| """Test case implementation""" |
| |
| import sys |
| import functools |
| import difflib |
| import pprint |
| import re |
| import warnings |
| import collections |
| |
| from . import result |
| from .util import (strclass, safe_repr, sorted_list_difference, |
| unorderable_list_difference, _count_diff_all_purpose, |
| _count_diff_hashable) |
| |
| __unittest = True |
| |
| |
| DIFF_OMITTED = ('\nDiff is %s characters long. ' |
| 'Set self.maxDiff to None to see it.') |
| |
| class SkipTest(Exception): |
| """ |
| Raise this exception in a test to skip it. |
| |
| Usually you can use TestResult.skip() or one of the skipping decorators |
| instead of raising this directly. |
| """ |
| |
| class _ExpectedFailure(Exception): |
| """ |
| Raise this when a test is expected to fail. |
| |
| This is an implementation detail. |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, exc_info): |
| super(_ExpectedFailure, self).__init__() |
| self.exc_info = exc_info |
| |
| class _UnexpectedSuccess(Exception): |
| """ |
| The test was supposed to fail, but it didn't! |
| """ |
| |
| |
| class _Outcome(object): |
| def __init__(self): |
| self.success = True |
| self.skipped = None |
| self.unexpectedSuccess = None |
| self.expectedFailure = None |
| self.errors = [] |
| self.failures = [] |
| |
| |
| def _id(obj): |
| return obj |
| |
| def skip(reason): |
| """ |
| Unconditionally skip a test. |
| """ |
| def decorator(test_item): |
| if not (isinstance(test_item, type) and issubclass(test_item, TestCase)): |
| @functools.wraps(test_item) |
| def skip_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): |
| raise SkipTest(reason) |
| test_item = skip_wrapper |
| |
| test_item.__unittest_skip__ = True |
| test_item.__unittest_skip_why__ = reason |
| return test_item |
| return decorator |
| |
| def skipIf(condition, reason): |
| """ |
| Skip a test if the condition is true. |
| """ |
| if condition: |
| return skip(reason) |
| return _id |
| |
| def skipUnless(condition, reason): |
| """ |
| Skip a test unless the condition is true. |
| """ |
| if not condition: |
| return skip(reason) |
| return _id |
| |
| |
| def expectedFailure(func): |
| @functools.wraps(func) |
| def wrapper(*args, **kwargs): |
| try: |
| func(*args, **kwargs) |
| except Exception: |
| raise _ExpectedFailure(sys.exc_info()) |
| raise _UnexpectedSuccess |
| return wrapper |
| |
| |
| class _AssertRaisesBaseContext(object): |
| |
| def __init__(self, expected, test_case, callable_obj=None, |
| expected_regex=None): |
| self.expected = expected |
| self.failureException = test_case.failureException |
| if callable_obj is not None: |
| try: |
| self.obj_name = callable_obj.__name__ |
| except AttributeError: |
| self.obj_name = str(callable_obj) |
| else: |
| self.obj_name = None |
| if isinstance(expected_regex, (bytes, str)): |
| expected_regex = re.compile(expected_regex) |
| self.expected_regex = expected_regex |
| |
| |
| class _AssertRaisesContext(_AssertRaisesBaseContext): |
| """A context manager used to implement TestCase.assertRaises* methods.""" |
| |
| def __enter__(self): |
| return self |
| |
| def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): |
| if exc_type is None: |
| try: |
| exc_name = self.expected.__name__ |
| except AttributeError: |
| exc_name = str(self.expected) |
| if self.obj_name: |
| raise self.failureException("{0} not raised by {1}" |
| .format(exc_name, self.obj_name)) |
| else: |
| raise self.failureException("{0} not raised" |
| .format(exc_name)) |
| if not issubclass(exc_type, self.expected): |
| # let unexpected exceptions pass through |
| return False |
| # store exception, without traceback, for later retrieval |
| self.exception = exc_value.with_traceback(None) |
| if self.expected_regex is None: |
| return True |
| |
| expected_regex = self.expected_regex |
| if not expected_regex.search(str(exc_value)): |
| raise self.failureException('"%s" does not match "%s"' % |
| (expected_regex.pattern, str(exc_value))) |
| return True |
| |
| |
| class _AssertWarnsContext(_AssertRaisesBaseContext): |
| """A context manager used to implement TestCase.assertWarns* methods.""" |
| |
| def __enter__(self): |
| # The __warningregistry__'s need to be in a pristine state for tests |
| # to work properly. |
| for v in sys.modules.values(): |
| if getattr(v, '__warningregistry__', None): |
| v.__warningregistry__ = {} |
| self.warnings_manager = warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) |
| self.warnings = self.warnings_manager.__enter__() |
| warnings.simplefilter("always", self.expected) |
| return self |
| |
| def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, tb): |
| self.warnings_manager.__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, tb) |
| if exc_type is not None: |
| # let unexpected exceptions pass through |
| return |
| try: |
| exc_name = self.expected.__name__ |
| except AttributeError: |
| exc_name = str(self.expected) |
| first_matching = None |
| for m in self.warnings: |
| w = m.message |
| if not isinstance(w, self.expected): |
| continue |
| if first_matching is None: |
| first_matching = w |
| if (self.expected_regex is not None and |
| not self.expected_regex.search(str(w))): |
| continue |
| # store warning for later retrieval |
| self.warning = w |
| self.filename = m.filename |
| self.lineno = m.lineno |
| return |
