test_isinstance.py 9.77 KB
Newer Older
1 2 3 4 5
# Tests some corner cases with isinstance() and issubclass().  While these
# tests use new style classes and properties, they actually do whitebox
# testing of error conditions uncovered when using extension types.

import unittest
6
import sys
7 8 9



10
class TestIsInstanceExceptions(unittest.TestCase):
11 12 13 14 15 16
    # Test to make sure that an AttributeError when accessing the instance's
    # class's bases is masked.  This was actually a bug in Python 2.2 and
    # 2.2.1 where the exception wasn't caught but it also wasn't being cleared
    # (leading to an "undetected error" in the debug build).  Set up is,
    # isinstance(inst, cls) where:
    #
17
    # - cls isn't a type, or a tuple
18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82
    # - cls has a __bases__ attribute
    # - inst has a __class__ attribute
    # - inst.__class__ as no __bases__ attribute
    #
    # Sounds complicated, I know, but this mimics a situation where an
    # extension type raises an AttributeError when its __bases__ attribute is
    # gotten.  In that case, isinstance() should return False.
    def test_class_has_no_bases(self):
        class I(object):
            def getclass(self):
                # This must return an object that has no __bases__ attribute
                return None
            __class__ = property(getclass)

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                return ()
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(I(), C()))

    # Like above except that inst.__class__.__bases__ raises an exception
    # other than AttributeError
    def test_bases_raises_other_than_attribute_error(self):
        class E(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise RuntimeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        class I(object):
            def getclass(self):
                return E()
            __class__ = property(getclass)

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                return ()
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, isinstance, I(), C())

    # Here's a situation where getattr(cls, '__bases__') raises an exception.
    # If that exception is not AttributeError, it should not get masked
    def test_dont_mask_non_attribute_error(self):
        class I: pass

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise RuntimeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, isinstance, I(), C())

    # Like above, except that getattr(cls, '__bases__') raises an
    # AttributeError, which /should/ get masked as a TypeError
    def test_mask_attribute_error(self):
        class I: pass

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise AttributeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, isinstance, I(), C())

83 84 85 86 87
    # check that we don't mask non AttributeErrors
    # see: http://bugs.python.org/issue1574217
    def test_isinstance_dont_mask_non_attribute_error(self):
        class C(object):
            def getclass(self):
Benjamin Peterson's avatar
Benjamin Peterson committed
88 89
                raise RuntimeError
            __class__ = property(getclass)
90

Benjamin Peterson's avatar
Benjamin Peterson committed
91
        c = C()
92 93 94 95 96
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, isinstance, c, bool)

        # test another code path
        class D: pass
        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, isinstance, c, D)
97 98 99 100 101


# These tests are similar to above, but tickle certain code paths in
# issubclass() instead of isinstance() -- really PyObject_IsSubclass()
# vs. PyObject_IsInstance().
102
class TestIsSubclassExceptions(unittest.TestCase):
103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119
    def test_dont_mask_non_attribute_error(self):
        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise RuntimeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        class S(C): pass

        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, issubclass, C(), S())

    def test_mask_attribute_error(self):
        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise AttributeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        class S(C): pass
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
120

121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, issubclass, C(), S())

    # Like above, but test the second branch, where the __bases__ of the
    # second arg (the cls arg) is tested.  This means the first arg must
    # return a valid __bases__, and it's okay for it to be a normal --
    # unrelated by inheritance -- class.
    def test_dont_mask_non_attribute_error_in_cls_arg(self):
        class B: pass

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise RuntimeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, issubclass, B, C())

    def test_mask_attribute_error_in_cls_arg(self):
        class B: pass

        class C(object):
            def getbases(self):
                raise AttributeError
            __bases__ = property(getbases)

        self.assertRaises(TypeError, issubclass, B, C())



