this scheme to (for example) do regular expression matching, etc.
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         result = True
 | |
|         for k in kwargs:
 | |
|             v = kwargs[k]
 | |
|             dv = d.get(k)
 | |
|             if not self.match_value(k, dv, v):
 | |
|                 result = False
 | |
|                 break
 | |
|         return result
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def match_value(self, k, dv, v):
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         Try to match a single stored value (dv) with a supplied value (v).
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         if type(v) != type(dv):
 | |
|             result = False
 | |
|         elif type(dv) is not str or k not in self._partial_matches:
 | |
|             result = (v == dv)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             result = dv.find(v) >= 0
 | |
|         return result
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| _can_symlink = None
 | |
| def can_symlink():
 | |
|     global _can_symlink
 | |
|     if _can_symlink is not None:
 | |
|         return _can_symlink
 | |
|     symlink_path = TESTFN + "can_symlink"
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         os.symlink(TESTFN, symlink_path)
 | |
|         can = True
 | |
|     except (OSError, NotImplementedError, AttributeError):
 | |
|         can = False
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         os.remove(symlink_path)
 | |
|     _can_symlink = can
 | |
|     return can
 | |
| 
 | |
| def skip_unless_symlink(test):
 | |
|     """Skip decorator for tests that require functional symlink"""
 | |
|     ok = can_symlink()
 | |
|     msg = "Requires functional symlink implementation"
 | |
|     return test if ok else unittest.skip(msg)(test)
 | |
| 
 | |
| _can_xattr = None
 | |
| def can_xattr():
 | |
|     global _can_xattr
 | |
|     if _can_xattr is not None:
 | |
|         return _can_xattr
 | |
|     if not hasattr(os, "setxattr"):
 | |
|         can = False
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         tmp_dir = tempfile.mkdtemp()
 | |
|         tmp_fp, tmp_name = tempfile.mkstemp(dir=tmp_dir)
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             with open(TESTFN, "wb") as fp:
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     # TESTFN & tempfile may use different file systems with
 | |
|                     # different capabilities
 | |
|                     os.setxattr(tmp_fp, b"user.test", b"")
 | |
|                     os.setxattr(tmp_name, b"trusted.foo", b"42")
 | |
|                     os.setxattr(fp.fileno(), b"user.test", b"")
 | |
|                     # Kernels < 2.6.39 don't respect setxattr flags.
 | |
|                     kernel_version = platform.release()
 | |
|                     m = re.match(r"2.6.(\d{1,2})", kernel_version)
 | |
|                     can = m is None or int(m.group(1)) >= 39
 | |
|                 except OSError:
 | |
|                     can = False
 | |
|         finally:
 | |
|             unlink(TESTFN)
 | |
|             unlink(tmp_name)
 | |
|             rmdir(tmp_dir)
 | |
|     _can_xattr = can
 | |
|     return can
 | |
| 
 | |
| def skip_unless_xattr(test):
 | |
|     """Skip decorator for tests that require functional extended attributes"""
 | |
|     ok = can_xattr()
 | |
|     msg = "no non-broken extended attribute support"
 | |
|     return test if ok else unittest.skip(msg)(test)
 | |
| 
 | |
| _bind_nix_socket_error = None
 | |
| def skip_unless_bind_unix_socket(test):
 | |
|     """Decorator for tests requiring a functional bind() for unix sockets."""
 | |
|     if not hasattr(socket, 'AF_UNIX'):
 | |
|         return unittest.skip('No UNIX Sockets')(test)
 | |
|     global _bind_nix_socket_error
 | |
|     if _bind_nix_socket_error is None:
 | |
|         path = TESTFN + "can_bind_unix_socket"
 | |
|         with socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX) as sock:
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 sock.bind(path)
 | |
|                 _bind_nix_socket_error = False
 | |
|             except OSError as e:
 | |
|                 _bind_nix_socket_error = e
 | |
|             finally:
 | |
|                 unlink(path)
 | |
|     if _bind_nix_socket_error:
 | |
|         msg = 'Requires a functional unix bind(): %s' % _bind_nix_socket_error
 | |
|         return unittest.skip(msg)(test)
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         return test
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def fs_is_case_insensitive(directory):
 | |
|     """Detects if the file system for the specified directory is case-insensitive."""
