| import sys |
| import os |
| import unittest |
| import itertools |
| import select |
| import signal |
| import subprocess |
| import time |
| from array import array |
| from weakref import proxy |
| try: |
| import threading |
| except ImportError: |
| threading = None |
| |
| from test import test_support |
| from test.test_support import TESTFN, run_unittest |
| from UserList import UserList |
| |
| class AutoFileTests(unittest.TestCase): |
| # file tests for which a test file is automatically set up |
| |
| def setUp(self): |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, 'wb') |
| |
| def tearDown(self): |
| if self.f: |
| self.f.close() |
| os.remove(TESTFN) |
| |
| def testWeakRefs(self): |
| # verify weak references |
| p = proxy(self.f) |
| p.write('teststring') |
| self.assertEqual(self.f.tell(), p.tell()) |
| self.f.close() |
| self.f = None |
| self.assertRaises(ReferenceError, getattr, p, 'tell') |
| |
| def testAttributes(self): |
| # verify expected attributes exist |
| f = self.f |
| with test_support.check_py3k_warnings(): |
| softspace = f.softspace |
| f.name # merely shouldn't blow up |
| f.mode # ditto |
| f.closed # ditto |
| |
| with test_support.check_py3k_warnings(): |
| # verify softspace is writable |
| f.softspace = softspace # merely shouldn't blow up |
| |
| # verify the others aren't |
| for attr in 'name', 'mode', 'closed': |
| self.assertRaises((AttributeError, TypeError), setattr, f, attr, 'oops') |
| |
| def testReadinto(self): |
| # verify readinto |
| self.f.write('12') |
| self.f.close() |
| a = array('c', 'x'*10) |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, 'rb') |
| n = self.f.readinto(a) |
| self.assertEqual('12', a.tostring()[:n]) |
| |
| def testWritelinesUserList(self): |
| # verify writelines with instance sequence |
| l = UserList(['1', '2']) |
| self.f.writelines(l) |
| self.f.close() |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, 'rb') |
| buf = self.f.read() |
| self.assertEqual(buf, '12') |
| |
| def testWritelinesIntegers(self): |
| # verify writelines with integers |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, [1, 2, 3]) |
| |
| def testWritelinesIntegersUserList(self): |
| # verify writelines with integers in UserList |
| l = UserList([1,2,3]) |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, l) |
| |
| def testWritelinesNonString(self): |
| # verify writelines with non-string object |
| class NonString: |
| pass |
| |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, |
| [NonString(), NonString()]) |
| |
| def testRepr(self): |
| # verify repr works |
| self.assertTrue(repr(self.f).startswith("<open file '" + TESTFN)) |
| # see issue #14161 |
| # Windows doesn't like \r\n\t" in the file name, but ' is ok |
| fname = 'xx\rxx\nxx\'xx"xx' if sys.platform != "win32" else "xx'xx" |
| with open(fname, 'w') as f: |
| self.addCleanup(os.remove, fname) |
| self.assertTrue(repr(f).startswith( |
| "<open file %r, mode 'w' at" % fname)) |
| |
| def testErrors(self): |
| self.f.close() |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, 'rb') |
| f = self.f |
| self.assertEqual(f.name, TESTFN) |
| self.assertTrue(not f.isatty()) |
| self.assertTrue(not f.closed) |
| |
| self.assertRaises(TypeError, f.readinto, "") |
| f.close() |
| self.assertTrue(f.closed) |
| |
| def testMethods(self): |
| methods = ['fileno', 'flush', 'isatty', 'next', 'read', 'readinto', |
| 'readline', 'readlines', 'seek', 'tell', 'truncate', |
| 'write', '__iter__'] |
| deprecated_methods = ['xreadlines'] |
| if sys.platform.startswith('atheos'): |
| methods.remove('truncate') |
| |
| # __exit__ should close the file |
| self.f.__exit__(None, None, None) |
| self.assertTrue(self.f.closed) |
| |
| for methodname in methods: |
| method = getattr(self.f, methodname) |
| # should raise on closed file |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, method) |
| with test_support.check_py3k_warnings(): |
| for methodname in deprecated_methods: |
| method = getattr(self.f, methodname) |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, method) |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.f.writelines, []) |
| |
| # file is closed, __exit__ shouldn't do anything |
| self.assertEqual(self.f.__exit__(None, None, None), None) |
| # it must also return None if an exception was given |
| try: |
| 1 // 0 |
| except: |
| self.assertEqual(self.f.__exit__(*sys.exc_info()), None) |
| |
| def testReadWhenWriting(self): |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, self.f.read) |
