Esempio n. 1
0
 def test_can_deserialize_dict(self):
     handler = BaseRestHandler(mock.MagicMock(), mock.MagicMock())
     handler._write_buffer = []
     obj = {"key": "value"}
     handler.write_object(obj)
     json = handler._write_buffer[0]
     self.assertTrue(json == '{"key": "value"}')
Esempio n. 2
0
 def test_can_deserialize_plain_object(self):
     """Sending an non-list/non-dict object to write_object deserializes it as json"""
     handler = BaseRestHandler(mock.MagicMock(), mock.MagicMock())
     handler._write_buffer = []
     obj = SerializeMe()
     obj.key = "value"
     handler.write_object(obj)
     json = handler._write_buffer[0]
     self.assertTrue(json == '{"key": "value"}')
Esempio n. 3
0
 def test_cant_deserialize_list(self):
     """
     It shouldn't be possible to deserialize to json lists:
     http://haacked.com/archive/2009/06/25/json-hijacking.aspx/
     """
     handler = BaseRestHandler(mock.MagicMock(), mock.MagicMock())
     obj = "This would be bad".split(' ')
     self.assertRaises(TypeError, handler.write_object, obj)
Esempio n. 4
0
 def test_cant_deserialize_tuple(self):
     handler = BaseRestHandler(mock.MagicMock(), mock.MagicMock())
     obj = ("this", "that")
     self.assertRaises(TypeError, handler.write_object, obj)