 | |
|     with tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(dir=directory) as base:
 | |
|         base_path = base.name
 | |
|         case_path = base_path.upper()
 | |
|         if case_path == base_path:
 | |
|             case_path = base_path.lower()
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             return os.path.samefile(base_path, case_path)
 | |
|         except FileNotFoundError:
 | |
|             return False
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def detect_api_mismatch(ref_api, other_api, *, ignore=()):
 | |
|     """Returns the set of items in ref_api not in other_api, except for a
 | |
|     defined list of items to be ignored in this check.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     By default this skips private attributes beginning with '_' but
 | |
|     includes all magic methods, i.e. those starting and ending in '__'.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     missing_items = set(dir(ref_api)) - set(dir(other_api))
 | |
|     if ignore:
 | |
|         missing_items -= set(ignore)
 | |
|     missing_items = set(m for m in missing_items
 | |
|                         if not m.startswith('_') or m.endswith('__'))
 | |
|     return missing_items
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def check__all__(test_case, module, name_of_module=None, extra=(),
 | |
|                  blacklist=()):
 | |
|     """Assert that the __all__ variable of 'module' contains all public names.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The module's public names (its API) are detected automatically based on
 | |
|     whether they match the public name convention and were defined in
 | |
|     'module'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The 'name_of_module' argument can specify (as a string or tuple thereof)
 | |
|     what module(s) an API could be defined in in order to be detected as a
 | |
|     public API. One case for this is when 'module' imports part of its public
 | |
|     API from other modules, possibly a C backend (like 'csv' and its '_csv').
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The 'extra' argument can be a set of names that wouldn't otherwise be
 | |
|     automatically detected as "public", like objects without a proper
 | |
|     '__module__' attribute. If provided, it will be added to the
 | |
|     automatically detected ones.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     The 'blacklist' argument can be a set of names that must not be treated
 | |
|     as part of the public API even though their names indicate otherwise.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Usage:
 | |
|         import bar
 | |
|         import foo
 | |
|         import unittest
 | |
|         from test import support
 | |
| 
 | |
|         class MiscTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
 | |
|             def test__all__(self):
 | |
|                 support.check__all__(self, foo)
 | |
| 
 | |
|         class OtherTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
 | |
|             def test__all__(self):
 | |
|                 extra = {'BAR_CONST', 'FOO_CONST'}
 | |
|                 blacklist = {'baz'}  # Undocumented name.
 | |
|                 # bar imports part of its API from _bar.
 | |
|                 support.check__all__(self, bar, ('bar', '_bar'),
 | |
|                                      extra=extra, blacklist=blacklist)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     if name_of_module is None:
 | |
|         name_of_module = (module.__name__, )
 | |
|     elif isinstance(name_of_module, str):
 | |
|         name_of_module = (name_of_module, )
 | |
| 
 | |
|     expected = set(extra)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     for name in dir(module):
 | |
|         if name.startswith('_') or name in blacklist:
 | |
|             continue
 | |
|         obj = getattr(module, name)
 | |
|         if (getattr(obj, '__module__', None) in name_of_module or
 | |
|                 (not hasattr(obj, '__module__') and
 | |
|                  not isinstance(obj, types.ModuleType))):
 | |
|             expected.add(name)
 | |
|     test_case.assertCountEqual(module.__all__, expected)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class SuppressCrashReport:
 | |
|     """Try to prevent a crash report from popping up.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     On Windows, don't display the Windows Error Reporting dialog.  On UNIX,
 | |
|     disable the creation of coredump file.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     old_value = None
 | |
|     old_modes = None
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __enter__(self):
 | |
|         """On Windows, disable Windows Error Reporting dialogs using
 | |
|         SetErrorMode.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         On UNIX, try to save the previous core file size limit, then set
 | |
|         soft limit to 0.
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         if sys.platform.startswith('win'):
 | |
|             # see http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/ms680621.aspx
 | |
|             # GetErrorMode is not available on Windows XP and Windows Server 2003,
 | |
|             # but SetErrorMode returns the previous value, so we can use that
 | |
|             import ctypes
 | |
|             self._k32 = ctypes.windll.kernel32
 | |
|             SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX = 0x02
 | |
|             self.old_value = self._k32.SetErrorMode(SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX)
 | |
|             self._k32.SetErrorMode(self.old_value | SEM_NOGPFAULTERRORBOX)
 | |
| 
 | |
|             # Suppress assert dialogs in debug builds
 | |
|             # (see http://bugs.python.org/issue23314)
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 import msvcrt
 | |
|                 msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode
 | |
|             except (AttributeError, ImportError):
 | |
|                 # no msvcrt or a release build
 | |
|                 pass
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 self.old_modes = {}
 | |
|                 for report_type in [msvcrt.CRT_WARN,
 | |
|                                     msvcrt.CRT_ERROR,
 | |
|                                     msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT]:
 | |
|                     old_mode = msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type,
 | |
|                             msvcrt.CRTDBG_MODE_FILE)
 | |
|                     old_file = msvcrt.CrtSetReportFile(report_type,
 | |
|                             msvcrt.CRTDBG_FILE_STDERR)
 | |
|                     self.old_modes[report_type] = old_mode, old_file
 | |
| 
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             if resource is not None:
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     self.old_value = resource.getrlimit(resource.RLIMIT_CORE)
 | |
|                     resource.setrlimit(resource.RLIMIT_CORE,
 | |
|                                        (0, self.old_value[1]))
 | |
|                 except (ValueError, OSError):
 | |
|                     pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if sys.platform == 'darwin':
 | |
|                 # Check if the 'Crash Reporter' on OSX was configured
 | |
|                 # in 'Developer' mode and warn that it will get triggered
 | |
|                 # when it is.
