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Diffstat (limited to 'src/third_party/wiredtiger/test/3rdparty/testtools-0.9.34/testtools/testcase.py')
-rw-r--r-- | src/third_party/wiredtiger/test/3rdparty/testtools-0.9.34/testtools/testcase.py | 942 |
1 files changed, 942 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/src/third_party/wiredtiger/test/3rdparty/testtools-0.9.34/testtools/testcase.py b/src/third_party/wiredtiger/test/3rdparty/testtools-0.9.34/testtools/testcase.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..59ea2052a9a --- /dev/null +++ b/src/third_party/wiredtiger/test/3rdparty/testtools-0.9.34/testtools/testcase.py @@ -0,0 +1,942 @@ +# Copyright (c) 2008-2011 testtools developers. See LICENSE for details. + +"""Test case related stuff.""" + +__metaclass__ = type +__all__ = [ + 'attr', + 'clone_test_with_new_id', + 'ExpectedException', + 'gather_details', + 'run_test_with', + 'skip', + 'skipIf', + 'skipUnless', + 'TestCase', + ] + +import copy +import itertools +import sys +import types +import unittest + +from extras import ( + safe_hasattr, + try_import, + ) + +from testtools import ( + content, + ) +from testtools.compat import ( + advance_iterator, + reraise, + ) +from testtools.matchers import ( + Annotate, + Contains, + Equals, + MatchesAll, + MatchesException, + MismatchError, + Is, + IsInstance, + Not, + Raises, + ) +from testtools.monkey import patch +from testtools.runtest import RunTest +from testtools.testresult import ( + ExtendedToOriginalDecorator, + TestResult, + ) + +wraps = try_import('functools.wraps') + +class TestSkipped(Exception): + """Raised within TestCase.run() when a test is skipped.""" +TestSkipped = try_import('unittest2.case.SkipTest', TestSkipped) +TestSkipped = try_import('unittest.case.SkipTest', TestSkipped) + + +class _UnexpectedSuccess(Exception): + """An unexpected success was raised. + + Note that this exception is private plumbing in testtools' testcase + module. + """ +_UnexpectedSuccess = try_import( + 'unittest2.case._UnexpectedSuccess', _UnexpectedSuccess) +_UnexpectedSuccess = try_import( + 'unittest.case._UnexpectedSuccess', _UnexpectedSuccess) + +class _ExpectedFailure(Exception): + """An expected failure occured. + + Note that this exception is private plumbing in testtools' testcase + module. + """ +_ExpectedFailure = try_import( + 'unittest2.case._ExpectedFailure', _ExpectedFailure) +_ExpectedFailure = try_import( + 'unittest.case._ExpectedFailure', _ExpectedFailure) + + +def run_test_with(test_runner, **kwargs): + """Decorate a test as using a specific ``RunTest``. + + e.g.:: + + @run_test_with(CustomRunner, timeout=42) + def test_foo(self): + self.assertTrue(True) + + The returned decorator works by setting an attribute on the decorated + function. `TestCase.__init__` looks for this attribute when deciding on a + ``RunTest`` factory. If you wish to use multiple decorators on a test + method, then you must either make this one the top-most decorator, or you + must write your decorators so that they update the wrapping function with + the attributes of the wrapped function. The latter is recommended style + anyway. ``functools.wraps``, ``functools.wrapper`` and + ``twisted.python.util.mergeFunctionMetadata`` can help you do this. + + :param test_runner: A ``RunTest`` factory that takes a test case and an + optional list of exception handlers. See ``RunTest``. + :param kwargs: Keyword arguments to pass on as extra arguments to + 'test_runner'. + :return: A decorator to be used for marking a test as needing a special + runner. + """ + def decorator(function): + # Set an attribute on 'function' which will inform TestCase how to + # make the runner. + function._run_test_with = ( + lambda case, handlers=None: + test_runner(case, handlers=handlers, **kwargs)) + return function + return decorator + + +def _copy_content(content_object): + """Make a copy of the given content object. + + The content within ``content_object`` is iterated and saved. This is + useful when the source of the content is volatile, a log file in a + temporary directory for example. + + :param content_object: A `content.Content` instance. + :return: A `content.Content` instance with the same mime-type as + ``content_object`` and a non-volatile copy of its content. + """ + content_bytes = list(content_object.iter_bytes()) + content_callback = lambda: content_bytes + return content.Content(content_object.content_type, content_callback) + + +def gather_details(source_dict, target_dict): + """Merge the details from ``source_dict`` into ``target_dict``. + + :param source_dict: A dictionary of details will be gathered. + :param target_dict: A dictionary into which details will be gathered. + """ + for name, content_object in source_dict.items(): + new_name = name + disambiguator = itertools.count(1) + while new_name in target_dict: + new_name = '%s-%d' % (name, advance_iterator(disambiguator)) + name = new_name + target_dict[name] = _copy_content(content_object) + + +class TestCase(unittest.TestCase): + """Extensions to the basic TestCase. + + :ivar exception_handlers: Exceptions to catch from setUp, runTest and + tearDown. This list is able to be modified at any time and consists of + (exception_class, handler(case, result, exception_value)) pairs. + :ivar force_failure: Force testtools.RunTest to fail the test after the + test has completed. + :cvar run_tests_with: A factory to make the ``RunTest`` to run tests with. + Defaults to ``RunTest``. The factory is expected to take a test case + and an optional list of exception handlers. + """ + + skipException = TestSkipped + + run_tests_with = RunTest + + def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): + """Construct a TestCase. + + :param testMethod: The name of the method to run. + :keyword runTest: Optional class to use to execute the test. If not + supplied ``RunTest`` is used. The instance to be used is created + when run() is invoked, so will be fresh each time. Overrides + ``TestCase.run_tests_with`` if given. + """ + runTest = kwargs.pop('runTest', None) + super(TestCase, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs) + self._cleanups = [] + self._unique_id_gen = itertools.count(1) + # Generators to ensure unique traceback ids. Maps traceback label to + # iterators. + self._traceback_id_gens = {} + self.__setup_called = False + self.__teardown_called = False + # __details is lazy-initialized so that a constructed-but-not-run + # TestCase is safe to use with clone_test_with_new_id. + self.__details = None + test_method = self._get_test_method() + if runTest is None: + runTest = getattr( + test_method, '_run_test_with', self.run_tests_with) + self.__RunTest = runTest + self.__exception_handlers = [] + self.exception_handlers = [ + (self.skipException, self._report_skip), + (self.failureException, self._report_failure), + (_ExpectedFailure, self._report_expected_failure), + (_UnexpectedSuccess, self._report_unexpected_success), + (Exception, self._report_error), + ] + if sys.version_info < (2, 6): + # Catch old-style string exceptions with None as the instance + self.exception_handlers.append((type(None), self._report_error)) + + def __eq__(self, other): + eq = getattr(unittest.TestCase, '__eq__', None) + if eq is not None and not unittest.TestCase.__eq__(self, other): + return False + return self.__dict__ == other.__dict__ + + def __repr__(self): + # We add id to the repr because it makes testing testtools easier. + return "<%s id=0x%0x>" % (self.id(), id(self)) + + def addDetail(self, name, content_object): + """Add a detail to be reported with this test's outcome. + + For more details see pydoc testtools.TestResult. + + :param name: The name to give this detail. + :param content_object: The content object for this detail. See + testtools.content for more detail. + """ + if self.__details is None: + self.__details = {} + self.__details[name] = content_object + + def getDetails(self): + """Get the details dict that will be reported with this test's outcome. + + For more details see pydoc testtools.TestResult. + """ + if self.__details is None: + self.__details = {} + return self.