| # Now we simply try to choose a helpful failure message |
| if first_matching is not None: |
| raise self.failureException('"%s" does not match "%s"' % |
| (self.expected_regex.pattern, str(first_matching))) |
| if self.obj_name: |
| raise self.failureException("{0} not triggered by {1}" |
| .format(exc_name, self.obj_name)) |
| else: |
| raise self.failureException("{0} not triggered" |
| .format(exc_name)) |
| |
| |
| class TestCase(object): |
| """A class whose instances are single test cases. |
| |
| By default, the test code itself should be placed in a method named |
| 'runTest'. |
| |
| If the fixture may be used for many test cases, create as |
| many test methods as are needed. When instantiating such a TestCase |
| subclass, specify in the constructor arguments the name of the test method |
| that the instance is to execute. |
| |
| Test authors should subclass TestCase for their own tests. Construction |
| and deconstruction of the test's environment ('fixture') can be |
| implemented by overriding the 'setUp' and 'tearDown' methods respectively. |
| |
| If it is necessary to override the __init__ method, the base class |
| __init__ method must always be called. It is important that subclasses |
| should not change the signature of their __init__ method, since instances |
| of the classes are instantiated automatically by parts of the framework |
| in order to be run. |
| """ |
| |
| # This attribute determines which exception will be raised when |
| # the instance's assertion methods fail; test methods raising this |
| # exception will be deemed to have 'failed' rather than 'errored' |
| |
| failureException = AssertionError |
| |
| # This attribute determines whether long messages (including repr of |
| # objects used in assert methods) will be printed on failure in *addition* |
| # to any explicit message passed. |
| |
| longMessage = True |
| |
| # This attribute sets the maximum length of a diff in failure messages |
| # by assert methods using difflib. It is looked up as an instance attribute |
| # so can be configured by individual tests if required. |
| |
| maxDiff = 80*8 |
| |
| # If a string is longer than _diffThreshold, use normal comparison instead |
| # of difflib. See #11763. |
| _diffThreshold = 2**16 |
| |
| # Attribute used by TestSuite for classSetUp |
| |
| _classSetupFailed = False |
| |
| def __init__(self, methodName='runTest'): |
| """Create an instance of the class that will use the named test |
| method when executed. Raises a ValueError if the instance does |
| not have a method with the specified name. |
| """ |
| self._testMethodName = methodName |
| self._outcomeForDoCleanups = None |
| self._testMethodDoc = 'No test' |
| try: |
| testMethod = getattr(self, methodName) |
| except AttributeError: |
| if methodName != 'runTest': |
| # we allow instantiation with no explicit method name |
| # but not an *incorrect* or missing method name |
| raise ValueError("no such test method in %s: %s" % |
| (self.__class__, methodName)) |
| else: |
| self._testMethodDoc = testMethod.__doc__ |
| self._cleanups = [] |
| |
| # Map types to custom assertEqual functions that will compare |
| # instances of said type in more detail to generate a more useful |
| # error message. |
| self._type_equality_funcs = {} |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(dict, 'assertDictEqual') |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(list, 'assertListEqual') |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(tuple, 'assertTupleEqual') |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(set, 'assertSetEqual') |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(frozenset, 'assertSetEqual') |
| self.addTypeEqualityFunc(str, 'assertMultiLineEqual') |
| |
| def addTypeEqualityFunc(self, typeobj, function): |
| """Add a type specific assertEqual style function to compare a type. |
| |
| This method is for use by TestCase subclasses that need to register |
| their own type equality functions to provide nicer error messages. |
| |
| Args: |
| typeobj: The data type to call this function on when both values |
| are of the same type in assertEqual(). |
| function: The callable taking two arguments and an optional |
| msg= argument that raises self.failureException with a |
| useful error message when the two arguments are not equal. |
| """ |
| self._type_equality_funcs[typeobj] = function |
| |
| def addCleanup(self, function, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Add a function, with arguments, to be called when the test is |
| completed. Functions added are called on a LIFO basis and are |
| called after tearDown on test failure or success. |
| |
| Cleanup items are called even if setUp fails (unlike tearDown).""" |
| self._cleanups.append((function, args, kwargs)) |
| |
| def setUp(self): |
| "Hook method for setting up the test fixture before exercising it." |
| pass |
| |
| def tearDown(self): |
| "Hook method for deconstructing the test fixture after testing it." |
| pass |
| |
| @classmethod |
| def setUpClass(cls): |
| "Hook method for setting up class fixture before running tests in the class." |
| |
| @classmethod |
| def tearDownClass(cls): |
| "Hook method for deconstructing the class fixture after running all tests in the class." |
| |
| def countTestCases(self): |
| return 1 |
| |
| def defaultTestResult(self): |
| return result.TestResult() |
| |
