1# Module doctest. 2# Released to the public domain 16-Jan-2001, by Tim Peters (tim@python.org). 3# Major enhancements and refactoring by: 4# Jim Fulton 5# Edward Loper 6 7# Provided as-is; use at your own risk; no warranty; no promises; enjoy! 8 9r"""Module doctest -- a framework for running examples in docstrings. 10 11In simplest use, end each module M to be tested with: 12 13def _test(): 14 import doctest 15 doctest.testmod() 16 17if __name__ == "__main__": 18 _test() 19 20Then running the module as a script will cause the examples in the 21docstrings to get executed and verified: 22 23python M.py 24 25This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the 26failing example(s) and the cause(s) of the failure(s) are printed to stdout 27(why not stderr? because stderr is a lame hack <0.2 wink>), and the final 28line of output is "Test failed.". 29 30Run it with the -v switch instead: 31 32python M.py -v 33 34and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to stdout, along 35with assorted summaries at the end. 36 37You can force verbose mode by passing "verbose=True" to testmod, or prohibit 38it by passing "verbose=False". In either of those cases, sys.argv is not 39examined by testmod. 40 41There are a variety of other ways to run doctests, including integration 42with the unittest framework, and support for running non-Python text 43files containing doctests. There are also many ways to override parts 44of doctest's default behaviors. See the Library Reference Manual for 45details. 46""" 47 48__docformat__ = 'reStructuredText en' 49 50__all__ = [ 51 # 0, Option Flags 52 'register_optionflag', 53 'DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1', 54 'DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE', 55 'NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE', 56 'ELLIPSIS', 57 'SKIP', 58 'IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL', 59 'COMPARISON_FLAGS', 60 'REPORT_UDIFF', 61 'REPORT_CDIFF', 62 'REPORT_NDIFF', 63 'REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE', 64 'REPORTING_FLAGS', 65 'FAIL_FAST', 66 # 1. Utility Functions 67 # 2. Example & DocTest 68 'Example', 69 'DocTest', 70 # 3. Doctest Parser 71 'DocTestParser', 72 # 4. Doctest Finder 73 'DocTestFinder', 74 # 5. Doctest Runner 75 'DocTestRunner', 76 'OutputChecker', 77 'DocTestFailure', 78 'UnexpectedException', 79 'DebugRunner', 80 # 6. Test Functions 81 'testmod', 82 'testfile', 83 'run_docstring_examples', 84 # 7. Unittest Support 85 'DocTestSuite', 86 'DocFileSuite', 87 'set_unittest_reportflags', 88 # 8. Debugging Support 89 'script_from_examples', 90 'testsource', 91 'debug_src', 92 'debug', 93] 94 95import __future__ 96import difflib 97import inspect 98import linecache 99import os 100import pdb 101import re 102import sys 103import traceback 104import unittest 105from io import StringIO 106from collections import namedtuple 107 108TestResults = namedtuple('TestResults', 'failed attempted') 109 110# There are 4 basic classes: 111# - Example: a <source, want> pair, plus an intra-docstring line number. 112# - DocTest: a collection of examples, parsed from a docstring, plus 113# info about where the docstring came from (name, filename, lineno). 114# - DocTestFinder: extracts DocTests from a given object's docstring and 115# its contained objects' docstrings. 116# - DocTestRunner: runs DocTest cases, and accumulates statistics. 117# 118# So the basic picture is: 119# 120# list of: 121# +------+ +---------+ +-------+ 122# |object| --DocTestFinder-> | DocTest | --DocTestRunner-> |results| 123# +------+ +---------+ +-------+ 124# | Example | 125# | ... | 126# | Example | 127# +---------+ 128 129# Option constants. 130 131OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME = {} 132def register_optionflag(name): 133 # Create a new flag unless `name` is already known. 134 return OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME.setdefault(name, 1 << len(OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME)) 135 136DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1') 137DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE') 138NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE = register_optionflag('NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE') 139ELLIPSIS = register_optionflag('ELLIPSIS') 140SKIP = register_optionflag('SKIP') 141IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL = register_optionflag('IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL') 142 143COMPARISON_FLAGS = (DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 | 144 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE | 145 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | 146 ELLIPSIS | 147 SKIP | 148 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL) 149 150REPORT_UDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_UDIFF') 151REPORT_CDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_CDIFF') 152REPORT_NDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_NDIFF') 153REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE = register_optionflag('REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE') 154FAIL_FAST = register_optionflag('FAIL_FAST') 155 156REPORTING_FLAGS = (REPORT_UDIFF | 157 REPORT_CDIFF | 158 REPORT_NDIFF | 159 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE | 160 FAIL_FAST) 161 162# Special string markers for use in `want` strings: 163BLANKLINE_MARKER = '<BLANKLINE>' 164ELLIPSIS_MARKER = '...' 165 166###################################################################### 167## Table of Contents 168###################################################################### 169# 1. Utility Functions 170# 2. Example & DocTest -- store test cases 171# 3. DocTest Parser -- extracts examples from strings 172# 4. DocTest Finder -- extracts test cases from objects 173# 5. DocTest Runner -- runs test cases 174# 6. Test Functions -- convenient wrappers for testing 175# 7. Unittest Support 176# 8. Debugging Support 177# 9. Example Usage 178 179###################################################################### 180## 1. Utility Functions 181###################################################################### 182 183def _extract_future_flags(globs): 184 """ 185 Return the compiler-flags associated with the future features that 186 have been imported into the given namespace (globs). 187 """ 188 flags = 0 189 for fname in __future__.all_feature_names: 190 feature = globs.get(fname, None) 191 if feature is getattr(__future__, fname): 192 flags |= feature.compiler_flag 193 return flags 194 195def _normalize_module(module, depth=2): 196 """ 197 Return the module specified by `module`. In particular: 198 - If `module` is a module, then return module. 199 - If `module` is a string, then import and return the 200 module with that name. 201 - If `module` is None, then return the calling module. 202 The calling module is assumed to be the module of 203 the stack frame at the given depth in the call stack. 204 """ 205 if inspect.ismodule(module): 206 return module 207 elif isinstance(module, str): 208 return __import__(module, globals(), locals(), ["*"]) 209 elif module is None: 210 return sys.modules[sys._getframe(depth).f_globals['__name__']] 211 else: 212 raise TypeError("Expected a module, string, or None") 213 214def _newline_convert(data): 215 # We have two cases to cover and we need to make sure we do 216 # them in the right order 217 for newline in ('\r\n', '\r'): 218 data = data.replace(newline, '\n') 219 return data 220 221def _load_testfile(filename, package, module_relative, encoding): 222 if module_relative: 223 package = _normalize_module(package, 3) 224 filename = _module_relative_path(package, filename) 225 if getattr(package, '__loader__', None) is not None: 226 if hasattr(package.__loader__, 'get_data'): 227 file_contents = package.__loader__.get_data(filename) 228 file_contents = file_contents.decode(encoding) 229 # get_data() opens files as 'rb', so one must do the equivalent 230 # conversion as universal newlines would do. 231 return _newline_convert(file_contents), filename 232 with open(filename, encoding=encoding) as f: 233 return f.read(), filename 234 235def _indent(s, indent=4): 236 """ 237 Add the given number of space characters to the beginning of 238 every non-blank line in `s`, and return the result. 239 """ 240 # This regexp matches the start of non-blank lines: 241 return re.sub('(?m)^(?!$)', indent*' ', s) 242 243def _exception_traceback(exc_info): 244 """ 245 Return a string containing a traceback message for the given 246 exc_info tuple (as returned by sys.exc_info()). 247 """ 248 # Get a traceback message. 249 excout = StringIO() 250 exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb = exc_info 251 traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb, file=excout) 252 return excout.getvalue() 253 254# Override some StringIO methods. 255class _SpoofOut(StringIO): 256 def getvalue(self): 257 result = StringIO.getvalue(self) 258 # If anything at all was written, make sure there's a trailing 259 # newline. There's no way for the expected output to indicate 260 # that a trailing newline is missing. 261 if result and not result.endswith("\n"): 262 result += "\n" 263 return result 264 265 def truncate(self, size=None): 266 self.seek(size) 267 StringIO.truncate(self) 268 269# Worst-case linear-time ellipsis matching. 270def _ellipsis_match(want, got): 271 """ 272 Essentially the only subtle case: 273 >>> _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa') 274 False 275 """ 276 if ELLIPSIS_MARKER not in want: 277 return want == got 278 279 # Find "the real" strings. 280 ws = want.split(ELLIPSIS_MARKER) 281 assert len(ws) >= 2 282 283 # Deal with exact matches possibly needed at one or both ends. 284 startpos, endpos = 0, len(got) 285 w = ws[0] 286 if w: # starts with exact match 287 if got.startswith(w): 288 startpos = len(w) 289 del ws[0] 290 else: 291 return False 292 w = ws[-1] 293 if w: # ends with exact match 294 if got.endswith(w): 295 endpos -= len(w) 296 del ws[-1] 297 else: 298 return False 299 300 if startpos > endpos: 301 # Exact end matches required more characters than we have, as in 302 # _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa') 303 return False 304 305 # For the rest, we only need to find the leftmost non-overlapping 306 # match for each piece. If there's no overall match that way alone, 307 # there's no overall match period. 308 for w in ws: 309 # w may be '' at times, if there are consecutive ellipses, or 310 # due to an ellipsis at the start or end of `want`. That's OK. 311 # Search for an empty string succeeds, and doesn't change startpos. 312 startpos = got.find(w, startpos, endpos) 313 if startpos < 0: 314 return False 315 startpos += len(w) 316 317 return True 318 319def _comment_line(line): 320 "Return a commented form of the given line" 321 line = line.rstrip() 322 if line: 323 return '# '+line 324 else: 325 return '#' 326 327def _strip_exception_details(msg): 328 # Support for IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL. 329 # Get rid of everything except the exception name; in particular, drop 330 # the possibly dotted module path (if any) and the exception message (if 331 # any). We assume that a colon is never part of a dotted name, or of an 332 # exception name. 333 # E.g., given 334 # "foo.bar.MyError: la di da" 335 # return "MyError" 336 # Or for "abc.def" or "abc.def:\n" return "def". 337 338 start, end = 0, len(msg) 339 # The exception name must appear on the first line. 340 i = msg.find("\n") 341 if i >= 0: 342 end = i 343 # retain up to the first colon (if any) 344 i = msg.find(':', 0, end) 345 if i >= 0: 346 end = i 347 # retain just the exception name 348 i = msg.rfind('.', 0, end) 349 if i >= 0: 350 start = i+1 351 return msg[start: end] 352 353class _OutputRedirectingPdb(pdb.Pdb): 354 """ 355 A specialized version of the python debugger that redirects stdout 356 to a given stream when interacting with the user. Stdout is *not* 357 redirected when traced code is executed. 358 """ 359 def __init__(self, out): 360 self.__out = out 361 self.__debugger_used = False 362 # do not play signal games in the pdb 363 pdb.Pdb.__init__(self, stdout=out, nosigint=True) 364 # still use input() to get user input 365 self.use_rawinput = 1 366 367 def set_trace(self, frame=None): 368 self.