__details + + def patch(self, obj, attribute, value): + """Monkey-patch 'obj.attribute' to 'value' while the test is running. + + If 'obj' has no attribute, then the monkey-patch will still go ahead, + and the attribute will be deleted instead of restored to its original + value. + + :param obj: The object to patch. Can be anything. + :param attribute: The attribute on 'obj' to patch. + :param value: The value to set 'obj.attribute' to. + """ + self.addCleanup(patch(obj, attribute, value)) + + def shortDescription(self): + return self.id() + + def skipTest(self, reason): + """Cause this test to be skipped. + + This raises self.skipException(reason). skipException is raised + to permit a skip to be triggered at any point (during setUp or the + testMethod itself). The run() method catches skipException and + translates that into a call to the result objects addSkip method. + + :param reason: The reason why the test is being skipped. This must + support being cast into a unicode string for reporting. + """ + raise self.skipException(reason) + + # skipTest is how python2.7 spells this. Sometime in the future + # This should be given a deprecation decorator - RBC 20100611. + skip = skipTest + + def _formatTypes(self, classOrIterable): + """Format a class or a bunch of classes for display in an error.""" + className = getattr(classOrIterable, '__name__', None) + if className is None: + className = ', '.join(klass.__name__ for klass in classOrIterable) + return className + + def addCleanup(self, function, *arguments, **keywordArguments): + """Add a cleanup function to be called after tearDown. + + Functions added with addCleanup will be called in reverse order of + adding after tearDown, or after setUp if setUp raises an exception. + + If a function added with addCleanup raises an exception, the error + will be recorded as a test error, and the next cleanup will then be + run. + + Cleanup functions are always called before a test finishes running, + even if setUp is aborted by an exception. + """ + self._cleanups.append((function, arguments, keywordArguments)) + + def addOnException(self, handler): + """Add a handler to be called when an exception occurs in test code. + + This handler cannot affect what result methods are called, and is + called before any outcome is called on the result object. An example + use for it is to add some diagnostic state to the test details dict + which is expensive to calculate and not interesting for reporting in + the success case. + + Handlers are called before the outcome (such as addFailure) that + the exception has caused. + + Handlers are called in first-added, first-called order, and if they + raise an exception, that will propogate out of the test running + machinery, halting test processing. As a result, do not call code that + may unreasonably fail. + """ + self.__exception_handlers.append(handler) + + def _add_reason(self, reason): + self.addDetail('reason', content.text_content(reason)) + + def assertEqual(self, expected, observed, message=''): + """Assert that 'expected' is equal to 'observed'. + + :param expected: The expected value. + :param observed: The observed value. + :param message: An optional message to include in the error. + """ + matcher = Equals(expected) + self.assertThat(observed, matcher, message) + + failUnlessEqual = assertEquals = assertEqual + + def assertIn(self, needle, haystack): + """Assert that needle is in haystack.""" + self.assertThat(haystack, Contains(needle)) + + def assertIsNone(self, observed, message=''): + """Assert that 'observed' is equal to None. + + :param observed: The observed value. + :param message: An optional message describing the error. + """ + matcher = Is(None) + self.assertThat(observed, matcher, message) + + def assertIsNotNone(self, observed, message=''): + """Assert that 'observed' is not equal to None. + + :param observed: The observed value. + :param message: An optional message describing the error. + """ + matcher = Not(Is(None)) + self.assertThat(observed, matcher, message) + + def assertIs(self, expected, observed, message=''): + """Assert that 'expected' is 'observed'. + + :param expected: The expected value. + :param observed: The observed value. + :param message: An optional message describing the error. + """ + matcher = Is(expected) + self.assertThat(observed, matcher, message) + + def assertIsNot(self, expected, observed, message=''): + """Assert that 'expected' is not 'observed'.""" + matcher = Not(Is(expected)) + self.assertThat(observed, matcher, message) + + def assertNotIn(self, needle, haystack): + """Assert that needle is not in haystack.""" + matcher = Not(Contains(needle)) + self.assertThat(haystack, matcher) + + def assertIsInstance(self, obj, klass, msg=None): + if isinstance(klass, tuple): + matcher = IsInstance(*klass) + else: + matcher = IsInstance(klass) + self.assertThat(obj, matcher, msg) + + def assertRaises(self, excClass, callableObj, *args, **kwargs): + """Fail unless an exception of class excClass is thrown + by callableObj when invoked with arguments args and keyword + arguments kwargs. If a different type of exception is + thrown, it will not be caught, and the test case will be + deemed to have suffered an error, exactly as for an + unexpected exception. + """ + class ReRaiseOtherTypes(object): + def match(self, matchee): + if not issubclass(matchee[0], excClass): + reraise(*matchee) + class CaptureMatchee(object): + def match(self, matchee): + self.matchee = matchee[1] + capture = CaptureMatchee() + matcher = Raises(MatchesAll(ReRaiseOtherTypes(), + MatchesException(excClass), capture)) + our_callable = Nullary(callableObj, *args, **kwargs) + self.assertThat(our_callable, matcher) + return capture.matchee + failUnlessRaises = assertRaises + + def assertThat(self, matchee, matcher, message='', verbose=False): + """Assert that matchee is matched by matcher. + + :param matchee: An object to match with matcher. + :param matcher: An object meeting the testtools.Matcher protocol. + :raises MismatchError: When matcher does not match thing. + """ + matcher = Annotate.if_message(message, matcher) + mismatch = matcher.match(matchee) + if not mismatch: + return + existing_details = self.getDetails() + for (name, content) in mismatch.get_details().items(): + self.addDetailUniqueName(name, content) + raise MismatchError(matchee, matcher, mismatch, verbose) + + def addDetailUniqueName(self, name, content_object): + """Add a detail to the test, but ensure it's name is unique. + + This method checks whether ``name`` conflicts with a detail that has + already been added to the test. If it does, it will modify ``name`` to + avoid the conflict. + + For more details see pydoc testtools.TestResult. + + :param name: The name to give this detail. + :param content_object: The content object for this detail. See + testtools.content for more detail. + """ + existing_details = self.getDetails() + full_name = name + suffix = 1 + while full_name in existing_details: + full_name = "%s-%d" % (name, suffix) + suffix += 1 + self.addDetail(full_name, content_object) + + def defaultTestResult(self): + return TestResult() + + def expectFailure(self, reason, predicate, *args, **kwargs): + """Check that a test fails in a particular way. + + If the test fails in the expected way, a KnownFailure is caused. If it + succeeds an UnexpectedSuccess is caused. + + The expected use of expectFailure is as a barrier at the point in a + test where the test would fail. For example: + >>> def test_foo(self): + >>> self.expectFailure("1 should be 0", self.assertNotEqual, 1, 0) + >>> self.assertEqual(1, 0) + + If in the future 1 were to equal 0, the expectFailure call can simply + be removed. This separation preserves the original intent of the test + while it is in the expectFailure mode. + """ + # TODO: implement with matchers. + self._add_reason(reason) + try: + predicate(*args, **kwargs) + except self.failureException: + # GZ 2010-08-12: Don't know how to avoid exc_info cycle as the new + # unittest _ExpectedFailure wants old traceback + exc_info = sys.exc_info() + try: + self._report_traceback(exc_info) + raise _ExpectedFailure(exc_info) + finally: + del exc_info + else: + raise _UnexpectedSuccess(reason) + + def getUniqueInteger(self): + """Get an integer unique to this test. + + Returns an integer that is guaranteed to be unique to this instance. + Use this when you need an arbitrary integer in your test, or as a + helper for custom anonymous factory methods. + """ + return advance_iterator(self._unique_id_gen) + + def getUniqueString(self, prefix=None): + """Get a string unique to this test. + + Returns a string that is guaranteed to be unique to this instance. Use + this when you need an arbitrary string in your test, or as a helper + for custom anonymous factory methods. + + :param prefix: The prefix of the string. If not provided, defaults + to the id of the tests. + :return: A bytestring of '<prefix>-<unique_int>'. + """ + if prefix is None: + prefix = self.id() + return '%s-%d' % (prefix, self.getUniqueInteger()) + + def onException(self, exc_info, tb_label='traceback'): + """Called when an exception propogates from test code. + + :seealso addOnException: + """ + if exc_info[0] not in [ + TestSkipped, _UnexpectedSuccess, _ExpectedFailure]: + self._report_traceback(exc_info, tb_label=tb_label) + for handler in self.