| def shortDescription(self): |
| """Returns a one-line description of the test, or None if no |
| description has been provided. |
| |
| The default implementation of this method returns the first line of |
| the specified test method's docstring. |
| """ |
| doc = self._testMethodDoc |
| return doc and doc.split("\n")[0].strip() or None |
| |
| |
| def id(self): |
| return "%s.%s" % (strclass(self.__class__), self._testMethodName) |
| |
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| if type(self) is not type(other): |
| return NotImplemented |
| |
| return self._testMethodName == other._testMethodName |
| |
| def __hash__(self): |
| return hash((type(self), self._testMethodName)) |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return "%s (%s)" % (self._testMethodName, strclass(self.__class__)) |
| |
| def __repr__(self): |
| return "<%s testMethod=%s>" % \ |
| (strclass(self.__class__), self._testMethodName) |
| |
| def _addSkip(self, result, reason): |
| addSkip = getattr(result, 'addSkip', None) |
| if addSkip is not None: |
| addSkip(self, reason) |
| else: |
| warnings.warn("TestResult has no addSkip method, skips not reported", |
| RuntimeWarning, 2) |
| result.addSuccess(self) |
| |
| def _executeTestPart(self, function, outcome, isTest=False): |
| try: |
| function() |
| except KeyboardInterrupt: |
| raise |
| except SkipTest as e: |
| outcome.success = False |
| outcome.skipped = str(e) |
| except _UnexpectedSuccess: |
| exc_info = sys.exc_info() |
| outcome.success = False |
| if isTest: |
| outcome.unexpectedSuccess = exc_info |
| else: |
| outcome.errors.append(exc_info) |
| except _ExpectedFailure: |
| outcome.success = False |
| exc_info = sys.exc_info() |
| if isTest: |
| outcome.expectedFailure = exc_info |
| else: |
| outcome.errors.append(exc_info) |
| except self.failureException: |
| outcome.success = False |
| outcome.failures.append(sys.exc_info()) |
| exc_info = sys.exc_info() |
| except: |
| outcome.success = False |
| outcome.errors.append(sys.exc_info()) |
| |
| def run(self, result=None): |
| orig_result = result |
| if result is None: |
| result = self.defaultTestResult() |
| startTestRun = getattr(result, 'startTestRun', None) |
| if startTestRun is not None: |
| startTestRun() |
| |
| result.startTest(self) |
| |
| testMethod = getattr(self, self._testMethodName) |
| if (getattr(self.__class__, "__unittest_skip__", False) or |
| getattr(testMethod, "__unittest_skip__", False)): |
| # If the class or method was skipped. |
| try: |
| skip_why = (getattr(self.__class__, '__unittest_skip_why__', '') |
| or getattr(testMethod, '__unittest_skip_why__', '')) |
| self._addSkip(result, skip_why) |
| finally: |
| result.stopTest(self) |
| return |
| try: |
| outcome = _Outcome() |
| self._outcomeForDoCleanups = outcome |
| |
| self._executeTestPart(self.setUp, outcome) |
| if outcome.success: |
| self._executeTestPart(testMethod, outcome, isTest=True) |
| self._executeTestPart(self.tearDown, outcome) |
| |
| self.doCleanups() |
| if outcome.success: |
| result.addSuccess(self) |
| else: |
| if outcome.skipped is not None: |
| self._addSkip(result, outcome.skipped) |
| for exc_info in outcome.errors: |
| result.addError(self, exc_info) |
| for exc_info in outcome.failures: |
| result.addFailure(self, exc_info) |
| if outcome.unexpectedSuccess is not None: |
| addUnexpectedSuccess = getattr(result, 'addUnexpectedSuccess', None) |
| if addUnexpectedSuccess is not None: |
| addUnexpectedSuccess(self) |
| else: |
| warnings.warn("TestResult has no addUnexpectedSuccess method, reporting as failures", |
| RuntimeWarning) |
| result.addFailure(self, outcome.unexpectedSuccess) |
| |
| if outcome.expectedFailure is not None: |
| addExpectedFailure = getattr(result, 'addExpectedFailure', None) |
| if addExpectedFailure is not None: |
| addExpectedFailure(self, outcome.expectedFailure) |
| else: |
| warnings.warn("TestResult has no addExpectedFailure method, reporting as passes", |
| RuntimeWarning) |
| result.addSuccess(self) |
| |
| finally: |
| result.stopTest(self) |
| if orig_result is None: |
| stopTestRun = getattr(result, 'stopTestRun', None) |
| if stopTestRun is not None: |
| stopTestRun() |
| |
| def doCleanups(self): |
| """Execute all cleanup functions. Normally called for you after |
| tearDown.""" |
| outcome = self._outcomeForDoCleanups or _Outcome() |
| while self._cleanups: |
| function, args, kwargs = self._cleanups.pop() |
| part = lambda: function(*args, **kwargs) |
| self._executeTestPart(part, outcome) |
| |
| # return this for backwards compatibility |
| # even though we no longer us it internally |
| return outcome.success |
| |
| def __call__(self, *args, **kwds): |
| return self.run(*args, **kwds) |
| |
| def debug(self): |
| """Run the test without collecting errors in a TestResult""" |
| self.setUp() |
| getattr(self, self._testMethodName)() |
| self.tearDown() |
| while self._cleanups: |
| function, args, kwargs = self._cleanups.pop(-1) |
| function(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| def skipTest(self, reason): |
| """Skip this test.""" |
| raise SkipTest(reason) |
| |
| def fail(self, msg=None): |
| """Fail immediately, with the given message.""" |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertFalse(self, expr, msg=None): |
| """Check that the expression is false.""" |
