def test_assert_python_failure_raises(self):
     with self.assertRaises(AssertionError) as error_context:
         script_helper.assert_python_failure('-c', 'import sys; sys.exit(0)')
     error_msg = str(error_context.exception)
     self.assertIn('Process return code is 0,', error_msg)
     self.assertIn('import sys; sys.exit(0)', error_msg,
                   msg='unexpected command line.')
Beispiel #2
0
    def test_exit(self):
        # call with two arguments
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sys.exit, 42, 42)

        # call without argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit()
        self.assertIsNone(cm.exception.code)

        rc, out, err = assert_python_ok("-c", "import sys; sys.exit()")
        self.assertEqual(rc, 0)
        self.assertEqual(out, b"")
        self.assertEqual(err, b"")

        # call with integer argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit(42)
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, 42)

        # call with tuple argument with one entry
        # entry will be unpacked
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit((42,))
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, 42)

        # call with string argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit("exit")
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, "exit")

        # call with tuple argument with two entries
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit((17, 23))
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, (17, 23))

        # test that the exit machinery handles SystemExits properly
        # both unnormalized...
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure("-c", "raise SystemExit, 46")
        self.assertEqual(rc, 46)
        self.assertEqual(out, b"")
        self.assertEqual(err, b"")
        # ... and normalized
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure("-c", "raise SystemExit(47)")
        self.assertEqual(rc, 47)
        self.assertEqual(out, b"")
        self.assertEqual(err, b"")

        def check_exit_message(code, expected, **env_vars):
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure("-c", code, **env_vars)
            self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
            self.assertEqual(out, b"")
            self.assertTrue(err.startswith(expected), "%s doesn't start with %s" % (repr(err), repr(expected)))

        # test that stderr buffer is flushed before the exit message is written
        # into stderr
        check_exit_message(r'import sys; sys.stderr.write("unflushed,"); sys.exit("message")', b"unflushed,message")

        # test that the unicode message is encoded to the stderr encoding
        check_exit_message(r'import sys; sys.exit(u"h\xe9")', b"h\xe9", PYTHONIOENCODING="latin-1")
Beispiel #3
0
 def test_run_code(self):
     # Test expected operation of the '-c' switch
     # Switch needs an argument
     assert_python_failure('-c')
     # Check we get an error for an uncaught exception
     assert_python_failure('-c', 'raise Exception')
     # All good if execution is successful
     assert_python_ok('-c', 'pass')
 def test_run_code(self):
     # Test expected operation of the '-c' switch
     # Switch needs an argument
     assert_python_failure('-c')
     # Check we get an error for an uncaught exception
     assert_python_failure('-c', 'raise Exception')
     # All good if execution is successful
     assert_python_ok('-c', 'pass')
 def test_crashers_crash(self):
     for fname in glob.glob(CRASHER_FILES):
         if os.path.basename(fname) in infinite_loops:
             continue
         # Some "crashers" only trigger an exception rather than a
         # segfault. Consider that an acceptable outcome.
         if test.support.verbose:
             print("Checking crasher:", fname)
         assert_python_failure(fname)
Beispiel #6
0
 def test_assert_python_failure_raises(self):
     with self.assertRaises(AssertionError) as error_context:
         script_helper.assert_python_failure('-c',
                                             'import sys; sys.exit(0)')
     error_msg = str(error_context.exception)
     self.assertIn('Process return code is 0,', error_msg)
     self.assertIn('import sys; sys.exit(0)',
                   error_msg,
                   msg='unexpected command line.')
 def test_crashers_crash(self):
     for fname in glob.glob(CRASHER_FILES):
         if os.path.basename(fname) in infinite_loops:
             continue
         # Some "crashers" only trigger an exception rather than a
         # segfault. Consider that an acceptable outcome.
         if test.support.verbose:
             print("Checking crasher:", fname)
         assert_python_failure(fname)
Beispiel #8
0
    def test_return_result_with_error(self):
        # Issue #23571: A function must not return a result with an error set
        if Py_DEBUG:
            code = textwrap.dedent("""
                import _testcapi
                from test import support