__exception_handlers: + handler(exc_info) + + @staticmethod + def _report_error(self, result, err): + result.addError(self, details=self.getDetails()) + + @staticmethod + def _report_expected_failure(self, result, err): + result.addExpectedFailure(self, details=self.getDetails()) + + @staticmethod + def _report_failure(self, result, err): + result.addFailure(self, details=self.getDetails()) + + @staticmethod + def _report_skip(self, result, err): + if err.args: + reason = err.args[0] + else: + reason = "no reason given." + self._add_reason(reason) + result.addSkip(self, details=self.getDetails()) + + def _report_traceback(self, exc_info, tb_label='traceback'): + id_gen = self._traceback_id_gens.setdefault( + tb_label, itertools.count(0)) + while True: + tb_id = advance_iterator(id_gen) + if tb_id: + tb_label = '%s-%d' % (tb_label, tb_id) + if tb_label not in self.getDetails(): + break + self.addDetail(tb_label, content.TracebackContent(exc_info, self)) + + @staticmethod + def _report_unexpected_success(self, result, err): + result.addUnexpectedSuccess(self, details=self.getDetails()) + + def run(self, result=None): + return self.__RunTest(self, self.exception_handlers).run(result) + + def _run_setup(self, result): + """Run the setUp function for this test. + + :param result: A testtools.TestResult to report activity to. + :raises ValueError: If the base class setUp is not called, a + ValueError is raised. + """ + ret = self.setUp() + if not self.__setup_called: + raise ValueError( + "In File: %s\n" + "TestCase.setUp was not called. Have you upcalled all the " + "way up the hierarchy from your setUp? e.g. Call " + "super(%s, self).setUp() from your setUp()." + % (sys.modules[self.__class__.__module__].__file__, + self.__class__.__name__)) + return ret + + def _run_teardown(self, result): + """Run the tearDown function for this test. + + :param result: A testtools.TestResult to report activity to. + :raises ValueError: If the base class tearDown is not called, a + ValueError is raised. + """ + ret = self.tearDown() + if not self.__teardown_called: + raise ValueError( + "In File: %s\n" + "TestCase.tearDown was not called. Have you upcalled all the " + "way up the hierarchy from your tearDown? e.g. Call " + "super(%s, self).tearDown() from your tearDown()." + % (sys.modules[self.__class__.__module__].__file__, + self.__class__.__name__)) + return ret + + def _get_test_method(self): + absent_attr = object() + # Python 2.5+ + method_name = getattr(self, '_testMethodName', absent_attr) + if method_name is absent_attr: + # Python 2.4 + method_name = getattr(self, '_TestCase__testMethodName') + return getattr(self, method_name) + + def _run_test_method(self, result): + """Run the test method for this test. + + :param result: A testtools.TestResult to report activity to. + :return: None. + """ + return self._get_test_method()() + + def useFixture(self, fixture): + """Use fixture in a test case. + + The fixture will be setUp, and self.addCleanup(fixture.cleanUp) called. + + :param fixture: The fixture to use. + :return: The fixture, after setting it up and scheduling a cleanup for + it. + """ + try: + fixture.setUp() + except: + gather_details(fixture.getDetails(), self.getDetails()) + raise + else: + self.addCleanup(fixture.cleanUp) + self.addCleanup( + gather_details, fixture.getDetails(), self.getDetails()) + return fixture + + def setUp(self): + super(TestCase, self).setUp() + self.__setup_called = True + + def tearDown(self): + super(TestCase, self).tearDown() + unittest.TestCase.tearDown(self) + self.