__debugger_used = True 369 if frame is None: 370 frame = sys._getframe().f_back 371 pdb.Pdb.set_trace(self, frame) 372 373 def set_continue(self): 374 # Calling set_continue unconditionally would break unit test 375 # coverage reporting, as Bdb.set_continue calls sys.settrace(None). 376 if self.__debugger_used: 377 pdb.Pdb.set_continue(self) 378 379 def trace_dispatch(self, *args): 380 # Redirect stdout to the given stream. 381 save_stdout = sys.stdout 382 sys.stdout = self.__out 383 # Call Pdb's trace dispatch method. 384 try: 385 return pdb.Pdb.trace_dispatch(self, *args) 386 finally: 387 sys.stdout = save_stdout 388 389# [XX] Normalize with respect to os.path.pardir? 390def _module_relative_path(module, test_path): 391 if not inspect.ismodule(module): 392 raise TypeError('Expected a module: %r' % module) 393 if test_path.startswith('/'): 394 raise ValueError('Module-relative files may not have absolute paths') 395 396 # Normalize the path. On Windows, replace "/" with "\". 397 test_path = os.path.join(*(test_path.split('/'))) 398 399 # Find the base directory for the path. 400 if hasattr(module, '__file__'): 401 # A normal module/package 402 basedir = os.path.split(module.__file__)[0] 403 elif module.__name__ == '__main__': 404 # An interactive session. 405 if len(sys.argv)>0 and sys.argv[0] != '': 406 basedir = os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[0] 407 else: 408 basedir = os.curdir 409 else: 410 if hasattr(module, '__path__'): 411 for directory in module.__path__: 412 fullpath = os.path.join(directory, test_path) 413 if os.path.exists(fullpath): 414 return fullpath 415 416 # A module w/o __file__ (this includes builtins) 417 raise ValueError("Can't resolve paths relative to the module " 418 "%r (it has no __file__)" 419 % module.__name__) 420 421 # Combine the base directory and the test path. 422 return os.path.join(basedir, test_path) 423 424###################################################################### 425## 2. Example & DocTest 426###################################################################### 427## - An "example" is a <source, want> pair, where "source" is a 428## fragment of source code, and "want" is the expected output for 429## "source." The Example class also includes information about 430## where the example was extracted from. 431## 432## - A "doctest" is a collection of examples, typically extracted from 433## a string (such as an object's docstring). The DocTest class also 434## includes information about where the string was extracted from. 435 436class Example: 437 """ 438 A single doctest example, consisting of source code and expected 439 output. `Example` defines the following attributes: 440 441 - source: A single Python statement, always ending with a newline. 442 The constructor adds a newline if needed. 443 444 - want: The expected output from running the source code (either 445 from stdout, or a traceback in case of exception). `want` ends 446 with a newline unless it's empty, in which case it's an empty 447 string. The constructor adds a newline if needed. 448 449 - exc_msg: The exception message generated by the example, if 450 the example is expected to generate an exception; or `None` if 451 it is not expected to generate an exception. This exception 452 message is compared against the return value of 453 `traceback.format_exception_only()`. `exc_msg` ends with a 454 newline unless it's `None`. The constructor adds a newline 455 if needed. 456 457 - lineno: The line number within the DocTest string containing 458 this Example where the Example begins. This line number is 459 zero-based, with respect to the beginning of the DocTest. 460 461 - indent: The example's indentation in the DocTest string. 462 I.e., the number of space characters that precede the 463 example's first prompt. 464 465 - options: A dictionary mapping from option flags to True or 466 False, which is used to override default options for this 467 example. Any option flags not contained in this dictionary 468 are left at their default value (as specified by the 469 DocTestRunner's optionflags). By default, no options are set. 470 """ 471 def __init__(self, source, want, exc_msg=None, lineno=0, indent=0, 472 options=None): 473 # Normalize inputs. 474 if not source.endswith('\n'): 475 source += '\n' 476 if want and not want.endswith('\n'): 477 want += '\n' 478 if exc_msg is not None and not exc_msg.endswith('\n'): 479 exc_msg += '\n' 480 # Store properties. 481 self.source = source 482 self.want = want 483 self.lineno = lineno 484 self.indent = indent 485 if options is None: options = {} 486 self.options = options 487 self.exc_msg = exc_msg 488 489 def __eq__(self, other): 490 if type(self) is not type(other): 491 return NotImplemented 492 493 return self.source == other.source and \ 494 self.want == other.want and \ 495 self.lineno == other.lineno and \ 496 self.indent == other.indent and \ 497 self.options == other.options and \ 498 self.exc_msg == other.exc_msg 499 500 def __hash__(self): 501 return hash((self.source, self.want, self.lineno, self.indent, 502 self.exc_msg)) 503 504class DocTest: 505 """ 506 A collection of doctest examples that should be run in a single 507 namespace. Each `DocTest` defines the following attributes: 508 509 - examples: the list of examples. 510 511 - globs: The namespace (aka globals) that the examples should 512 be run in. 513 514 - name: A name identifying the DocTest (typically, the name of 515 the object whose docstring this DocTest was extracted from). 516 517 - filename: The name of the file that this DocTest was extracted 518 from, or `None` if the filename is unknown. 519 520 - lineno: The line number within filename where this DocTest 521 begins, or `None` if the line number is unavailable. This 522 line number is zero-based, with respect to the beginning of 523 the file. 524 525 - docstring: The string that the examples were extracted from, 526 or `None` if the string is unavailable. 527 """ 528 def __init__(self, examples, globs, name, filename, lineno, docstring): 529 """ 530 Create a new DocTest containing the given examples. The 531 DocTest's globals are initialized with a copy of `globs`. 532 """ 533 assert not isinstance(examples, str), \ 534 "DocTest no longer accepts str; use DocTestParser instead" 535 self.examples = examples 536 self.docstring = docstring 537 self.globs = globs.copy() 538 self.name = name 539 self.filename = filename 540 self.lineno = lineno 541 542 def __repr__(self): 543 if len(self.examples) == 0: 544 examples = 'no examples' 545 elif len(self.examples) == 1: 546 examples = '1 example' 547 else: 548 examples = '%d examples' % len(self.examples) 549 return ('<%s %s from %s:%s (%s)>' % 550 (self.__class__.__name__, 551 self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, examples)) 552 553 def __eq__(self, other): 554 if type(self) is not type(other): 555 return NotImplemented 556 557 return self.examples == other.examples and \ 558 self.docstring == other.docstring and \ 559 self.globs == other.globs and \ 560 self.name == other.name and \ 561 self.filename == other.filename and \ 562 self.lineno == other.lineno 563 564 def __hash__(self): 565 return hash((self.docstring, self.name, self.filename, self.lineno)) 566 567 # This lets us sort tests by name: 568 def __lt__(self, other): 569 if not isinstance(other, DocTest): 570 return NotImplemented 571 return ((self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, id(self)) 572 < 573 (other.name, other.filename, other.lineno, id(other))) 574 575###################################################################### 576## 3. DocTestParser 577###################################################################### 578 579class DocTestParser: 580 """ 581 A class used to parse strings containing doctest examples. 582 """ 583 # This regular expression is used to find doctest examples in a 584 # string. It defines three groups: `source` is the source code 585 # (including leading indentation and prompts); `indent` is the 586 # indentation of the first (PS1) line of the source code; and 587 # `want` is the expected output (including leading indentation). 588 _EXAMPLE_RE = re.compile(r''' 589 # Source consists of a PS1 line followed by zero or more PS2 lines. 590 (?P<source> 591 (?:^(?P<indent> [ ]*) >>> .*) # PS1 line 592 (?:\n [ ]* \.\.\. .*)*) # PS2 lines 593 \n? 594 # Want consists of any non-blank lines that do not start with PS1. 595 (?P<want> (?:(?![ ]*$) # Not a blank line 596 (?![ ]*>>>) # Not a line starting with PS1 597 .+$\n? # But any other line 598 )*) 599 ''', re.MULTILINE | re.VERBOSE) 600 601 # A regular expression for handling `want` strings that contain 602 # expected exceptions. It divides `want` into three pieces: 603 # - the traceback header line (`hdr`) 604 # - the traceback stack (`stack`) 605 # - the exception message (`msg`), as generated by 606 # traceback.format_exception_only() 607 # `msg` may have multiple lines. We assume/require that the 608 # exception message is the first non-indented line starting with a word 609 # character following the traceback header line. 610 _EXCEPTION_RE = re.compile(r""" 611 # Grab the traceback header. Different versions of Python have 612 # said different things on the first traceback line. 613 ^(?P<hdr> Traceback\ \( 614 (?: most\ recent\ call\ last 615 | innermost\ last 616 ) \) : 617 ) 618 \s* $ # toss trailing whitespace on the header. 619 (?P<stack> .*?) # don't blink: absorb stuff until... 620 ^ (?P<msg> \w+ .*) # a line *starts* with alphanum. 621 """, re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL) 622 623 # A callable returning a true value iff its argument is a blank line 624 # or contains a single comment. 625 _IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT = re.compile(r'^[ ]*(#.*)?$').match 626 627 def parse(self, string, name='<string>'): 628 """ 629 Divide the given string into examples and intervening text, 630 and return them as a list of alternating Examples and strings. 631 Line numbers for the Examples are 0-based. The optional 632 argument `name` is a name identifying this string, and is only 633 used for error messages. 634 """ 635 string = string.expandtabs() 636 # If all lines begin with the same indentation, then strip it. 637 min_indent = self._min_indent(string) 638 if min_indent > 0: 639 string = '\n'.join([l[min_indent:] for l in string.split('\n')]) 640 641 output = [] 642 charno, lineno = 0, 0 643 # Find all doctest examples in the string: 644 for m in self._EXAMPLE_RE.finditer(string): 645 # Add the pre-example text to `output`. 646 output.append(string[charno:m.start()]) 647 # Update lineno (lines before this example) 648 lineno += string.count('\n', charno, m.start()) 649 # Extract info from the regexp match. 650 (source, options, want, exc_msg) = \ 651 self._parse_example(m, name, lineno) 652 # Create an Example, and add it to the list. 653 if not self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source): 654 output.append( Example(source, want, exc_msg, 655 lineno=lineno, 656 indent=min_indent+len(m.group('indent')), 657 options=options) ) 658 # Update lineno (lines inside this example) 659 lineno += string.count('\n', m.start(), m.end()) 660 # Update charno. 661 charno = m.end() 662 # Add any remaining post-example text to `output`. 663 output.append(string[charno:]) 664 return output 665 666 def get_doctest(self, string, globs, name, filename, lineno): 667 """ 668 Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and 669 collect them into a `DocTest` object. 670 671 `globs`, `name`, `filename`, and `lineno` are attributes for 672 the new `DocTest` object. See the documentation for `DocTest` 673 for more information. 674 """ 675 return DocTest(self.get_examples(string, name), globs, 676 name, filename, lineno, string) 677 678 def get_examples(self, string, name='<string>'): 679 """ 680 Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and return 681 them as a list of `Example` objects. Line numbers are 682 0-based, because it's most common in doctests that nothing 683 interesting appears on the same line as opening triple-quote, 684 and so the first interesting line is called \"line 1\" then. 685 686 The optional argument `name` is a name identifying this 687 string, and is only used for error messages. 