| |
| def testNastyWritelinesGenerator(self): |
| def nasty(): |
| for i in range(5): |
| if i == 3: |
| self.f.close() |
| yield str(i) |
| self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.f.writelines, nasty()) |
| |
| def testIssue5677(self): |
| # Remark: Do not perform more than one test per open file, |
| # since that does NOT catch the readline error on Windows. |
| data = 'xxx' |
| for mode in ['w', 'wb', 'a', 'ab']: |
| for attr in ['read', 'readline', 'readlines']: |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.f.write(data) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, getattr(self.f, attr)) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.f.write(data) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, lambda: [line for line in self.f]) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.f.write(data) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, self.f.readinto, bytearray(len(data))) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| for mode in ['r', 'rb', 'U', 'Ub', 'Ur', 'rU', 'rbU', 'rUb']: |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, self.f.write, data) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, self.f.writelines, [data, data]) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| self.f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, self.f.truncate) |
| self.f.close() |
| |
| class OtherFileTests(unittest.TestCase): |
| |
| def testOpenDir(self): |
| this_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__) or os.curdir |
| for mode in (None, "w"): |
| try: |
| if mode: |
| f = open(this_dir, mode) |
| else: |
| f = open(this_dir) |
| except IOError as e: |
| self.assertEqual(e.filename, this_dir) |
| else: |
| self.fail("opening a directory didn't raise an IOError") |
| |
| def testModeStrings(self): |
| # check invalid mode strings |
| for mode in ("", "aU", "wU+"): |
| try: |
| f = open(TESTFN, mode) |
| except ValueError: |
| pass |
| else: |
| f.close() |
| self.fail('%r is an invalid file mode' % mode) |
| |
| # Some invalid modes fail on Windows, but pass on Unix |
| # Issue3965: avoid a crash on Windows when filename is unicode |
| for name in (TESTFN, unicode(TESTFN), unicode(TESTFN + '\t')): |
| try: |
| f = open(name, "rr") |
| except (IOError, ValueError): |
| pass |
| else: |
| f.close() |
| |
| def testStdin(self): |
| # This causes the interpreter to exit on OSF1 v5.1. |
| if sys.platform != 'osf1V5': |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, sys.stdin.seek, -1) |
| else: |
| print >>sys.__stdout__, ( |
| ' Skipping sys.stdin.seek(-1), it may crash the interpreter.' |
| ' Test manually.') |
| self.assertRaises(IOError, sys.stdin.truncate) |
| |
| def testUnicodeOpen(self): |
| # verify repr works for unicode too |
| f = open(unicode(TESTFN), "w") |
| self.assertTrue(repr(f).startswith("<open file u'" + TESTFN)) |
| f.close() |
| os.unlink(TESTFN) |
| |
| def testBadModeArgument(self): |
| # verify that we get a sensible error message for bad mode argument |
| bad_mode = "qwerty" |
| try: |
| f = open(TESTFN, bad_mode) |
| except ValueError, msg: |
| if msg.args[0] != 0: |
| s = str(msg) |
| if TESTFN in s or bad_mode not in s: |
| self.fail("bad error message for invalid mode: %s" % s) |
| # if msg.args[0] == 0, we're probably on Windows where there may |
| # be no obvious way to discover why open() failed. |
| else: |
| f.close() |
| self.fail("no error for invalid mode: %s" % bad_mode) |
| |
| def testSetBufferSize(self): |
| # make sure that explicitly setting the buffer size doesn't cause |
| # misbehaviour especially with repeated close() calls |
| for s in (-1, 0, 1, 512): |
| try: |
| f = open(TESTFN, 'w', s) |
| f.write(str(s)) |
| f.close() |
| f.close() |
| f = open(TESTFN, 'r', s) |
| d = int(f.read()) |
| f.close() |
| f.close() |
| except IOError, msg: |
| self.fail('error setting buffer size %d: %s' % (s, str(msg))) |
| self.assertEqual(d, s) |
| |
| def testTruncateOnWindows(self): |
| os.unlink(TESTFN) |
| |
| def bug801631(): |
| # SF bug <http://www.python.org/sf/801631> |
| # "file.truncate fault on windows" |
| f = open(TESTFN, 'wb') |
| f.write('12345678901') # 11 bytes |
| f.close() |
| |
| f = open(TESTFN,'rb+') |
| data = f.read(5) |
| if data != '12345': |
| self.fail("Read on file opened for update failed %r" % data) |
| if f.tell() != 5: |
| self.fail("File pos after read wrong %d" % f.tell()) |
| |
| f.truncate() |
| if f.tell() != 5: |
| self.fail("File pos after ftruncate wrong %d" % f.tell()) |
