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2693 lines
98 KiB
2693 lines
98 KiB
# This is a slightly modified version of the doctest.py that shipped with Python 2.4 |
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# It incorporates changes that have been submitted the the Python ticket tracker |
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# as ticket #1521051. These changes allow for a DoctestRunner and Doctest base |
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# class to be specified when constructing a DoctestSuite. |
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|
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# Module doctest. |
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# Released to the public domain 16-Jan-2001, by Tim Peters (tim@python.org). |
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# Major enhancements and refactoring by: |
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# Jim Fulton |
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# Edward Loper |
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|
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# Provided as-is; use at your own risk; no warranty; no promises; enjoy! |
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|
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r"""Module doctest -- a framework for running examples in docstrings. |
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|
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In simplest use, end each module M to be tested with: |
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|
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def _test(): |
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import doctest |
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doctest.testmod() |
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|
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if __name__ == "__main__": |
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_test() |
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|
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Then running the module as a script will cause the examples in the |
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docstrings to get executed and verified: |
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|
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python M.py |
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This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the |
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failing example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout |
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(why not stderr? because stderr is a lame hack <0.2 wink>), and the final |
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line of output is "Test failed.". |
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|
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Run it with the -v switch instead: |
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python M.py -v |
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|
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and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to stdout, along |
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with assorted summaries at the end. |
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|
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You can force verbose mode by passing "verbose=True" to testmod, or prohibit |
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it by passing "verbose=False". In either of those cases, sys.argv is not |
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examined by testmod. |
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There are a variety of other ways to run doctests, including integration |
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with the unittest framework, and support for running non-Python text |
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files containing doctests. There are also many ways to override parts |
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of doctest's default behaviors. See the Library Reference Manual for |
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details. |
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""" |
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|
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__docformat__ = 'reStructuredText en' |
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|
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__all__ = [ |
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# 0, Option Flags |
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'register_optionflag', |
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'DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1', |
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'DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE', |
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'NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE', |
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'ELLIPSIS', |
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'IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL', |
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'COMPARISON_FLAGS', |
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'REPORT_UDIFF', |
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'REPORT_CDIFF', |
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'REPORT_NDIFF', |
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'REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE', |
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'REPORTING_FLAGS', |
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# 1. Utility Functions |
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'is_private', |
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# 2. Example & DocTest |
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'Example', |
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'DocTest', |
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# 3. Doctest Parser |
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'DocTestParser', |
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# 4. Doctest Finder |
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'DocTestFinder', |
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# 5. Doctest Runner |
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'DocTestRunner', |
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'OutputChecker', |
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'DocTestFailure', |
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'UnexpectedException', |
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'DebugRunner', |
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# 6. Test Functions |
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'testmod', |
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'testfile', |
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'run_docstring_examples', |
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# 7. Tester |
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'Tester', |
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# 8. Unittest Support |
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'DocTestSuite', |
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'DocFileSuite', |
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'set_unittest_reportflags', |
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# 9. Debugging Support |
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'script_from_examples', |
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'testsource', |
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'debug_src', |
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'debug', |
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] |
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import __future__ |
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|
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import sys, traceback, inspect, linecache, os, re |
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import unittest, difflib, pdb, tempfile |
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import warnings |
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from StringIO import StringIO |
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|
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if sys.platform.startswith('java'): |
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# On Jython, isclass() reports some modules as classes. Patch it. |
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def patch_isclass(isclass): |
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def patched_isclass(obj): |
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return isclass(obj) and hasattr(obj, '__module__') |
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return patched_isclass |
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inspect.isclass = patch_isclass(inspect.isclass) |
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|
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# Don't whine about the deprecated is_private function in this |
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# module's tests. |
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warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", "is_private", DeprecationWarning, |
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__name__, 0) |
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|
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# There are 4 basic classes: |
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# - Example: a <source, want> pair, plus an intra-docstring line number. |
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# - DocTest: a collection of examples, parsed from a docstring, plus |
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# info about where the docstring came from (name, filename, lineno). |
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# - DocTestFinder: extracts DocTests from a given object's docstring and |
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# its contained objects' docstrings. |
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# - DocTestRunner: runs DocTest cases, and accumulates statistics. |
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# |
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# So the basic picture is: |
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# |
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# list of: |
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# +------+ +---------+ +-------+ |
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# |object| --DocTestFinder-> | DocTest | --DocTestRunner-> |results| |
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# +------+ +---------+ +-------+ |
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# | Example | |
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# | ... | |
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# | Example | |
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# +---------+ |
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|
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# Option constants. |
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|
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OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME = {} |
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def register_optionflag(name): |
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flag = 1 << len(OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME) |
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OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[name] = flag |
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return flag |
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|
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DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1') |
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DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE') |
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NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE = register_optionflag('NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE') |
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ELLIPSIS = register_optionflag('ELLIPSIS') |
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IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL = register_optionflag('IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL') |
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|
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COMPARISON_FLAGS = (DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 | |
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DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE | |
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NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | |
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ELLIPSIS | |
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IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL) |
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|
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REPORT_UDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_UDIFF') |
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REPORT_CDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_CDIFF') |
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REPORT_NDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_NDIFF') |
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REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE = register_optionflag('REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE') |
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REPORTING_FLAGS = (REPORT_UDIFF | |
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REPORT_CDIFF | |
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REPORT_NDIFF | |
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REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) |
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|