 | |
|                 #
 | |
|                 # This assumes that this context manager is used in tests
 | |
|                 # that might trigger the next manager.
 | |
|                 cmd = ['/usr/bin/defaults', 'read',
 | |
|                        'com.apple.CrashReporter', 'DialogType']
 | |
|                 proc = subprocess.Popen(cmd,
 | |
|                                         stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
 | |
|                                         stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
 | |
|                 with proc:
 | |
|                     stdout = proc.communicate()[0]
 | |
|                 if stdout.strip() == b'developer':
 | |
|                     print("this test triggers the Crash Reporter, "
 | |
|                           "that is intentional", end='', flush=True)
 | |
| 
 | |
|         return self
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __exit__(self, *ignore_exc):
 | |
|         """Restore Windows ErrorMode or core file behavior to initial value."""
 | |
|         if self.old_value is None:
 | |
|             return
 | |
| 
 | |
|         if sys.platform.startswith('win'):
 | |
|             self._k32.SetErrorMode(self.old_value)
 | |
| 
 | |
|             if self.old_modes:
 | |
|                 import msvcrt
 | |
|                 for report_type, (old_mode, old_file) in self.old_modes.items():
 | |
|                     msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, old_mode)
 | |
|                     msvcrt.CrtSetReportFile(report_type, old_file)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             if resource is not None:
 | |
|                 try:
 | |
|                     resource.setrlimit(resource.RLIMIT_CORE, self.old_value)
 | |
|                 except (ValueError, OSError):
 | |
|                     pass
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def patch(test_instance, object_to_patch, attr_name, new_value):
 | |
|     """Override 'object_to_patch'.'attr_name' with 'new_value'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Also, add a cleanup procedure to 'test_instance' to restore
 | |
|     'object_to_patch' value for 'attr_name'.
 | |
|     The 'attr_name' should be a valid attribute for 'object_to_patch'.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     # check that 'attr_name' is a real attribute for 'object_to_patch'
 | |
|     # will raise AttributeError if it does not exist
 | |
|     getattr(object_to_patch, attr_name)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # keep a copy of the old value
 | |
|     attr_is_local = False
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         old_value = object_to_patch.__dict__[attr_name]
 | |
|     except (AttributeError, KeyError):
 | |
|         old_value = getattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, None)
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         attr_is_local = True
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # restore the value when the test is done
 | |
|     def cleanup():
 | |
|         if attr_is_local:
 | |
|             setattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, old_value)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             delattr(object_to_patch, attr_name)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     test_instance.addCleanup(cleanup)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     # actually override the attribute
 | |
|     setattr(object_to_patch, attr_name, new_value)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def run_in_subinterp(code):
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Run code in a subinterpreter. Raise unittest.SkipTest if the tracemalloc
 | |
|     module is enabled.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     # Issue #10915, #15751: PyGILState_*() functions don't work with
 | |
|     # sub-interpreters, the tracemalloc module uses these functions internally
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         import tracemalloc
 | |
|     except ImportError:
 | |
|         pass
 | |
|     else:
 | |
|         if tracemalloc.is_tracing():
 | |
|             raise unittest.SkipTest("run_in_subinterp() cannot be used "
 | |
|                                      "if tracemalloc module is tracing "
 | |
|                                      "memory allocations")
 | |
|     import _testcapi
 | |
|     return _testcapi.run_in_subinterp(code)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def check_free_after_iterating(test, iter, cls, args=()):
 | |
|     class A(cls):
 | |
|         def __del__(self):
 | |
|             nonlocal done
 | |
|             done = True
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 next(it)
 | |
|             except StopIteration:
 | |
|                 pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|     done = False
 | |
|     it = iter(A(*args))
 | |
|     # Issue 26494: Shouldn't crash
 | |
|     test.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
 | |
|     # The sequence should be deallocated just after the end of iterating
 | |
|     gc_collect()
 | |
|     test.assertTrue(done)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def missing_compiler_executable(cmd_names=[]):
 | |