                with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                    _testcapi.return_result_with_error()
            """)
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code)
            self.assertRegex(err.replace(b'\r', b''),
                             br'Fatal Python error: a function returned a '
                                br'result with an error set\n'
                             br'ValueError\n'
                             br'\n'
                             br'During handling of the above exception, '
                                br'another exception occurred:\n'
                             br'\n'
                             br'SystemError: <built-in '
                                br'function return_result_with_error> '
                                br'returned a result with an error set\n'
                             br'\n'
                             br'Current thread.*:\n'
                             br'  File .*, line 6 in <module>')
        else:
            with self.assertRaises(SystemError) as cm:
                _testcapi.return_result_with_error()
            self.assertRegex(str(cm.exception),
                             'return_result_with_error.* '
                             'returned a result with an error set')
    def test_finalize_runnning_thread(self):
        # Issue 1402: the PyGILState_Ensure / _Release functions may be called
        # very late on python exit: on deallocation of a running thread for
        # example.
        import_module("ctypes")

        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
            "-c",
            """if 1:
            import ctypes, sys, time, _thread

            # This lock is used as a simple event variable.
            ready = _thread.allocate_lock()
            ready.acquire()

            # Module globals are cleared before __del__ is run
            # So we save the functions in class dict
            class C:
                ensure = ctypes.pythonapi.PyGILState_Ensure
                release = ctypes.pythonapi.PyGILState_Release
                def __del__(self):
                    state = self.ensure()
                    self.release(state)

            def waitingThread():
                x = C()
                ready.release()
                time.sleep(100)

            _thread.start_new_thread(waitingThread, ())
            ready.acquire()  # Be sure the other thread is waiting.
            sys.exit(42)
            """,
        )
        self.assertEqual(rc, 42)
Beispiel #10
0
 def test_trigger_memory_error(self):
     e = self._nested_expression(100)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', e)
     # parsing the expression will result in an error message
     # followed by a MemoryError (see #11963)
     self.assertIn(b's_push: parser stack overflow', err)
     self.assertIn(b'MemoryError', err)
    def test_return_result_with_error(self):
        # Issue #23571: A function must not return a result with an error set
        if Py_DEBUG:
            code = textwrap.dedent("""
                import _testcapi
                from test import support

                with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                    _testcapi.return_result_with_error()
            """)
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code)
            self.assertRegex(
                err.replace(b'\r', b''),
                br'Fatal Python error: a function returned a '
                br'result with an error set\n'
                br'ValueError\n'
                br'\n'
                br'During handling of the above exception, '
                br'another exception occurred:\n'
                br'\n'
                br'SystemError: <built-in '
                br'function return_result_with_error> '
                br'returned a result with an error set\n'
                br'\n'
                br'Current thread.*:\n'
                br'  File .*, line 6 in <module>')
        else:
            with self.assertRaises(SystemError) as cm:
                _testcapi.return_result_with_error()
            self.assertRegex(
                str(cm.exception), 'return_result_with_error.* '
                'returned a result with an error set')
    def test_finalize_runnning_thread(self):
        # Issue 1402: the PyGILState_Ensure / _Release functions may be called
        # very late on python exit: on deallocation of a running thread for
        # example.
        import_module("ctypes")

        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
            "-c", """if 1:
            import ctypes, sys, time, _thread

            # This lock is used as a simple event variable.
            ready = _thread.allocate_lock()
            ready.acquire()

            # Module globals are cleared before __del__ is run
            # So we save the functions in class dict
            class C:
                ensure = ctypes.pythonapi.PyGILState_Ensure
                release = ctypes.pythonapi.PyGILState_Release
                def __del__(self):
                    state = self.ensure()
                    self.release(state)

            def waitingThread():
                x = C()
                ready.release()
                time.sleep(100)

            _thread.start_new_thread(waitingThread, ())
            ready.acquire()  # Be sure the other thread is waiting.
            sys.exit(42)
            """)
        self.assertEqual(rc, 42)
Beispiel #13
0
    def test_return_null_without_error(self):
        # Issue #23571: A function must not return NULL without setting an
        # error
        if Py_DEBUG:
            code = textwrap.dedent("""
                import _testcapi
                from test import support