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# Special string markers for use in `want` strings: |
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BLANKLINE_MARKER = '<BLANKLINE>' |
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ELLIPSIS_MARKER = '...' |
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|
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###################################################################### |
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## Table of Contents |
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###################################################################### |
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# 1. Utility Functions |
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# 2. Example & DocTest -- store test cases |
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# 3. DocTest Parser -- extracts examples from strings |
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# 4. DocTest Finder -- extracts test cases from objects |
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# 5. DocTest Runner -- runs test cases |
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# 6. Test Functions -- convenient wrappers for testing |
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# 7. Tester Class -- for backwards compatibility |
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# 8. Unittest Support |
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# 9. Debugging Support |
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# 10. Example Usage |
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|
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###################################################################### |
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## 1. Utility Functions |
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###################################################################### |
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|
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def is_private(prefix, base): |
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"""prefix, base -> true iff name prefix + "." + base is "private". |
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|
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Prefix may be an empty string, and base does not contain a period. |
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Prefix is ignored (although functions you write conforming to this |
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protocol may make use of it). |
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Return true iff base begins with an (at least one) underscore, but |
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does not both begin and end with (at least) two underscores. |
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|
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>>> is_private("a.b", "my_func") |
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False |
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>>> is_private("____", "_my_func") |
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True |
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>>> is_private("someclass", "__init__") |
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False |
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>>> is_private("sometypo", "__init_") |
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True |
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>>> is_private("x.y.z", "_") |
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True |
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>>> is_private("_x.y.z", "__") |
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False |
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>>> is_private("", "") # senseless but consistent |
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False |
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""" |
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warnings.warn("is_private is deprecated; it wasn't useful; " |
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"examine DocTestFinder.find() lists instead", |
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DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) |
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return base[:1] == "_" and not base[:2] == "__" == base[-2:] |
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|
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def _extract_future_flags(globs): |
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""" |
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Return the compiler-flags associated with the future features that |
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have been imported into the given namespace (globs). |
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""" |
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flags = 0 |
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for fname in __future__.all_feature_names: |
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feature = globs.get(fname, None) |
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if feature is getattr(__future__, fname): |
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flags |= feature.compiler_flag |
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return flags |
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|
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def _normalize_module(module, depth=2): |
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""" |
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Return the module specified by `module`. In particular: |
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- If `module` is a module, then return module. |
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- If `module` is a string, then import and return the |
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module with that name. |
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- If `module` is None, then return the calling module. |
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The calling module is assumed to be the module of |
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the stack frame at the given depth in the call stack. |
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""" |
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if inspect.ismodule(module): |
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return module |
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elif isinstance(module, (str, unicode)): |
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return __import__(module, globals(), locals(), ["*"]) |
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elif module is None: |
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return sys.modules[sys._getframe(depth).f_globals['__name__']] |
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else: |
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raise TypeError("Expected a module, string, or None") |
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|
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def _indent(s, indent=4): |
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""" |
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Add the given number of space characters to the beginning every |
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non-blank line in `s`, and return the result. |
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""" |
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# This regexp matches the start of non-blank lines: |
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return re.sub('(?m)^(?!$)', indent*' ', s) |
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|
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def _exception_traceback(exc_info): |
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""" |
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Return a string containing a traceback message for the given |
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exc_info tuple (as returned by sys.exc_info()). |
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""" |
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# Get a traceback message. |
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excout = StringIO() |
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exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb = exc_info |
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traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb, file=excout) |
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return excout.getvalue() |
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|
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# Override some StringIO methods. |
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class _SpoofOut(StringIO): |
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def getvalue(self): |
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result = StringIO.getvalue(self) |
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# If anything at all was written, make sure there's a trailing |
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# newline. There's no way for the expected output to indicate |
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# that a trailing newline is missing. |
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if result and not result.endswith("\n"): |
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result += "\n" |
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# Prevent softspace from screwing up the next test case, in |
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# case they used print with a trailing comma in an example. |
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if hasattr(self, "softspace"): |
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del self.softspace |
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return result |
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|
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def truncate(self, size=None): |
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StringIO.truncate(self, size) |
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if hasattr(self, "softspace"): |
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del self.softspace |
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|
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# Worst-case linear-time ellipsis matching. |
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def _ellipsis_match(want, got): |
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""" |
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Essentially the only subtle case: |
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>>> _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa') |
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False |
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""" |
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if ELLIPSIS_MARKER not in want: |
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return want == got |
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|
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# Find "the real" strings. |
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ws = want.split(ELLIPSIS_MARKER) |
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assert len(ws) >= 2 |
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|
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# Deal with exact matches possibly needed at one or both ends. |
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startpos, endpos = 0, len(got) |
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w = ws[0] |
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if w: # starts with exact match |
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if got.startswith(w): |
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startpos = len(w) |
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del ws[0] |
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else: |
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return False |
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w = ws[-1] |
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if w: # ends with exact match |
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if got.endswith(w): |
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endpos -= len(w) |
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del ws[-1] |
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else: |
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return False |
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|
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if startpos > endpos: |
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# Exact end matches required more characters than we have, as in |
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# _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa') |
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return False |
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|
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# For the rest, we only need to find the leftmost non-overlapping |
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# match for each piece. If there's no overall match that way alone, |
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# there's no overall match period. |
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for w in ws: |
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# w may be '' at times, if there are consecutive ellipses, or |
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# due to an ellipsis at the start or end of `want`. That's OK. |
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# Search for an empty string succeeds, and doesn't change startpos. |
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startpos = got.find(w, startpos, endpos) |
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if startpos < 0: |
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return False |
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startpos += len(w) |
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|
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return True |
