Kaydet (Commit) 442b49e9 authored tarafından Georg Brandl's avatar Georg Brandl

Convert test_file to unittest.

üst 98b40ad5
import sys import sys
import os import os
import unittest
from array import array from array import array
from weakref import proxy from weakref import proxy
from test.test_support import verify, TESTFN, TestFailed, findfile from test.test_support import TESTFN, findfile, run_unittest
from UserList import UserList from UserList import UserList
# verify weak references class AutoFileTests(unittest.TestCase):
f = file(TESTFN, 'w') # file tests for which a test file is automatically set up
p = proxy(f)
p.write('teststring') def setUp(self):
verify(f.tell(), p.tell()) self.f = file(TESTFN, 'wb')
f.close()
f = None def tearDown(self):
try:
p.tell()
except ReferenceError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed('file proxy still exists when the file is gone')
# verify expected attributes exist
f = file(TESTFN, 'w')
softspace = f.softspace
f.name # merely shouldn't blow up
f.mode # ditto
f.closed # ditto
# verify softspace is writable
f.softspace = softspace # merely shouldn't blow up
# verify the others aren't
for attr in 'name', 'mode', 'closed':
try:
setattr(f, attr, 'oops')
except (AttributeError, TypeError):
pass
else:
raise TestFailed('expected exception setting file attr %r' % attr)
f.close()
# check invalid mode strings
for mode in ("", "aU", "wU+"):
try:
f = file(TESTFN, mode)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
f.close()
raise TestFailed('%r is an invalid file mode' % mode)
# verify writelines with instance sequence
l = UserList(['1', '2'])
f = open(TESTFN, 'wb')
f.writelines(l)
f.close()
f = open(TESTFN, 'rb')
buf = f.read()
f.close()
verify(buf == '12')
# verify readinto
a = array('c', 'x'*10)
f = open(TESTFN, 'rb')
n = f.readinto(a)
f.close()
verify(buf == a.tostring()[:n])
# verify writelines with integers
f = open(TESTFN, 'wb')
try:
f.writelines([1, 2, 3])
except TypeError:
pass
else:
print "writelines accepted sequence of integers"
f.close()
# verify writelines with integers in UserList
f = open(TESTFN, 'wb')
l = UserList([1,2,3])
try:
f.writelines(l)
except TypeError:
pass
else:
print "writelines accepted sequence of integers"
f.close()
# verify writelines with non-string object
class NonString: pass
f = open(TESTFN, 'wb')
try:
f.writelines([NonString(), NonString()])
except TypeError:
pass
else:
print "writelines accepted sequence of non-string objects"
f.close()
# This causes the interpreter to exit on OSF1 v5.1.
if sys.platform != 'osf1V5':
try:
sys.stdin.seek(-1)
except IOError:
pass
else:
print "should not be able to seek on sys.stdin"
else:
print >>sys.__stdout__, (
' Skipping sys.stdin.seek(-1), it may crash the interpreter.'
' Test manually.')
try:
sys.stdin.truncate()
except IOError:
pass
else:
print "should not be able to truncate on sys.stdin"
# verify repr works
f = open(TESTFN)
if not repr(f).startswith("<open file '" + TESTFN):
print "repr(file) failed"
f.close()
# verify repr works for unicode too
f = open(unicode(TESTFN))
if not repr(f).startswith("<open file u'" + TESTFN):
print "repr(file with unicode name) failed"
f.close()
# verify that we get a sensible error message for bad mode argument
bad_mode = "qwerty"
try:
open(TESTFN, bad_mode)
except ValueError, msg:
if msg[0] != 0:
s = str(msg)
if s.find(TESTFN) != -1 or s.find(bad_mode) == -1:
print "bad error message for invalid mode: %s" % s
# if msg[0] == 0, we're probably on Windows where there may be
# no obvious way to discover why open() failed.
else:
print "no error for invalid mode: %s" % bad_mode
f = open(TESTFN)
if f.name != TESTFN:
raise TestFailed, 'file.name should be "%s"' % TESTFN
if f.isatty():
raise TestFailed, 'file.isatty() should be false'
if f.closed:
raise TestFailed, 'file.closed should be false'
try:
f.readinto("")
except TypeError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, 'file.readinto("") should raise a TypeError'
f.close()
if not f.closed:
raise TestFailed, 'file.closed should be true'
# make sure that explicitly setting the buffer size doesn't cause
# misbehaviour especially with repeated close() calls
for s in (-1, 0, 1, 512):
try:
f = open(TESTFN, 'w', s)
f.write(str(s))
f.close()
f.close()
f = open(TESTFN, 'r', s)
d = int(f.read())
f.close()
f.close()
except IOError, msg:
raise TestFailed, 'error setting buffer size %d: %s' % (s, str(msg))
if d != s:
raise TestFailed, 'readback failure using buffer size %d'
methods = ['fileno', 'flush', 'isatty', 'next', 'read', 'readinto',
'readline', 'readlines', 'seek', 'tell', 'truncate', 'write',
'xreadlines', '__iter__']
if sys.platform.startswith('atheos'):
methods.remove('truncate')
for methodname in methods:
method = getattr(f, methodname)
try:
method()
except ValueError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, 'file.%s() on a closed file should raise a ValueError' % methodname
try:
f.writelines([])
except ValueError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, 'file.writelines([]) on a closed file should raise a ValueError'
os.unlink(TESTFN)
def bug801631():
# SF bug <http://www.python.org/sf/801631>
# "file.truncate fault on windows"
f = file(TESTFN, 'wb')
f.write('12345678901') # 11 bytes
f.close()
f = file(TESTFN,'rb+')
data = f.read(5)
if data != '12345':
raise TestFailed("Read on file opened for update failed %r" % data)
if f.tell() != 5:
raise TestFailed("File pos after read wrong %d" % f.tell())
f.truncate()
if f.tell() != 5:
raise TestFailed("File pos after ftruncate wrong %d" % f.tell())
f.close()
size = os.path.getsize(TESTFN)
if size != 5:
raise TestFailed("File size after ftruncate wrong %d" % size)
try:
bug801631()
finally:
os.unlink(TESTFN)
# Test the complex interaction when mixing file-iteration and the various
# read* methods. Ostensibly, the mixture could just be tested to work
# when it should work according to the Python language, instead of fail
# when it should fail according to the current CPython implementation.
# People don't always program Python the way they should, though, and the
# implemenation might change in subtle ways, so we explicitly test for
# errors, too; the test will just have to be updated when the
# implementation changes.
dataoffset = 16384
filler = "ham\n"
assert not dataoffset % len(filler), \
"dataoffset must be multiple of len(filler)"
nchunks = dataoffset // len(filler)
testlines = [
"spam, spam and eggs\n",
"eggs, spam, ham and spam\n",
"saussages, spam, spam and eggs\n",
"spam, ham, spam and eggs\n",
"spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, ham, spam\n",
"wonderful spaaaaaam.\n"
]
methods = [("readline", ()), ("read", ()), ("readlines", ()),
("readinto", (array("c", " "*100),))]
try:
# Prepare the testfile
bag = open(TESTFN, "w")
bag.write(filler * nchunks)
bag.writelines(testlines)
bag.close()
# Test for appropriate errors mixing read* and iteration
for methodname, args in methods:
f = open(TESTFN)
if f.next() != filler:
raise TestFailed, "Broken testfile"
meth = getattr(f, methodname)
try: try:
meth(*args) if self.f:
except ValueError: self.f.close()
except IOError:
pass pass
def testWeakRefs(self):
# verify weak references
p = proxy(self.f)
p.write('teststring')
self.assertEquals(self.f.tell(), p.tell())
self.f.close()
self.f = None
self.assertRaises(ReferenceError, getattr, p, 'tell')
def testAttributes(self):
# verify expected attributes exist
f = self.f
softspace = f.softspace
f.name # merely shouldn't blow up
f.mode # ditto
f.closed # ditto
# verify softspace is writable
f.softspace = softspace # merely shouldn't blow up
# verify the others aren't
for attr in 'name', 'mode', 'closed':
self.assertRaises((AttributeError, TypeError), setattr, f, attr, 'oops')
def testReadinto(self):
# verify readinto
self.f.write('12')
self.f.close()
a = array('c', 'x'*10)
self.f = open(TESTFN, 'rb')
n = self.f.readinto(a)
self.assertEquals('12', a.tostring()[:n])