| if expr: |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, "%s is not false" % safe_repr(expr)) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertTrue(self, expr, msg=None): |
| """Check that the expression is true.""" |
| if not expr: |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, "%s is not true" % safe_repr(expr)) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def _formatMessage(self, msg, standardMsg): |
| """Honour the longMessage attribute when generating failure messages. |
| If longMessage is False this means: |
| * Use only an explicit message if it is provided |
| * Otherwise use the standard message for the assert |
| |
| If longMessage is True: |
| * Use the standard message |
| * If an explicit message is provided, plus ' : ' and the explicit message |
| """ |
| if not self.longMessage: |
| return msg or standardMsg |
| if msg is None: |
| return standardMsg |
| try: |
| # don't switch to '{}' formatting in Python 2.X |
| # it changes the way unicode input is handled |
| return '%s : %s' % (standardMsg, msg) |
| except UnicodeDecodeError: |
| return '%s : %s' % (safe_repr(standardMsg), safe_repr(msg)) |
| |
| |
| def assertRaises(self, excClass, callableObj=None, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Fail unless an exception of class excClass is thrown |
| by callableObj when invoked with arguments args and keyword |
| arguments kwargs. If a different type of exception is |
| thrown, it will not be caught, and the test case will be |
| deemed to have suffered an error, exactly as for an |
| unexpected exception. |
| |
| If called with callableObj omitted or None, will return a |
| context object used like this:: |
| |
| with self.assertRaises(SomeException): |
| do_something() |
| |
| The context manager keeps a reference to the exception as |
| the 'exception' attribute. This allows you to inspect the |
| exception after the assertion:: |
| |
| with self.assertRaises(SomeException) as cm: |
| do_something() |
| the_exception = cm.exception |
| self.assertEqual(the_exception.error_code, 3) |
| """ |
| context = _AssertRaisesContext(excClass, self, callableObj) |
| if callableObj is None: |
| return context |
| with context: |
| callableObj(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| def assertWarns(self, expected_warning, callable_obj=None, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Fail unless a warning of class warnClass is triggered |
| by callableObj when invoked with arguments args and keyword |
| arguments kwargs. If a different type of warning is |
| triggered, it will not be handled: depending on the other |
| warning filtering rules in effect, it might be silenced, printed |
| out, or raised as an exception. |
| |
| If called with callableObj omitted or None, will return a |
| context object used like this:: |
| |
| with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning): |
| do_something() |
| |
| The context manager keeps a reference to the first matching |
| warning as the 'warning' attribute; similarly, the 'filename' |
| and 'lineno' attributes give you information about the line |
| of Python code from which the warning was triggered. |
| This allows you to inspect the warning after the assertion:: |
| |
| with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning) as cm: |
| do_something() |
| the_warning = cm.warning |
| self.assertEqual(the_warning.some_attribute, 147) |
| """ |
| context = _AssertWarnsContext(expected_warning, self, callable_obj) |
| if callable_obj is None: |
| return context |
| with context: |
| callable_obj(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| def _getAssertEqualityFunc(self, first, second): |
| """Get a detailed comparison function for the types of the two args. |
| |
| Returns: A callable accepting (first, second, msg=None) that will |
| raise a failure exception if first != second with a useful human |
| readable error message for those types. |
| """ |
| # |
| # NOTE(gregory.p.smith): I considered isinstance(first, type(second)) |
| # and vice versa. I opted for the conservative approach in case |
| # subclasses are not intended to be compared in detail to their super |
| # class instances using a type equality func. This means testing |
| # subtypes won't automagically use the detailed comparison. Callers |
| # should use their type specific assertSpamEqual method to compare |
| # subclasses if the detailed comparison is desired and appropriate. |
| # See the discussion in http://bugs.python.org/issue2578. |
| # |
| if type(first) is type(second): |
| asserter = self._type_equality_funcs.get(type(first)) |
| if asserter is not None: |
| if isinstance(asserter, str): |
| asserter = getattr(self, asserter) |
| return asserter |
| |
| return self._baseAssertEqual |
| |
| def _baseAssertEqual(self, first, second, msg=None): |
| """The default assertEqual implementation, not type specific.""" |
| if not first == second: |
| standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(first), safe_repr(second)) |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertEqual(self, first, second, msg=None): |
| """Fail if the two objects are unequal as determined by the '==' |
| operator. |
| """ |
| assertion_func = self._getAssertEqualityFunc(first, second) |
| assertion_func(first, second, msg=msg) |
| |
| def assertNotEqual(self, first, second, msg=None): |
| """Fail if the two objects are equal as determined by the '==' |