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|
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def _comment_line(line): |
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"Return a commented form of the given line" |
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line = line.rstrip() |
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if line: |
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return '# '+line |
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else: |
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return '#' |
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|
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class _OutputRedirectingPdb(pdb.Pdb): |
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""" |
|
A specialized version of the python debugger that redirects stdout |
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to a given stream when interacting with the user. Stdout is *not* |
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redirected when traced code is executed. |
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""" |
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def __init__(self, out): |
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self.__out = out |
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self.__debugger_used = False |
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pdb.Pdb.__init__(self) |
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|
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def set_trace(self): |
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self.__debugger_used = True |
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pdb.Pdb.set_trace(self) |
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|
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def set_continue(self): |
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# Calling set_continue unconditionally would break unit test coverage |
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# reporting, as Bdb.set_continue calls sys.settrace(None). |
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if self.__debugger_used: |
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pdb.Pdb.set_continue(self) |
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|
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def trace_dispatch(self, *args): |
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# Redirect stdout to the given stream. |
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save_stdout = sys.stdout |
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sys.stdout = self.__out |
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# Call Pdb's trace dispatch method. |
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try: |
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return pdb.Pdb.trace_dispatch(self, *args) |
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finally: |
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sys.stdout = save_stdout |
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|
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# [XX] Normalize with respect to os.path.pardir? |
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def _module_relative_path(module, path): |
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if not inspect.ismodule(module): |
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raise TypeError, 'Expected a module: %r' % module |
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if path.startswith('/'): |
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raise ValueError, 'Module-relative files may not have absolute paths' |
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|
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# Find the base directory for the path. |
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if hasattr(module, '__file__'): |
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# A normal module/package |
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basedir = os.path.split(module.__file__)[0] |
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elif module.__name__ == '__main__': |
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# An interactive session. |
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if len(sys.argv)>0 and sys.argv[0] != '': |
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basedir = os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[0] |
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else: |
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basedir = os.curdir |
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else: |
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# A module w/o __file__ (this includes builtins) |
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raise ValueError("Can't resolve paths relative to the module " + |
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module + " (it has no __file__)") |
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|
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# Combine the base directory and the path. |
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return os.path.join(basedir, *(path.split('/'))) |
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|
|
###################################################################### |
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## 2. Example & DocTest |
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###################################################################### |
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## - An "example" is a <source, want> pair, where "source" is a |
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## fragment of source code, and "want" is the expected output for |
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## "source." The Example class also includes information about |
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## where the example was extracted from. |
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## |
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## - A "doctest" is a collection of examples, typically extracted from |
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## a string (such as an object's docstring). The DocTest class also |
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## includes information about where the string was extracted from. |
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|
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class Example: |
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""" |
|
A single doctest example, consisting of source code and expected |
|
output. `Example` defines the following attributes: |
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|
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- source: A single Python statement, always ending with a newline. |
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The constructor adds a newline if needed. |
|
|
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- want: The expected output from running the source code (either |
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from stdout, or a traceback in case of exception). `want` ends |
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with a newline unless it's empty, in which case it's an empty |
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string. The constructor adds a newline if needed. |
|
|
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- exc_msg: The exception message generated by the example, if |
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the example is expected to generate an exception; or `None` if |
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it is not expected to generate an exception. This exception |
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message is compared against the return value of |
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`traceback.format_exception_only()`. `exc_msg` ends with a |
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newline unless it's `None`. The constructor adds a newline |
|
if needed. |
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|
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- lineno: The line number within the DocTest string containing |
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this Example where the Example begins. This line number is |
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zero-based, with respect to the beginning of the DocTest. |
|
|
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- indent: The example's indentation in the DocTest string. |
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I.e., the number of space characters that preceed the |
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example's first prompt. |
|
|
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- options: A dictionary mapping from option flags to True or |
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False, which is used to override default options for this |
|
example. Any option flags not contained in this dictionary |
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are left at their default value (as specified by the |
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DocTestRunner's optionflags). By default, no options are set. |
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""" |
|
def __init__(self, source, want, exc_msg=None, lineno=0, indent=0, |
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options=None): |
|
# Normalize inputs. |
|
if not source.endswith('\n'): |
|
source += '\n' |
|
if want and not want.endswith('\n'): |
|
want += '\n' |
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if exc_msg is not None and not exc_msg.endswith('\n'): |
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exc_msg += '\n' |
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# Store properties. |
|
self.source = source |
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self.want = want |
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self.lineno = lineno |
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self.indent = indent |
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if options is None: options = {} |
|
self.options = options |
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self.exc_msg = exc_msg |
|
|
|
class DocTest: |
|
""" |
|
A collection of doctest examples that should be run in a single |
|
namespace. Each `DocTest` defines the following attributes: |
|
|
|
- examples: the list of examples. |
|
|
|
- globs: The namespace (aka globals) that the examples should |
|
be run in. |
|
|
|
- name: A name identifying the DocTest (typically, the name of |
|
the object whose docstring this DocTest was extracted from). |
|
|
|
- filename: The name of the file that this DocTest was extracted |
|
from, or `None` if the filename is unknown. |
|
|
|
- lineno: The line number within filename where this DocTest |
|
begins, or `None` if the line number is unavailable. This |
|
line number is zero-based, with respect to the beginning of |
|
the file. |
|
|
|
- docstring: The string that the examples were extracted from, |
|
or `None` if the string is unavailable. |
|
""" |
|
def __init__(self, examples, globs, name, filename, lineno, docstring): |
|
""" |
|
Create a new DocTest containing the given examples. The |
|
DocTest's globals are initialized with a copy of `globs`. |
|
""" |
|
assert not isinstance(examples, basestring), \ |
|
"DocTest no longer accepts str; use DocTestParser instead" |
|
self.examples = examples |
|
self.docstring = docstring |
|
self.globs = globs.copy() |
|
self.name = name |
|
self.filename = filename |
|
self.lineno = lineno |
|
|
|
def __repr__(self): |
|
if len(self.examples) == 0: |
|
examples = 'no examples' |
|
elif len(self.examples) == 1: |
|
examples = '1 example' |
|
else: |
|
examples = '%d examples' % len(self.examples) |
|
return ('<DocTest %s from %s:%s (%s)>' % |
|
(self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, examples)) |
|
|
|
|
|
# This lets us sort tests by name: |
|
def __cmp__(self, other): |
|
if not isinstance(other, DocTest): |
|
return -1 |
|
return cmp((self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, id(self)), |
|
(other.name, other.filename, other.lineno, id(other))) |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 3. DocTestParser |
|
###################################################################### |
|
|
|
class DocTestParser: |
|
""" |
|
A class used to parse strings containing doctest examples. |
|
""" |
|
# This regular expression is used to find doctest examples in a |
|
# string. It defines three groups: `source` is the source code |
|
# (including leading indentation and prompts); `indent` is the |
|
# indentation of the first (PS1) line of the source code; and |
|
# `want` is the expected output (including leading indentation). |
|
_EXAMPLE_RE = re.compile(r''' |
|
# Source consists of a PS1 line followed by zero or more PS2 lines. |
|
(?P<source> |
|
(?:^(?P<indent> [ ]*) >>> .*) # PS1 line |
|
(?:\n [ ]* \.\.\. .*)*) # PS2 lines |
|
\n? |
|
# Want consists of any non-blank lines that do not start with PS1. |
|
(?P<want> (?:(?![ ]*$) # Not a blank line |
|
(?![ ]*>>>) # Not a line starting with PS1 |
|
.*$\n? # But any other line |
|
)*) |
|
''', re.MULTILINE | re.VERBOSE) |
|
|
|
# A regular expression for handling `want` strings that contain |
|
# expected exceptions. It divides `want` into three pieces: |
|
# - the traceback header line (`hdr`) |
|
# - the traceback stack (`stack`) |
|
# - the exception message (`msg`), as generated by |
|
# traceback.format_exception_only() |
|
# `msg` may have multiple lines. We assume/require that the |
|
# exception message is the first non-indented line starting with a word |
|
# character following the traceback header line. |
|
_EXCEPTION_RE = re.compile(r""" |
|
# Grab the traceback header. Different versions of Python have |
|
# said different things on the first traceback line. |
|
^(?P<hdr> Traceback\ \( |
|
(?: most\ recent\ call\ last |
|
| innermost\ last |
|
) \) : |
|
) |
|
\s* $ # toss trailing whitespace on the header. |
|
(?P<stack> .*?) # don't blink: absorb stuff until... |
|
^ (?P<msg> \w+ .*) # a line *starts* with alphanum. |
|
""", re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL) |