                with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                    _testcapi.return_null_without_error()
            """)
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code)
            self.assertRegex(err.replace(b'\r', b''),
                             br'Fatal Python error: a function returned NULL '
                                br'without setting an error\n'
                             br'SystemError: <built-in function '
                                 br'return_null_without_error> returned NULL '
                                 br'without setting an error\n'
                             br'\n'
                             br'Current thread.*:\n'
                             br'  File .*", line 6 in <module>')
        else:
            with self.assertRaises(SystemError) as cm:
                _testcapi.return_null_without_error()
            self.assertRegex(str(cm.exception),
                             'return_null_without_error.* '
                             'returned NULL without setting an error')
Beispiel #14
0
 def test_trigger_memory_error(self):
     e = self._nested_expression(100)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', e)
     # parsing the expression will result in an error message
     # followed by a MemoryError (see #11963)
     self.assertIn(b's_push: parser stack overflow', err)
     self.assertIn(b'MemoryError', err)
    def test_return_null_without_error(self):
        # Issue #23571: A function must not return NULL without setting an
        # error
        if Py_DEBUG:
            code = textwrap.dedent("""
                import _testcapi
                from test import support

                with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                    _testcapi.return_null_without_error()
            """)
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code)
            self.assertRegex(
                err.replace(b'\r', b''),
                br'Fatal Python error: a function returned NULL '
                br'without setting an error\n'
                br'SystemError: <built-in function '
                br'return_null_without_error> returned NULL '
                br'without setting an error\n'
                br'\n'
                br'Current thread.*:\n'
                br'  File .*", line 6 in <module>')
        else:
            with self.assertRaises(SystemError) as cm:
                _testcapi.return_null_without_error()
            self.assertRegex(
                str(cm.exception), 'return_null_without_error.* '
                'returned NULL without setting an error')
Beispiel #16
0
 def test_sys_xoptions_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 2 ** 30):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 args = ("-X", "tracemalloc=%s" % nframe, "-c", "pass")
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(*args)
                 self.assertIn(b"-X tracemalloc=NFRAME: invalid " b"number of frames", stderr)
Beispiel #17
0
 def check_exit_message(code, expected, **env_vars):
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code, **env_vars)
     self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
     self.assertEqual(out, b'')
     self.assertTrue(
         err.startswith(expected),
         "%s doesn't start with %s" % (repr(err), repr(expected)))
 def test_unknown_options(self):
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-E', '-z')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -z'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
     # Add "without='-E'" to prevent _assert_python to append -E
     # to env_vars and change the output of stderr
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-z', without='-E')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -z'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-a', '-z', without='-E')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -a', err)
     # only the first unknown option is reported
     self.assertNotIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -a'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
Beispiel #19
0
 def test_unknown_options(self):
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-E', '-z')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -z'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
     # Add "without='-E'" to prevent _assert_python to append -E
     # to env_vars and change the output of stderr
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-z', without='-E')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -z'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-a', '-z', without='-E')
     self.assertIn(b'Unknown option: -a', err)
     # only the first unknown option is reported
     self.assertNotIn(b'Unknown option: -z', err)
     self.assertEqual(err.splitlines().count(b'Unknown option: -a'), 1)
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
 def _check_import_error(self, script_name, expected_msg, *cmd_line_switches):
     run_args = cmd_line_switches + (script_name,)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(*run_args)
     if verbose > 1:
         print("Output from test script %r:" % script_name)
         print(err)
         print("Expected output: %r" % expected_msg)
     self.assertIn(expected_msg.encode("utf-8"), err)
 def test_sys_xoptions_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 2**30):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 args = ('-X', 'tracemalloc=%s' % nframe, '-c', 'pass')
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(*args)
                 self.assertIn(b'-X tracemalloc=NFRAME: invalid '
                               b'number of frames',
                               stderr)
Beispiel #22
0
 def test_sys_xoptions_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 5000):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 args = ('-X', 'tracemalloc=%s' % nframe, '-c', 'pass')
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(*args)
                 self.assertIn(b'-X tracemalloc=NFRAME: number of frame must '