| |
| f.close() |
| size = os.path.getsize(TESTFN) |
| if size != 5: |
| self.fail("File size after ftruncate wrong %d" % size) |
| |
| try: |
| bug801631() |
| finally: |
| os.unlink(TESTFN) |
| |
| def testIteration(self): |
| # Test the complex interaction when mixing file-iteration and the |
| # various read* methods. Ostensibly, the mixture could just be tested |
| # to work when it should work according to the Python language, |
| # instead of fail when it should fail according to the current CPython |
| # implementation. People don't always program Python the way they |
| # should, though, and the implemenation might change in subtle ways, |
| # so we explicitly test for errors, too; the test will just have to |
| # be updated when the implementation changes. |
| dataoffset = 16384 |
| filler = "ham\n" |
| assert not dataoffset % len(filler), \ |
| "dataoffset must be multiple of len(filler)" |
| nchunks = dataoffset // len(filler) |
| testlines = [ |
| "spam, spam and eggs\n", |
| "eggs, spam, ham and spam\n", |
| "saussages, spam, spam and eggs\n", |
| "spam, ham, spam and eggs\n", |
| "spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, ham, spam\n", |
| "wonderful spaaaaaam.\n" |
| ] |
| methods = [("readline", ()), ("read", ()), ("readlines", ()), |
| ("readinto", (array("c", " "*100),))] |
| |
| try: |
| # Prepare the testfile |
| bag = open(TESTFN, "w") |
| bag.write(filler * nchunks) |
| bag.writelines(testlines) |
| bag.close() |
| # Test for appropriate errors mixing read* and iteration |
| for methodname, args in methods: |
| f = open(TESTFN) |
| if f.next() != filler: |
| self.fail, "Broken testfile" |
| meth = getattr(f, methodname) |
| try: |
| meth(*args) |
| except ValueError: |
| pass |
| else: |
| self.fail("%s%r after next() didn't raise ValueError" % |
| (methodname, args)) |
| f.close() |
| |
| # Test to see if harmless (by accident) mixing of read* and |
| # iteration still works. This depends on the size of the internal |
| # iteration buffer (currently 8192,) but we can test it in a |
| # flexible manner. Each line in the bag o' ham is 4 bytes |
| # ("h", "a", "m", "\n"), so 4096 lines of that should get us |
| # exactly on the buffer boundary for any power-of-2 buffersize |
| # between 4 and 16384 (inclusive). |
| f = open(TESTFN) |
| for i in range(nchunks): |
| f.next() |
| testline = testlines.pop(0) |
| try: |
| line = f.readline() |
| except ValueError: |
| self.fail("readline() after next() with supposedly empty " |
| "iteration-buffer failed anyway") |
| if line != testline: |
| self.fail("readline() after next() with empty buffer " |
| "failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline)) |
| testline = testlines.pop(0) |
| buf = array("c", "\x00" * len(testline)) |
| try: |
| f.readinto(buf) |
| except ValueError: |
| self.fail("readinto() after next() with supposedly empty " |
| "iteration-buffer failed anyway") |
| line = buf.tostring() |
| if line != testline: |
| self.fail("readinto() after next() with empty buffer " |
| "failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline)) |
| |
| testline = testlines.pop(0) |
| try: |
| line = f.read(len(testline)) |
| except ValueError: |
| self.fail("read() after next() with supposedly empty " |
| "iteration-buffer failed anyway") |
| if line != testline: |
| self.fail("read() after next() with empty buffer " |
| "failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline)) |
| try: |
| lines = f.readlines() |
| except ValueError: |
| self.fail("readlines() after next() with supposedly empty " |
| "iteration-buffer failed anyway") |
| if lines != testlines: |
| self.fail("readlines() after next() with empty buffer " |
| "failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline)) |
| # Reading after iteration hit EOF shouldn't hurt either |
| f = open(TESTFN) |
| try: |
| for line in f: |
| pass |
| try: |
| f.readline() |
| f.readinto(buf) |
| f.read() |
| f.readlines() |
| except ValueError: |
| self.fail("read* failed after next() consumed file") |
| finally: |
| f.close() |
| finally: |
| os.unlink(TESTFN) |
| |
| @unittest.skipUnless(os.name == 'posix', 'test requires a posix system.') |
| def test_write_full(self): |
| # Issue #17976 |
| try: |
| f = open('/dev/full', 'w', 1) |
| except IOError: |
| self.skipTest("requires '/dev/full'") |
| try: |
| with self.assertRaises(IOError): |
| f.write('hello') |
| f.write('\n') |
| finally: |
| f.close() |
| |
| class FileSubclassTests(unittest.TestCase): |