149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180
# meta classes for creating abstract classes and instances
class AbstractClass(object):
    def __init__(self, bases):
        self.bases = bases

    def getbases(self):
        return self.bases
    __bases__ = property(getbases)

    def __call__(self):
        return AbstractInstance(self)

class AbstractInstance(object):
    def __init__(self, klass):
        self.klass = klass

    def getclass(self):
        return self.klass
    __class__ = property(getclass)

# abstract classes
AbstractSuper = AbstractClass(bases=())

AbstractChild = AbstractClass(bases=(AbstractSuper,))

# normal classes
class Super:
    pass

class Child(Super):
    pass

181 182 183 184 185 186 187
# new-style classes
class NewSuper(object):
    pass

class NewChild(NewSuper):
    pass

188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198


class TestIsInstanceIsSubclass(unittest.TestCase):
    # Tests to ensure that isinstance and issubclass work on abstract
    # classes and instances.  Before the 2.2 release, TypeErrors were
    # raised when boolean values should have been returned.  The bug was
    # triggered by mixing 'normal' classes and instances were with
    # 'abstract' classes and instances.  This case tries to test all
    # combinations.

    def test_isinstance_normal(self):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
199
        # normal instances
200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208
        self.assertEqual(True, isinstance(Super(), Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(Super(), Child))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(Super(), AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(Super(), AbstractChild))

        self.assertEqual(True, isinstance(Child(), Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(Child(), AbstractSuper))

    def test_isinstance_abstract(self):
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
209
        # abstract instances
210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218
        self.assertEqual(True, isinstance(AbstractSuper(), AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(AbstractSuper(), AbstractChild))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(AbstractSuper(), Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(AbstractSuper(), Child))

        self.assertEqual(True, isinstance(AbstractChild(), AbstractChild))
        self.assertEqual(True, isinstance(AbstractChild(), AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(AbstractChild(), Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, isinstance(AbstractChild(), Child))
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
219

220 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 235 236 237 238 239
    def test_subclass_normal(self):
        # normal classes
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Super, Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(Super, AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(Super, Child))

        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Child, Child))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Child, Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(Child, AbstractSuper))

    def test_subclass_abstract(self):
        # abstract classes
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(AbstractSuper, AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(AbstractSuper, AbstractChild))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(AbstractSuper, Child))

        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(AbstractChild, AbstractChild))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(AbstractChild, AbstractSuper))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(AbstractChild, Super))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(AbstractChild, Child))
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
240

241 242 243 244 245 246 247
    def test_subclass_tuple(self):
        # test with a tuple as the second argument classes
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Child, (Child,)))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Child, (Super,)))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(Super, (Child,)))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Super, (Child, Super)))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(Child, ()))
248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255 256
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(Super, (Child, (Super,))))

        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(NewChild, (NewChild,)))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(NewChild, (NewSuper,)))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(NewSuper, (NewChild,)))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(NewSuper, (NewChild, NewSuper)))
        self.assertEqual(False, issubclass(NewChild, ()))
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(NewSuper, (NewChild, (NewSuper,))))

257
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(int, (int, (float, int))))
258
        self.assertEqual(True, issubclass(str, (str, (Child, NewChild, str))))
259

260
    def test_subclass_recursion_limit(self):
261
        # make sure that issubclass raises RecursionError before the C stack is
262
        # blown
263
        self.assertRaises(RecursionError, blowstack, issubclass, str, str)
264 265

    def test_isinstance_recursion_limit(self):
266
        # make sure that issubclass raises RecursionError before the C stack is
Tim Peters's avatar
Tim Peters committed
267
        # blown
268
        self.assertRaises(RecursionError, blowstack, isinstance, '', str)
269 270 271

def blowstack(fxn, arg, compare_to):
    # Make sure that calling isinstance with a deeply nested tuple for its
272
    # argument will raise RecursionError eventually.
273
    tuple_arg = (compare_to,)
274
    for cnt in range(sys.getrecursionlimit()+5):
275 276
        tuple_arg = (tuple_arg,)
        fxn(arg, tuple_arg)
277 278


279
if __name__ == '__main__':
280
    unittest.main()