                               b'be an integer in range [1; 100]',
                               stderr)
Beispiel #23
0
 def test_d_runtime_error(self):
     bazfn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, "baz", "raise Exception")
     self.assertRunOK("-q", "-d", "dinsdale", self.pkgdir)
     fn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, "bing", "import baz")
     pyc = importlib.util.cache_from_source(bazfn)
     os.rename(pyc, os.path.join(self.pkgdir, "baz.pyc"))
     os.remove(bazfn)
     rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn, __isolated=False)
     self.assertRegex(err, b'File "dinsdale')
 def test_d_runtime_error(self):
     bazfn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, 'baz', 'raise Exception')
     self.assertRunOK('-q', '-d', 'dinsdale', self.pkgdir)
     fn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, 'bing', 'import baz')
     pyc = importlib.util.cache_from_source(bazfn)
     os.rename(pyc, os.path.join(self.pkgdir, 'baz.pyc'))
     os.remove(bazfn)
     rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn, __isolated=False)
     self.assertRegex(err, b'File "dinsdale')
Beispiel #25
0
 def test_d_runtime_error(self):
     bazfn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, 'baz', 'raise Exception')
     self.assertRunOK('-q', '-d', 'dinsdale', self.pkgdir)
     fn = script_helper.make_script(self.pkgdir, 'bing', 'import baz')
     pyc = importlib.util.cache_from_source(bazfn)
     os.rename(pyc, os.path.join(self.pkgdir, 'baz.pyc'))
     os.remove(bazfn)
     rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn, __isolated=False)
     self.assertRegex(err, b'File "dinsdale')
Beispiel #26
0
 def test_env_var_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 2**30):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(
                     '-c', 'pass', PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=str(nframe))
                 self.assertIn(
                     b'PYTHONTRACEMALLOC: invalid '
                     b'number of frames', stderr)
Beispiel #27
0
 def test_sys_xoptions_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 2**30):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 args = ('-X', 'tracemalloc=%s' % nframe, '-c', 'pass')
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(*args)
                 self.assertIn(b'-X tracemalloc=NFRAME: invalid '
                               b'number of frames',
                               stderr)
 def _check_import_error(self, script_name, expected_msg,
                         *cmd_line_switches):
     run_args = cmd_line_switches + (script_name,)
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(*run_args)
     if verbose > 1:
         print('Output from test script %r:' % script_name)
         print(err)
         print('Expected output: %r' % expected_msg)
     self.assertIn(expected_msg.encode('utf-8'), err)
Beispiel #29
0
 def test_env_var_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 5000):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(
                     '-c', 'pass',
                     PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=str(nframe))
                 self.assertIn(b'PYTHONTRACEMALLOC must be an integer '
                               b'in range [1; 100]',
                               stderr)
 def test_env_var_invalid(self):
     for nframe in (-1, 0, 2**30):
         with self.subTest(nframe=nframe):
             with support.SuppressCrashReport():
                 ok, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(
                     '-c', 'pass',
                     PYTHONTRACEMALLOC=str(nframe))
                 self.assertIn(b'PYTHONTRACEMALLOC: invalid '
                               b'number of frames',
                               stderr)
Beispiel #31
0
 def test_syshook_no_logdir_text_format(self):
     # Issue 12890: we were emitting the <p> tag in text mode.
     with temp_dir() as tracedir:
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
             '-c', ('import cgitb; cgitb.enable(format="text", logdir=%s); '
                    'raise ValueError("Hello World")') % repr(tracedir))
     out = out.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
     self.assertIn("ValueError", out)
     self.assertIn("Hello World", out)
     self.assertNotIn('<p>', out)
     self.assertNotIn('</p>', out)
Beispiel #32
0
 def test_syshook_no_logdir_default_format(self):
     with temp_dir() as tracedir:
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
             '-c', ('import cgitb; cgitb.enable(logdir=%s); '
                    'raise ValueError("Hello World")') % repr(tracedir))
     out = out.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
     self.assertIn("ValueError", out)
     self.assertIn("Hello World", out)
     # By default we emit HTML markup.
     self.assertIn('<p>', out)
     self.assertIn('</p>', out)
Beispiel #33
0
 def test_conflicting_envvar_and_command_line(self):
     rc, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure("-Werror::DeprecationWarning", "-c",
         "import sys, warnings; sys.stdout.write(str(sys.warnoptions)); "
         "warnings.warn('Message', DeprecationWarning)",
         PYTHONWARNINGS="default::DeprecationWarning")
     self.assertEqual(stdout,
         b"['default::DeprecationWarning', 'error::DeprecationWarning']")
     self.assertEqual(stderr.splitlines(),
         [b"Traceback (most recent call last):",
          b"  File \"<string>\", line 1, in <module>",
          b"DeprecationWarning: Message"])
Beispiel #34
0
 def test_conflicting_envvar_and_command_line(self):
     rc, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure("-Werror::DeprecationWarning", "-c",
         "import sys, warnings; sys.stdout.write(str(sys.warnoptions)); "
         "warnings.warn('Message', DeprecationWarning)",
         PYTHONWARNINGS="default::DeprecationWarning")
     self.assertEqual(stdout,
         b"['default::DeprecationWarning', 'error::DeprecationWarning']")
     self.assertEqual(stderr.splitlines(),
