Source code for sympy.utilities.runtests

"""
This is our testing framework.

Goals:

* it should be compatible with py.test and operate very similarly
  (or identically)
* doesn't require any external dependencies
* preferably all the functionality should be in this file only
* no magic, just import the test file and execute the test functions, that's it
* portable

"""

from __future__ import print_function, division

import os
import sys
import platform
import inspect
import traceback
import pdb
import re
import linecache
import time
from fnmatch import fnmatch
from timeit import default_timer as clock
import doctest as pdoctest  # avoid clashing with our doctest() function
from doctest import DocTestFinder, DocTestRunner
import random
import subprocess
import signal
import stat
from inspect import isgeneratorfunction

from sympy.core.cache import clear_cache
from sympy.core.compatibility import exec_, PY3, string_types, range
from sympy.utilities.misc import find_executable
from sympy.external import import_module
from sympy.utilities.exceptions import SymPyDeprecationWarning

IS_WINDOWS = (os.name == 'nt')


class Skipped(Exception):
    pass

import __future__
# add more flags ??
future_flags = __future__.division.compiler_flag

def _indent(s, indent=4):
    """
    Add the given number of space characters to the beginning of
    every non-blank line in ``s``, and return the result.
    If the string ``s`` is Unicode, it is encoded using the stdout
    encoding and the ``backslashreplace`` error handler.
    """
    # After a 2to3 run the below code is bogus, so wrap it with a version check
    if not PY3:
        if isinstance(s, unicode):
            s = s.encode(pdoctest._encoding, 'backslashreplace')
    # This regexp matches the start of non-blank lines:
    return re.sub('(?m)^(?!$)', indent*' ', s)

pdoctest._indent = _indent

# ovverride reporter to maintain windows and python3


def _report_failure(self, out, test, example, got):
    """
    Report that the given example failed.
    """
    s = self._checker.output_difference(example, got, self.optionflags)
    s = s.encode('raw_unicode_escape').decode('utf8', 'ignore')
    out(self._failure_header(test, example) + s)