__teardown_called = True + + +class PlaceHolder(object): + """A placeholder test. + + `PlaceHolder` implements much of the same interface as TestCase and is + particularly suitable for being added to TestResults. + """ + + failureException = None + + def __init__(self, test_id, short_description=None, details=None, + outcome='addSuccess', error=None, tags=None, timestamps=(None, None)): + """Construct a `PlaceHolder`. + + :param test_id: The id of the placeholder test. + :param short_description: The short description of the place holder + test. If not provided, the id will be used instead. + :param details: Outcome details as accepted by addSuccess etc. + :param outcome: The outcome to call. Defaults to 'addSuccess'. + :param tags: Tags to report for the test. + :param timestamps: A two-tuple of timestamps for the test start and + finish. Each timestamp may be None to indicate it is not known. + """ + self._test_id = test_id + self._short_description = short_description + self._details = details or {} + self._outcome = outcome + if error is not None: + self._details['traceback'] = content.TracebackContent(error, self) + tags = tags or frozenset() + self._tags = frozenset(tags) + self._timestamps = timestamps + + def __call__(self, result=None): + return self.run(result=result) + + def __repr__(self): + internal = [self._outcome, self._test_id, self._details] + if self._short_description is not None: + internal.append(self._short_description) + return "<%s.%s(%s)>" % ( + self.__class__.__module__, + self.__class__.__name__, + ", ".join(map(repr, internal))) + + def __str__(self): + return self.id() + + def countTestCases(self): + return 1 + + def debug(self): + pass + + def id(self): + return self._test_id + + def _result(self, result): + if result is None: + return TestResult() + else: + return ExtendedToOriginalDecorator(result) + + def run(self, result=None): + result = self._result(result) + if self._timestamps[0] is not None: + result.time(self._timestamps[0]) + result.tags(self._tags, set()) + result.startTest(self) + if self._timestamps[1] is not None: + result.time(self._timestamps[1]) + outcome = getattr(result, self._outcome) + outcome(self, details=self._details) + result.stopTest(self) + result.tags(set(), self._tags) + + def shortDescription(self): + if self._short_description is None: + return self.id() + else: + return self._short_description + + +def ErrorHolder(test_id, error, short_description=None, details=None): + """Construct an `ErrorHolder`. + + :param test_id: The id of the test. + :param error: The exc info tuple that will be used as the test's error. + This is inserted into the details as 'traceback' - any existing key + will be overridden. + :param short_description: An optional short description of the test. + :param details: Outcome details as accepted by addSuccess etc. + """ + return PlaceHolder(test_id, short_description=short_description, + details=details, outcome='addError', error=error) + + +def _clone_test_id_callback(test, callback): + """Copy a `TestCase`, and make it call callback for its id(). + + This is only expected to be used on tests that have been constructed but + not executed. + + :param test: A TestCase instance. + :param callback: A callable that takes no parameters and returns a string. + :return: A copy.copy of the test with id=callback. + """ + newTest = copy.copy(test) + newTest.id = callback + return newTest + + +def clone_test_with_new_id(test, new_id): + """Copy a `TestCase`, and give the copied test a new id. + + This is only expected to be used on tests that have been constructed but + not executed. + """ + return _clone_test_id_callback(test, lambda: new_id) + + +def attr(*args): + """Decorator for adding attributes to WithAttributes. + + :param args: The name of attributes to add. + :return: A callable that when applied to a WithAttributes will + alter its id to enumerate the added attributes. + """ + def decorate(fn): + if not safe_hasattr(fn, '__testtools_attrs'): + fn.__testtools_attrs = set() + fn.__testtools_attrs.update(args) + return fn + return decorate + + +class WithAttributes(object): + """A mix-in class for modifying test id by attributes. + + e.g. + >>> class MyTest(WithAttributes, TestCase): + ... @attr('foo') + ... def test_bar(self): + ... pass + >>> MyTest('test_bar').id() + testtools.testcase.MyTest/test_bar[foo] + """ + + def id(self): + orig = super(WithAttributes, self).id() + # Depends on testtools.TestCase._get_test_method, be nice to support + # plain unittest. + fn = self._get_test_method() + attributes = getattr(fn, '__testtools_attrs', None) + if not attributes: + return orig + return orig + '[' + ','.join(sorted(attributes)) + ']' + + +def skip(reason): + """A decorator to skip unit tests. + + This is just syntactic sugar so users don't