|     """Check if the compiler components used to build the interpreter exist.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     Check for the existence of the compiler executables whose names are listed
 | |
|     in 'cmd_names' or all the compiler executables when 'cmd_names' is empty
 | |
|     and return the first missing executable or None when none is found
 | |
|     missing.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     from distutils import ccompiler, sysconfig, spawn
 | |
|     compiler = ccompiler.new_compiler()
 | |
|     sysconfig.customize_compiler(compiler)
 | |
|     for name in compiler.executables:
 | |
|         if cmd_names and name not in cmd_names:
 | |
|             continue
 | |
|         cmd = getattr(compiler, name)
 | |
|         if cmd_names:
 | |
|             assert cmd is not None, \
 | |
|                     "the '%s' executable is not configured" % name
 | |
|         elif not cmd:
 | |
|             continue
 | |
|         if spawn.find_executable(cmd[0]) is None:
 | |
|             return cmd[0]
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| _is_android_emulator = None
 | |
| def setswitchinterval(interval):
 | |
|     # Setting a very low gil interval on the Android emulator causes python
 | |
|     # to hang (issue #26939).
 | |
|     minimum_interval = 1e-5
 | |
|     if is_android and interval < minimum_interval:
 | |
|         global _is_android_emulator
 | |
|         if _is_android_emulator is None:
 | |
|             _is_android_emulator = (subprocess.check_output(
 | |
|                                ['getprop', 'ro.kernel.qemu']).strip() == b'1')
 | |
|         if _is_android_emulator:
 | |
|             interval = minimum_interval
 | |
|     return sys.setswitchinterval(interval)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| @contextlib.contextmanager
 | |
| def disable_faulthandler():
 | |
|     # use sys.__stderr__ instead of sys.stderr, since regrtest replaces
 | |
|     # sys.stderr with a StringIO which has no file descriptor when a test
 | |
|     # is run with -W/--verbose3.
 | |
|     fd = sys.__stderr__.fileno()
 | |
| 
 | |
|     is_enabled = faulthandler.is_enabled()
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         faulthandler.disable()
 | |
|         yield
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         if is_enabled:
 | |
|             faulthandler.enable(file=fd, all_threads=True)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def fd_count():
 | |
|     """Count the number of open file descriptors.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     if sys.platform.startswith(('linux', 'freebsd')):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             names = os.listdir("/proc/self/fd")
 | |
|             # Substract one because listdir() opens internally a file
 | |
|             # descriptor to list the content of the /proc/self/fd/ directory.
 | |
|             return len(names) - 1
 | |
|         except FileNotFoundError:
 | |
|             pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|     MAXFD = 256
 | |
|     if hasattr(os, 'sysconf'):
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             MAXFD = os.sysconf("SC_OPEN_MAX")
 | |
|         except OSError:
 | |
|             pass
 | |
| 
 | |
|     old_modes = None
 | |
|     if sys.platform == 'win32':
 | |
|         # bpo-25306, bpo-31009: Call CrtSetReportMode() to not kill the process
 | |
|         # on invalid file descriptor if Python is compiled in debug mode
 | |
|         try:
 | |
|             import msvcrt
 | |
|             msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode
 | |
|         except (AttributeError, ImportError):
 | |
|             # no msvcrt or a release build
 | |
|             pass
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             old_modes = {}
 | |
|             for report_type in (msvcrt.CRT_WARN,
 | |
|                                 msvcrt.CRT_ERROR,
 | |
|                                 msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT):
 | |
|                 old_modes[report_type] = msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, 0)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     try:
 | |
|         count = 0
 | |
|         for fd in range(MAXFD):
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 # Prefer dup() over fstat(). fstat() can require input/output
 | |
|                 # whereas dup() doesn't.
 | |
|                 fd2 = os.dup(fd)
 | |
|             except OSError as e:
 | |
|                 if e.errno != errno.EBADF:
 | |
|                     raise
 | |
|             else:
 | |
|                 os.close(fd2)
 | |
|                 count += 1
 | |
|     finally:
 | |
|         if old_modes is not None:
 | |
|             for report_type in (msvcrt.CRT_WARN,
 | |
|                                 msvcrt.CRT_ERROR,
 | |
|                                 msvcrt.CRT_ASSERT):
 | |
|                 msvcrt.CrtSetReportMode(report_type, old_modes[report_type])
 | |
| 
 | |
|     return count
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class SaveSignals:
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     Save and restore signal handlers.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This class is only able to save/restore signal handlers registered
 | |
|     by the Python signal module: see bpo-13285 for "external" signal
 | |
|     handlers.