def testWritelinesUserList(self):
# verify writelines with instance sequence
l = UserList(['1', '2'])
self.f.writelines(l)
self.f.close()
self.f = open(TESTFN, 'rb')
buf = self.f.read()
self.assertEquals(buf, '12')
def testWritelinesIntegers(self):
# verify writelines with integers
self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, [1, 2, 3])
def testWritelinesIntegersUserList(self):
# verify writelines with integers in UserList
l = UserList([1,2,3])
self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, l)
def testWritelinesNonString(self):
# verify writelines with non-string object
class NonString: pass
self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.f.writelines, [NonString(), NonString()])
def testRepr(self):
# verify repr works
self.assert_(repr(self.f).startswith("<open file '" + TESTFN))
def testErrors(self):
f = self.f
self.assertEquals(f.name, TESTFN)
self.assert_(not f.isatty())
self.assert_(not f.closed)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, f.readinto, "")
f.close()
self.assert_(f.closed)
def testMethods(self):
methods = ['fileno', 'flush', 'isatty', 'next', 'read', 'readinto',
'readline', 'readlines', 'seek', 'tell', 'truncate', 'write',
'xreadlines', '__iter__']
if sys.platform.startswith('atheos'):
methods.remove('truncate')
self.f.close()
for methodname in methods:
method = getattr(self.f, methodname)
# should raise on closed file
self.assertRaises(ValueError, method)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.f.writelines, [])
class OtherFileTests(unittest.TestCase):
def testModeStrings(self):
# check invalid mode strings
for mode in ("", "aU", "wU+"):
try:
f = file(TESTFN, mode)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
f.close()
self.fail('%r is an invalid file mode' % mode)
def testStdin(self):
# This causes the interpreter to exit on OSF1 v5.1.
if sys.platform != 'osf1V5':
self.assertRaises(IOError, sys.stdin.seek, -1)
else: else:
raise TestFailed("%s%r after next() didn't raise ValueError" % print >>sys.__stdout__, (
(methodname, args)) ' Skipping sys.stdin.seek(-1), it may crash the interpreter.'
' Test manually.')
self.assertRaises(IOError, sys.stdin.truncate)
def testUnicodeOpen(self):
# verify repr works for unicode too
f = open(unicode(TESTFN), "w")
self.assert_(repr(f).startswith("<open file u'" + TESTFN))
f.close() f.close()
# Test to see if harmless (by accident) mixing of read* and iteration def testBadModeArgument(self):
# still works. This depends on the size of the internal iteration # verify that we get a sensible error message for bad mode argument
# buffer (currently 8192,) but we can test it in a flexible manner. bad_mode = "qwerty"
# Each line in the bag o' ham is 4 bytes ("h", "a", "m", "\n"), so
# 4096 lines of that should get us exactly on the buffer boundary for
# any power-of-2 buffersize between 4 and 16384 (inclusive).
f = open(TESTFN)
for i in range(nchunks):
f.next()
testline = testlines.pop(0)
try:
line = f.readline()
except ValueError:
raise TestFailed("readline() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if line != testline:
raise TestFailed("readline() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
testline = testlines.pop(0)
buf = array("c", "\x00" * len(testline))
try:
f.readinto(buf)
except ValueError:
raise TestFailed("readinto() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
line = buf.tostring()
if line != testline:
raise TestFailed("readinto() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
testline = testlines.pop(0)
try:
line = f.read(len(testline))
except ValueError:
raise TestFailed("read() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if line != testline:
raise TestFailed("read() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
try:
lines = f.readlines()
except ValueError:
raise TestFailed("readlines() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if lines != testlines:
raise TestFailed("readlines() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
# Reading after iteration hit EOF shouldn't hurt either
f = open(TESTFN)
try:
for line in f:
pass
try: try:
f.readline() f = open(TESTFN, bad_mode)
f.readinto(buf) except ValueError, msg:
f.read() if msg[0] != 0:
f.readlines() s = str(msg)
except ValueError: if s.find(TESTFN) != -1 or s.find(bad_mode) == -1:
raise TestFailed("read* failed after next() consumed file") self.fail("bad error message for invalid mode: %s" % s)
finally: # if msg[0] == 0, we're probably on Windows where there may be
f.close() # no obvious way to discover why open() failed.