| |
| def testExit(self): |
| # test that exiting with context calls subclass' close |
| class C(file): |
| def __init__(self, *args): |
| self.subclass_closed = False |
| file.__init__(self, *args) |
| def close(self): |
| self.subclass_closed = True |
| file.close(self) |
| |
| with C(TESTFN, 'w') as f: |
| pass |
| self.assertTrue(f.subclass_closed) |
| |
| |
| @unittest.skipUnless(threading, 'Threading required for this test.') |
| class FileThreadingTests(unittest.TestCase): |
| # These tests check the ability to call various methods of file objects |
| # (including close()) concurrently without crashing the Python interpreter. |
| # See #815646, #595601 |
| |
| def setUp(self): |
| self._threads = test_support.threading_setup() |
| self.f = None |
| self.filename = TESTFN |
| with open(self.filename, "w") as f: |
| f.write("\n".join("0123456789")) |
| self._count_lock = threading.Lock() |
| self.close_count = 0 |
| self.close_success_count = 0 |
| self.use_buffering = False |
| |
| def tearDown(self): |
| if self.f: |
| try: |
| self.f.close() |
| except (EnvironmentError, ValueError): |
| pass |
| try: |
| os.remove(self.filename) |
| except EnvironmentError: |
| pass |
| test_support.threading_cleanup(*self._threads) |
| |
| def _create_file(self): |
| if self.use_buffering: |
| self.f = open(self.filename, "w+", buffering=1024*16) |
| else: |
| self.f = open(self.filename, "w+") |
| |
| def _close_file(self): |
| with self._count_lock: |
| self.close_count += 1 |
| self.f.close() |
| with self._count_lock: |
| self.close_success_count += 1 |
| |
| def _close_and_reopen_file(self): |
| self._close_file() |
| # if close raises an exception thats fine, self.f remains valid so |
| # we don't need to reopen. |
| self._create_file() |
| |
| def _run_workers(self, func, nb_workers, duration=0.2): |
| with self._count_lock: |
| self.close_count = 0 |
| self.close_success_count = 0 |
| self.do_continue = True |
| threads = [] |
| try: |
| for i in range(nb_workers): |
| t = threading.Thread(target=func) |
| t.start() |
| threads.append(t) |
| for _ in xrange(100): |
| time.sleep(duration/100) |
| with self._count_lock: |
| if self.close_count-self.close_success_count > nb_workers+1: |
| if test_support.verbose: |
| print 'Q', |
| break |
| time.sleep(duration) |
| finally: |
| self.do_continue = False |
| for t in threads: |
| t.join() |
| |
| def _test_close_open_io(self, io_func, nb_workers=5): |
| def worker(): |
| self._create_file() |
| funcs = itertools.cycle(( |
| lambda: io_func(), |
| lambda: self._close_and_reopen_file(), |
| )) |
| for f in funcs: |
| if not self.do_continue: |
| break |
| try: |
| f() |
| except (IOError, ValueError): |
| pass |
| self._run_workers(worker, nb_workers) |
| if test_support.verbose: |
| # Useful verbose statistics when tuning this test to take |
| # less time to run but still ensuring that its still useful. |
| # |
| # the percent of close calls that raised an error |
| percent = 100. - 100.*self.close_success_count/self.close_count |
| print self.close_count, ('%.4f ' % percent), |
| |
| def test_close_open(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| pass |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_flush(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.flush() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_iter(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| list(iter(self.f)) |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_isatty(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.isatty() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_print(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| print >> self.f, '' |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_print_buffered(self): |
| self.use_buffering = True |
| def io_func(): |
| print >> self.f, '' |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_read(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.read(0) |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_readinto(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| a = array('c', 'xxxxx') |