688 """ 689 return [x for x in self.parse(string, name) 690 if isinstance(x, Example)] 691 692 def _parse_example(self, m, name, lineno): 693 """ 694 Given a regular expression match from `_EXAMPLE_RE` (`m`), 695 return a pair `(source, want)`, where `source` is the matched 696 example's source code (with prompts and indentation stripped); 697 and `want` is the example's expected output (with indentation 698 stripped). 699 700 `name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number 701 where the example starts; both are used for error messages. 702 """ 703 # Get the example's indentation level. 704 indent = len(m.group('indent')) 705 706 # Divide source into lines; check that they're properly 707 # indented; and then strip their indentation & prompts. 708 source_lines = m.group('source').split('\n') 709 self._check_prompt_blank(source_lines, indent, name, lineno) 710 self._check_prefix(source_lines[1:], ' '*indent + '.', name, lineno) 711 source = '\n'.join([sl[indent+4:] for sl in source_lines]) 712 713 # Divide want into lines; check that it's properly indented; and 714 # then strip the indentation. Spaces before the last newline should 715 # be preserved, so plain rstrip() isn't good enough. 716 want = m.group('want') 717 want_lines = want.split('\n') 718 if len(want_lines) > 1 and re.match(r' *$', want_lines[-1]): 719 del want_lines[-1] # forget final newline & spaces after it 720 self._check_prefix(want_lines, ' '*indent, name, 721 lineno + len(source_lines)) 722 want = '\n'.join([wl[indent:] for wl in want_lines]) 723 724 # If `want` contains a traceback message, then extract it. 725 m = self._EXCEPTION_RE.match(want) 726 if m: 727 exc_msg = m.group('msg') 728 else: 729 exc_msg = None 730 731 # Extract options from the source. 732 options = self._find_options(source, name, lineno) 733 734 return source, options, want, exc_msg 735 736 # This regular expression looks for option directives in the 737 # source code of an example. Option directives are comments 738 # starting with "doctest:". Warning: this may give false 739 # positives for string-literals that contain the string 740 # "#doctest:". Eliminating these false positives would require 741 # actually parsing the string; but we limit them by ignoring any 742 # line containing "#doctest:" that is *followed* by a quote mark. 743 _OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE = re.compile(r'#\s*doctest:\s*([^\n\'"]*)$', 744 re.MULTILINE) 745 746 def _find_options(self, source, name, lineno): 747 """ 748 Return a dictionary containing option overrides extracted from 749 option directives in the given source string. 750 751 `name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number 752 where the example starts; both are used for error messages. 753 """ 754 options = {} 755 # (note: with the current regexp, this will match at most once:) 756 for m in self._OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE.finditer(source): 757 option_strings = m.group(1).replace(',', ' ').split() 758 for option in option_strings: 759 if (option[0] not in '+-' or 760 option[1:] not in OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME): 761 raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s ' 762 'has an invalid option: %r' % 763 (lineno+1, name, option)) 764 flag = OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[option[1:]] 765 options[flag] = (option[0] == '+') 766 if options and self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source): 767 raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s has an option ' 768 'directive on a line with no example: %r' % 769 (lineno, name, source)) 770 return options 771 772 # This regular expression finds the indentation of every non-blank 773 # line in a string. 774 _INDENT_RE = re.compile(r'^([ ]*)(?=\S)', re.MULTILINE) 775 776 def _min_indent(self, s): 777 "Return the minimum indentation of any non-blank line in `s`" 778 indents = [len(indent) for indent in self._INDENT_RE.findall(s)] 779 if len(indents) > 0: 780 return min(indents) 781 else: 782 return 0 783 784 def _check_prompt_blank(self, lines, indent, name, lineno): 785 """ 786 Given the lines of a source string (including prompts and 787 leading indentation), check to make sure that every prompt is 788 followed by a space character. If any line is not followed by 789 a space character, then raise ValueError. 790 """ 791 for i, line in enumerate(lines): 792 if len(line) >= indent+4 and line[indent+3] != ' ': 793 raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s ' 794 'lacks blank after %s: %r' % 795 (lineno+i+1, name, 796 line[indent:indent+3], line)) 797 798 def _check_prefix(self, lines, prefix, name, lineno): 799 """ 800 Check that every line in the given list starts with the given 801 prefix; if any line does not, then raise a ValueError. 802 """ 803 for i, line in enumerate(lines): 804 if line and not line.startswith(prefix): 805 raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s has ' 806 'inconsistent leading whitespace: %r' % 807 (lineno+i+1, name, line)) 808 809 810###################################################################### 811## 4. DocTest Finder 812###################################################################### 813 814class DocTestFinder: 815 """ 816 A class used to extract the DocTests that are relevant to a given 817 object, from its docstring and the docstrings of its contained 818 objects. Doctests can currently be extracted from the following 819 object types: modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods, 820 classmethods, and properties. 821 """ 822 823 def __init__(self, verbose=False, parser=DocTestParser(), 824 recurse=True, exclude_empty=True): 825 """ 826 Create a new doctest finder. 827 828 The optional argument `parser` specifies a class or 829 function that should be used to create new DocTest objects (or 830 objects that implement the same interface as DocTest). The 831 signature for this factory function should match the signature 832 of the DocTest constructor. 833 834 If the optional argument `recurse` is false, then `find` will 835 only examine the given object, and not any contained objects. 836 837 If the optional argument `exclude_empty` is false, then `find` 838 will include tests for objects with empty docstrings. 839 """ 840 self._parser = parser 841 self._verbose = verbose 842 self._recurse = recurse 843 self._exclude_empty = exclude_empty 844 845 def find(self, obj, name=None, module=None, globs=None, extraglobs=None): 846 """ 847 Return a list of the DocTests that are defined by the given 848 object's docstring, or by any of its contained objects' 849 docstrings. 850 851 The optional parameter `module` is the module that contains 852 the given object. If the module is not specified or is None, then 853 the test finder will attempt to automatically determine the 854 correct module. The object's module is used: 855 856 - As a default namespace, if `globs` is not specified. 857 - To prevent the DocTestFinder from extracting DocTests 858 from objects that are imported from other modules. 859 - To find the name of the file containing the object. 860 - To help find the line number of the object within its 861 file. 862 863 Contained objects whose module does not match `module` are ignored. 864 865 If `module` is False, no attempt to find the module will be made. 866 This is obscure, of use mostly in tests: if `module` is False, or 867 is None but cannot be found automatically, then all objects are 868 considered to belong to the (non-existent) module, so all contained 869 objects will (recursively) be searched for doctests. 870 871 The globals for each DocTest is formed by combining `globs` 872 and `extraglobs` (bindings in `extraglobs` override bindings 873 in `globs`). A new copy of the globals dictionary is created 874 for each DocTest. If `globs` is not specified, then it 875 defaults to the module's `__dict__`, if specified, or {} 876 otherwise. If `extraglobs` is not specified, then it defaults 877 to {}. 878 879 """ 880 # If name was not specified, then extract it from the object. 881 if name is None: 882 name = getattr(obj, '__name__', None) 883 if name is None: 884 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: name must be given " 885 "when obj.__name__ doesn't exist: %r" % 886 (type(obj),)) 887 888 # Find the module that contains the given object (if obj is 889 # a module, then module=obj.). Note: this may fail, in which 890 # case module will be None. 891 if module is False: 892 module = None 893 elif module is None: 894 module = inspect.getmodule(obj) 895 896 # Read the module's source code. This is used by 897 # DocTestFinder._find_lineno to find the line number for a 898 # given object's docstring. 899 try: 900 file = inspect.getsourcefile(obj) 901 except TypeError: 902 source_lines = None 903 else: 904 if not file: 905 # Check to see if it's one of our special internal "files" 906 # (see __patched_linecache_getlines). 907 file = inspect.getfile(obj) 908 if not file[0]+file[-2:] == '<]>': file = None 909 if file is None: 910 source_lines = None 911 else: 912 if module is not None: 913 # Supply the module globals in case the module was 914 # originally loaded via a PEP 302 loader and 915 # file is not a valid filesystem path 916 source_lines = linecache.getlines(file, module.__dict__) 917 else: 918 # No access to a loader, so assume it's a normal 919 # filesystem path 920 source_lines = linecache.getlines(file) 921 if not source_lines: 922 source_lines = None 923 924 # Initialize globals, and merge in extraglobs. 925 if globs is None: 926 if module is None: 927 globs = {} 928 else: 929 globs = module.__dict__.copy() 930 else: 931 globs = globs.copy() 932 if extraglobs is not None: 933 globs.update(extraglobs) 934 if '__name__' not in globs: 935 globs['__name__'] = '__main__' # provide a default module name 936 937 # Recursively explore `obj`, extracting DocTests. 938 tests = [] 939 self._find(tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, {}) 940 # Sort the tests by alpha order of names, for consistency in 941 # verbose-mode output. This was a feature of doctest in Pythons 942 # <= 2.3 that got lost by accident in 2.4. It was repaired in 943 # 2.4.4 and 2.5. 944 tests.sort() 945 return tests 946 947 def _from_module(self, module, object): 948 """ 949 Return true if the given object is defined in the given 950 module. 951 """ 952 if module is None: 953 return True 954 elif inspect.getmodule(object) is not None: 955 return module is inspect.getmodule(object) 956 elif inspect.isfunction(object): 957 return module.__dict__ is object.__globals__ 958 elif inspect.ismethoddescriptor(object): 959 if hasattr(object, '__objclass__'): 960 obj_mod = object.__objclass__.__module__ 961 elif hasattr(object, '__module__'): 962 obj_mod = object.__module__ 963 else: 964 return True # [XX] no easy way to tell otherwise 965 return module.__name__ == obj_mod 966 elif inspect.isclass(object): 967 return module.__name__ == object.__module__ 968 elif hasattr(object, '__module__'): 969 return module.__name__ == object.__module__ 970 elif isinstance(object, property): 971 return True # [XX] no way not be sure. 972 else: 973 raise ValueError("object must be a class or function") 974 975 def _find(self, tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, seen): 976 """ 977 Find tests for the given object and any contained objects, and 978 add them to `tests`. 979 """ 980 if self._verbose: 981 print('Finding tests in %s' % name) 982 983 # If we've already processed this object, then ignore it. 984 if id(obj) in seen: 985 return 986 seen[id(obj)] = 1 987 988 # Find a test for this object, and add it to the list of tests. 989 test = self._get_test(obj, name, module, globs, source_lines) 990 if test is not None: 991 tests.append(test) 992 993 # Look for tests in a module's contained objects. 994 if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse: 995 for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): 996 valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname) 997 # Recurse to functions & classes. 998 if ((inspect.isroutine(inspect.unwrap(val)) 999 or inspect.isclass(val)) and 1000 self._from_module(module, val)): 1001 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, 1002 globs, seen) 1003 1004 # Look for tests in a module's __test__ dictionary. 