| operator. |
| """ |
| if not first != second: |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, '%s == %s' % (safe_repr(first), |
| safe_repr(second))) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertAlmostEqual(self, first, second, places=None, msg=None, |
| delta=None): |
| """Fail if the two objects are unequal as determined by their |
| difference rounded to the given number of decimal places |
| (default 7) and comparing to zero, or by comparing that the |
| between the two objects is more than the given delta. |
| |
| Note that decimal places (from zero) are usually not the same |
| as significant digits (measured from the most signficant digit). |
| |
| If the two objects compare equal then they will automatically |
| compare almost equal. |
| """ |
| if first == second: |
| # shortcut |
| return |
| if delta is not None and places is not None: |
| raise TypeError("specify delta or places not both") |
| |
| if delta is not None: |
| if abs(first - second) <= delta: |
| return |
| |
| standardMsg = '%s != %s within %s delta' % (safe_repr(first), |
| safe_repr(second), |
| safe_repr(delta)) |
| else: |
| if places is None: |
| places = 7 |
| |
| if round(abs(second-first), places) == 0: |
| return |
| |
| standardMsg = '%s != %s within %r places' % (safe_repr(first), |
| safe_repr(second), |
| places) |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertNotAlmostEqual(self, first, second, places=None, msg=None, |
| delta=None): |
| """Fail if the two objects are equal as determined by their |
| difference rounded to the given number of decimal places |
| (default 7) and comparing to zero, or by comparing that the |
| between the two objects is less than the given delta. |
| |
| Note that decimal places (from zero) are usually not the same |
| as significant digits (measured from the most signficant digit). |
| |
| Objects that are equal automatically fail. |
| """ |
| if delta is not None and places is not None: |
| raise TypeError("specify delta or places not both") |
| if delta is not None: |
| if not (first == second) and abs(first - second) > delta: |
| return |
| standardMsg = '%s == %s within %s delta' % (safe_repr(first), |
| safe_repr(second), |
| safe_repr(delta)) |
| else: |
| if places is None: |
| places = 7 |
| if not (first == second) and round(abs(second-first), places) != 0: |
| return |
| standardMsg = '%s == %s within %r places' % (safe_repr(first), |
| safe_repr(second), |
| places) |
| |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| |
| def assertSequenceEqual(self, seq1, seq2, msg=None, seq_type=None): |
| """An equality assertion for ordered sequences (like lists and tuples). |
| |
| For the purposes of this function, a valid ordered sequence type is one |
| which can be indexed, has a length, and has an equality operator. |
| |
| Args: |
| seq1: The first sequence to compare. |
| seq2: The second sequence to compare. |
| seq_type: The expected datatype of the sequences, or None if no |
| datatype should be enforced. |
| msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of |
| differences. |
| """ |
| if seq_type != None: |
| seq_type_name = seq_type.__name__ |
| if not isinstance(seq1, seq_type): |
| raise self.failureException('First sequence is not a %s: %s' |
| % (seq_type_name, safe_repr(seq1))) |
| if not isinstance(seq2, seq_type): |
| raise self.failureException('Second sequence is not a %s: %s' |
| % (seq_type_name, safe_repr(seq2))) |
| else: |
| seq_type_name = "sequence" |
| |
| differing = None |
| try: |
| len1 = len(seq1) |
| except (TypeError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing = 'First %s has no length. Non-sequence?' % ( |
| seq_type_name) |
| |
| if differing is None: |
| try: |
| len2 = len(seq2) |
| except (TypeError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing = 'Second %s has no length. Non-sequence?' % ( |
| seq_type_name) |
| |
| if differing is None: |
| if seq1 == seq2: |
| return |
| |
| seq1_repr = safe_repr(seq1) |
| seq2_repr = safe_repr(seq2) |
| if len(seq1_repr) > 30: |
| seq1_repr = seq1_repr[:30] + '...' |
| if len(seq2_repr) > 30: |
| seq2_repr = seq2_repr[:30] + '...' |
| elements = (seq_type_name.capitalize(), seq1_repr, seq2_repr) |
| differing = '%ss differ: %s != %s\n' % elements |
| |
| for i in range(min(len1, len2)): |
| try: |
| item1 = seq1[i] |
| except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing += ('\nUnable to index element %d of first %s\n' % |
| (i, seq_type_name)) |
| break |
| |
| try: |
| item2 = seq2[i] |
| except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing += ('\nUnable to index element %d of second %s\n' % |
| (i, seq_type_name)) |
| break |
| |
| if item1 != item2: |
| differing += ('\nFirst differing element %d:\n%s\n%s\n' % |
| (i, item1, item2)) |
| break |
| else: |
| if (len1 == len2 and seq_type is None and |
| type(seq1) != type(seq2)): |
| # The sequences are the same, but have differing types. |
| return |
| |
| if len1 > len2: |
| differing += ('\nFirst %s contains %d additional ' |
| 'elements.\n' % (seq_type_name, len1 - len2)) |
| try: |
| differing += ('First extra element %d:\n%s\n' % |
| (len2, seq1[len2])) |
| except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing += ('Unable to index element %d ' |
| 'of first %s\n' % (len2, seq_type_name)) |
| elif len1 < len2: |