| self.f.readinto(a) |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_readline(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.readline() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_readlines(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.readlines() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_seek(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.seek(0, 0) |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_tell(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.tell() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_truncate(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.truncate() |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_write(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.write('') |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| def test_close_open_writelines(self): |
| def io_func(): |
| self.f.writelines('') |
| self._test_close_open_io(io_func) |
| |
| |
| @unittest.skipUnless(os.name == 'posix', 'test requires a posix system.') |
| class TestFileSignalEINTR(unittest.TestCase): |
| def _test_reading(self, data_to_write, read_and_verify_code, method_name, |
| universal_newlines=False): |
| """Generic buffered read method test harness to verify EINTR behavior. |
| |
| Also validates that Python signal handlers are run during the read. |
| |
| Args: |
| data_to_write: String to write to the child process for reading |
| before sending it a signal, confirming the signal was handled, |
| writing a final newline char and closing the infile pipe. |
| read_and_verify_code: Single "line" of code to read from a file |
| object named 'infile' and validate the result. This will be |
| executed as part of a python subprocess fed data_to_write. |
| method_name: The name of the read method being tested, for use in |
| an error message on failure. |
| universal_newlines: If True, infile will be opened in universal |
| newline mode in the child process. |
| """ |
| if universal_newlines: |
| # Test the \r\n -> \n conversion while we're at it. |
| data_to_write = data_to_write.replace('\n', '\r\n') |
| infile_setup_code = 'infile = os.fdopen(sys.stdin.fileno(), "rU")' |
| else: |
| infile_setup_code = 'infile = sys.stdin' |
| # Total pipe IO in this function is smaller than the minimum posix OS |
| # pipe buffer size of 512 bytes. No writer should block. |
| assert len(data_to_write) < 512, 'data_to_write must fit in pipe buf.' |
| |
| child_code = ( |
| 'import os, signal, sys ;' |
| 'signal.signal(' |
| 'signal.SIGINT, lambda s, f: sys.stderr.write("$\\n")) ;' |
| + infile_setup_code + ' ;' + |
| 'assert isinstance(infile, file) ;' |
| 'sys.stderr.write("Go.\\n") ;' |
| + read_and_verify_code) |
| reader_process = subprocess.Popen( |
| [sys.executable, '-c', child_code], |
| stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, |
| stderr=subprocess.PIPE) |
| # Wait for the signal handler to be installed. |
| go = reader_process.stderr.read(4) |
| if go != 'Go.\n': |
| reader_process.kill() |
| self.fail('Error from %s process while awaiting "Go":\n%s' % ( |
| method_name, go+reader_process.stderr.read())) |
| reader_process.stdin.write(data_to_write) |
| signals_sent = 0 |
| rlist = [] |
| # We don't know when the read_and_verify_code in our child is actually |
| # executing within the read system call we want to interrupt. This |
| # loop waits for a bit before sending the first signal to increase |
| # the likelihood of that. Implementations without correct EINTR |
| # and signal handling usually fail this test. |
| while not rlist: |
| rlist, _, _ = select.select([reader_process.stderr], (), (), 0.05) |
| reader_process.send_signal(signal.SIGINT) |
| # Give the subprocess time to handle it before we loop around and |
| # send another one. On OSX the second signal happening close to |
| # immediately after the first was causing the subprocess to crash |
| # via the OS's default SIGINT handler. |
| time.sleep(0.1) |
| signals_sent += 1 |
| if signals_sent > 200: |
| reader_process.kill() |
| self.fail("failed to handle signal during %s." % method_name) |
| # This assumes anything unexpected that writes to stderr will also |
| # write a newline. That is true of the traceback printing code. |
| signal_line = reader_process.stderr.readline() |
| if signal_line != '$\n': |
| reader_process.kill() |
| self.fail('Error from %s process while awaiting signal:\n%s' % ( |
| method_name, signal_line+reader_process.stderr.read())) |
| # We append a newline to our input so that a readline call can |
| # end on its own before the EOF is seen. |
| stdout, stderr = reader_process.communicate(input='\n') |
| if reader_process.returncode != 0: |
| self.fail('%s() process exited rc=%d.\nSTDOUT:\n%s\nSTDERR:\n%s' % ( |
| method_name, reader_process.returncode, stdout, stderr)) |
| |
| def test_readline(self, universal_newlines=False): |
| """file.readline must handle signals and not lose data.""" |