1005 if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse: 1006 for valname, val in getattr(obj, '__test__', {}).items(): 1007 if not isinstance(valname, str): 1008 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ keys " 1009 "must be strings: %r" % 1010 (type(valname),)) 1011 if not (inspect.isroutine(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or 1012 inspect.ismodule(val) or isinstance(val, str)): 1013 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ values " 1014 "must be strings, functions, methods, " 1015 "classes, or modules: %r" % 1016 (type(val),)) 1017 valname = '%s.__test__.%s' % (name, valname) 1018 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, 1019 globs, seen) 1020 1021 # Look for tests in a class's contained objects. 1022 if inspect.isclass(obj) and self._recurse: 1023 for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): 1024 # Special handling for staticmethod/classmethod. 1025 if isinstance(val, staticmethod): 1026 val = getattr(obj, valname) 1027 if isinstance(val, classmethod): 1028 val = getattr(obj, valname).__func__ 1029 1030 # Recurse to methods, properties, and nested classes. 1031 if ((inspect.isroutine(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or 1032 isinstance(val, property)) and 1033 self._from_module(module, val)): 1034 valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname) 1035 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, 1036 globs, seen) 1037 1038 def _get_test(self, obj, name, module, globs, source_lines): 1039 """ 1040 Return a DocTest for the given object, if it defines a docstring; 1041 otherwise, return None. 1042 """ 1043 # Extract the object's docstring. If it doesn't have one, 1044 # then return None (no test for this object). 1045 if isinstance(obj, str): 1046 docstring = obj 1047 else: 1048 try: 1049 if obj.__doc__ is None: 1050 docstring = '' 1051 else: 1052 docstring = obj.__doc__ 1053 if not isinstance(docstring, str): 1054 docstring = str(docstring) 1055 except (TypeError, AttributeError): 1056 docstring = '' 1057 1058 # Find the docstring's location in the file. 1059 lineno = self._find_lineno(obj, source_lines) 1060 1061 # Don't bother if the docstring is empty. 1062 if self._exclude_empty and not docstring: 1063 return None 1064 1065 # Return a DocTest for this object. 1066 if module is None: 1067 filename = None 1068 else: 1069 # __file__ can be None for namespace packages. 1070 filename = getattr(module, '__file__', None) or module.__name__ 1071 if filename[-4:] == ".pyc": 1072 filename = filename[:-1] 1073 return self._parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, name, 1074 filename, lineno) 1075 1076 def _find_lineno(self, obj, source_lines): 1077 """ 1078 Return a line number of the given object's docstring. Note: 1079 this method assumes that the object has a docstring. 1080 """ 1081 lineno = None 1082 1083 # Find the line number for modules. 1084 if inspect.ismodule(obj): 1085 lineno = 0 1086 1087 # Find the line number for classes. 1088 # Note: this could be fooled if a class is defined multiple 1089 # times in a single file. 1090 if inspect.isclass(obj): 1091 if source_lines is None: 1092 return None 1093 pat = re.compile(r'^\s*class\s*%s\b' % 1094 getattr(obj, '__name__', '-')) 1095 for i, line in enumerate(source_lines): 1096 if pat.match(line): 1097 lineno = i 1098 break 1099 1100 # Find the line number for functions & methods. 1101 if inspect.ismethod(obj): obj = obj.__func__ 1102 if inspect.isfunction(obj): obj = obj.__code__ 1103 if inspect.istraceback(obj): obj = obj.tb_frame 1104 if inspect.isframe(obj): obj = obj.f_code 1105 if inspect.iscode(obj): 1106 lineno = getattr(obj, 'co_firstlineno', None)-1 1107 1108 # Find the line number where the docstring starts. Assume 1109 # that it's the first line that begins with a quote mark. 1110 # Note: this could be fooled by a multiline function 1111 # signature, where a continuation line begins with a quote 1112 # mark. 1113 if lineno is not None: 1114 if source_lines is None: 1115 return lineno+1 1116 pat = re.compile(r'(^|.*:)\s*\w*("|\')') 1117 for lineno in range(lineno, len(source_lines)): 1118 if pat.match(source_lines[lineno]): 1119 return lineno 1120 1121 # We couldn't find the line number. 1122 return None 1123 1124###################################################################### 1125## 5. DocTest Runner 1126###################################################################### 1127 1128class DocTestRunner: 1129 """ 1130 A class used to run DocTest test cases, and accumulate statistics. 1131 The `run` method is used to process a single DocTest case. It 1132 returns a tuple `(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of test cases 1133 tried, and `f` is the number of test cases that failed. 1134 1135 >>> tests = DocTestFinder().find(_TestClass) 1136 >>> runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=False) 1137 >>> tests.sort(key = lambda test: test.name) 1138 >>> for test in tests: 1139 ... print(test.name, '->', runner.run(test)) 1140 _TestClass -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2) 1141 _TestClass.__init__ -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2) 1142 _TestClass.get -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2) 1143 _TestClass.square -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1) 1144 1145 The `summarize` method prints a summary of all the test cases that 1146 have been run by the runner, and returns an aggregated `(f, t)` 1147 tuple: 1148 1149 >>> runner.summarize(verbose=1) 1150 4 items passed all tests: 1151 2 tests in _TestClass 1152 2 tests in _TestClass.__init__ 1153 2 tests in _TestClass.get 1154 1 tests in _TestClass.square 1155 7 tests in 4 items. 1156 7 passed and 0 failed. 1157 Test passed. 1158 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=7) 1159 1160 The aggregated number of tried examples and failed examples is 1161 also available via the `tries` and `failures` attributes: 1162 1163 >>> runner.tries 1164 7 1165 >>> runner.failures 1166 0 1167 1168 The comparison between expected outputs and actual outputs is done 1169 by an `OutputChecker`. This comparison may be customized with a 1170 number of option flags; see the documentation for `testmod` for 1171 more information. If the option flags are insufficient, then the 1172 comparison may also be customized by passing a subclass of 1173 `OutputChecker` to the constructor. 1174 1175 The test runner's display output can be controlled in two ways. 1176 First, an output function (`out) can be passed to 1177 `TestRunner.run`; this function will be called with strings that 1178 should be displayed. It defaults to `sys.stdout.write`. If 1179 capturing the output is not sufficient, then the display output 1180 can be also customized by subclassing DocTestRunner, and 1181 overriding the methods `report_start`, `report_success`, 1182 `report_unexpected_exception`, and `report_failure`. 1183 """ 1184 # This divider string is used to separate failure messages, and to 1185 # separate sections of the summary. 1186 DIVIDER = "*" * 70 1187 1188 def __init__(self, checker=None, verbose=None, optionflags=0): 1189 """ 1190 Create a new test runner. 1191 1192 Optional keyword arg `checker` is the `OutputChecker` that 1193 should be used to compare the expected outputs and actual 1194 outputs of doctest examples. 1195 1196 Optional keyword arg 'verbose' prints lots of stuff if true, 1197 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff '-v' is in 1198 sys.argv. 1199 1200 Optional argument `optionflags` can be used to control how the 1201 test runner compares expected output to actual output, and how 1202 it displays failures. See the documentation for `testmod` for 1203 more information. 1204 """ 1205 self._checker = checker or OutputChecker() 1206 if verbose is None: 1207 verbose = '-v' in sys.argv 1208 self._verbose = verbose 1209 self.optionflags = optionflags 1210 self.original_optionflags = optionflags 1211 1212 # Keep track of the examples we've run. 1213 self.tries = 0 1214 self.failures = 0 1215 self._name2ft = {} 1216 1217 # Create a fake output target for capturing doctest output. 1218 self._fakeout = _SpoofOut() 1219 1220 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1221 # Reporting methods 1222 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1223 1224 def report_start(self, out, test, example): 1225 """ 1226 Report that the test runner is about to process the given 1227 example. (Only displays a message if verbose=True) 1228 """ 1229 if self._verbose: 1230 if example.want: 1231 out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) + 1232 'Expecting:\n' + _indent(example.want)) 1233 else: 1234 out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) + 1235 'Expecting nothing\n') 1236 1237 def report_success(self, out, test, example, got): 1238 """ 1239 Report that the given example ran successfully. (Only 1240 displays a message if verbose=True) 1241 """ 1242 if self._verbose: 1243 out("ok\n") 1244 1245 def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got): 1246 """ 1247 Report that the given example failed. 1248 """ 1249 out(self._failure_header(test, example) + 1250 self._checker.output_difference(example, got, self.optionflags)) 1251 1252 def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info): 1253 """ 1254 Report that the given example raised an unexpected exception. 1255 """ 1256 out(self._failure_header(test, example) + 1257 'Exception raised:\n' + _indent(_exception_traceback(exc_info))) 1258 1259 def _failure_header(self, test, example): 1260 out = [self.DIVIDER] 1261 if test.filename: 1262 if test.lineno is not None and example.lineno is not None: 1263 lineno = test.lineno + example.lineno + 1 1264 else: 1265 lineno = '?' 1266 out.append('File "%s", line %s, in %s' % 1267 (test.filename, lineno, test.name)) 1268 else: 1269 out.append('Line %s, in %s' % (example.lineno+1, test.name)) 1270 out.append('Failed example:') 1271 source = example.source 1272 out.append(_indent(source)) 1273 return '\n'.join(out) 1274 1275 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1276 # DocTest Running 1277 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1278 1279 def __run(self, test, compileflags, out): 1280 """ 1281 Run the examples in `test`. Write the outcome of each example 1282 with one of the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods, using the 1283 writer function `out`. `compileflags` is the set of compiler 1284 flags that should be used to execute examples. Return a tuple 1285 `(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of examples tried, and `f` 1286 is the number of examples that failed. The examples are run 1287 in the namespace `test.globs`. 1288 """ 1289 # Keep track of the number of failures and tries. 1290 failures = tries = 0 1291 1292 # Save the option flags (since option directives can be used 1293 # to modify them). 1294 original_optionflags = self.optionflags 1295 1296 SUCCESS, FAILURE, BOOM = range(3) # `outcome` state 1297 1298 check = self._checker.check_output 1299 1300 # Process each example. 1301 for examplenum, example in enumerate(test.examples): 1302 1303 # If REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE is set, then suppress 1304 # reporting after the first failure. 1305 quiet = (self.optionflags & REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE and 1306 failures > 0) 1307 1308 # Merge in the example's options. 1309 self.optionflags = original_optionflags 1310 if example.options: 1311 for (optionflag, val) in example.options.items(): 1312 if val: 1313 self.optionflags |= optionflag 1314 else: 1315 self.optionflags &= ~optionflag 1316 1317 # If 'SKIP' is set, then skip this example. 1318 if self.optionflags & SKIP: 1319 continue 1320 1321 # Record that we started this example. 1322 tries += 1 1323 if not quiet: 1324 self.report_start(out, test, example) 1325 1326 # Use a special filename for compile(), so we can retrieve 1327 # the source code during interactive debugging (see 1328 # __patched_linecache_getlines). 