| differing += ('\nSecond %s contains %d additional ' |
| 'elements.\n' % (seq_type_name, len2 - len1)) |
| try: |
| differing += ('First extra element %d:\n%s\n' % |
| (len1, seq2[len1])) |
| except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError): |
| differing += ('Unable to index element %d ' |
| 'of second %s\n' % (len1, seq_type_name)) |
| standardMsg = differing |
| diffMsg = '\n' + '\n'.join( |
| difflib.ndiff(pprint.pformat(seq1).splitlines(), |
| pprint.pformat(seq2).splitlines())) |
| |
| standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diffMsg) |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg) |
| self.fail(msg) |
| |
| def _truncateMessage(self, message, diff): |
| max_diff = self.maxDiff |
| if max_diff is None or len(diff) <= max_diff: |
| return message + diff |
| return message + (DIFF_OMITTED % len(diff)) |
| |
| def assertListEqual(self, list1, list2, msg=None): |
| """A list-specific equality assertion. |
| |
| Args: |
| list1: The first list to compare. |
| list2: The second list to compare. |
| msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of |
| differences. |
| |
| """ |
| self.assertSequenceEqual(list1, list2, msg, seq_type=list) |
| |
| def assertTupleEqual(self, tuple1, tuple2, msg=None): |
| """A tuple-specific equality assertion. |
| |
| Args: |
| tuple1: The first tuple to compare. |
| tuple2: The second tuple to compare. |
| msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of |
| differences. |
| """ |
| self.assertSequenceEqual(tuple1, tuple2, msg, seq_type=tuple) |
| |
| def assertSetEqual(self, set1, set2, msg=None): |
| """A set-specific equality assertion. |
| |
| Args: |
| set1: The first set to compare. |
| set2: The second set to compare. |
| msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of |
| differences. |
| |
| assertSetEqual uses ducktyping to support different types of sets, and |
| is optimized for sets specifically (parameters must support a |
| difference method). |
| """ |
| try: |
| difference1 = set1.difference(set2) |
| except TypeError as e: |
| self.fail('invalid type when attempting set difference: %s' % e) |
| except AttributeError as e: |
| self.fail('first argument does not support set difference: %s' % e) |
| |
| try: |
| difference2 = set2.difference(set1) |
| except TypeError as e: |
| self.fail('invalid type when attempting set difference: %s' % e) |
| except AttributeError as e: |
| self.fail('second argument does not support set difference: %s' % e) |
| |
| if not (difference1 or difference2): |
| return |
| |
| lines = [] |
| if difference1: |
| lines.append('Items in the first set but not the second:') |
| for item in difference1: |
| lines.append(repr(item)) |
| if difference2: |
| lines.append('Items in the second set but not the first:') |
| for item in difference2: |
| lines.append(repr(item)) |
| |
| standardMsg = '\n'.join(lines) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIn(self, member, container, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a in b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if member not in container: |
| standardMsg = '%s not found in %s' % (safe_repr(member), |
| safe_repr(container)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertNotIn(self, member, container, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a not in b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if member in container: |
| standardMsg = '%s unexpectedly found in %s' % (safe_repr(member), |
| safe_repr(container)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIs(self, expr1, expr2, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a is b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if expr1 is not expr2: |
| standardMsg = '%s is not %s' % (safe_repr(expr1), |
| safe_repr(expr2)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIsNot(self, expr1, expr2, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a is not b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if expr1 is expr2: |
| standardMsg = 'unexpectedly identical: %s' % (safe_repr(expr1),) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertDictEqual(self, d1, d2, msg=None): |
| self.assertIsInstance(d1, dict, 'First argument is not a dictionary') |
| self.assertIsInstance(d2, dict, 'Second argument is not a dictionary') |
| |
| if d1 != d2: |
| standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(d1, True), safe_repr(d2, True)) |
| diff = ('\n' + '\n'.join(difflib.ndiff( |
| pprint.pformat(d1).splitlines(), |
| pprint.pformat(d2).splitlines()))) |
| standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertDictContainsSubset(self, subset, dictionary, msg=None): |
| """Checks whether dictionary is a superset of subset.""" |
| warnings.warn('assertDictContainsSubset is deprecated', |
| DeprecationWarning) |
| missing = [] |
| mismatched = [] |
| for key, value in subset.items(): |
| if key not in dictionary: |
| missing.append(key) |
| elif value != dictionary[key]: |
| mismatched.append('%s, expected: %s, actual: %s' % |
| (safe_repr(key), safe_repr(value), |
| safe_repr(dictionary[key]))) |
| |
| if not (missing or mismatched): |
| return |
| |
| standardMsg = '' |
| if missing: |
| standardMsg = 'Missing: %s' % ','.join(safe_repr(m) for m in |
| missing) |
| if mismatched: |
| if standardMsg: |
| standardMsg += '; ' |
| standardMsg += 'Mismatched values: %s' % ','.join(mismatched) |