         [b"Traceback (most recent call last):",
          b"  File \"<string>\", line 1, in <module>",
          b"DeprecationWarning: Message"])
 def test_yet_more_evil_still_undecodable(self):
     # Issue #25388
     src = b"#\x00\n#\xfd\n"
     tmpd = tempfile.mkdtemp()
     try:
         fn = os.path.join(tmpd, "bad.py")
         with open(fn, "wb") as fp:
             fp.write(src)
         rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn)
     finally:
         test_support.rmtree(tmpd)
     self.assertIn(b"Non-ASCII", err)
 def test_yet_more_evil_still_undecodable(self):
     # Issue #25388
     src = b"#\x00\n#\xfd\n"
     tmpd = tempfile.mkdtemp()
     try:
         fn = os.path.join(tmpd, "bad.py")
         with open(fn, "wb") as fp:
             fp.write(src)
         rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn)
     finally:
         test_support.rmtree(tmpd)
     self.assertIn(b"Non-ASCII", err)
Beispiel #37
0
 def test_syshook_no_logdir_text_format(self):
     # Issue 12890: we were emitting the <p> tag in text mode.
     with temp_dir() as tracedir:
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
               '-c',
               ('import cgitb; cgitb.enable(format="text", logdir=%s); '
                'raise ValueError("Hello World")') % repr(tracedir))
     out = out.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
     self.assertIn("ValueError", out)
     self.assertIn("Hello World", out)
     self.assertNotIn('<p>', out)
     self.assertNotIn('</p>', out)
Beispiel #38
0
 def test_syshook_no_logdir_default_format(self):
     with temp_dir() as tracedir:
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(
               '-c',
               ('import cgitb; cgitb.enable(logdir=%s); '
                'raise ValueError("Hello World")') % repr(tracedir))
     out = out.decode(sys.getfilesystemencoding())
     self.assertIn("ValueError", out)
     self.assertIn("Hello World", out)
     # By default we emit HTML markup.
     self.assertIn('<p>', out)
     self.assertIn('</p>', out)
 def test_dash_m_error_code_is_one(self):
     # If a module is invoked with the -m command line flag
     # and results in an error that the return code to the
     # shell is '1'
     with temp_dir() as script_dir:
         pkg_dir = os.path.join(script_dir, 'test_pkg')
         make_pkg(pkg_dir)
         script_name = _make_test_script(pkg_dir, 'other', "if __name__ == '__main__': raise ValueError")
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-m', 'test_pkg.other', *example_args)
         if verbose > 1:
             print(out)
         self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
Beispiel #40
0
 def test_dash_m_error_code_is_one(self):
     # If a module is invoked with the -m command line flag
     # and results in an error that the return code to the
     # shell is '1'
     with temp_dir() as script_dir:
         pkg_dir = os.path.join(script_dir, 'test_pkg')
         make_pkg(pkg_dir)
         script_name = _make_test_script(pkg_dir, 'other', "if __name__ == '__main__': raise ValueError")
         rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-m', 'test_pkg.other', *example_args)
         if verbose > 1:
             print(out)
         self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
 def test_dash_m_errors(self):
     # Exercise error reporting for various invalid package executions
     tests = (
         ('__builtin__', br'No code object available'),
         ('__builtin__.x', br'No module named'),
         ('__builtin__.x.y', br'No module named'),
         ('os.path', br'Loader.*cannot handle'),
         ('importlib', br'No module named.*'
             br'is a package and cannot be directly executed'),
         ('importlib.nonexistant', br'No module named'),
     )
     for name, regex in tests:
         rc, _, err = assert_python_failure('-m', name)
         self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
         self.assertRegexpMatches(err, regex)
         self.assertNotIn(b'Traceback', err)
Beispiel #42
0
 def test_dash_m_errors(self):
     # Exercise error reporting for various invalid package executions
     tests = (
         ('__builtin__', br'No code object available'),
         ('__builtin__.x', br'No module named'),
         ('__builtin__.x.y', br'No module named'),
         ('os.path', br'Loader.*cannot handle'),
         ('importlib', br'No module named.*'
          br'is a package and cannot be directly executed'),
         ('importlib.nonexistant', br'No module named'),
     )
     for name, regex in tests:
         rc, _, err = assert_python_failure('-m', name)
         self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
         self.assertRegexpMatches(err, regex)
         self.assertNotIn(b'Traceback', err)
 def test_run_module(self):
     # Test expected operation of the '-m' switch
     # Switch needs an argument
     assert_python_failure('-m')
     # Check we get an error for a nonexistent module
     assert_python_failure('-m', 'fnord43520xyz')
     # Check the runpy module also gives an error for
     # a nonexistent module
     assert_python_failure('-m', 'runpy', 'fnord43520xyz')
     # All good if module is located and run successfully
     assert_python_ok('-m', 'timeit', '-n', '1')
Beispiel #44
0
 def test_run_module(self):
     # Test expected operation of the '-m' switch
     # Switch needs an argument
     assert_python_failure('-m')
     # Check we get an error for a nonexistent module
     assert_python_failure('-m', 'fnord43520xyz')
     # Check the runpy module also gives an error for
     # a nonexistent module
     assert_python_failure('-m', 'runpy', 'fnord43520xyz'),
     # All good if module is located and run successfully
     assert_python_ok('-m', 'timeit', '-n', '1'),
    def test_issue20500_exit_with_exception_value(self):
        script = textwrap.dedent("""\
            import sys
            error = None
            try:
                raise ValueError('some text')
            except ValueError as err:
                error = err