1329 filename = '<doctest %s[%d]>' % (test.name, examplenum) 1330 1331 # Run the example in the given context (globs), and record 1332 # any exception that gets raised. (But don't intercept 1333 # keyboard interrupts.) 1334 try: 1335 # Don't blink! This is where the user's code gets run. 1336 exec(compile(example.source, filename, "single", 1337 compileflags, True), test.globs) 1338 self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ==== 1339 exception = None 1340 except KeyboardInterrupt: 1341 raise 1342 except: 1343 exception = sys.exc_info() 1344 self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ==== 1345 1346 got = self._fakeout.getvalue() # the actual output 1347 self._fakeout.truncate(0) 1348 outcome = FAILURE # guilty until proved innocent or insane 1349 1350 # If the example executed without raising any exceptions, 1351 # verify its output. 1352 if exception is None: 1353 if check(example.want, got, self.optionflags): 1354 outcome = SUCCESS 1355 1356 # The example raised an exception: check if it was expected. 1357 else: 1358 exc_msg = traceback.format_exception_only(*exception[:2])[-1] 1359 if not quiet: 1360 got += _exception_traceback(exception) 1361 1362 # If `example.exc_msg` is None, then we weren't expecting 1363 # an exception. 1364 if example.exc_msg is None: 1365 outcome = BOOM 1366 1367 # We expected an exception: see whether it matches. 1368 elif check(example.exc_msg, exc_msg, self.optionflags): 1369 outcome = SUCCESS 1370 1371 # Another chance if they didn't care about the detail. 1372 elif self.optionflags & IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL: 1373 if check(_strip_exception_details(example.exc_msg), 1374 _strip_exception_details(exc_msg), 1375 self.optionflags): 1376 outcome = SUCCESS 1377 1378 # Report the outcome. 1379 if outcome is SUCCESS: 1380 if not quiet: 1381 self.report_success(out, test, example, got) 1382 elif outcome is FAILURE: 1383 if not quiet: 1384 self.report_failure(out, test, example, got) 1385 failures += 1 1386 elif outcome is BOOM: 1387 if not quiet: 1388 self.report_unexpected_exception(out, test, example, 1389 exception) 1390 failures += 1 1391 else: 1392 assert False, ("unknown outcome", outcome) 1393 1394 if failures and self.optionflags & FAIL_FAST: 1395 break 1396 1397 # Restore the option flags (in case they were modified) 1398 self.optionflags = original_optionflags 1399 1400 # Record and return the number of failures and tries. 1401 self.__record_outcome(test, failures, tries) 1402 return TestResults(failures, tries) 1403 1404 def __record_outcome(self, test, f, t): 1405 """ 1406 Record the fact that the given DocTest (`test`) generated `f` 1407 failures out of `t` tried examples. 1408 """ 1409 f2, t2 = self._name2ft.get(test.name, (0,0)) 1410 self._name2ft[test.name] = (f+f2, t+t2) 1411 self.failures += f 1412 self.tries += t 1413 1414 __LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE = re.compile(r'<doctest ' 1415 r'(?P<name>.+)' 1416 r'\[(?P<examplenum>\d+)\]>$') 1417 def __patched_linecache_getlines(self, filename, module_globals=None): 1418 m = self.__LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE.match(filename) 1419 if m and m.group('name') == self.test.name: 1420 example = self.test.examples[int(m.group('examplenum'))] 1421 return example.source.splitlines(keepends=True) 1422 else: 1423 return self.save_linecache_getlines(filename, module_globals) 1424 1425 def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True): 1426 """ 1427 Run the examples in `test`, and display the results using the 1428 writer function `out`. 1429 1430 The examples are run in the namespace `test.globs`. If 1431 `clear_globs` is true (the default), then this namespace will 1432 be cleared after the test runs, to help with garbage 1433 collection. If you would like to examine the namespace after 1434 the test completes, then use `clear_globs=False`. 1435 1436 `compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by 1437 the Python compiler when running the examples. If not 1438 specified, then it will default to the set of future-import 1439 flags that apply to `globs`. 1440 1441 The output of each example is checked using 1442 `DocTestRunner.check_output`, and the results are formatted by 1443 the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods. 1444 """ 1445 self.test = test 1446 1447 if compileflags is None: 1448 compileflags = _extract_future_flags(test.globs) 1449 1450 save_stdout = sys.stdout 1451 if out is None: 1452 encoding = save_stdout.encoding 1453 if encoding is None or encoding.lower() == 'utf-8': 1454 out = save_stdout.write 1455 else: 1456 # Use backslashreplace error handling on write 1457 def out(s): 1458 s = str(s.encode(encoding, 'backslashreplace'), encoding) 1459 save_stdout.write(s) 1460 sys.stdout = self._fakeout 1461 1462 # Patch pdb.set_trace to restore sys.stdout during interactive 1463 # debugging (so it's not still redirected to self._fakeout). 1464 # Note that the interactive output will go to *our* 1465 # save_stdout, even if that's not the real sys.stdout; this 1466 # allows us to write test cases for the set_trace behavior. 1467 save_trace = sys.gettrace() 1468 save_set_trace = pdb.set_trace 1469 self.debugger = _OutputRedirectingPdb(save_stdout) 1470 self.debugger.reset() 1471 pdb.set_trace = self.debugger.set_trace 1472 1473 # Patch linecache.getlines, so we can see the example's source 1474 # when we're inside the debugger. 1475 self.save_linecache_getlines = linecache.getlines 1476 linecache.getlines = self.__patched_linecache_getlines 1477 1478 # Make sure sys.displayhook just prints the value to stdout 1479 save_displayhook = sys.displayhook 1480 sys.displayhook = sys.__displayhook__ 1481 1482 try: 1483 return self.__run(test, compileflags, out) 1484 finally: 1485 sys.stdout = save_stdout 1486 pdb.set_trace = save_set_trace 1487 sys.settrace(save_trace) 1488 linecache.getlines = self.save_linecache_getlines 1489 sys.displayhook = save_displayhook 1490 if clear_globs: 1491 test.globs.clear() 1492 import builtins 1493 builtins._ = None 1494 1495 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1496 # Summarization 1497 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1498 def summarize(self, verbose=None): 1499 """ 1500 Print a summary of all the test cases that have been run by 1501 this DocTestRunner, and return a tuple `(f, t)`, where `f` is 1502 the total number of failed examples, and `t` is the total 1503 number of tried examples. 1504 1505 The optional `verbose` argument controls how detailed the 1506 summary is. If the verbosity is not specified, then the 1507 DocTestRunner's verbosity is used. 1508 """ 1509 if verbose is None: 1510 verbose = self._verbose 1511 notests = [] 1512 passed = [] 1513 failed = [] 1514 totalt = totalf = 0 1515 for x in self._name2ft.items(): 1516 name, (f, t) = x 1517 assert f <= t 1518 totalt += t 1519 totalf += f 1520 if t == 0: 1521 notests.append(name) 1522 elif f == 0: 1523 passed.append( (name, t) ) 1524 else: 1525 failed.append(x) 1526 if verbose: 1527 if notests: 1528 print(len(notests), "items had no tests:") 1529 notests.sort() 1530 for thing in notests: 1531 print(" ", thing) 1532 if passed: 1533 print(len(passed), "items passed all tests:") 1534 passed.sort() 1535 for thing, count in passed: 1536 print(" %3d tests in %s" % (count, thing)) 1537 if failed: 1538 print(self.DIVIDER) 1539 print(len(failed), "items had failures:") 1540 failed.sort() 1541 for thing, (f, t) in failed: 1542 print(" %3d of %3d in %s" % (f, t, thing)) 1543 if verbose: 1544 print(totalt, "tests in", len(self._name2ft), "items.") 1545 print(totalt - totalf, "passed and", totalf, "failed.") 1546 if totalf: 1547 print("***Test Failed***", totalf, "failures.") 1548 elif verbose: 1549 print("Test passed.") 1550 return TestResults(totalf, totalt) 1551 1552 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1553 # Backward compatibility cruft to maintain doctest.master. 1554 #///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// 1555 def merge(self, other): 1556 d = self._name2ft 1557 for name, (f, t) in other._name2ft.items(): 1558 if name in d: 1559 # Don't print here by default, since doing 1560 # so breaks some of the buildbots 1561 #print("*** DocTestRunner.merge: '" + name + "' in both" \ 1562 # " testers; summing outcomes.") 1563 f2, t2 = d[name] 1564 f = f + f2 1565 t = t + t2 1566 d[name] = f, t 1567 1568class OutputChecker: 1569 """ 1570 A class used to check the whether the actual output from a doctest 1571 example matches the expected output. `OutputChecker` defines two 1572 methods: `check_output`, which compares a given pair of outputs, 1573 and returns true if they match; and `output_difference`, which 1574 returns a string describing the differences between two outputs. 1575 """ 1576 def _toAscii(self, s): 1577 """ 1578 Convert string to hex-escaped ASCII string. 1579 """ 1580 return str(s.encode('ASCII', 'backslashreplace'), "ASCII") 1581 1582 def check_output(self, want, got, optionflags): 1583 """ 1584 Return True iff the actual output from an example (`got`) 1585 matches the expected output (`want`). These strings are 1586 always considered to match if they are identical; but 1587 depending on what option flags the test runner is using, 1588 several non-exact match types are also possible. See the 1589 documentation for `TestRunner` for more information about 1590 option flags. 1591 """ 1592 1593 # If `want` contains hex-escaped character such as "\u1234", 1594 # then `want` is a string of six characters(e.g. [\,u,1,2,3,4]). 1595 # On the other hand, `got` could be another sequence of 1596 # characters such as [\u1234], so `want` and `got` should 1597 # be folded to hex-escaped ASCII string to compare. 1598 got = self._toAscii(got) 1599 want = self._toAscii(want) 1600 1601 # Handle the common case first, for efficiency: 1602 # if they're string-identical, always return true. 1603 if got == want: 1604 return True 1605 1606 # The values True and False replaced 1 and 0 as the return 1607 # value for boolean comparisons in Python 2.3. 1608 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1): 1609 if (got,want) == ("True\n", "1\n"): 1610 return True 1611 if (got,want) == ("False\n", "0\n"): 1612 return True 1613 1614 # <BLANKLINE> can be used as a special sequence to signify a 1615 # blank line, unless the DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag is used. 1616 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE): 1617 # Replace <BLANKLINE> in want with a blank line. 1618 want = re.sub(r'(?m)^%s\s*?$' % re.escape(BLANKLINE_MARKER), 1619 '', want) 1620 # If a line in got contains only spaces, then remove the 1621 # spaces. 1622 got = re.sub(r'(?m)^[^\S\n]+$', '', got) 1623 if got == want: 1624 return True 1625 1626 # This flag causes doctest to ignore any differences in the 1627 # contents of whitespace strings. Note that this can be used 1628 # in conjunction with the ELLIPSIS flag. 1629 if optionflags & NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE: 1630 got = ' '.join(got.split()) 1631 want = ' '.join(want.split()) 1632 if got == want: 1633 return True 1634 1635 # The ELLIPSIS flag says to let the sequence "..." in `want` 1636 # match any substring in `got`. 1637 if optionflags & ELLIPSIS: 1638 if _ellipsis_match(want, got): 1639 return True 1640 1641 # We didn't find any match; return false. 1642 return False 1643 1644 # Should we do a fancy diff? 1645 def _do_a_fancy_diff(self, want, got, optionflags): 1646 # Not unless they asked for a fancy diff. 1647 if not optionflags & (REPORT_UDIFF | 1648 REPORT_CDIFF | 1649 REPORT_NDIFF): 1650 return False 1651 1652 # If expected output uses ellipsis, a meaningful fancy diff is 1653 # too hard ... or maybe not. In two real-life failures Tim saw, 1654 # a diff was a major help anyway, so this is commented out. 1655 # [todo] _ellipsis_match() knows which pieces do and don't match, 1656 # and could be the basis for a kick-ass diff in this case. 1657 ##if optionflags & ELLIPSIS and ELLIPSIS_MARKER in want: 1658 ## return False 1659 1660 # ndiff does intraline difference marking, so can be useful even 1661 # for 1-line differences. 1662 if optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF: 1663 return True 1664 1665 # The other diff types need at least a few lines to be helpful. 