|
|
|
# A callable returning a true value iff its argument is a blank line |
|
# or contains a single comment. |
|
_IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT = re.compile(r'^[ ]*(#.*)?$').match |
|
|
|
def parse(self, string, name='<string>'): |
|
""" |
|
Divide the given string into examples and intervening text, |
|
and return them as a list of alternating Examples and strings. |
|
Line numbers for the Examples are 0-based. The optional |
|
argument `name` is a name identifying this string, and is only |
|
used for error messages. |
|
""" |
|
string = string.expandtabs() |
|
# If all lines begin with the same indentation, then strip it. |
|
min_indent = self._min_indent(string) |
|
if min_indent > 0: |
|
string = '\n'.join([l[min_indent:] for l in string.split('\n')]) |
|
|
|
output = [] |
|
charno, lineno = 0, 0 |
|
# Find all doctest examples in the string: |
|
for m in self._EXAMPLE_RE.finditer(string): |
|
# Add the pre-example text to `output`. |
|
output.append(string[charno:m.start()]) |
|
# Update lineno (lines before this example) |
|
lineno += string.count('\n', charno, m.start()) |
|
# Extract info from the regexp match. |
|
(source, options, want, exc_msg) = \ |
|
self._parse_example(m, name, lineno) |
|
# Create an Example, and add it to the list. |
|
if not self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source): |
|
output.append( Example(source, want, exc_msg, |
|
lineno=lineno, |
|
indent=min_indent+len(m.group('indent')), |
|
options=options) ) |
|
# Update lineno (lines inside this example) |
|
lineno += string.count('\n', m.start(), m.end()) |
|
# Update charno. |
|
charno = m.end() |
|
# Add any remaining post-example text to `output`. |
|
output.append(string[charno:]) |
|
return output |
|
|
|
def get_doctest(self, string, globs, name, filename, lineno): |
|
""" |
|
Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and |
|
collect them into a `DocTest` object. |
|
|
|
`globs`, `name`, `filename`, and `lineno` are attributes for |
|
the new `DocTest` object. See the documentation for `DocTest` |
|
for more information. |
|
""" |
|
return DocTest(self.get_examples(string, name), globs, |
|
name, filename, lineno, string) |
|
|
|
def get_examples(self, string, name='<string>'): |
|
""" |
|
Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and return |
|
them as a list of `Example` objects. Line numbers are |
|
0-based, because it's most common in doctests that nothing |
|
interesting appears on the same line as opening triple-quote, |
|
and so the first interesting line is called \"line 1\" then. |
|
|
|
The optional argument `name` is a name identifying this |
|
string, and is only used for error messages. |
|
""" |
|
return [x for x in self.parse(string, name) |
|
if isinstance(x, Example)] |
|
|
|
def _parse_example(self, m, name, lineno): |
|
""" |
|
Given a regular expression match from `_EXAMPLE_RE` (`m`), |
|
return a pair `(source, want)`, where `source` is the matched |
|
example's source code (with prompts and indentation stripped); |
|
and `want` is the example's expected output (with indentation |
|
stripped). |
|
|
|
`name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number |
|
where the example starts; both are used for error messages. |
|
""" |
|
# Get the example's indentation level. |
|
indent = len(m.group('indent')) |
|
|
|
# Divide source into lines; check that they're properly |
|
# indented; and then strip their indentation & prompts. |
|
source_lines = m.group('source').split('\n') |
|
self._check_prompt_blank(source_lines, indent, name, lineno) |
|
self._check_prefix(source_lines[1:], ' '*indent + '.', name, lineno) |
|
source = '\n'.join([sl[indent+4:] for sl in source_lines]) |
|
|
|
# Divide want into lines; check that it's properly indented; and |
|
# then strip the indentation. Spaces before the last newline should |
|
# be preserved, so plain rstrip() isn't good enough. |
|
want = m.group('want') |
|
want_lines = want.split('\n') |
|
if len(want_lines) > 1 and re.match(r' *$', want_lines[-1]): |
|
del want_lines[-1] # forget final newline & spaces after it |
|
self._check_prefix(want_lines, ' '*indent, name, |
|
lineno + len(source_lines)) |
|
want = '\n'.join([wl[indent:] for wl in want_lines]) |
|
|
|
# If `want` contains a traceback message, then extract it. |
|
m = self._EXCEPTION_RE.match(want) |
|
if m: |
|
exc_msg = m.group('msg') |
|
else: |
|
exc_msg = None |
|
|
|
# Extract options from the source. |
|
options = self._find_options(source, name, lineno) |
|
|
|
return source, options, want, exc_msg |
|
|
|
# This regular expression looks for option directives in the |
|
# source code of an example. Option directives are comments |
|
# starting with "doctest:". Warning: this may give false |
|
# positives for string-literals that contain the string |
|
# "#doctest:". Eliminating these false positives would require |
|
# actually parsing the string; but we limit them by ignoring any |
|
# line containing "#doctest:" that is *followed* by a quote mark. |
|
_OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE = re.compile(r'#\s*doctest:\s*([^\n\'"]*)$', |
|
re.MULTILINE) |
|
|
|
def _find_options(self, source, name, lineno): |
|
""" |
|
Return a dictionary containing option overrides extracted from |
|
option directives in the given source string. |
|
|
|
`name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number |
|
where the example starts; both are used for error messages. |
|
""" |
|
options = {} |
|
# (note: with the current regexp, this will match at most once:) |
|
for m in self._OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE.finditer(source): |
|
option_strings = m.group(1).replace(',', ' ').split() |
|
for option in option_strings: |
|
if (option[0] not in '+-' or |
|
option[1:] not in OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME): |
|
raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s ' |
|
'has an invalid option: %r' % |
|
(lineno+1, name, option)) |
|
flag = OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[option[1:]] |
|
options[flag] = (option[0] == '+') |
|
if options and self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source): |
|
raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s has an option ' |
|
'directive on a line with no example: %r' % |
|
(lineno, name, source)) |
|
return options |
|
|
|
# This regular expression finds the indentation of every non-blank |
|
# line in a string. |
|
_INDENT_RE = re.compile('^([ ]*)(?=\S)', re.MULTILINE) |
|
|
|
def _min_indent(self, s): |
|
"Return the minimum indentation of any non-blank line in `s`" |
|
indents = [len(indent) for indent in self._INDENT_RE.findall(s)] |
|
if len(indents) > 0: |
|
return min(indents) |
|
else: |
|
return 0 |
|
|
|
def _check_prompt_blank(self, lines, indent, name, lineno): |
|
""" |
|
Given the lines of a source string (including prompts and |
|
leading indentation), check to make sure that every prompt is |
|
followed by a space character. If any line is not followed by |
|
a space character, then raise ValueError. |
|
""" |
|
for i, line in enumerate(lines): |
|
if len(line) >= indent+4 and line[indent+3] != ' ': |
|
raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s ' |
|
'lacks blank after %s: %r' % |
|
(lineno+i+1, name, |
|
line[indent:indent+3], line)) |
|
|
|
def _check_prefix(self, lines, prefix, name, lineno): |
|
""" |
|
Check that every line in the given list starts with the given |
|
prefix; if any line does not, then raise a ValueError. |
|
""" |
|
for i, line in enumerate(lines): |
|
if line and not line.startswith(prefix): |
|
raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s has ' |
|
'inconsistent leading whitespace: %r' % |
|
(lineno+i+1, name, line)) |
|
|
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 4. DocTest Finder |
|
###################################################################### |
|
|
|
class DocTestFinder: |
|
""" |
|
A class used to extract the DocTests that are relevant to a given |
|
object, from its docstring and the docstrings of its contained |
|
objects. Doctests can currently be extracted from the following |
|
object types: modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods, |
|
classmethods, and properties. |
|
""" |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, verbose=False, parser=DocTestParser(), |
|
recurse=True, _namefilter=None, exclude_empty=True): |
|
""" |
|
Create a new doctest finder. |
|
|
|
The optional argument `parser` specifies a class or |
|
function that should be used to create new DocTest objects (or |
|
objects that implement the same interface as DocTest). The |
|
signature for this factory function should match the signature |
|
of the DocTest constructor. |
|
|
|
If the optional argument `recurse` is false, then `find` will |
|
only examine the given object, and not any contained objects. |
|
|
|
If the optional argument `exclude_empty` is false, then `find` |
|
will include tests for objects with empty docstrings. |
|
""" |
|
self._parser = parser |
|
self._verbose = verbose |
|
self._recurse = recurse |
|
self._exclude_empty = exclude_empty |
|
# _namefilter is undocumented, and exists only for temporary backward- |
|
# compatibility support of testmod's deprecated isprivate mess. |
|
self._namefilter = _namefilter |
|
|
|
def find(self, obj, name=None, module=None, globs=None, |
|
extraglobs=None): |
|
""" |
|
Return a list of the DocTests that are defined by the given |
|
object's docstring, or by any of its contained objects' |
|
docstrings. |
|
|
|
The optional parameter `module` is the module that contains |
|
the given object. If the module is not specified or is None, then |
|
the test finder will attempt to automatically determine the |
|
correct module. The object's module is used: |
|
|
|
- As a default namespace, if `globs` is not specified. |
|
- To prevent the DocTestFinder from extracting DocTests |
|
from objects that are imported from other modules. |
|
- To find the name of the file containing the object. |
|
- To help find the line number of the object within its |
|
file. |
|
|
|
Contained objects whose module does not match `module` are ignored. |
|
|
|
If `module` is False, no attempt to find the module will be made. |
|
This is obscure, of use mostly in tests: if `module` is False, or |
|
is None but cannot be found automatically, then all objects are |
|
considered to belong to the (non-existent) module, so all contained |
|
objects will (recursively) be searched for doctests. |
|
|
|
The globals for each DocTest is formed by combining `globs` |
|
and `extraglobs` (bindings in `extraglobs` override bindings |
|
in `globs`). A new copy of the globals dictionary is created |
|
for each DocTest. If `globs` is not specified, then it |
|
defaults to the module's `__dict__`, if specified, or {} |
|
otherwise. If `extraglobs` is not specified, then it defaults |
|
to {}. |
|
|
|
""" |
|
# If name was not specified, then extract it from the object. |
|
if name is None: |
|
name = getattr(obj, '__name__', None) |
|
if name is None: |
|
raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: name must be given " |
|
"when obj.__name__ doesn't exist: %r" % |
|
(type(obj),)) |
|
|
|
# Find the module that contains the given object (if obj is |
|
# a module, then module=obj.). Note: this may fail, in which |
|
# case module will be None. |
|
if module is False: |
|
module = None |
|
elif module is None: |
|
module = inspect.getmodule(obj) |
|
|
|
# Read the module's source code. This is used by |
|
# DocTestFinder._find_lineno to find the line number for a |
|
# given object's docstring. |
|
try: |
|
file = inspect.getsourcefile(obj) or inspect.getfile(obj) |
|
source_lines = linecache.getlines(file) |
|
if not source_lines: |
|
source_lines = None |
|
except TypeError: |
|
source_lines = None |
|
|
|
# Initialize globals, and merge in extraglobs. |
|
if globs is None: |
|
if module is None: |
|
globs = {} |
|
else: |
|
globs = module.__dict__.copy() |
|
else: |
|
globs = globs.copy() |
|
if extraglobs is not None: |
|
globs.update(extraglobs) |
|
|
|
# Recursively explore `obj`, extracting DocTests. |
|
tests = [] |
|
self._find(tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, {}) |
|
return tests |
|
|
|
def _filter(self, obj, prefix, base): |
|
""" |
|
Return true if the given object should not be examined. |
|
""" |
|
return (self._namefilter is not None and |
|
self._namefilter(prefix, base)) |
|
|
|
def _from_module(self, module, object): |
|
""" |
|
Return true if the given object is defined in the given |
|
module. |
|
""" |
|
if module is None: |
|
return True |
|
elif inspect.isfunction(object): |
|
return module.__dict__ is object.func_globals |
|
elif inspect.isclass(object): |
|
return module.__name__ == object.__module__ |
|
elif inspect.getmodule(object) is not None: |
|
return module is inspect.getmodule(object) |
|
elif hasattr(object, '__module__'): |
|
return module.__name__ == object.__module__ |
|
elif isinstance(object, property): |
|
return True # [XX] no way not be sure. |
|
else: |
|
raise ValueError("object must be a class or function") |
|
|
|
def _find(self, tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, seen): |
|
""" |
|
Find tests for the given object and any contained objects, and |
|
add them to `tests`. |
|
""" |
|
if self._verbose: |
|
print 'Finding tests in %s' % name |
|
|
|
# If we've already processed this object, then ignore it. |
|
if id(obj) in seen: |
|
return |
|
seen[id(obj)] = 1 |
|
|
|
# Find a test for this object, and add it to the list of tests. |
|
test = self._get_test(obj, name, module, globs, source_lines) |
|
if test is not None: |
|
tests.append(test) |
|
|
|
# Look for tests in a module's contained objects. |
|
if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse: |
|
for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): |
|
# Check if this contained object should be ignored. |
|
if self._filter(val, name, valname): |
|
continue |
|
valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname) |
|
# Recurse to functions & classes. |
|
if ((inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val)) and |
|
self._from_module(module, val)): |
|
self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, |
|
globs, seen) |
|
|
|
# Look for tests in a module's __test__ dictionary. |
|
if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse: |
|
for valname, val in getattr(obj, '__test__', {}).items(): |
|