| self._test_reading( |
| data_to_write='hello, world!', |
| read_and_verify_code=( |
| 'line = infile.readline() ;' |
| 'expected_line = "hello, world!\\n" ;' |
| 'assert line == expected_line, (' |
| '"read %r expected %r" % (line, expected_line))' |
| ), |
| method_name='readline', |
| universal_newlines=universal_newlines) |
| |
| def test_readline_with_universal_newlines(self): |
| self.test_readline(universal_newlines=True) |
| |
| def test_readlines(self, universal_newlines=False): |
| """file.readlines must handle signals and not lose data.""" |
| self._test_reading( |
| data_to_write='hello\nworld!', |
| read_and_verify_code=( |
| 'lines = infile.readlines() ;' |
| 'expected_lines = ["hello\\n", "world!\\n"] ;' |
| 'assert lines == expected_lines, (' |
| '"readlines returned wrong data.\\n" ' |
| '"got lines %r\\nexpected %r" ' |
| '% (lines, expected_lines))' |
| ), |
| method_name='readlines', |
| universal_newlines=universal_newlines) |
| |
| def test_readlines_with_universal_newlines(self): |
| self.test_readlines(universal_newlines=True) |
| |
| def test_readall(self): |
| """Unbounded file.read() must handle signals and not lose data.""" |
| self._test_reading( |
| data_to_write='hello, world!abcdefghijklm', |
| read_and_verify_code=( |
| 'data = infile.read() ;' |
| 'expected_data = "hello, world!abcdefghijklm\\n";' |
| 'assert data == expected_data, (' |
| '"read %r expected %r" % (data, expected_data))' |
| ), |
| method_name='unbounded read') |
| |
| def test_readinto(self): |
| """file.readinto must handle signals and not lose data.""" |
| self._test_reading( |
| data_to_write='hello, world!', |
| read_and_verify_code=( |
| 'data = bytearray(50) ;' |
| 'num_read = infile.readinto(data) ;' |
| 'expected_data = "hello, world!\\n";' |
| 'assert data[:num_read] == expected_data, (' |
| '"read %r expected %r" % (data, expected_data))' |
| ), |
| method_name='readinto') |
| |
| |
| class StdoutTests(unittest.TestCase): |
| |
| def test_move_stdout_on_write(self): |
| # Issue 3242: sys.stdout can be replaced (and freed) during a |
| # print statement; prevent a segfault in this case |
| save_stdout = sys.stdout |
| |
| class File: |
| def write(self, data): |
| if '\n' in data: |
| sys.stdout = save_stdout |
| |
| try: |
| sys.stdout = File() |
| print "some text" |
| finally: |
| sys.stdout = save_stdout |
| |
| def test_del_stdout_before_print(self): |
| # Issue 4597: 'print' with no argument wasn't reporting when |
| # sys.stdout was deleted. |
| save_stdout = sys.stdout |
| del sys.stdout |
| try: |
| print |
| except RuntimeError as e: |
| self.assertEqual(str(e), "lost sys.stdout") |
| else: |
| self.fail("Expected RuntimeError") |
| finally: |
| sys.stdout = save_stdout |
| |
| def test_unicode(self): |
| import subprocess |
| |
| def get_message(encoding, *code): |
| code = '\n'.join(code) |
| env = os.environ.copy() |
| env['PYTHONIOENCODING'] = encoding |
| process = subprocess.Popen([sys.executable, "-c", code], |
| stdout=subprocess.PIPE, env=env) |
| stdout, stderr = process.communicate() |
| self.assertEqual(process.returncode, 0) |
| return stdout |
| |
| def check_message(text, encoding, expected): |
| stdout = get_message(encoding, |
| "import sys", |
| "sys.stdout.write(%r)" % text, |
| "sys.stdout.flush()") |
| self.assertEqual(stdout, expected) |
| |
| # test the encoding |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "iso-8859-15", "15\xa4") |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "utf-8", '15\xe2\x82\xac') |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "utf-16-le", '1\x005\x00\xac\x20') |
| |
| # test the error handler |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "iso-8859-1:ignore", "15") |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "iso-8859-1:replace", "15?") |
| check_message(u'15\u20ac', "iso-8859-1:backslashreplace", "15\\u20ac") |
| |
| # test the buffer API |
| for objtype in ('buffer', 'bytearray'): |
| stdout = get_message('ascii', |
| 'import sys', |
| r'sys.stdout.write(%s("\xe9"))' % objtype, |
| 'sys.stdout.flush()') |
| self.assertEqual(stdout, "\xe9") |
| |
| |
| def test_main(): |
| # Historically, these tests have been sloppy about removing TESTFN. |
| # So get rid of it no matter what. |
| try: |
| run_unittest(AutoFileTests, OtherFileTests, FileSubclassTests, |
| FileThreadingTests, TestFileSignalEINTR, StdoutTests) |
| finally: |
| if os.path.exists(TESTFN): |
| os.unlink(TESTFN) |
| |
| if __name__ == '__main__': |
| test_main() |