if PY3 and IS_WINDOWS:
    DocTestRunner.report_failure = _report_failure


[docs]def convert_to_native_paths(lst): """ Converts a list of '/' separated paths into a list of native (os.sep separated) paths and converts to lowercase if the system is case insensitive. """ newlst = [] for i, rv in enumerate(lst): rv = os.path.join(*rv.split("/")) # on windows the slash after the colon is dropped if sys.platform == "win32": pos = rv.find(':') if pos != -1: if rv[pos + 1] != '\\': rv = rv[:pos + 1] + '\\' + rv[pos + 1:] newlst.append(sys_normcase(rv)) return newlst
[docs]def get_sympy_dir(): """ Returns the root sympy directory and set the global value indicating whether the system is case sensitive or not. """ global sys_case_insensitive this_file = os.path.abspath(__file__) sympy_dir = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(this_file), "..", "..") sympy_dir = os.path.normpath(sympy_dir) sys_case_insensitive = (os.path.isdir(sympy_dir) and os.path.isdir(sympy_dir.lower()) and os.path.isdir(sympy_dir.upper())) return sys_normcase(sympy_dir)
def sys_normcase(f): if sys_case_insensitive: # global defined after call to get_sympy_dir() return f.lower() return f def setup_pprint(): from sympy import pprint_use_unicode, init_printing # force pprint to be in ascii mode in doctests pprint_use_unicode(False) # hook our nice, hash-stable strprinter init_printing(pretty_print=False)
[docs]def run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization(function, function_args=(), function_kwargs={}, command=sys.executable, module='sympy.utilities.runtests', force=False): """ Run a function in a Python subprocess with hash randomization enabled. If hash randomization is not supported by the version of Python given, it returns False. Otherwise, it returns the exit value of the command. The function is passed to sys.exit(), so the return value of the function will be the return value. The environment variable PYTHONHASHSEED is used to seed Python's hash randomization. If it is set, this function will return False, because starting a new subprocess is unnecessary in that case. If it is not set, one is set at random, and the tests are run. Note that if this environment variable is set when Python starts, hash randomization is automatically enabled. To force a subprocess to be created even if PYTHONHASHSEED is set, pass ``force=True``. This flag will not force a subprocess in Python versions that do not support hash randomization (see below), because those versions of Python do not support the ``-R`` flag. ``function`` should be a string name of a function that is importable from the module ``module``, like "_test". The default for ``module`` is "sympy.utilities.runtests". ``function_args`` and ``function_kwargs`` should be a repr-able tuple and dict, respectively. The default Python command is sys.executable, which is the currently running Python command. This function is necessary because the seed for hash randomization must be set by the environment variable before Python starts. Hence, in order to use a predetermined seed for tests, we must start Python in a separate subprocess. Hash randomization was added in the minor Python versions 2.6.8, 2.7.3, 3.1.5, and 3.2.3, and is enabled by default in all Python versions after and including 3.3.0. Examples ======== >>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import ( ... run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization) >>> # run the core tests in verbose mode >>> run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_test", ... function_args=("core",), ... function_kwargs={'verbose': True}) # doctest: +SKIP # Will return 0 if sys.executable supports hash randomization and tests # pass, 1 if they fail, and False if it does not support hash # randomization. """ # Note, we must return False everywhere, not None, as subprocess.call will # sometimes return None. # First check if the Python version supports hash randomization # If it doesn't have this support, it won't reconize the -R flag p = subprocess.Popen([command, "-RV"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.STDOUT) p.communicate() if p.returncode != 0: return False hash_seed = os.getenv("PYTHONHASHSEED") if not hash_seed: os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"] = str(random.randrange(2**32)) else: if not force: return False # Now run the command commandstring = ("import sys; from %s import %s;sys.exit(%s(*%s, **%s))" % (module, function, function, repr(function_args), repr(function_kwargs))) try: p = subprocess.Popen([command, "-R", "-c", commandstring]) p.communicate() except KeyboardInterrupt: p.wait() finally: # Put the environment variable back, so that it reads correctly for # the current Python process. if hash_seed is None: del os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"] else: os.environ["PYTHONHASHSEED"] = hash_seed return p.returncode
[docs]def run_all_tests(test_args=(), test_kwargs={}, doctest_args=(), doctest_kwargs={}, examples_args=(), examples_kwargs={'quiet': True}): """ Run all tests. Right now, this runs the regular tests (bin/test), the doctests (bin/doctest), the examples (examples/all.py), and the sage tests (see sympy/external/tests/test_sage.py). This is what ``setup.py test`` uses. You can pass arguments and keyword arguments to the test functions that support them (for now, test, doctest, and the examples). See the docstrings of those functions for a description of the available options. For example, to run the solvers tests with colors turned off: >>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import run_all_tests >>> run_all_tests(test_args=("solvers",), ... test_kwargs={"colors:False"}) # doctest: +SKIP """ tests_successful = True try: # Regular tests if not test(*test_args, **test_kwargs): # some regular test fails, so set the tests_successful # flag to false and continue running the doctests tests_successful = False # Doctests print() if not doctest(*doctest_args, **doctest_kwargs): tests_successful = False # Examples print() sys.path.append("examples") from all import run_examples # examples/all.py if not run_examples(*examples_args, **examples_kwargs): tests_successful = False # Sage tests if sys.platform != "win32" and not PY3 and os.path.exists("bin/test"): # run Sage tests; Sage currently doesn't support Windows or Python 3 # Only run Sage tests if 'bin/test' is present (it is missing from # our release because everything in the 'bin' directory gets # installed). dev_null = open(os.devnull, 'w') if subprocess.call("sage -v", shell=True, stdout=dev_null, stderr=dev_null) == 0: if subprocess.call("sage -python bin/test " "sympy/external/tests/test_sage.py", shell=True, cwd=os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(os.path.dirname(__file__)))) != 0: tests_successful = False if tests_successful: return else: # Return nonzero exit code sys.exit(1) except KeyboardInterrupt: print() print("DO *NOT* COMMIT!") sys.exit(1)