if not isinstance(valname, basestring): |
|
raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ keys " |
|
"must be strings: %r" % |
|
(type(valname),)) |
|
if not (inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or |
|
inspect.ismethod(val) or inspect.ismodule(val) or |
|
isinstance(val, basestring)): |
|
raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ values " |
|
"must be strings, functions, methods, " |
|
"classes, or modules: %r" % |
|
(type(val),)) |
|
valname = '%s.__test__.%s' % (name, valname) |
|
self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, |
|
globs, seen) |
|
|
|
# Look for tests in a class's contained objects. |
|
if inspect.isclass(obj) and self._recurse: |
|
for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): |
|
# Check if this contained object should be ignored. |
|
if self._filter(val, name, valname): |
|
continue |
|
# Special handling for staticmethod/classmethod. |
|
if isinstance(val, staticmethod): |
|
val = getattr(obj, valname) |
|
if isinstance(val, classmethod): |
|
val = getattr(obj, valname).im_func |
|
|
|
# Recurse to methods, properties, and nested classes. |
|
if ((inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or |
|
isinstance(val, property)) and |
|
self._from_module(module, val)): |
|
valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname) |
|
self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, |
|
globs, seen) |
|
|
|
def _get_test(self, obj, name, module, globs, source_lines): |
|
""" |
|
Return a DocTest for the given object, if it defines a docstring; |
|
otherwise, return None. |
|
""" |
|
# Extract the object's docstring. If it doesn't have one, |
|
# then return None (no test for this object). |
|
if isinstance(obj, basestring): |
|
docstring = obj |
|
else: |
|
try: |
|
if obj.__doc__ is None: |
|
docstring = '' |
|
else: |
|
docstring = obj.__doc__ |
|
if not isinstance(docstring, basestring): |
|
docstring = str(docstring) |
|
except (TypeError, AttributeError): |
|
docstring = '' |
|
|
|
# Find the docstring's location in the file. |
|
lineno = self._find_lineno(obj, source_lines) |
|
|
|
# Don't bother if the docstring is empty. |
|
if self._exclude_empty and not docstring: |
|
return None |
|
|
|
# Return a DocTest for this object. |
|
if module is None: |
|
filename = None |
|
else: |
|
filename = getattr(module, '__file__', module.__name__) |
|
if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"): |
|
filename = filename[:-1] |
|
return self._parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, name, |
|
filename, lineno) |
|
|
|
def _find_lineno(self, obj, source_lines): |
|
""" |
|
Return a line number of the given object's docstring. Note: |
|
this method assumes that the object has a docstring. |
|
""" |
|
lineno = None |
|
|
|
# Find the line number for modules. |
|
if inspect.ismodule(obj): |
|
lineno = 0 |
|
|
|
# Find the line number for classes. |
|
# Note: this could be fooled if a class is defined multiple |
|
# times in a single file. |
|
if inspect.isclass(obj): |
|
if source_lines is None: |
|
return None |
|
pat = re.compile(r'^\s*class\s*%s\b' % |
|
getattr(obj, '__name__', '-')) |
|
for i, line in enumerate(source_lines): |
|
if pat.match(line): |
|
lineno = i |
|
break |
|
|
|
# Find the line number for functions & methods. |
|
if inspect.ismethod(obj): obj = obj.im_func |
|
if inspect.isfunction(obj): obj = obj.func_code |
|
if inspect.istraceback(obj): obj = obj.tb_frame |
|
if inspect.isframe(obj): obj = obj.f_code |
|
if inspect.iscode(obj): |
|
lineno = getattr(obj, 'co_firstlineno', None)-1 |
|
|
|
# Find the line number where the docstring starts. Assume |
|
# that it's the first line that begins with a quote mark. |
|
# Note: this could be fooled by a multiline function |
|
# signature, where a continuation line begins with a quote |
|
# mark. |
|
if lineno is not None: |
|
if source_lines is None: |
|
return lineno+1 |
|
pat = re.compile('(^|.*:)\s*\w*("|\')') |
|
for lineno in range(lineno, len(source_lines)): |
|
if pat.match(source_lines[lineno]): |
|
return lineno |
|
|
|
# We couldn't find the line number. |
|
return None |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 5. DocTest Runner |
|
###################################################################### |
|
|
|
class DocTestRunner: |
|
""" |
|
A class used to run DocTest test cases, and accumulate statistics. |
|
The `run` method is used to process a single DocTest case. It |
|
returns a tuple `(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of test cases |
|
tried, and `f` is the number of test cases that failed. |
|
|
|
>>> tests = DocTestFinder().find(_TestClass) |
|
>>> runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=False) |
|
>>> for test in tests: |
|
... print runner.run(test) |
|
(0, 2) |
|
(0, 1) |
|
(0, 2) |
|
(0, 2) |
|
|
|
The `summarize` method prints a summary of all the test cases that |
|
have been run by the runner, and returns an aggregated `(f, t)` |
|
tuple: |
|
|
|
>>> runner.summarize(verbose=1) |
|
4 items passed all tests: |
|
2 tests in _TestClass |
|
2 tests in _TestClass.__init__ |
|
2 tests in _TestClass.get |
|
1 tests in _TestClass.square |
|
7 tests in 4 items. |
|
7 passed and 0 failed. |
|
Test passed. |
|
(0, 7) |
|
|
|
The aggregated number of tried examples and failed examples is |
|
also available via the `tries` and `failures` attributes: |
|
|
|
>>> runner.tries |
|
7 |
|
>>> runner.failures |
|
0 |
|
|
|
The comparison between expected outputs and actual outputs is done |
|
by an `OutputChecker`. This comparison may be customized with a |
|
number of option flags; see the documentation for `testmod` for |
|
more information. If the option flags are insufficient, then the |
|
comparison may also be customized by passing a subclass of |
|
`OutputChecker` to the constructor. |
|
|
|
The test runner's display output can be controlled in two ways. |
|
First, an output function (`out) can be passed to |
|
`TestRunner.run`; this function will be called with strings that |
|
should be displayed. It defaults to `sys.stdout.write`. If |
|
capturing the output is not sufficient, then the display output |
|
can be also customized by subclassing DocTestRunner, and |
|
overriding the methods `report_start`, `report_success`, |
|
`report_unexpected_exception`, and `report_failure`. |
|
""" |
|
# This divider string is used to separate failure messages, and to |
|
# separate sections of the summary. |
|
DIVIDER = "*" * 70 |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, checker=None, verbose=None, optionflags=0): |
|
""" |
|
Create a new test runner. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg `checker` is the `OutputChecker` that |
|
should be used to compare the expected outputs and actual |
|
outputs of doctest examples. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg 'verbose' prints lots of stuff if true, |
|
only failures if false; by default, it's true iff '-v' is in |
|
sys.argv. |
|
|
|
Optional argument `optionflags` can be used to control how the |
|
test runner compares expected output to actual output, and how |
|
it displays failures. See the documentation for `testmod` for |
|
more information. |
|
""" |
|
self._checker = checker or OutputChecker() |
|
if verbose is None: |
|
verbose = '-v' in sys.argv |
|
self._verbose = verbose |
|
self.optionflags = optionflags |
|
self.original_optionflags = optionflags |
|
|
|
# Keep track of the examples we've run. |
|
self.tries = 0 |
|
self.failures = 0 |
|
self._name2ft = {} |
|
|
|
# Create a fake output target for capturing doctest output. |
|
self._fakeout = _SpoofOut() |
|
|
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
# Reporting methods |
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
|
|
def report_start(self, out, test, example): |
|
""" |
|
Report that the test runner is about to process the given |
|
example. (Only displays a message if verbose=True) |
|
""" |
|
if self._verbose: |
|
if example.want: |
|
out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) + |
|
'Expecting:\n' + _indent(example.want)) |
|
else: |
|
out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) + |
|
'Expecting nothing\n') |
|
|
|
def report_success(self, out, test, example, got): |
|
""" |
|
Report that the given example ran successfully. (Only |
|
displays a message if verbose=True) |
|
""" |
|
if self._verbose: |
|
out("ok\n") |
|
|
|
def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got): |
|
""" |
|
Report that the given example failed. |
|
""" |
|
out(self._failure_header(test, example) + |
|
self._checker.output_difference(example, got, self.optionflags)) |
|
|
|
def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info): |
|
""" |
|
Report that the given example raised an unexpected exception. |
|
""" |
|
out(self._failure_header(test, example) + |
|
'Exception raised:\n' + _indent(_exception_traceback(exc_info))) |
|
|
|
def _failure_header(self, test, example): |
|
out = [self.DIVIDER] |
|
if test.filename: |
|
if test.lineno is not None and example.lineno is not None: |
|
lineno = test.lineno + example.lineno + 1 |
|
else: |
|
lineno = '?' |
|
out.append('File "%s", line %s, in %s' % |
|
(test.filename, lineno, test.name)) |
|
else: |
|
out.append('Line %s, in %s' % (example.lineno+1, test.name)) |
|
out.append('Failed example:') |
|
source = example.source |
|
out.append(_indent(source)) |
|
return '\n'.join(out) |
|
|
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
# DocTest Running |
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
|
|
def __run(self, test, compileflags, out): |
|
""" |
|
Run the examples in `test`. Write the outcome of each example |
|
with one of the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods, using the |
|
writer function `out`. `compileflags` is the set of compiler |
|
flags that should be used to execute examples. Return a tuple |
|
`(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of examples tried, and `f` |
|
is the number of examples that failed. The examples are run |
|
in the namespace `test.globs`. |
|
""" |
|
# Keep track of the number of failures and tries. |
|
failures = tries = 0 |
|
|
|
# Save the option flags (since option directives can be used |
|
# to modify them). |
|
original_optionflags = self.optionflags |
|
|
|
SUCCESS, FAILURE, BOOM = range(3) # `outcome` state |
|
|
|
check = self._checker.check_output |
|
|
|
# Process each example. |
|
for examplenum, example in enumerate(test.examples): |
|
|
|
# If REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE is set, then suppress |
|
# reporting after the first failure. |
|
quiet = (self.optionflags & REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE and |
|
failures > 0) |
|
|
|
# Merge in the example's options. |
|
self.optionflags = original_optionflags |
|
if example.options: |
|
for (optionflag, val) in example.options.items(): |
|
if val: |
|
self.optionflags |= optionflag |
|
else: |
|
self.optionflags &= ~optionflag |
|
|
|
# Record that we started this example. |
|
tries += 1 |
|
if not quiet: |
|
self.report_start(out, test, example) |
|
|
|
# Use a special filename for compile(), so we can retrieve |
|
# the source code during interactive debugging (see |
|
# __patched_linecache_getlines). |
|
filename = '<doctest %s[%d]>' % (test.name, examplenum) |
|
|
|
# Run the example in the given context (globs), and record |
|
# any exception that gets raised. (But don't intercept |
|
# keyboard interrupts.) |
|
try: |
|
# Don't blink! This is where the user's code gets run. |
|
exec compile(example.source, filename, "single", |
|
compileflags, 1) in test.globs |
|
self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ==== |
|
exception = None |
|
except KeyboardInterrupt: |
|
raise |
|
except: |
|
exception = sys.exc_info() |
|
self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ==== |
|
|
|
got = self._fakeout.getvalue() # the actual output |
|
self._fakeout.truncate(0) |
|
outcome = FAILURE # guilty until proved innocent or insane |
|
|
|
# If the example executed without raising any exceptions, |
|
# verify its output. |
|
if exception is None: |
|
if check(example.want, got, self.optionflags): |
|
outcome = SUCCESS |
|
|
|
# The example raised an exception: check if it was expected. |
|
else: |
|
exc_info = sys.exc_info() |
|
exc_msg = traceback.format_exception_only(*exc_info[:2])[-1] |
|
if not quiet: |
|
got += _exception_traceback(exc_info) |
|
|
|
# If `example.exc_msg` is None, then we weren't expecting |
|
# an exception. |
|
if example.exc_msg is None: |
|
outcome = BOOM |
|
|
|
# We expected an exception: see whether it matches. |
|
elif check(example.exc_msg, exc_msg, self.optionflags): |
|
outcome = SUCCESS |
|
|
|
# Another chance if they didn't care about the detail. |
|
elif self.optionflags & IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL: |
|
m1 = re.match(r'[^:]*:', example.exc_msg) |
|
m2 = re.match(r'[^:]*:', exc_msg) |
|
if m1 and m2 and check(m1.group(0), m2.group(0), |
|
self.optionflags): |
|
outcome = SUCCESS |
|
|
|
# Report the outcome. |
|
if outcome is SUCCESS: |
|
if not quiet: |
|
self.report_success(out, test, example, got) |
|
elif outcome is FAILURE: |
|
if not quiet: |
|
self.report_failure(out, test, example, got) |
|
failures += 1 |
|
elif outcome is BOOM: |
|
if not quiet: |
|
self.report_unexpected_exception(out, test, example, |
|
exc_info) |
|
failures += 1 |
|
else: |
|
assert False, ("unknown outcome", outcome) |
|
|
|
# Restore the option flags (in case they were modified) |
|
self.optionflags = original_optionflags |
|
|
|
# Record and return the number of failures and tries. |
|
self.__record_outcome(test, failures, tries) |
|
return failures, tries |
|
|
|
def __record_outcome(self, test, f, t): |
|
""" |
|
Record the fact that the given DocTest (`test`) generated `f` |
|
failures out of `t` tried examples. |
|
""" |
|
f2, t2 = self._name2ft.get(test.name, (0,0)) |
|
self._name2ft[test.name] = (f+f2, t+t2) |
|
self.failures += f |
|
self.tries += t |
|
|
|
__LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE = re.compile(r'<doctest ' |
|
r'(?P<name>[\w\.]+)' |
|
r'\[(?P<examplenum>\d+)\]>$') |
|
def __patched_linecache_getlines(self, filename, module_globals=None): |
|
m = self.__LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE.match(filename) |
|
if m and m.group('name') == self.test.name: |
|
example = self.test.examples[int(m.group('examplenum'))] |
|
return example.source.splitlines(True) |