            if error:
                sys.exit(error)
            """)
        with temp_dir() as script_dir:
            script_name = _make_test_script(script_dir, 'script', script)
            exitcode, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(script_name)
            text = stderr.decode('ascii')
            self.assertEqual(text, "some text")
 def test_pep_409_verbiage(self):
     # Make sure PEP 409 syntax properly suppresses
     # the context of an exception
     script = textwrap.dedent("""\
         try:
             raise ValueError
         except:
             raise NameError from None
         """)
     with temp_dir() as script_dir:
         script_name = _make_test_script(script_dir, 'script', script)
         exitcode, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(script_name)
         text = stderr.decode('ascii').split('\n')
         self.assertEqual(len(text), 4)
         self.assertTrue(text[0].startswith('Traceback'))
         self.assertTrue(text[1].startswith('  File '))
         self.assertTrue(text[3].startswith('NameError'))
 def test_pep_409_verbiage(self):
     # Make sure PEP 409 syntax properly suppresses
     # the context of an exception
     script = textwrap.dedent("""\
         try:
             raise ValueError
         except:
             raise NameError from None
         """)
     with temp_dir() as script_dir:
         script_name = _make_test_script(script_dir, 'script', script)
         exitcode, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure(script_name)
         text = stderr.decode('ascii').split('\n')
         self.assertEqual(len(text), 4)
         self.assertTrue(text[0].startswith('Traceback'))
         self.assertTrue(text[1].startswith('  File '))
         self.assertTrue(text[3].startswith('NameError'))
 def test_yet_more_evil_still_undecodable(self):
     # Issue #25388
     src = b"#\x00\n#\xfd\n"
     tmpd = tempfile.mkdtemp()
     try:
         fn = os.path.join(tmpd, "bad.py")
         with open(fn, "wb") as fp:
             fp.write(src)
         try:
             rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn)
         except AssertionError:
             if check_impl_detail(pypy=True):
                 # as long as we don't crash
                 return
             raise
     finally:
         test_support.rmtree(tmpd)
     self.assertIn(b"Non-ASCII", err)
Beispiel #49
0
 def test_yet_more_evil_still_undecodable(self):
     # Issue #25388
     src = b"#\x00\n#\xfd\n"
     tmpd = tempfile.mkdtemp()
     try:
         fn = os.path.join(tmpd, "bad.py")
         with open(fn, "wb") as fp:
             fp.write(src)
         try:
             rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(fn)
         except AssertionError:
             if check_impl_detail(pypy=True):
                 # as long as we don't crash
                 return
             raise
     finally:
         test_support.rmtree(tmpd)
     self.assertIn(b"Non-ASCII", err)
Beispiel #50
0
    def test_daemon_threads_fatal_error(self):
        subinterp_code = r"""if 1:
            import os
            import threading
            import time