1666 return want.count('\n') > 2 and got.count('\n') > 2 1667 1668 def output_difference(self, example, got, optionflags): 1669 """ 1670 Return a string describing the differences between the 1671 expected output for a given example (`example`) and the actual 1672 output (`got`). `optionflags` is the set of option flags used 1673 to compare `want` and `got`. 1674 """ 1675 want = example.want 1676 # If <BLANKLINE>s are being used, then replace blank lines 1677 # with <BLANKLINE> in the actual output string. 1678 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE): 1679 got = re.sub('(?m)^[ ]*(?=\n)', BLANKLINE_MARKER, got) 1680 1681 # Check if we should use diff. 1682 if self._do_a_fancy_diff(want, got, optionflags): 1683 # Split want & got into lines. 1684 want_lines = want.splitlines(keepends=True) 1685 got_lines = got.splitlines(keepends=True) 1686 # Use difflib to find their differences. 1687 if optionflags & REPORT_UDIFF: 1688 diff = difflib.unified_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2) 1689 diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header 1690 kind = 'unified diff with -expected +actual' 1691 elif optionflags & REPORT_CDIFF: 1692 diff = difflib.context_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2) 1693 diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header 1694 kind = 'context diff with expected followed by actual' 1695 elif optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF: 1696 engine = difflib.Differ(charjunk=difflib.IS_CHARACTER_JUNK) 1697 diff = list(engine.compare(want_lines, got_lines)) 1698 kind = 'ndiff with -expected +actual' 1699 else: 1700 assert 0, 'Bad diff option' 1701 return 'Differences (%s):\n' % kind + _indent(''.join(diff)) 1702 1703 # If we're not using diff, then simply list the expected 1704 # output followed by the actual output. 1705 if want and got: 1706 return 'Expected:\n%sGot:\n%s' % (_indent(want), _indent(got)) 1707 elif want: 1708 return 'Expected:\n%sGot nothing\n' % _indent(want) 1709 elif got: 1710 return 'Expected nothing\nGot:\n%s' % _indent(got) 1711 else: 1712 return 'Expected nothing\nGot nothing\n' 1713 1714class DocTestFailure(Exception): 1715 """A DocTest example has failed in debugging mode. 1716 1717 The exception instance has variables: 1718 1719 - test: the DocTest object being run 1720 1721 - example: the Example object that failed 1722 1723 - got: the actual output 1724 """ 1725 def __init__(self, test, example, got): 1726 self.test = test 1727 self.example = example 1728 self.got = got 1729 1730 def __str__(self): 1731 return str(self.test) 1732 1733class UnexpectedException(Exception): 1734 """A DocTest example has encountered an unexpected exception 1735 1736 The exception instance has variables: 1737 1738 - test: the DocTest object being run 1739 1740 - example: the Example object that failed 1741 1742 - exc_info: the exception info 1743 """ 1744 def __init__(self, test, example, exc_info): 1745 self.test = test 1746 self.example = example 1747 self.exc_info = exc_info 1748 1749 def __str__(self): 1750 return str(self.test) 1751 1752class DebugRunner(DocTestRunner): 1753 r"""Run doc tests but raise an exception as soon as there is a failure. 1754 1755 If an unexpected exception occurs, an UnexpectedException is raised. 1756 It contains the test, the example, and the original exception: 1757 1758 >>> runner = DebugRunner(verbose=False) 1759 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42', 1760 ... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 1761 >>> try: 1762 ... runner.run(test) 1763 ... except UnexpectedException as f: 1764 ... failure = f 1765 1766 >>> failure.test is test 1767 True 1768 1769 >>> failure.example.want 1770 '42\n' 1771 1772 >>> exc_info = failure.exc_info 1773 >>> raise exc_info[1] # Already has the traceback 1774 Traceback (most recent call last): 1775 ... 1776 KeyError 1777 1778 We wrap the original exception to give the calling application 1779 access to the test and example information. 1780 1781 If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised: 1782 1783 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' 1784 ... >>> x = 1 1785 ... >>> x 1786 ... 2 1787 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 1788 1789 >>> try: 1790 ... runner.run(test) 1791 ... except DocTestFailure as f: 1792 ... failure = f 1793 1794 DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test: 1795 1796 >>> failure.test is test 1797 True 1798 1799 As well as to the example: 1800 1801 >>> failure.example.want 1802 '2\n' 1803 1804 and the actual output: 1805 1806 >>> failure.got 1807 '1\n' 1808 1809 If a failure or error occurs, the globals are left intact: 1810 1811 >>> del test.globs['__builtins__'] 1812 >>> test.globs 1813 {'x': 1} 1814 1815 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' 1816 ... >>> x = 2 1817 ... >>> raise KeyError 1818 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 1819 1820 >>> runner.run(test) 1821 Traceback (most recent call last): 1822 ... 1823 doctest.UnexpectedException: <DocTest foo from foo.py:0 (2 examples)> 1824 1825 >>> del test.globs['__builtins__'] 1826 >>> test.globs 1827 {'x': 2} 1828 1829 But the globals are cleared if there is no error: 1830 1831 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' 1832 ... >>> x = 2 1833 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 1834 1835 >>> runner.run(test) 1836 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1) 1837 1838 >>> test.globs 1839 {} 1840 1841 """ 1842 1843 def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True): 1844 r = DocTestRunner.run(self, test, compileflags, out, False) 1845 if clear_globs: 1846 test.globs.clear() 1847 return r 1848 1849 def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info): 1850 raise UnexpectedException(test, example, exc_info) 1851 1852 def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got): 1853 raise DocTestFailure(test, example, got) 1854 1855###################################################################### 1856## 6. Test Functions 1857###################################################################### 1858# These should be backwards compatible. 1859 1860# For backward compatibility, a global instance of a DocTestRunner 1861# class, updated by testmod. 1862master = None 1863 1864def testmod(m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None, 1865 report=True, optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, 1866 raise_on_error=False, exclude_empty=False): 1867 """m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, 1868 optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, 1869 exclude_empty=False 1870 1871 Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable 1872 from module m (or the current module if m is not supplied), starting 1873 with m.__doc__. 1874 1875 Also test examples reachable from dict m.__test__ if it exists and is 1876 not None. m.__test__ maps names to functions, classes and strings; 1877 function and class docstrings are tested even if the name is private; 1878 strings are tested directly, as if they were docstrings. 1879 1880 Return (#failures, #tests). 1881 1882 See help(doctest) for an overview. 1883 1884 Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the module; by default 1885 use m.__name__. 1886 1887 Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals 1888 when executing examples; by default, use m.__dict__. A copy of this 1889 dict is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's 1890 examples start with a clean slate. 1891 1892 Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be 1893 merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By 1894 default, no extra globals are used. This is new in 2.4. 1895 1896 Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints 1897 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv. 1898 1899 Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true, 1900 else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is 1901 detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed). 1902 1903 Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants, 1904 and defaults to 0. This is new in 2.3. Possible values (see the 1905 docs for details): 1906 1907 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 1908 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE 1909 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE 1910 ELLIPSIS 1911 SKIP 1912 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL 1913 REPORT_UDIFF 1914 REPORT_CDIFF 1915 REPORT_NDIFF 1916 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE 1917 1918 Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the 1919 first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be 1920 post-mortem debugged. 1921 1922 Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of 1923 class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates) 1924 global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master 1925 can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual. 1926 Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay 1927 displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose) 1928 when you're done fiddling. 1929 """ 1930 global master 1931 1932 # If no module was given, then use __main__. 1933 if m is None: 1934 # DWA - m will still be None if this wasn't invoked from the command 1935 # line, in which case the following TypeError is about as good an error 1936 # as we should expect 1937 m = sys.modules.get('__main__') 1938 1939 # Check that we were actually given a module. 1940 if not inspect.ismodule(m): 1941 raise TypeError("testmod: module required; %r" % (m,)) 1942 1943 # If no name was given, then use the module's name. 1944 if name is None: 1945 name = m.__name__ 1946 1947 # Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module. 1948 finder = DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=exclude_empty) 1949 1950 if raise_on_error: 1951 runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) 1952 else: 1953 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) 1954 1955 for test in finder.find(m, name, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs): 1956 runner.run(test) 1957 1958 if report: 1959 runner.summarize() 1960 1961 if master is None: 1962 master = runner 1963 else: 1964 master.merge(runner) 1965 1966 return TestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries) 1967 1968def testfile(filename, module_relative=True, name=None, package=None, 1969 globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, optionflags=0, 1970 extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, parser=DocTestParser(), 1971 encoding=None): 1972 """ 1973 Test examples in the given file. Return (#failures, #tests). 1974 1975 Optional keyword arg "module_relative" specifies how filenames 1976 should be interpreted: 1977 1978 - If "module_relative" is True (the default), then "filename" 1979 specifies a module-relative path. By default, this path is 1980 relative to the calling module's directory; but if the 1981 "package" argument is specified, then it is relative to that 1982 package. To ensure os-independence, "filename" should use 1983 "/" characters to separate path segments, and should not 1984 be an absolute path (i.e., it may not begin with "/"). 1985 1986 - If "module_relative" is False, then "filename" specifies an 1987 os-specific path. The path may be absolute or relative (to 1988 the current working directory). 1989 1990 Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the test; by default 1991 use the file's basename. 1992 1993 Optional keyword argument "package" is a Python package or the 1994 name of a Python package whose directory should be used as the 1995 base directory for a module relative filename. If no package is 1996 specified, then the calling module's directory is used as the base 1997 directory for module relative filenames. It is an error to 1998 specify "package" if "module_relative" is False. 1999 2000 Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals 2001 when executing examples; by default, use {}. A copy of this dict 2002 is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's 2003 examples start with a clean slate. 