|
else: |
|
if sys.version_info < (2, 5, 0): |
|
return self.save_linecache_getlines(filename) |
|
else: |
|
return self.save_linecache_getlines(filename, module_globals) |
|
|
|
def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True): |
|
""" |
|
Run the examples in `test`, and display the results using the |
|
writer function `out`. |
|
|
|
The examples are run in the namespace `test.globs`. If |
|
`clear_globs` is true (the default), then this namespace will |
|
be cleared after the test runs, to help with garbage |
|
collection. If you would like to examine the namespace after |
|
the test completes, then use `clear_globs=False`. |
|
|
|
`compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by |
|
the Python compiler when running the examples. If not |
|
specified, then it will default to the set of future-import |
|
flags that apply to `globs`. |
|
|
|
The output of each example is checked using |
|
`DocTestRunner.check_output`, and the results are formatted by |
|
the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods. |
|
""" |
|
self.test = test |
|
|
|
if compileflags is None: |
|
compileflags = _extract_future_flags(test.globs) |
|
|
|
save_stdout = sys.stdout |
|
if out is None: |
|
out = save_stdout.write |
|
sys.stdout = self._fakeout |
|
|
|
# Patch pdb.set_trace to restore sys.stdout during interactive |
|
# debugging (so it's not still redirected to self._fakeout). |
|
# Note that the interactive output will go to *our* |
|
# save_stdout, even if that's not the real sys.stdout; this |
|
# allows us to write test cases for the set_trace behavior. |
|
save_set_trace = pdb.set_trace |
|
self.debugger = _OutputRedirectingPdb(save_stdout) |
|
self.debugger.reset() |
|
pdb.set_trace = self.debugger.set_trace |
|
|
|
# Patch linecache.getlines, so we can see the example's source |
|
# when we're inside the debugger. |
|
self.save_linecache_getlines = linecache.getlines |
|
linecache.getlines = self.__patched_linecache_getlines |
|
|
|
try: |
|
return self.__run(test, compileflags, out) |
|
finally: |
|
sys.stdout = save_stdout |
|
pdb.set_trace = save_set_trace |
|
linecache.getlines = self.save_linecache_getlines |
|
if clear_globs: |
|
test.globs.clear() |
|
|
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
# Summarization |
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
def summarize(self, verbose=None): |
|
""" |
|
Print a summary of all the test cases that have been run by |
|
this DocTestRunner, and return a tuple `(f, t)`, where `f` is |
|
the total number of failed examples, and `t` is the total |
|
number of tried examples. |
|
|
|
The optional `verbose` argument controls how detailed the |
|
summary is. If the verbosity is not specified, then the |
|
DocTestRunner's verbosity is used. |
|
""" |
|
if verbose is None: |
|
verbose = self._verbose |
|
notests = [] |
|
passed = [] |
|
failed = [] |
|
totalt = totalf = 0 |
|
for x in self._name2ft.items(): |
|
name, (f, t) = x |
|
assert f <= t |
|
totalt += t |
|
totalf += f |
|
if t == 0: |
|
notests.append(name) |
|
elif f == 0: |
|
passed.append( (name, t) ) |
|
else: |
|
failed.append(x) |
|
if verbose: |
|
if notests: |
|
print len(notests), "items had no tests:" |
|
notests.sort() |
|
for thing in notests: |
|
print " ", thing |
|
if passed: |
|
print len(passed), "items passed all tests:" |
|
passed.sort() |
|
for thing, count in passed: |
|
print " %3d tests in %s" % (count, thing) |
|
if failed: |
|
print self.DIVIDER |
|
print len(failed), "items had failures:" |
|
failed.sort() |
|
for thing, (f, t) in failed: |
|
print " %3d of %3d in %s" % (f, t, thing) |
|
if verbose: |
|
print totalt, "tests in", len(self._name2ft), "items." |
|
print totalt - totalf, "passed and", totalf, "failed." |
|
if totalf: |
|
print "***Test Failed***", totalf, "failures." |
|
elif verbose: |
|
print "Test passed." |
|
return totalf, totalt |
|
|
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
# Backward compatibility cruft to maintain doctest.master. |
|
#///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// |
|
def merge(self, other): |
|
d = self._name2ft |
|
for name, (f, t) in other._name2ft.items(): |
|
if name in d: |
|
print "*** DocTestRunner.merge: '" + name + "' in both" \ |
|
" testers; summing outcomes." |
|
f2, t2 = d[name] |
|
f = f + f2 |
|
t = t + t2 |
|
d[name] = f, t |
|
|
|
class OutputChecker: |
|
""" |
|
A class used to check the whether the actual output from a doctest |
|
example matches the expected output. `OutputChecker` defines two |
|
methods: `check_output`, which compares a given pair of outputs, |
|
and returns true if they match; and `output_difference`, which |
|
returns a string describing the differences between two outputs. |
|
""" |
|
def check_output(self, want, got, optionflags): |
|
""" |
|
Return True iff the actual output from an example (`got`) |
|
matches the expected output (`want`). These strings are |
|
always considered to match if they are identical; but |
|
depending on what option flags the test runner is using, |
|
several non-exact match types are also possible. See the |
|
documentation for `TestRunner` for more information about |
|
option flags. |
|
""" |
|
# Handle the common case first, for efficiency: |
|
# if they're string-identical, always return true. |
|
if got == want: |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# The values True and False replaced 1 and 0 as the return |
|
# value for boolean comparisons in Python 2.3. |
|
if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1): |
|
if (got,want) == ("True\n", "1\n"): |
|
return True |
|
if (got,want) == ("False\n", "0\n"): |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# <BLANKLINE> can be used as a special sequence to signify a |
|
# blank line, unless the DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag is used. |
|
if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE): |
|
# Replace <BLANKLINE> in want with a blank line. |
|
want = re.sub('(?m)^%s\s*?$' % re.escape(BLANKLINE_MARKER), |
|
'', want) |
|
# If a line in got contains only spaces, then remove the |
|
# spaces. |
|
got = re.sub('(?m)^\s*?$', '', got) |
|
if got == want: |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# This flag causes doctest to ignore any differences in the |
|
# contents of whitespace strings. Note that this can be used |
|
# in conjunction with the ELLIPSIS flag. |
|
if optionflags & NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE: |
|
got = ' '.join(got.split()) |
|
want = ' '.join(want.split()) |
|
if got == want: |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# The ELLIPSIS flag says to let the sequence "..." in `want` |
|
# match any substring in `got`. |
|
if optionflags & ELLIPSIS: |
|
if _ellipsis_match(want, got): |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# We didn't find any match; return false. |
|
return False |
|
|
|
# Should we do a fancy diff? |
|
def _do_a_fancy_diff(self, want, got, optionflags): |
|
# Not unless they asked for a fancy diff. |
|
if not optionflags & (REPORT_UDIFF | |
|
REPORT_CDIFF | |
|
REPORT_NDIFF): |
|
return False |
|
|
|
# If expected output uses ellipsis, a meaningful fancy diff is |
|
# too hard ... or maybe not. In two real-life failures Tim saw, |
|
# a diff was a major help anyway, so this is commented out. |
|
# [todo] _ellipsis_match() knows which pieces do and don't match, |
|
# and could be the basis for a kick-ass diff in this case. |
|
##if optionflags & ELLIPSIS and ELLIPSIS_MARKER in want: |
|
## return False |
|
|
|
# ndiff does intraline difference marking, so can be useful even |
|
# for 1-line differences. |
|
if optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF: |
|
return True |
|
|
|
# The other diff types need at least a few lines to be helpful. |
|
return want.count('\n') > 2 and got.count('\n') > 2 |
|
|
|
def output_difference(self, example, got, optionflags): |
|
""" |
|
Return a string describing the differences between the |
|
expected output for a given example (`example`) and the actual |
|
output (`got`). `optionflags` is the set of option flags used |
|
to compare `want` and `got`. |
|
""" |
|
want = example.want |
|
# If <BLANKLINE>s are being used, then replace blank lines |
|
# with <BLANKLINE> in the actual output string. |
|
if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE): |
|
got = re.sub('(?m)^[ ]*(?=\n)', BLANKLINE_MARKER, got) |
|
|
|
# Check if we should use diff. |
|
if self._do_a_fancy_diff(want, got, optionflags): |
|
# Split want & got into lines. |
|
want_lines = want.splitlines(True) # True == keep line ends |
|
got_lines = got.splitlines(True) |
|
# Use difflib to find their differences. |
|
if optionflags & REPORT_UDIFF: |
|
diff = difflib.unified_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2) |
|
diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header |
|
kind = 'unified diff with -expected +actual' |
|
elif optionflags & REPORT_CDIFF: |
|
diff = difflib.context_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2) |
|
diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header |
|
kind = 'context diff with expected followed by actual' |
|
elif optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF: |
|
engine = difflib.Differ(charjunk=difflib.IS_CHARACTER_JUNK) |
|
diff = list(engine.compare(want_lines, got_lines)) |
|
kind = 'ndiff with -expected +actual' |
|
else: |
|
assert 0, 'Bad diff option' |
|
# Remove trailing whitespace on diff output. |
|
diff = [line.rstrip() + '\n' for line in diff] |
|
return 'Differences (%s):\n' % kind + _indent(''.join(diff)) |
|
|
|
# If we're not using diff, then simply list the expected |
|
# output followed by the actual output. |
|
if want and got: |
|
return 'Expected:\n%sGot:\n%s' % (_indent(want), _indent(got)) |
|
elif want: |
|
return 'Expected:\n%sGot nothing\n' % _indent(want) |
|
elif got: |
|
return 'Expected nothing\nGot:\n%s' % _indent(got) |
|
else: |
|
return 'Expected nothing\nGot nothing\n' |
|
|
|
class DocTestFailure(Exception): |
|
"""A DocTest example has failed in debugging mode. |
|
|
|
The exception instance has variables: |
|
|
|
- test: the DocTest object being run |
|
|
|
- excample: the Example object that failed |
|
|
|
- got: the actual output |
|
""" |
|
def __init__(self, test, example, got): |
|
self.test = test |
|
self.example = example |
|
self.got = got |
|
|
|
def __str__(self): |
|
return str(self.test) |
|
|
|
class UnexpectedException(Exception): |
|
"""A DocTest example has encountered an unexpected exception |
|
|
|
The exception instance has variables: |
|
|
|
- test: the DocTest object being run |
|
|
|
- excample: the Example object that failed |
|
|
|
- exc_info: the exception info |
|
""" |
|
def __init__(self, test, example, exc_info): |
|
self.test = test |
|
self.example = example |
|
self.exc_info = exc_info |
|
|
|
def __str__(self): |
|
return str(self.test) |
|
|
|
class DebugRunner(DocTestRunner): |
|
r"""Run doc tests but raise an exception as soon as there is a failure. |
|
|
|
If an unexpected exception occurs, an UnexpectedException is raised. |
|
It contains the test, the example, and the original exception: |
|
|
|
>>> runner = DebugRunner(verbose=False) |
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42', |
|
... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
>>> try: |
|
... runner.run(test) |
|
... except UnexpectedException, failure: |
|
... pass |
|
|
|
>>> failure.test is test |
|
True |
|
|
|
>>> failure.example.want |
|
'42\n' |
|
|
|
>>> exc_info = failure.exc_info |
|
>>> raise exc_info[0], exc_info[1], exc_info[2] |
|
Traceback (most recent call last): |
|
... |
|
KeyError |
|
|
|
We wrap the original exception to give the calling application |
|
access to the test and example information. |
|
|
|
If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised: |
|
|
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' |
|
... >>> x = 1 |
|
... >>> x |
|
... 2 |
|
... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
|
|
>>> try: |
|
... runner.run(test) |
|
... except DocTestFailure, failure: |
|
... pass |
|
|
|
DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.test is test |
|
True |
|
|
|
As well as to the example: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.example.want |
|
'2\n' |
|
|
|
and the actual output: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.got |
|
'1\n' |
|
|
|
If a failure or error occurs, the globals are left intact: |
|
|
|
>>> del test.globs['__builtins__'] |
|
>>> test.globs |
|
{'x': 1} |
|
|
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' |
|
... >>> x = 2 |
|
... >>> raise KeyError |
|
... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
|
|
>>> runner.run(test) |
|
Traceback (most recent call last): |
|
... |
|
UnexpectedException: <DocTest foo from foo.py:0 (2 examples)> |
|
|
|
>>> del test.globs['__builtins__'] |
|
>>> test.globs |
|
{'x': 2} |
|
|
|
But the globals are cleared if there is no error: |
|
|
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' |
|
... >>> x = 2 |
|
... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
|
|
>>> runner.run(test) |
|
(0, 1) |
|
|
|
>>> test.globs |
|
{} |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True): |
|
r = DocTestRunner.run(self, test, compileflags, out, False) |
|
if clear_globs: |
|
test.globs.clear() |
|
return r |
|
|
|
def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info): |
|
raise UnexpectedException(test, example, exc_info) |
|
|
|
def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got): |
|
raise DocTestFailure(test, example, got) |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 6. Test Functions |
|
###################################################################### |
|
# These should be backwards compatible. |
|
|
|
# For backward compatibility, a global instance of a DocTestRunner |
|
# class, updated by testmod. |
|
master = None |
|
|
|
def testmod(m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None, isprivate=None, |
|
report=True, optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, |
|
raise_on_error=False, exclude_empty=False): |
|
"""m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None, isprivate=None, |
|
report=True, optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, |
|
exclude_empty=False |
|
|
|
Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable |
|
from module m (or the current module if m is not supplied), starting |
|