            def f():
                # Make sure the daemon thread is still running when
                # Py_EndInterpreter is called.
                time.sleep(10)
            threading.Thread(target=f, daemon=True).start()
            """
        script = r"""if 1:
            import _testcapi

            _testcapi.run_in_subinterp(%r)
            """ % (subinterp_code,)
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure("-c", script)
        self.assertIn("Fatal Python error: Py_EndInterpreter: "
                      "not the last thread", err.decode())
Beispiel #51
0
    def test_daemon_threads_fatal_error(self):
        subinterp_code = r"""if 1:
            import os
            import threading
            import time

            def f():
                # Make sure the daemon thread is still running when
                # Py_EndInterpreter is called.
                time.sleep(10)
            threading.Thread(target=f, daemon=True).start()
            """
        script = r"""if 1:
            import _testcapi

            _testcapi.run_in_subinterp(%r)
            """ % (subinterp_code, )
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure("-c", script)
        self.assertIn(
            "Fatal Python error: Py_EndInterpreter: "
            "not the last thread", err.decode())
Beispiel #52
0
    def test_exit(self):
        # call with two arguments
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, sys.exit, 42, 42)

        # call without argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit()
        self.assertIsNone(cm.exception.code)

        rc, out, err = assert_python_ok('-c', 'import sys; sys.exit()')
        self.assertEqual(rc, 0)
        self.assertEqual(out, b'')
        self.assertEqual(err, b'')

        # call with integer argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit(42)
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, 42)

        # call with tuple argument with one entry
        # entry will be unpacked
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit((42,))
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, 42)

        # call with string argument
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit("exit")
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, "exit")

        # call with tuple argument with two entries
        with self.assertRaises(SystemExit) as cm:
            sys.exit((17, 23))
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.code, (17, 23))

        # test that the exit machinery handles SystemExits properly
        # both unnormalized...
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', 'raise SystemExit, 46')
        self.assertEqual(rc, 46)
        self.assertEqual(out, b'')
        self.assertEqual(err, b'')
        # ... and normalized
        rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', 'raise SystemExit(47)')
        self.assertEqual(rc, 47)
        self.assertEqual(out, b'')
        self.assertEqual(err, b'')

        def check_exit_message(code, expected, **env_vars):
            rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', code, **env_vars)
            self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
            self.assertEqual(out, b'')
            self.assertTrue(err.startswith(expected),
                "%s doesn't start with %s" % (repr(err), repr(expected)))

        # test that stderr buffer is flushed before the exit message is written
        # into stderr
        check_exit_message(
            r'import sys; sys.stderr.write("unflushed,"); sys.exit("message")',
            b"unflushed,message")

        # test that the unicode message is encoded to the stderr encoding
        check_exit_message(
            r'import sys; sys.exit(u"h\xe9")',
            b"h\xe9", PYTHONIOENCODING='latin-1')
Beispiel #53
0
 def assertFailure(self, *args):
     rc, stdout, stderr = assert_python_failure('-m', 'calendar', *args)
     self.assertIn(b'Usage:', stderr)
     self.assertEqual(rc, 2)
 def test_unmached_quote(self):
     # Issue #10206: python program starting with unmatched quote
     # spewed spaces to stdout
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', "'")
     self.assertRegex(err.decode('ascii', 'ignore'), 'SyntaxError')
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
 def test_directories(self):
     assert_python_failure('.')
     assert_python_failure('< .')
Beispiel #56
0
 def test_unmached_quote(self):
     # Issue #10206: python program starting with unmatched quote
     # spewed spaces to stdout
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure('-c', "'")
     self.assertRegex(err.decode('ascii', 'ignore'), 'SyntaxError')
     self.assertEqual(b'', out)
 def assertRunNotOK(self, *args, **env_vars):
     rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure(
         '-S', '-m', 'compileall', *args, **env_vars)
     return rc, out, err
Beispiel #58
0
 def test_usage(self):
     rc, out, err = assert_python_failure(self.script, '-h')
     self.assertEqual(rc, 2)
     self.assertEqual(out, b'')
     self.assertGreater(err, b'')