| |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertSameElements(self, expected_seq, actual_seq, msg=None): |
| """An unordered sequence specific comparison. |
| |
| Raises with an error message listing which elements of expected_seq |
| are missing from actual_seq and vice versa if any. |
| |
| Duplicate elements are ignored when comparing *expected_seq* and |
| *actual_seq*. It is the equivalent of ``assertEqual(set(expected), |
| set(actual))`` but it works with sequences of unhashable objects as |
| well. |
| """ |
| warnings.warn('assertSameElements is deprecated', |
| DeprecationWarning) |
| try: |
| expected = set(expected_seq) |
| actual = set(actual_seq) |
| missing = sorted(expected.difference(actual)) |
| unexpected = sorted(actual.difference(expected)) |
| except TypeError: |
| # Fall back to slower list-compare if any of the objects are |
| # not hashable. |
| expected = list(expected_seq) |
| actual = list(actual_seq) |
| try: |
| expected.sort() |
| actual.sort() |
| except TypeError: |
| missing, unexpected = unorderable_list_difference(expected, |
| actual) |
| else: |
| missing, unexpected = sorted_list_difference(expected, actual) |
| errors = [] |
| if missing: |
| errors.append('Expected, but missing:\n %s' % |
| safe_repr(missing)) |
| if unexpected: |
| errors.append('Unexpected, but present:\n %s' % |
| safe_repr(unexpected)) |
| if errors: |
| standardMsg = '\n'.join(errors) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| |
| def assertCountEqual(self, first, second, msg=None): |
| """An unordered sequence comparison asserting that the same elements, |
| regardless of order. If the same element occurs more than once, |
| it verifies that the elements occur the same number of times. |
| |
| self.assertEqual(Counter(list(first)), |
| Counter(list(second))) |
| |
| Example: |
| - [0, 1, 1] and [1, 0, 1] compare equal. |
| - [0, 0, 1] and [0, 1] compare unequal. |
| |
| """ |
| first_seq, second_seq = list(first), list(second) |
| try: |
| first = collections.Counter(first_seq) |
| second = collections.Counter(second_seq) |
| except TypeError: |
| # Handle case with unhashable elements |
| differences = _count_diff_all_purpose(first_seq, second_seq) |
| else: |
| if first == second: |
| return |
| differences = _count_diff_hashable(first_seq, second_seq) |
| |
| if differences: |
| standardMsg = 'Element counts were not equal:\n' |
| lines = ['First has %d, Second has %d: %r' % diff for diff in differences] |
| diffMsg = '\n'.join(lines) |
| standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diffMsg) |
| msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg) |
| self.fail(msg) |
| |
| def assertMultiLineEqual(self, first, second, msg=None): |
| """Assert that two multi-line strings are equal.""" |
| self.assertIsInstance(first, str, 'First argument is not a string') |
| self.assertIsInstance(second, str, 'Second argument is not a string') |
| |
| if first != second: |
| # don't use difflib if the strings are too long |
| if (len(first) > self._diffThreshold or |
| len(second) > self._diffThreshold): |
| self._baseAssertEqual(first, second, msg) |
| firstlines = first.splitlines(True) |
| secondlines = second.splitlines(True) |
| if len(firstlines) == 1 and first.strip('\r\n') == first: |
| firstlines = [first + '\n'] |
| secondlines = [second + '\n'] |
| standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(first, True), |
| safe_repr(second, True)) |
| diff = '\n' + ''.join(difflib.ndiff(firstlines, secondlines)) |
| standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertLess(self, a, b, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a < b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if not a < b: |
| standardMsg = '%s not less than %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertLessEqual(self, a, b, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a <= b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if not a <= b: |
| standardMsg = '%s not less than or equal to %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertGreater(self, a, b, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a > b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if not a > b: |
| standardMsg = '%s not greater than %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertGreaterEqual(self, a, b, msg=None): |
| """Just like self.assertTrue(a >= b), but with a nicer default message.""" |
| if not a >= b: |
| standardMsg = '%s not greater than or equal to %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b)) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIsNone(self, obj, msg=None): |
| """Same as self.assertTrue(obj is None), with a nicer default message.""" |
| if obj is not None: |
| standardMsg = '%s is not None' % (safe_repr(obj),) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIsNotNone(self, obj, msg=None): |
| """Included for symmetry with assertIsNone.""" |
| if obj is None: |
| standardMsg = 'unexpectedly None' |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertIsInstance(self, obj, cls, msg=None): |
| """Same as self.assertTrue(isinstance(obj, cls)), with a nicer |
| default message.""" |
| if not isinstance(obj, cls): |
| standardMsg = '%s is not an instance of %r' % (safe_repr(obj), cls) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertNotIsInstance(self, obj, cls, msg=None): |