with m.__doc__. Unless isprivate is specified, private names |
|
are not skipped. |
|
|
|
Also test examples reachable from dict m.__test__ if it exists and is |
|
not None. m.__test__ maps names to functions, classes and strings; |
|
function and class docstrings are tested even if the name is private; |
|
strings are tested directly, as if they were docstrings. |
|
|
|
Return (#failures, #tests). |
|
|
|
See doctest.__doc__ for an overview. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the module; by default |
|
use m.__name__. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals |
|
when executing examples; by default, use m.__dict__. A copy of this |
|
dict is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's |
|
examples start with a clean slate. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be |
|
merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By |
|
default, no extra globals are used. This is new in 2.4. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints |
|
only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true, |
|
else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is |
|
detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed). |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants, |
|
and defaults to 0. This is new in 2.3. Possible values (see the |
|
docs for details): |
|
|
|
DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 |
|
DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE |
|
NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
|
ELLIPSIS |
|
IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL |
|
REPORT_UDIFF |
|
REPORT_CDIFF |
|
REPORT_NDIFF |
|
REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the |
|
first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be |
|
post-mortem debugged. |
|
|
|
Deprecated in Python 2.4: |
|
Optional keyword arg "isprivate" specifies a function used to |
|
determine whether a name is private. The default function is |
|
treat all functions as public. Optionally, "isprivate" can be |
|
set to doctest.is_private to skip over functions marked as private |
|
using the underscore naming convention; see its docs for details. |
|
|
|
Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of |
|
class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates) |
|
global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master |
|
can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual. |
|
Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay |
|
displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose) |
|
when you're done fiddling. |
|
""" |
|
global master |
|
|
|
if isprivate is not None: |
|
warnings.warn("the isprivate argument is deprecated; " |
|
"examine DocTestFinder.find() lists instead", |
|
DeprecationWarning) |
|
|
|
# If no module was given, then use __main__. |
|
if m is None: |
|
# DWA - m will still be None if this wasn't invoked from the command |
|
# line, in which case the following TypeError is about as good an error |
|
# as we should expect |
|
m = sys.modules.get('__main__') |
|
|
|
# Check that we were actually given a module. |
|
if not inspect.ismodule(m): |
|
raise TypeError("testmod: module required; %r" % (m,)) |
|
|
|
# If no name was given, then use the module's name. |
|
if name is None: |
|
name = m.__name__ |
|
|
|
# Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module. |
|
finder = DocTestFinder(_namefilter=isprivate, exclude_empty=exclude_empty) |
|
|
|
if raise_on_error: |
|
runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) |
|
else: |
|
runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) |
|
|
|
for test in finder.find(m, name, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs): |
|
runner.run(test) |
|
|
|
if report: |
|
runner.summarize() |
|
|
|
if master is None: |
|
master = runner |
|
else: |
|
master.merge(runner) |
|
|
|
return runner.failures, runner.tries |
|
|
|
def testfile(filename, module_relative=True, name=None, package=None, |
|
globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, optionflags=0, |
|
extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, parser=DocTestParser()): |
|
""" |
|
Test examples in the given file. Return (#failures, #tests). |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "module_relative" specifies how filenames |
|
should be interpreted: |
|
|
|
- If "module_relative" is True (the default), then "filename" |
|
specifies a module-relative path. By default, this path is |
|
relative to the calling module's directory; but if the |
|
"package" argument is specified, then it is relative to that |
|
package. To ensure os-independence, "filename" should use |
|
"/" characters to separate path segments, and should not |
|
be an absolute path (i.e., it may not begin with "/"). |
|
|
|
- If "module_relative" is False, then "filename" specifies an |
|
os-specific path. The path may be absolute or relative (to |
|
the current working directory). |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the test; by default |
|
use the file's basename. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword argument "package" is a Python package or the |
|
name of a Python package whose directory should be used as the |
|
base directory for a module relative filename. If no package is |
|
specified, then the calling module's directory is used as the base |
|
directory for module relative filenames. It is an error to |
|
specify "package" if "module_relative" is False. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals |
|
when executing examples; by default, use {}. A copy of this dict |
|
is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's |
|
examples start with a clean slate. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be |
|
merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By |
|
default, no extra globals are used. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints |
|
only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true, |
|
else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is |
|
detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed). |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants, |
|
and defaults to 0. Possible values (see the docs for details): |
|
|
|
DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 |
|
DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE |
|
NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
|
ELLIPSIS |
|
IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL |
|
REPORT_UDIFF |
|
REPORT_CDIFF |
|
REPORT_NDIFF |
|
REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the |
|
first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be |
|
post-mortem debugged. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg "parser" specifies a DocTestParser (or |
|
subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files. |
|
|
|
Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of |
|
class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates) |
|
global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master |
|
can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual. |
|
Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay |
|
displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose) |
|
when you're done fiddling. |
|
""" |
|
global master |
|
|
|
if package and not module_relative: |
|
raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-" |
|
"relative paths.") |
|
|
|
# Relativize the path |
|
if module_relative: |
|
package = _normalize_module(package) |
|
filename = _module_relative_path(package, filename) |
|
|
|
# If no name was given, then use the file's name. |
|
if name is None: |
|
name = os.path.basename(filename) |
|
|
|
# Assemble the globals. |
|
if globs is None: |
|
globs = {} |
|
else: |
|
globs = globs.copy() |
|
if extraglobs is not None: |
|
globs.update(extraglobs) |
|
|
|
if raise_on_error: |
|
runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) |
|
else: |
|
runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) |
|
|
|
# Read the file, convert it to a test, and run it. |
|
s = open(filename).read() |
|
test = parser.get_doctest(s, globs, name, filename, 0) |
|
runner.run(test) |
|
|
|
if report: |
|
runner.summarize() |
|
|
|
if master is None: |
|
master = runner |
|
else: |
|
master.merge(runner) |
|
|
|
return runner.failures, runner.tries |
|
|
|
def run_docstring_examples(f, globs, verbose=False, name="NoName", |
|
compileflags=None, optionflags=0): |
|
""" |
|
Test examples in the given object's docstring (`f`), using `globs` |
|
as globals. Optional argument `name` is used in failure messages. |
|
If the optional argument `verbose` is true, then generate output |
|
even if there are no failures. |
|
|
|
`compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by the |
|
Python compiler when running the examples. If not specified, then |
|
it will default to the set of future-import flags that apply to |
|
`globs`. |
|
|
|
Optional keyword arg `optionflags` specifies options for the |
|
testing and output. See the documentation for `testmod` for more |
|
information. |
|
""" |
|
# Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module. |
|
finder = DocTestFinder(verbose=verbose, recurse=False) |
|
runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) |
|
for test in finder.find(f, name, globs=globs): |
|
runner.run(test, compileflags=compileflags) |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 7. Tester |
|
###################################################################### |
|
# This is provided only for backwards compatibility. It's not |
|
# actually used in any way. |
|
|
|
class Tester: |
|
def __init__(self, mod=None, globs=None, verbose=None, |
|
isprivate=None, optionflags=0): |
|
|
|
warnings.warn("class Tester is deprecated; " |
|
"use class doctest.DocTestRunner instead", |
|
DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) |
|
if mod is None and globs is None: |
|
raise TypeError("Tester.__init__: must specify mod or globs") |
|
if mod is not None and not inspect.ismodule(mod): |
|
raise TypeError("Tester.__init__: mod must be a module; %r" % |
|
(mod,)) |
|
if globs is None: |
|
globs = mod.__dict__ |
|
self.globs = globs |
|
|
|
self.verbose = verbose |
|
self.isprivate = isprivate |
|
self.optionflags = optionflags |
|
self.testfinder = DocTestFinder(_namefilter=isprivate) |
|
self.testrunner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, |
|
optionflags=optionflags) |
|
|
|
def runstring(self, s, name): |
|
test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(s, self.globs, name, None, None) |
|
if self.verbose: |
|
print "Running string", name |
|
(f,t) = self.testrunner.run(test) |
|
if self.verbose: |
|
print f, "of", t, "examples failed in string", name |
|
return (f,t) |
|
|
|
def rundoc(self, object, name=None, module=None): |
|
f = t = 0 |
|
tests = self.testfinder.find(object, name, module=module, |
|
globs=self.globs) |
|
for test in tests: |
|
(f2, t2) = self.testrunner.run(test) |
|
(f,t) = (f+f2, t+t2) |
|
return (f,t) |
|
|
|
def rundict(self, d, name, module=None): |
|
import new |
|
m = new.module(name) |
|
m.__dict__.update(d) |
|
if module is None: |
|
module = False |
|
return self.rundoc(m, name, module) |
|
|
|
def run__test__(self, d, name): |
|
import new |
|
m = new.module(name) |
|
m.__test__ = d |
|
return self.rundoc(m, name) |
|
|
|
def summarize(self, verbose=None): |
|
return self.testrunner.summarize(verbose) |
|
|
|
def merge(self, other): |
|
self.testrunner.merge(other.testrunner) |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 8. Unittest Support |
|
###################################################################### |
|
|
|
_unittest_reportflags = 0 |
|
|
|
def set_unittest_reportflags(flags): |
|
"""Sets the unittest option flags. |
|
|
|
The old flag is returned so that a runner could restore the old |
|
value if it wished to: |
|
|
|
>>> old = _unittest_reportflags |
|
>>> set_unittest_reportflags(REPORT_NDIFF | |
|
... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) == old |
|
True |
|
|
|
>>> import doctest |
|
>>> doctest._unittest_reportflags == (REPORT_NDIFF | |
|
... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) |
|
True |
|
|
|
Only reporting flags can be set: |
|
|
|
>>> set_unittest_reportflags(ELLIPSIS) |
|
Traceback (most recent call last): |
|
... |
|
ValueError: ('Only reporting flags allowed', 8) |
|
|
|
>>> set_unittest_reportflags(old) == (REPORT_NDIFF | |
|
... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) |
|
True |
|
""" |
|
global _unittest_reportflags |
|
|
|
if (flags & REPORTING_FLAGS) != flags: |
|
raise ValueError("Only reporting flags allowed", flags) |
|
old = _unittest_reportflags |
|
_unittest_reportflags = flags |
|
return old |
|
|
|
|
|
class DocTestCase(unittest.TestCase): |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, test, optionflags=0, setUp=None, tearDown=None, |
|
checker=None, runner=DocTestRunner): |
|
|
|
unittest.TestCase.__init__(self) |
|
self._dt_optionflags = optionflags |
|
self._dt_checker = checker |
|
self._dt_test = test |
|
self._dt_setUp = setUp |
|
self._dt_tearDown = tearDown |
|
self._dt_runner = runner |
|
|
|
def setUp(self): |
|
test = self._dt_test |
|
|
|
if self._dt_setUp is not None: |
|
self._dt_setUp(test) |
|
|
|
def tearDown(self): |
|
test = self._dt_test |
|
|
|
if self._dt_tearDown is not None: |
|
self._dt_tearDown(test) |
|
|
|
test.globs.clear() |
|
|
|
def runTest(self): |
|
test = self._dt_test |
|
old = sys.stdout |
|
new = StringIO() |
|
optionflags = self._dt_optionflags |
|
|
|
if not (optionflags & REPORTING_FLAGS): |
|
# The option flags don't include any reporting flags, |
|
# so add the default reporting flags |
|
optionflags |= _unittest_reportflags |
|
|
|
runner = self._dt_runner(optionflags=optionflags, |
|
checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False) |
|
|
|
try: |
|
runner.DIVIDER = "-"*70 |
|
failures, tries = runner.run( |
|
test, out=new.write, clear_globs=False) |
|
finally: |
|
sys.stdout = old |
|
|
|
if failures: |
|
raise self.failureException(self.format_failure(new.getvalue())) |
|
|
|
def format_failure(self, err): |
|
test = self._dt_test |
|
if test.lineno is None: |
|
lineno = 'unknown line number' |
|
else: |
|
lineno = '%s' % test.lineno |
|
lname = '.'.join(test.name.split('.')[-1:]) |
|
return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n' |
|
' File "%s", line %s, in %s\n\n%s' |
|
% (test.name, test.filename, lineno, lname, err) |