finally: else:
os.unlink(TESTFN) f.close()
self.fail("no error for invalid mode: %s" % bad_mode)
def testSetBufferSize(self):
# make sure that explicitly setting the buffer size doesn't cause
# misbehaviour especially with repeated close() calls
for s in (-1, 0, 1, 512):
try:
f = open(TESTFN, 'w', s)
f.write(str(s))
f.close()
f.close()
f = open(TESTFN, 'r', s)
d = int(f.read())
f.close()
f.close()
except IOError, msg:
self.fail('error setting buffer size %d: %s' % (s, str(msg)))
self.assertEquals(d, s)
def testTruncateOnWindows(self):
os.unlink(TESTFN)
def bug801631():
# SF bug <http://www.python.org/sf/801631>
# "file.truncate fault on windows"
f = file(TESTFN, 'wb')
f.write('12345678901') # 11 bytes
f.close()
f = file(TESTFN,'rb+')
data = f.read(5)
if data != '12345':
self.fail("Read on file opened for update failed %r" % data)
if f.tell() != 5:
self.fail("File pos after read wrong %d" % f.tell())
f.truncate()
if f.tell() != 5:
self.fail("File pos after ftruncate wrong %d" % f.tell())
f.close()
size = os.path.getsize(TESTFN)
if size != 5:
self.fail("File size after ftruncate wrong %d" % size)
try:
bug801631()
finally:
os.unlink(TESTFN)
def testIteration(self):
# Test the complex interaction when mixing file-iteration and the various
# read* methods. Ostensibly, the mixture could just be tested to work
# when it should work according to the Python language, instead of fail
# when it should fail according to the current CPython implementation.
# People don't always program Python the way they should, though, and the
# implemenation might change in subtle ways, so we explicitly test for
# errors, too; the test will just have to be updated when the
# implementation changes.
dataoffset = 16384
filler = "ham\n"
assert not dataoffset % len(filler), \
"dataoffset must be multiple of len(filler)"
nchunks = dataoffset // len(filler)
testlines = [
"spam, spam and eggs\n",
"eggs, spam, ham and spam\n",
"saussages, spam, spam and eggs\n",
"spam, ham, spam and eggs\n",
"spam, spam, spam, spam, spam, ham, spam\n",
"wonderful spaaaaaam.\n"
]
methods = [("readline", ()), ("read", ()), ("readlines", ()),
("readinto", (array("c", " "*100),))]
try:
# Prepare the testfile
bag = open(TESTFN, "w")
bag.write(filler * nchunks)
bag.writelines(testlines)
bag.close()
# Test for appropriate errors mixing read* and iteration
for methodname, args in methods:
f = open(TESTFN)
if f.next() != filler:
self.fail, "Broken testfile"
meth = getattr(f, methodname)
try:
meth(*args)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
self.fail("%s%r after next() didn't raise ValueError" %
(methodname, args))
f.close()
# Test to see if harmless (by accident) mixing of read* and iteration
# still works. This depends on the size of the internal iteration
# buffer (currently 8192,) but we can test it in a flexible manner.
# Each line in the bag o' ham is 4 bytes ("h", "a", "m", "\n"), so
# 4096 lines of that should get us exactly on the buffer boundary for
# any power-of-2 buffersize between 4 and 16384 (inclusive).
f = open(TESTFN)
for i in range(nchunks):
f.next()
testline = testlines.pop(0)
try:
line = f.readline()
except ValueError:
self.fail("readline() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if line != testline:
self.fail("readline() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
testline = testlines.pop(0)
buf = array("c", "\x00" * len(testline))
try:
f.readinto(buf)
except ValueError:
self.fail("readinto() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
line = buf.tostring()
if line != testline:
self.fail("readinto() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
testline = testlines.pop(0)
try:
line = f.read(len(testline))
except ValueError:
self.fail("read() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if line != testline:
self.fail("read() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
try:
lines = f.readlines()
except ValueError:
self.fail("readlines() after next() with supposedly empty "
"iteration-buffer failed anyway")
if lines != testlines:
self.fail("readlines() after next() with empty buffer "
"failed. Got %r, expected %r" % (line, testline))
# Reading after iteration hit EOF shouldn't hurt either
f = open(TESTFN)
try:
for line in f:
pass
try:
f.readline()
f.readinto(buf)
f.read()
f.readlines()
except ValueError:
self.fail("read* failed after next() consumed file")
finally:
f.close()
finally:
os.unlink(TESTFN)
def test_main():
run_unittest(AutoFileTests, OtherFileTests)
if __name__ == '__main__':
test_main()
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