| """Included for symmetry with assertIsInstance.""" |
| if isinstance(obj, cls): |
| standardMsg = '%s is an instance of %r' % (safe_repr(obj), cls) |
| self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)) |
| |
| def assertRaisesRegex(self, expected_exception, expected_regex, |
| callable_obj=None, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Asserts that the message in a raised exception matches a regex. |
| |
| Args: |
| expected_exception: Exception class expected to be raised. |
| expected_regex: Regex (re pattern object or string) expected |
| to be found in error message. |
| callable_obj: Function to be called. |
| args: Extra args. |
| kwargs: Extra kwargs. |
| """ |
| context = _AssertRaisesContext(expected_exception, self, callable_obj, |
| expected_regex) |
| if callable_obj is None: |
| return context |
| with context: |
| callable_obj(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| def assertWarnsRegex(self, expected_warning, expected_regex, |
| callable_obj=None, *args, **kwargs): |
| """Asserts that the message in a triggered warning matches a regexp. |
| Basic functioning is similar to assertWarns() with the addition |
| that only warnings whose messages also match the regular expression |
| are considered successful matches. |
| |
| Args: |
| expected_warning: Warning class expected to be triggered. |
| expected_regex: Regex (re pattern object or string) expected |
| to be found in error message. |
| callable_obj: Function to be called. |
| args: Extra args. |
| kwargs: Extra kwargs. |
| """ |
| context = _AssertWarnsContext(expected_warning, self, callable_obj, |
| expected_regex) |
| if callable_obj is None: |
| return context |
| with context: |
| callable_obj(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| def assertRegex(self, text, expected_regex, msg=None): |
| """Fail the test unless the text matches the regular expression.""" |
| if isinstance(expected_regex, (str, bytes)): |
| assert expected_regex, "expected_regex must not be empty." |
| expected_regex = re.compile(expected_regex) |
| if not expected_regex.search(text): |
| msg = msg or "Regex didn't match" |
| msg = '%s: %r not found in %r' % (msg, expected_regex.pattern, text) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| def assertNotRegex(self, text, unexpected_regex, msg=None): |
| """Fail the test if the text matches the regular expression.""" |
| if isinstance(unexpected_regex, (str, bytes)): |
| unexpected_regex = re.compile(unexpected_regex) |
| match = unexpected_regex.search(text) |
| if match: |
| msg = msg or "Regex matched" |
| msg = '%s: %r matches %r in %r' % (msg, |
| text[match.start():match.end()], |
| unexpected_regex.pattern, |
| text) |
| raise self.failureException(msg) |
| |
| |
| def _deprecate(original_func): |
| def deprecated_func(*args, **kwargs): |
| warnings.warn( |
| 'Please use {0} instead.'.format(original_func.__name__), |
| DeprecationWarning, 2) |
| return original_func(*args, **kwargs) |
| return deprecated_func |
| |
| # see #9424 |
| failUnlessEqual = assertEquals = _deprecate(assertEqual) |
| failIfEqual = assertNotEquals = _deprecate(assertNotEqual) |
| failUnlessAlmostEqual = assertAlmostEquals = _deprecate(assertAlmostEqual) |
| failIfAlmostEqual = assertNotAlmostEquals = _deprecate(assertNotAlmostEqual) |
| failUnless = assert_ = _deprecate(assertTrue) |
| failUnlessRaises = _deprecate(assertRaises) |
| failIf = _deprecate(assertFalse) |
| assertRaisesRegexp = _deprecate(assertRaisesRegex) |
| assertRegexpMatches = _deprecate(assertRegex) |
| |
| |
| |
| class FunctionTestCase(TestCase): |
| """A test case that wraps a test function. |
| |
| This is useful for slipping pre-existing test functions into the |
| unittest framework. Optionally, set-up and tidy-up functions can be |
| supplied. As with TestCase, the tidy-up ('tearDown') function will |
| always be called if the set-up ('setUp') function ran successfully. |
| """ |
| |
| def __init__(self, testFunc, setUp=None, tearDown=None, description=None): |
| super(FunctionTestCase, self).__init__() |
| self._setUpFunc = setUp |
| self._tearDownFunc = tearDown |
| self._testFunc = testFunc |
| self._description = description |
| |
| def setUp(self): |
| if self._setUpFunc is not None: |
| self._setUpFunc() |
| |
| def tearDown(self): |
| if self._tearDownFunc is not None: |
| self._tearDownFunc() |
| |
| def runTest(self): |
| self._testFunc() |
| |
| def id(self): |
| return self._testFunc.__name__ |
| |
| def __eq__(self, other): |
| if not isinstance(other, self.__class__): |
| return NotImplemented |
| |
| return self._setUpFunc == other._setUpFunc and \ |
| self._tearDownFunc == other._tearDownFunc and \ |
| self._testFunc == other._testFunc and \ |
| self._description == other._description |
| |
| def __ne__(self, other): |
| return not self == other |
| |
| def __hash__(self): |
| return hash((type(self), self._setUpFunc, self._tearDownFunc, |
| self._testFunc, self._description)) |
| |
| def __str__(self): |
| return "%s (%s)" % (strclass(self.__class__), |
| self._testFunc.__name__) |
| |
| def __repr__(self): |
| return "<%s tec=%s>" % (strclass(self.__class__), |
| self._testFunc) |
| |
| def shortDescription(self): |
| if self._description is not None: |
| return self._description |
| doc = self._testFunc.__doc__ |
| return doc and doc.split("\n")[0].strip() or None |