have to change any of their + unit tests in order to migrate to python 2.7, which provides the + @unittest.skip decorator. + """ + def decorator(test_item): + if wraps is not None: + @wraps(test_item) + def skip_wrapper(*args, **kwargs): + raise TestCase.skipException(reason) + else: + def skip_wrapper(test_item): + test_item.skip(reason) + return skip_wrapper + return decorator + + +def skipIf(condition, reason): + """A decorator to skip a test if the condition is true.""" + if condition: + return skip(reason) + def _id(obj): + return obj + return _id + + +def skipUnless(condition, reason): + """A decorator to skip a test unless the condition is true.""" + if not condition: + return skip(reason) + def _id(obj): + return obj + return _id + + +class ExpectedException: + """A context manager to handle expected exceptions. + + In Python 2.5 or later:: + + def test_foo(self): + with ExpectedException(ValueError, 'fo.*'): + raise ValueError('foo') + + will pass. If the raised exception has a type other than the specified + type, it will be re-raised. If it has a 'str()' that does not match the + given regular expression, an AssertionError will be raised. If no + exception is raised, an AssertionError will be raised. + """ + + def __init__(self, exc_type, value_re=None, msg=None): + """Construct an `ExpectedException`. + + :param exc_type: The type of exception to expect. + :param value_re: A regular expression to match against the + 'str()' of the raised exception. + :param msg: An optional message explaining the failure. + """ + self.exc_type = exc_type + self.value_re = value_re + self.msg = msg + + def __enter__(self): + pass + + def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback): + if exc_type is None: + error_msg = '%s not raised.' % self.exc_type.__name__ + if self.msg: + error_msg = error_msg + ' : ' + self.msg + raise AssertionError(error_msg) + if exc_type != self.exc_type: + return False + if self.value_re: + matcher = MatchesException(self.exc_type, self.value_re) + if self.msg: + matcher = Annotate(self.msg, matcher) + mismatch = matcher.match((exc_type, exc_value, traceback)) + if mismatch: + raise AssertionError(mismatch.describe()) + return True + + +class Nullary(object): + """Turn a callable into a nullary callable. + + The advantage of this over ``lambda: f(*args, **kwargs)`` is that it + preserves the ``repr()`` of ``f``. + """ + + def __init__(self, callable_object, *args, **kwargs): + self._callable_object = callable_object + self._args = args + self._kwargs = kwargs + + def __call__(self): + return self._callable_object(*self._args, **self._kwargs) + + def __repr__(self): + return repr(self._callable_object) + + +class DecorateTestCaseResult(object): + """Decorate a TestCase and permit customisation of the result for runs.""" + + def __init__(self, case, callout, before_run=None, after_run=None): + """Construct a DecorateTestCaseResult. + + :param case: The case to decorate. + :param callout: A callback to call when run/__call__/debug is called. + Must take a result parameter and return a result object to be used. + For instance: lambda result: result. + :param before_run: If set, call this with the decorated result before + calling into the decorated run/__call__ method. + :param before_run: If set, call this with the decorated result after + calling into the decorated run/__call__ method. + """ + self.decorated = case + self.callout = callout + self.before_run = before_run + self.after_run = after_run + + def _run(self, result, run_method): + result = self.callout(result) + if self.before_run: + self.before_run(result) + try: + return run_method(result) + finally: + if self.after_run: + self.after_run(result) + + def run(self, result=None): + self._run(result, self.decorated.run) + + def __call__(self, result=None): + self._run(result, self.decorated) + + def __getattr__(self, name): + return getattr(self.decorated, name) + + def __delattr__(self, name): + delattr(self.decorated, name) + + def __setattr__(self, name, value): + if name in ('decorated', 'callout', 'before_run', 'after_run'): + self.__dict__[name] = value + return + setattr(self.decorated, name, value) + + +# Signal that this is part of the testing framework, and that code from this +# should not normally appear in tracebacks. +__unittest = True |