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __init__(self):
 | |
|         import signal
 | |
|         self.signal = signal
 | |
|         self.signals = signal.valid_signals()
 | |
|         # SIGKILL and SIGSTOP signals cannot be ignored nor caught
 | |
|         for signame in ('SIGKILL', 'SIGSTOP'):
 | |
|             try:
 | |
|                 signum = getattr(signal, signame)
 | |
|             except AttributeError:
 | |
|                 continue
 | |
|             self.signals.remove(signum)
 | |
|         self.handlers = {}
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def save(self):
 | |
|         for signum in self.signals:
 | |
|             handler = self.signal.getsignal(signum)
 | |
|             if handler is None:
 | |
|                 # getsignal() returns None if a signal handler was not
 | |
|                 # registered by the Python signal module,
 | |
|                 # and the handler is not SIG_DFL nor SIG_IGN.
 | |
|                 #
 | |
|                 # Ignore the signal: we cannot restore the handler.
 | |
|                 continue
 | |
|             self.handlers[signum] = handler
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def restore(self):
 | |
|         for signum, handler in self.handlers.items():
 | |
|             self.signal.signal(signum, handler)
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def with_pymalloc():
 | |
|     import _testcapi
 | |
|     return _testcapi.WITH_PYMALLOC
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| class FakePath:
 | |
|     """Simple implementing of the path protocol.
 | |
|     """
 | |
|     def __init__(self, path):
 | |
|         self.path = path
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __repr__(self):
 | |
|         return f'<FakePath {self.path!r}>'
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def __fspath__(self):
 | |
|         if (isinstance(self.path, BaseException) or
 | |
|             isinstance(self.path, type) and
 | |
|                 issubclass(self.path, BaseException)):
 | |
|             raise self.path
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             return self.path
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
 | |
| def maybe_get_event_loop_policy():
 | |
|     """Return the global event loop policy if one is set, else return None."""
 | |
|     return asyncio.events._event_loop_policy
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Helpers for testing hashing.
 | |
| NHASHBITS = sys.hash_info.width # number of bits in hash() result
 | |
| assert NHASHBITS in (32, 64)
 | |
| 
 | |
| # Return mean and sdev of number of collisions when tossing nballs balls
 | |
| # uniformly at random into nbins bins.  By definition, the number of
 | |
| # collisions is the number of balls minus the number of occupied bins at
 | |
| # the end.
 | |
| def collision_stats(nbins, nballs):
 | |
|     n, k = nbins, nballs
 | |
|     # prob a bin empty after k trials = (1 - 1/n)**k
 | |
|     # mean # empty is then n * (1 - 1/n)**k
 | |
|     # so mean # occupied is n - n * (1 - 1/n)**k
 | |
|     # so collisions = k - (n - n*(1 - 1/n)**k)
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # For the variance:
 | |
|     # n*(n-1)*(1-2/n)**k + meanempty - meanempty**2 =
 | |
|     # n*(n-1)*(1-2/n)**k + meanempty * (1 - meanempty)
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # Massive cancellation occurs, and, e.g., for a 64-bit hash code
 | |
|     # 1-1/2**64 rounds uselessly to 1.0.  Rather than make heroic (and
 | |
|     # error-prone) efforts to rework the naive formulas to avoid those,
 | |
|     # we use the `decimal` module to get plenty of extra precision.
 | |
|     #
 | |
|     # Note:  the exact values are straightforward to compute with
 | |
|     # rationals, but in context that's unbearably slow, requiring
 | |
|     # multi-million bit arithmetic.
 | |
|     import decimal
 | |
|     with decimal.localcontext() as ctx:
 | |
|         bits = n.bit_length() * 2  # bits in n**2
 | |
|         # At least that many bits will likely cancel out.
 | |
|         # Use that many decimal digits instead.
 | |
|         ctx.prec = max(bits, 30)
 | |
|         dn = decimal.Decimal(n)
 | |
|         p1empty = ((dn - 1) / dn) ** k
 | |
|         meanempty = n * p1empty
 | |
|         occupied = n - meanempty
 | |
|         collisions = k - occupied
 | |
|         var = dn*(dn-1)*((dn-2)/dn)**k + meanempty * (1 - meanempty)
 | |
|         return float(collisions), float(var.sqrt())
 | 