2004 2005 Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be 2006 merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By 2007 default, no extra globals are used. 2008 2009 Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints 2010 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv. 2011 2012 Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true, 2013 else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is 2014 detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed). 2015 2016 Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants, 2017 and defaults to 0. Possible values (see the docs for details): 2018 2019 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 2020 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE 2021 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE 2022 ELLIPSIS 2023 SKIP 2024 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL 2025 REPORT_UDIFF 2026 REPORT_CDIFF 2027 REPORT_NDIFF 2028 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE 2029 2030 Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the 2031 first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be 2032 post-mortem debugged. 2033 2034 Optional keyword arg "parser" specifies a DocTestParser (or 2035 subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files. 2036 2037 Optional keyword arg "encoding" specifies an encoding that should 2038 be used to convert the file to unicode. 2039 2040 Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of 2041 class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates) 2042 global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master 2043 can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual. 2044 Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay 2045 displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose) 2046 when you're done fiddling. 2047 """ 2048 global master 2049 2050 if package and not module_relative: 2051 raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-" 2052 "relative paths.") 2053 2054 # Relativize the path 2055 text, filename = _load_testfile(filename, package, module_relative, 2056 encoding or "utf-8") 2057 2058 # If no name was given, then use the file's name. 2059 if name is None: 2060 name = os.path.basename(filename) 2061 2062 # Assemble the globals. 2063 if globs is None: 2064 globs = {} 2065 else: 2066 globs = globs.copy() 2067 if extraglobs is not None: 2068 globs.update(extraglobs) 2069 if '__name__' not in globs: 2070 globs['__name__'] = '__main__' 2071 2072 if raise_on_error: 2073 runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) 2074 else: 2075 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) 2076 2077 # Read the file, convert it to a test, and run it. 2078 test = parser.get_doctest(text, globs, name, filename, 0) 2079 runner.run(test) 2080 2081 if report: 2082 runner.summarize() 2083 2084 if master is None: 2085 master = runner 2086 else: 2087 master.merge(runner) 2088 2089 return TestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries) 2090 2091def run_docstring_examples(f, globs, verbose=False, name="NoName", 2092 compileflags=None, optionflags=0): 2093 """ 2094 Test examples in the given object's docstring (`f`), using `globs` 2095 as globals. Optional argument `name` is used in failure messages. 2096 If the optional argument `verbose` is true, then generate output 2097 even if there are no failures. 2098 2099 `compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by the 2100 Python compiler when running the examples. If not specified, then 2101 it will default to the set of future-import flags that apply to 2102 `globs`. 2103 2104 Optional keyword arg `optionflags` specifies options for the 2105 testing and output. See the documentation for `testmod` for more 2106 information. 2107 """ 2108 # Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module. 2109 finder = DocTestFinder(verbose=verbose, recurse=False) 2110 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) 2111 for test in finder.find(f, name, globs=globs): 2112 runner.run(test, compileflags=compileflags) 2113 2114###################################################################### 2115## 7. Unittest Support 2116###################################################################### 2117 2118_unittest_reportflags = 0 2119 2120def set_unittest_reportflags(flags): 2121 """Sets the unittest option flags. 2122 2123 The old flag is returned so that a runner could restore the old 2124 value if it wished to: 2125 2126 >>> import doctest 2127 >>> old = doctest._unittest_reportflags 2128 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(REPORT_NDIFF | 2129 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) == old 2130 True 2131 2132 >>> doctest._unittest_reportflags == (REPORT_NDIFF | 2133 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) 2134 True 2135 2136 Only reporting flags can be set: 2137 2138 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(ELLIPSIS) 2139 Traceback (most recent call last): 2140 ... 2141 ValueError: ('Only reporting flags allowed', 8) 2142 2143 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(old) == (REPORT_NDIFF | 2144 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) 2145 True 2146 """ 2147 global _unittest_reportflags 2148 2149 if (flags & REPORTING_FLAGS) != flags: 2150 raise ValueError("Only reporting flags allowed", flags) 2151 old = _unittest_reportflags 2152 _unittest_reportflags = flags 2153 return old 2154 2155 2156class DocTestCase(unittest.TestCase): 2157 2158 def __init__(self, test, optionflags=0, setUp=None, tearDown=None, 2159 checker=None): 2160 2161 unittest.TestCase.__init__(self) 2162 self._dt_optionflags = optionflags 2163 self._dt_checker = checker 2164 self._dt_test = test 2165 self._dt_setUp = setUp 2166 self._dt_tearDown = tearDown 2167 2168 def setUp(self): 2169 test = self._dt_test 2170 2171 if self._dt_setUp is not None: 2172 self._dt_setUp(test) 2173 2174 def tearDown(self): 2175 test = self._dt_test 2176 2177 if self._dt_tearDown is not None: 2178 self._dt_tearDown(test) 2179 2180 test.globs.clear() 2181 2182 def runTest(self): 2183 test = self._dt_test 2184 old = sys.stdout 2185 new = StringIO() 2186 optionflags = self._dt_optionflags 2187 2188 if not (optionflags & REPORTING_FLAGS): 2189 # The option flags don't include any reporting flags, 2190 # so add the default reporting flags 2191 optionflags |= _unittest_reportflags 2192 2193 runner = DocTestRunner(optionflags=optionflags, 2194 checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False) 2195 2196 try: 2197 runner.DIVIDER = "-"*70 2198 failures, tries = runner.run( 2199 test, out=new.write, clear_globs=False) 2200 finally: 2201 sys.stdout = old 2202 2203 if failures: 2204 raise self.failureException(self.format_failure(new.getvalue())) 2205 2206 def format_failure(self, err): 2207 test = self._dt_test 2208 if test.lineno is None: 2209 lineno = 'unknown line number' 2210 else: 2211 lineno = '%s' % test.lineno 2212 lname = '.'.join(test.name.split('.')[-1:]) 2213 return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n' 2214 ' File "%s", line %s, in %s\n\n%s' 2215 % (test.name, test.filename, lineno, lname, err) 2216 ) 2217 2218 def debug(self): 2219 r"""Run the test case without results and without catching exceptions 2220 2221 The unit test framework includes a debug method on test cases 2222 and test suites to support post-mortem debugging. The test code 2223 is run in such a way that errors are not caught. This way a 2224 caller can catch the errors and initiate post-mortem debugging. 2225 2226 The DocTestCase provides a debug method that raises 2227 UnexpectedException errors if there is an unexpected 2228 exception: 2229 2230 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42', 2231 ... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 2232 >>> case = DocTestCase(test) 2233 >>> try: 2234 ... case.debug() 2235 ... except UnexpectedException as f: 2236 ... failure = f 2237 2238 The UnexpectedException contains the test, the example, and 2239 the original exception: 2240 2241 >>> failure.test is test 2242 True 2243 2244 >>> failure.example.want 2245 '42\n' 2246 2247 >>> exc_info = failure.exc_info 2248 >>> raise exc_info[1] # Already has the traceback 2249 Traceback (most recent call last): 2250 ... 2251 KeyError 2252 2253 If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised: 2254 2255 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest(''' 2256 ... >>> x = 1 2257 ... >>> x 2258 ... 2 2259 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0) 2260 >>> case = DocTestCase(test) 2261 2262 >>> try: 2263 ... case.debug() 2264 ... except DocTestFailure as f: 2265 ... failure = f 2266 2267 DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test: 2268 2269 >>> failure.test is test 2270 True 2271 2272 As well as to the example: 2273 2274 >>> failure.example.want 2275 '2\n' 2276 2277 and the actual output: 2278 2279 >>> failure.got 2280 '1\n' 2281 2282 """ 2283 2284 self.setUp() 2285 runner = DebugRunner(optionflags=self._dt_optionflags, 2286 checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False) 2287 runner.run(self._dt_test, clear_globs=False) 2288 self.tearDown() 2289 2290 def id(self): 2291 return self._dt_test.name 2292 2293 def __eq__(self, other): 2294 if type(self) is not type(other): 2295 return NotImplemented 2296 2297 return self._dt_test == other._dt_test and \ 2298 self._dt_optionflags == other._dt_optionflags and \ 2299 self._dt_setUp == other._dt_setUp and \ 2300 self._dt_tearDown == other._dt_tearDown and \ 2301 self._dt_checker == other._dt_checker 2302 2303 def __hash__(self): 2304 return hash((self._dt_optionflags, self._dt_setUp, self._dt_tearDown, 2305 self._dt_checker)) 2306 2307 def __repr__(self): 2308 name = self._dt_test.name.split('.') 2309 return "%s (%s)" % (name[-1], '.'.join(name[:-1])) 2310 2311 __str__ = object.__str__ 2312 2313 def shortDescription(self): 2314 return "Doctest: " + self._dt_test.name 2315 2316class SkipDocTestCase(DocTestCase): 2317 def __init__(self, module): 2318 self.module = module 2319 DocTestCase.__init__(self, None) 2320 2321 def setUp(self): 2322 self.skipTest("DocTestSuite will not work with -O2 and above") 2323 2324 def test_skip(self): 2325 pass 2326 2327 def shortDescription(self): 2328 return "Skipping tests from %s" % self.module.__name__ 2329 2330 __str__ = shortDescription 2331 2332 2333class _DocTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite): 2334 2335 def _removeTestAtIndex(self, index): 2336 pass 2337 2338 2339def DocTestSuite(module=None, globs=None, extraglobs=None, test_finder=None, 2340 **options): 2341 """ 2342 Convert doctest tests for a module to a unittest test suite. 2343 2344 This converts each documentation string in a module that 2345 contains doctest tests to a unittest test case. If any of the 2346 tests in a doc string fail, then the test case fails. An exception 2347 is raised showing the name of the file containing the test and a 2348 (sometimes approximate) line number. 2349 2350 The `module` argument provides the module to be tested. The argument 2351 can be either a module or a module name. 2352 2353 If no argument is given, the calling module is used. 2354 2355 A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments: 2356 2357 setUp 2358 A set-up function. This is called before running the 2359 tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest 2360 object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the 2361 globs attribute of the test passed. 2362 2363 tearDown 2364 A tear-down function. This is called after running the 2365 tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest 2366 object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the 2367 globs attribute of the test passed. 2368 2369 globs 2370 A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests. 2371 2372 optionflags 2373 A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer. 2374 """ 2375 2376 if test_finder is None: 2377 test_finder = DocTestFinder() 2378 2379 module = _normalize_module(module) 2380 tests = test_finder.find(module, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs) 2381 2382 if not tests and sys.flags.optimize >=2: 2383 # Skip doctests when running with -O2 2384 suite = _DocTestSuite() 2385 suite.addTest(SkipDocTestCase(module)) 2386 return suite 2387 2388 tests.sort() 2389 suite = _DocTestSuite() 2390 2391 for test in tests: 2392 if len(test.examples) == 0: 2393 continue 2394 if not test.filename: 2395 filename = module.