|
) |
|
|
|
def debug(self): |
|
r"""Run the test case without results and without catching exceptions |
|
|
|
The unit test framework includes a debug method on test cases |
|
and test suites to support post-mortem debugging. The test code |
|
is run in such a way that errors are not caught. This way a |
|
caller can catch the errors and initiate post-mortem debugging. |
|
|
|
The DocTestCase provides a debug method that raises |
|
UnexpectedException errors if there is an unexepcted |
|
exception: |
|
|
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42', |
|
... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
>>> case = DocTestCase(test) |
|
>>> try: |
|
... case.debug() |
|
... except UnexpectedException, failure: |
|
... pass |
|
|
|
The UnexpectedException contains the test, the example, and |
|
the original exception: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.test is test |
|
True |
|
|
|
>>> failure.example.want |
|
'42\n' |
|
|
|
>>> exc_info = failure.exc_info |
|
>>> raise exc_info[0], exc_info[1], exc_info[2] |
|
Traceback (most recent call last): |
|
... |
|
KeyError |
|
|
|
If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised: |
|
|
|
>>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' |
|
... >>> x = 1 |
|
... >>> x |
|
... 2 |
|
... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) |
|
>>> case = DocTestCase(test) |
|
|
|
>>> try: |
|
... case.debug() |
|
... except DocTestFailure, failure: |
|
... pass |
|
|
|
DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.test is test |
|
True |
|
|
|
As well as to the example: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.example.want |
|
'2\n' |
|
|
|
and the actual output: |
|
|
|
>>> failure.got |
|
'1\n' |
|
|
|
""" |
|
|
|
self.setUp() |
|
runner = DebugRunner(optionflags=self._dt_optionflags, |
|
checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False) |
|
runner.run(self._dt_test) |
|
self.tearDown() |
|
|
|
def id(self): |
|
return self._dt_test.name |
|
|
|
def __repr__(self): |
|
name = self._dt_test.name.split('.') |
|
return "%s (%s)" % (name[-1], '.'.join(name[:-1])) |
|
|
|
__str__ = __repr__ |
|
|
|
def shortDescription(self): |
|
return "Doctest: " + self._dt_test.name |
|
|
|
def DocTestSuite(module=None, globs=None, extraglobs=None, test_finder=None, |
|
test_class=DocTestCase, **options): |
|
""" |
|
Convert doctest tests for a module to a unittest test suite. |
|
|
|
This converts each documentation string in a module that |
|
contains doctest tests to a unittest test case. If any of the |
|
tests in a doc string fail, then the test case fails. An exception |
|
is raised showing the name of the file containing the test and a |
|
(sometimes approximate) line number. |
|
|
|
The `module` argument provides the module to be tested. The argument |
|
can be either a module or a module name. |
|
|
|
If no argument is given, the calling module is used. |
|
|
|
A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments: |
|
|
|
setUp |
|
A set-up function. This is called before running the |
|
tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest |
|
object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the |
|
globs attribute of the test passed. |
|
|
|
tearDown |
|
A tear-down function. This is called after running the |
|
tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest |
|
object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the |
|
globs attribute of the test passed. |
|
|
|
globs |
|
A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests. |
|
|
|
optionflags |
|
A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer. |
|
""" |
|
|
|
if test_finder is None: |
|
test_finder = DocTestFinder() |
|
|
|
module = _normalize_module(module) |
|
tests = test_finder.find(module, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs) |
|
if globs is None: |
|
globs = module.__dict__ |
|
if not tests: |
|
# Why do we want to do this? Because it reveals a bug that might |
|
# otherwise be hidden. |
|
raise ValueError(module, "has no tests") |
|
|
|
tests.sort() |
|
suite = unittest.TestSuite() |
|
for test in tests: |
|
if len(test.examples) == 0: |
|
continue |
|
if not test.filename: |
|
filename = module.__file__ |
|
if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"): |
|
filename = filename[:-1] |
|
test.filename = filename |
|
suite.addTest(test_class(test, **options)) |
|
|
|
return suite |
|
|
|
class DocFileCase(DocTestCase): |
|
|
|
def id(self): |
|
return '_'.join(self._dt_test.name.split('.')) |
|
|
|
def __repr__(self): |
|
return self._dt_test.filename |
|
__str__ = __repr__ |
|
|
|
def format_failure(self, err): |
|
return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n File "%s", line 0\n\n%s' |
|
% (self._dt_test.name, self._dt_test.filename, err) |
|
) |
|
|
|
def DocFileTest(path, module_relative=True, package=None, |
|
globs=None, parser=DocTestParser(), **options): |
|
if globs is None: |
|
globs = {} |
|
|
|
if package and not module_relative: |
|
raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-" |
|
"relative paths.") |
|
|
|
# Relativize the path. |
|
if module_relative: |
|
package = _normalize_module(package) |
|
path = _module_relative_path(package, path) |
|
|
|
# Find the file and read it. |
|
name = os.path.basename(path) |
|
doc = open(path).read() |
|
|
|
# Convert it to a test, and wrap it in a DocFileCase. |
|
test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globs, name, path, 0) |
|
return DocFileCase(test, **options) |
|
|
|
def DocFileSuite(*paths, **kw): |
|
"""A unittest suite for one or more doctest files. |
|
|
|
The path to each doctest file is given as a string; the |
|
interpretation of that string depends on the keyword argument |
|
"module_relative". |
|
|
|
A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments: |
|
|
|
module_relative |
|
If "module_relative" is True, then the given file paths are |
|
interpreted as os-independent module-relative paths. By |
|
default, these paths are relative to the calling module's |
|
directory; but if the "package" argument is specified, then |
|
they are relative to that package. To ensure os-independence, |
|
"filename" should use "/" characters to separate path |
|
segments, and may not be an absolute path (i.e., it may not |
|
begin with "/"). |
|
|
|
If "module_relative" is False, then the given file paths are |
|
interpreted as os-specific paths. These paths may be absolute |
|
or relative (to the current working directory). |
|
|
|
package |
|
A Python package or the name of a Python package whose directory |
|
should be used as the base directory for module relative paths. |
|
If "package" is not specified, then the calling module's |
|
directory is used as the base directory for module relative |
|
filenames. It is an error to specify "package" if |
|
"module_relative" is False. |
|
|
|
setUp |
|
A set-up function. This is called before running the |
|
tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest |
|
object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the |
|
globs attribute of the test passed. |
|
|
|
tearDown |
|
A tear-down function. This is called after running the |
|
tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest |
|
object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the |
|
globs attribute of the test passed. |
|
|
|
globs |
|
A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests. |
|
|
|
optionflags |
|
A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer. |
|
|
|
parser |
|
A DocTestParser (or subclass) that should be used to extract |
|
tests from the files. |
|
""" |
|
suite = unittest.TestSuite() |
|
|
|
# We do this here so that _normalize_module is called at the right |
|
# level. If it were called in DocFileTest, then this function |
|
# would be the caller and we might guess the package incorrectly. |
|
if kw.get('module_relative', True): |
|
kw['package'] = _normalize_module(kw.get('package')) |
|
|
|
for path in paths: |
|
suite.addTest(DocFileTest(path, **kw)) |
|
|
|
return suite |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 9. Debugging Support |
|
###################################################################### |
|
|
|
def script_from_examples(s): |
|
r"""Extract script from text with examples. |
|
|
|
Converts text with examples to a Python script. Example input is |
|
converted to regular code. Example output and all other words |
|
are converted to comments: |
|
|
|
>>> text = ''' |
|
... Here are examples of simple math. |
|
... |
|
... Python has super accurate integer addition |
|
... |
|
... >>> 2 + 2 |
|
... 5 |
|
... |
|
... And very friendly error messages: |
|
... |
|
... >>> 1/0 |
|
... To Infinity |
|
... And |
|
... Beyond |
|
... |
|
... You can use logic if you want: |
|
... |
|
... >>> if 0: |
|
... ... blah |
|
... ... blah |
|
... ... |
|
... |
|
... Ho hum |
|
... ''' |
|
|
|
>>> print script_from_examples(text) |
|
# Here are examples of simple math. |
|
# |
|
# Python has super accurate integer addition |
|
# |
|
2 + 2 |
|
# Expected: |
|
## 5 |
|
# |
|
# And very friendly error messages: |
|
# |
|
1/0 |
|
# Expected: |
|
## To Infinity |
|
## And |
|
## Beyond |
|
# |
|
# You can use logic if you want: |
|
# |
|
if 0: |
|
blah |
|
blah |
|
# |
|
# Ho hum |
|
""" |
|
output = [] |
|
for piece in DocTestParser().parse(s): |
|
if isinstance(piece, Example): |
|
# Add the example's source code (strip trailing NL) |
|
output.append(piece.source[:-1]) |
|
# Add the expected output: |
|
want = piece.want |
|
if want: |
|
output.append('# Expected:') |
|
output += ['## '+l for l in want.split('\n')[:-1]] |
|
else: |
|
# Add non-example text. |
|
output += [_comment_line(l) |
|
for l in piece.split('\n')[:-1]] |
|
|
|
# Trim junk on both ends. |
|
while output and output[-1] == '#': |
|
output.pop() |
|
while output and output[0] == '#': |
|
output.pop(0) |
|
# Combine the output, and return it. |
|
return '\n'.join(output) |
|
|
|
def testsource(module, name): |
|
"""Extract the test sources from a doctest docstring as a script. |
|
|
|
Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the |
|
test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object |
|
with the doc string with tests to be debugged. |
|
""" |
|
module = _normalize_module(module) |
|
tests = DocTestFinder().find(module) |
|
test = [t for t in tests if t.name == name] |
|
if not test: |
|
raise ValueError(name, "not found in tests") |
|
test = test[0] |
|
testsrc = script_from_examples(test.docstring) |
|
return testsrc |
|
|
|
def debug_src(src, pm=False, globs=None): |
|
"""Debug a single doctest docstring, in argument `src`'""" |
|
testsrc = script_from_examples(src) |
|
debug_script(testsrc, pm, globs) |
|
|
|
def debug_script(src, pm=False, globs=None): |
|
"Debug a test script. `src` is the script, as a string." |
|
import pdb |
|
|
|
# Note that tempfile.NameTemporaryFile() cannot be used. As the |
|
# docs say, a file so created cannot be opened by name a second time |
|
# on modern Windows boxes, and execfile() needs to open it. |
|
srcfilename = tempfile.mktemp(".py", "doctestdebug") |
|
f = open(srcfilename, 'w') |
|
f.write(src) |
|
f.close() |
|
|
|
try: |
|
if globs: |
|
globs = globs.copy() |
|
else: |
|
globs = {} |
|
|
|
if pm: |
|
try: |
|
execfile(srcfilename, globs, globs) |
|
except: |
|
print sys.exc_info()[1] |
|
pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_info()[2]) |
|
else: |
|
# Note that %r is vital here. '%s' instead can, e.g., cause |
|
# backslashes to get treated as metacharacters on Windows. |
|
pdb.run("execfile(%r)" % srcfilename, globs, globs) |
|
|
|
finally: |
|
os.remove(srcfilename) |
|
|
|
def debug(module, name, pm=False): |
|
"""Debug a single doctest docstring. |
|
|
|
Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the |
|
test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object |
|
with the docstring with tests to be debugged. |
|
""" |
|
module = _normalize_module(module) |
|
testsrc = testsource(module, name) |
|
debug_script(testsrc, pm, module.__dict__) |
|
|
|
###################################################################### |
|
## 10. Example Usage |
|
###################################################################### |
|
class _TestClass: |
|
""" |
|
A pointless class, for sanity-checking of docstring testing. |
|
|
|
Methods: |
|
square() |
|
get() |
|
|
|
>>> _TestClass(13).get() + _TestClass(-12).get() |
|
1 |
|
>>> hex(_TestClass(13).square().get()) |
|
'0xa9' |
|
""" |
|
|
|
def __init__(self, val): |
|
"""val -> _TestClass object with associated value val. |
|
|
|
>>> t = _TestClass(123) |
|
>>> print t.get() |
|
123 |
|
""" |
|
|
|
self.val = val |
|
|
|
def square(self): |
|
"""square() -> square TestClass's associated value |
|
|
|
>>> _TestClass(13).square().get() |
|
169 |
|
""" |
|
|
|
self.val = self.val ** 2 |
|
return self |
|
|
|
def get(self): |
|
"""get() -> return TestClass's associated value. |
|
|
|
>>> x = _TestClass(-42) |
|
>>> print x.get() |
|
-42 |
|
""" |
|
|
|
return self.val |
|
|
|
__test__ = {"_TestClass": _TestClass, |
|
"string": r""" |
|
Example of a string object, searched as-is. |
|
>>> x = 1; y = 2 |
|
>>> x + y, x * y |
|
(3, 2) |
|
""", |
|
|
|
"bool-int equivalence": r""" |
|
In 2.2, boolean expressions displayed |
|
0 or 1. By default, we still accept |
|
them. This can be disabled by passing |
|
DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 to the new |
|
optionflags argument. |
|
>>> 4 == 4 |
|
1 |
|
>>> 4 == 4 |
|
True |
|
>>> 4 > 4 |
|
0 |
|
>>> 4 > 4 |
|
False |
|
""", |
|
|
|
"blank lines": r""" |
|
Blank lines can be marked with <BLANKLINE>: |
|
>>> print 'foo\n\nbar\n' |
|
foo |
|
<BLANKLINE> |
|
bar |
|
<BLANKLINE> |
|
""", |
|
|
|
"ellipsis": r""" |
|
If the ellipsis flag is used, then '...' can be used to |
|
elide substrings in the desired output: |
|
>>> print range(1000) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS |
|
[0, 1, 2, ..., 999] |
|
""", |
|
|
|
"whitespace normalization": r""" |
|
If the whitespace normalization flag is used, then |
|
differences in whitespace are ignored. |
|
>>> print range(30) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
|
[0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, |
|
15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, |
|
27, 28, 29] |
|
""", |
|
} |
|
|
|
def _test(): |
|
r = unittest.TextTestRunner() |
|
r.run(DocTestSuite()) |
|
|
|
if __name__ == "__main__": |
|
_test()
|
|
|