__file__ 2396 if filename[-4:] == ".pyc": 2397 filename = filename[:-1] 2398 test.filename = filename 2399 suite.addTest(DocTestCase(test, **options)) 2400 2401 return suite 2402 2403class DocFileCase(DocTestCase): 2404 2405 def id(self): 2406 return '_'.join(self._dt_test.name.split('.')) 2407 2408 def __repr__(self): 2409 return self._dt_test.filename 2410 2411 def format_failure(self, err): 2412 return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n File "%s", line 0\n\n%s' 2413 % (self._dt_test.name, self._dt_test.filename, err) 2414 ) 2415 2416def DocFileTest(path, module_relative=True, package=None, 2417 globs=None, parser=DocTestParser(), 2418 encoding=None, **options): 2419 if globs is None: 2420 globs = {} 2421 else: 2422 globs = globs.copy() 2423 2424 if package and not module_relative: 2425 raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-" 2426 "relative paths.") 2427 2428 # Relativize the path. 2429 doc, path = _load_testfile(path, package, module_relative, 2430 encoding or "utf-8") 2431 2432 if "__file__" not in globs: 2433 globs["__file__"] = path 2434 2435 # Find the file and read it. 2436 name = os.path.basename(path) 2437 2438 # Convert it to a test, and wrap it in a DocFileCase. 2439 test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globs, name, path, 0) 2440 return DocFileCase(test, **options) 2441 2442def DocFileSuite(*paths, **kw): 2443 """A unittest suite for one or more doctest files. 2444 2445 The path to each doctest file is given as a string; the 2446 interpretation of that string depends on the keyword argument 2447 "module_relative". 2448 2449 A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments: 2450 2451 module_relative 2452 If "module_relative" is True, then the given file paths are 2453 interpreted as os-independent module-relative paths. By 2454 default, these paths are relative to the calling module's 2455 directory; but if the "package" argument is specified, then 2456 they are relative to that package. To ensure os-independence, 2457 "filename" should use "/" characters to separate path 2458 segments, and may not be an absolute path (i.e., it may not 2459 begin with "/"). 2460 2461 If "module_relative" is False, then the given file paths are 2462 interpreted as os-specific paths. These paths may be absolute 2463 or relative (to the current working directory). 2464 2465 package 2466 A Python package or the name of a Python package whose directory 2467 should be used as the base directory for module relative paths. 2468 If "package" is not specified, then the calling module's 2469 directory is used as the base directory for module relative 2470 filenames. It is an error to specify "package" if 2471 "module_relative" is False. 2472 2473 setUp 2474 A set-up function. This is called before running the 2475 tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest 2476 object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the 2477 globs attribute of the test passed. 2478 2479 tearDown 2480 A tear-down function. This is called after running the 2481 tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest 2482 object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the 2483 globs attribute of the test passed. 2484 2485 globs 2486 A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests. 2487 2488 optionflags 2489 A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer. 2490 2491 parser 2492 A DocTestParser (or subclass) that should be used to extract 2493 tests from the files. 2494 2495 encoding 2496 An encoding that will be used to convert the files to unicode. 2497 """ 2498 suite = _DocTestSuite() 2499 2500 # We do this here so that _normalize_module is called at the right 2501 # level. If it were called in DocFileTest, then this function 2502 # would be the caller and we might guess the package incorrectly. 2503 if kw.get('module_relative', True): 2504 kw['package'] = _normalize_module(kw.get('package')) 2505 2506 for path in paths: 2507 suite.addTest(DocFileTest(path, **kw)) 2508 2509 return suite 2510 2511###################################################################### 2512## 8. Debugging Support 2513###################################################################### 2514 2515def script_from_examples(s): 2516 r"""Extract script from text with examples. 2517 2518 Converts text with examples to a Python script. Example input is 2519 converted to regular code. Example output and all other words 2520 are converted to comments: 2521 2522 >>> text = ''' 2523 ... Here are examples of simple math. 2524 ... 2525 ... Python has super accurate integer addition 2526 ... 2527 ... >>> 2 + 2 2528 ... 5 2529 ... 2530 ... And very friendly error messages: 2531 ... 2532 ... >>> 1/0 2533 ... To Infinity 2534 ... And 2535 ... Beyond 2536 ... 2537 ... You can use logic if you want: 2538 ... 2539 ... >>> if 0: 2540 ... ... blah 2541 ... ... blah 2542 ... ... 2543 ... 2544 ... Ho hum 2545 ... ''' 2546 2547 >>> print(script_from_examples(text)) 2548 # Here are examples of simple math. 2549 # 2550 # Python has super accurate integer addition 2551 # 2552 2 + 2 2553 # Expected: 2554 ## 5 2555 # 2556 # And very friendly error messages: 2557 # 2558 1/0 2559 # Expected: 2560 ## To Infinity 2561 ## And 2562 ## Beyond 2563 # 2564 # You can use logic if you want: 2565 # 2566 if 0: 2567 blah 2568 blah 2569 # 2570 # Ho hum 2571 <BLANKLINE> 2572 """ 2573 output = [] 2574 for piece in DocTestParser().parse(s): 2575 if isinstance(piece, Example): 2576 # Add the example's source code (strip trailing NL) 2577 output.append(piece.source[:-1]) 2578 # Add the expected output: 2579 want = piece.want 2580 if want: 2581 output.append('# Expected:') 2582 output += ['## '+l for l in want.split('\n')[:-1]] 2583 else: 2584 # Add non-example text. 2585 output += [_comment_line(l) 2586 for l in piece.split('\n')[:-1]] 2587 2588 # Trim junk on both ends. 2589 while output and output[-1] == '#': 2590 output.pop() 2591 while output and output[0] == '#': 2592 output.pop(0) 2593 # Combine the output, and return it. 2594 # Add a courtesy newline to prevent exec from choking (see bug #1172785) 2595 return '\n'.join(output) + '\n' 2596 2597def testsource(module, name): 2598 """Extract the test sources from a doctest docstring as a script. 2599 2600 Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the 2601 test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object 2602 with the doc string with tests to be debugged. 2603 """ 2604 module = _normalize_module(module) 2605 tests = DocTestFinder().find(module) 2606 test = [t for t in tests if t.name == name] 2607 if not test: 2608 raise ValueError(name, "not found in tests") 2609 test = test[0] 2610 testsrc = script_from_examples(test.docstring) 2611 return testsrc 2612 2613def debug_src(src, pm=False, globs=None): 2614 """Debug a single doctest docstring, in argument `src`'""" 2615 testsrc = script_from_examples(src) 2616 debug_script(testsrc, pm, globs) 2617 2618def debug_script(src, pm=False, globs=None): 2619 "Debug a test script. `src` is the script, as a string." 2620 import pdb 2621 2622 if globs: 2623 globs = globs.copy() 2624 else: 2625 globs = {} 2626 2627 if pm: 2628 try: 2629 exec(src, globs, globs) 2630 except: 2631 print(sys.exc_info()[1]) 2632 p = pdb.Pdb(nosigint=True) 2633 p.reset() 2634 p.interaction(None, sys.exc_info()[2]) 2635 else: 2636 pdb.Pdb(nosigint=True).run("exec(%r)" % src, globs, globs) 2637 2638def debug(module, name, pm=False): 2639 """Debug a single doctest docstring. 2640 2641 Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the 2642 test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object 2643 with the docstring with tests to be debugged. 2644 """ 2645 module = _normalize_module(module) 2646 testsrc = testsource(module, name) 2647 debug_script(testsrc, pm, module.__dict__) 2648 2649###################################################################### 2650## 9. Example Usage 2651###################################################################### 2652class _TestClass: 2653 """ 2654 A pointless class, for sanity-checking of docstring testing. 2655 2656 Methods: 2657 square() 2658 get() 2659 2660 >>> _TestClass(13).get() + _TestClass(-12).get() 2661 1 2662 >>> hex(_TestClass(13).square().get()) 2663 '0xa9' 2664 """ 2665 2666 def __init__(self, val): 2667 """val -> _TestClass object with associated value val. 2668 2669 >>> t = _TestClass(123) 2670 >>> print(t.get()) 2671 123 2672 """ 2673 2674 self.val = val 2675 2676 def square(self): 2677 """square() -> square TestClass's associated value 2678 2679 >>> _TestClass(13).square().get() 2680 169 2681 """ 2682 2683 self.val = self.val ** 2 2684 return self 2685 2686 def get(self): 2687 """get() -> return TestClass's associated value. 2688 2689 >>> x = _TestClass(-42) 2690 >>> print(x.get()) 2691 -42 2692 """ 2693 2694 return self.val 2695 2696__test__ = {"_TestClass": _TestClass, 2697 "string": r""" 2698 Example of a string object, searched as-is. 2699 >>> x = 1; y = 2 2700 >>> x + y, x * y 2701 (3, 2) 2702 """, 2703 2704 "bool-int equivalence": r""" 2705 In 2.2, boolean expressions displayed 2706 0 or 1. By default, we still accept 2707 them. This can be disabled by passing 2708 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 to the new 2709 optionflags argument. 2710 >>> 4 == 4 2711 1 2712 >>> 4 == 4 2713 True 2714 >>> 4 > 4 2715 0 2716 >>> 4 > 4 2717 False 2718 """, 2719 2720 "blank lines": r""" 2721 Blank lines can be marked with <BLANKLINE>: 2722 >>> print('foo\n\nbar\n') 2723 foo 2724 <BLANKLINE> 2725 bar 2726 <BLANKLINE> 2727 """, 2728 2729 "ellipsis": r""" 2730 If the ellipsis flag is used, then '...' can be used to 2731 elide substrings in the desired output: 2732 >>> print(list(range(1000))) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS 2733 [0, 1, 2, ..., 999] 2734 """, 2735 2736 "whitespace normalization": r""" 2737 If the whitespace normalization flag is used, then 2738 differences in whitespace are ignored. 2739 >>> print(list(range(30))) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE 2740 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 2741 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 2742 27, 28, 29] 2743 """, 2744 } 2745 2746 2747def _test(): 2748 import argparse 2749 2750 parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description="doctest runner") 2751 parser.add_argument('-v', '--verbose', action='store_true', default=False, 2752 help='print very verbose output for all tests') 2753 parser.add_argument('-o', '--option', action='append', 2754 choices=OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME.keys(), default=[], 2755 help=('specify a doctest option flag to apply' 2756 ' to the test run; may be specified more' 2757 ' than once to apply multiple options')) 2758 parser.add_argument('-f', '--fail-fast', action='store_true', 2759 help=('stop running tests after first failure (this' 2760 ' is a shorthand for -o FAIL_FAST, and is' 2761 ' in addition to any other -o options)')) 2762 parser.add_argument('file', nargs='+', 2763 help='file containing the tests to run') 2764 args = parser.parse_args() 2765 testfiles = args.file 2766 # Verbose used to be handled by the "inspect argv" magic in DocTestRunner, 2767 # but since we are using argparse we are passing it manually now. 2768 verbose = args.verbose 2769 options = 0 2770 for option in args.option: 2771 options |= OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[option] 2772 if args.fail_fast: 2773 options |= FAIL_FAST 2774 for filename in testfiles: 2775 if filename.endswith(".py"): 2776 # It is a module -- insert its dir into sys.path and try to 2777 # import it. If it is part of a package, that possibly 2778 # won't work because of package imports. 2779 dirname, filename = os.path.split(filename) 2780 sys.path.insert(0, dirname) 2781 m = __import__(filename[:-3]) 2782 del sys.path[0] 2783 failures, _ = testmod(m, verbose=verbose, optionflags=options) 2784 else: 2785 failures, _ = testfile(filename, module_relative=False, 2786 verbose=verbose, optionflags=options) 2787 if failures: 2788 return 1 2789 return 0 2790 2791 2792if __name__ == "__main__": 2793 sys.exit(_test()) 2794