[docs]def test(*paths, **kwargs): """ Run tests in the specified test_*.py files. Tests in a particular test_*.py file are run if any of the given strings in ``paths`` matches a part of the test file's path. If ``paths=[]``, tests in all test_*.py files are run. Notes: - If sort=False, tests are run in random order (not default). - Paths can be entered in native system format or in unix, forward-slash format. - Files that are on the blacklist can be tested by providing their path; they are only excluded if no paths are given. **Explanation of test results** ====== =============================================================== Output Meaning ====== =============================================================== . passed F failed X XPassed (expected to fail but passed) f XFAILed (expected to fail and indeed failed) s skipped w slow T timeout (e.g., when ``--timeout`` is used) K KeyboardInterrupt (when running the slow tests with ``--slow``, you can interrupt one of them without killing the test runner) ====== =============================================================== Colors have no additional meaning and are used just to facilitate interpreting the output. Examples ======== >>> import sympy Run all tests: >>> sympy.test() # doctest: +SKIP Run one file: >>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP >>> sympy.test("_basic") # doctest: +SKIP Run all tests in sympy/functions/ and some particular file: >>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py", ... "sympy/functions") # doctest: +SKIP Run all tests in sympy/core and sympy/utilities: >>> sympy.test("/core", "/util") # doctest: +SKIP Run specific test from a file: >>> sympy.test("sympy/core/tests/test_basic.py", ... kw="test_equality") # doctest: +SKIP Run specific test from any file: >>> sympy.test(kw="subs") # doctest: +SKIP Run the tests with verbose mode on: >>> sympy.test(verbose=True) # doctest: +SKIP Don't sort the test output: >>> sympy.test(sort=False) # doctest: +SKIP Turn on post-mortem pdb: >>> sympy.test(pdb=True) # doctest: +SKIP Turn off colors: >>> sympy.test(colors=False) # doctest: +SKIP Force colors, even when the output is not to a terminal (this is useful, e.g., if you are piping to ``less -r`` and you still want colors) >>> sympy.test(force_colors=False) # doctest: +SKIP The traceback verboseness can be set to "short" or "no" (default is "short") >>> sympy.test(tb='no') # doctest: +SKIP The ``split`` option can be passed to split the test run into parts. The split currently only splits the test files, though this may change in the future. ``split`` should be a string of the form 'a/b', which will run part ``a`` of ``b``. For instance, to run the first half of the test suite: >>> sympy.test(split='1/2') # doctest: +SKIP You can disable running the tests in a separate subprocess using ``subprocess=False``. This is done to support seeding hash randomization, which is enabled by default in the Python versions where it is supported. If subprocess=False, hash randomization is enabled/disabled according to whether it has been enabled or not in the calling Python process. However, even if it is enabled, the seed cannot be printed unless it is called from a new Python process. Hash randomization was added in the minor Python versions 2.6.8, 2.7.3, 3.1.5, and 3.2.3, and is enabled by default in all Python versions after and including 3.3.0. If hash randomization is not supported ``subprocess=False`` is used automatically. >>> sympy.test(subprocess=False) # doctest: +SKIP To set the hash randomization seed, set the environment variable ``PYTHONHASHSEED`` before running the tests. This can be done from within Python using >>> import os >>> os.environ['PYTHONHASHSEED'] = '42' # doctest: +SKIP Or from the command line using $ PYTHONHASHSEED=42 ./bin/test If the seed is not set, a random seed will be chosen. Note that to reproduce the same hash values, you must use both the same seed as well as the same architecture (32-bit vs. 64-bit). """ subprocess = kwargs.pop("subprocess", True) rerun = kwargs.pop("rerun", 0) # count up from 0, do not print 0 print_counter = lambda i : (print("rerun %d" % (rerun-i)) if rerun-i else None) if subprocess: # loop backwards so last i is 0 for i in range(rerun, -1, -1): print_counter(i) ret = run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_test", function_args=paths, function_kwargs=kwargs) if ret is False: break val = not bool(ret) # exit on the first failure or if done if not val or i == 0: return val # rerun even if hash randomization is not supported for i in range(rerun, -1, -1): print_counter(i) val = not bool(_test(*paths, **kwargs)) if not val or i == 0: return val
def _test(*paths, **kwargs): """ Internal function that actually runs the tests. All keyword arguments from ``test()`` are passed to this function except for ``subprocess``. Returns 0 if tests passed and 1 if they failed. See the docstring of ``test()`` for more information. """ verbose = kwargs.get("verbose", False) tb = kwargs.get("tb", "short") kw = kwargs.get("kw", None) or () # ensure that kw is a tuple if isinstance(kw, str): kw = (kw, ) post_mortem = kwargs.get("pdb", False) colors = kwargs.get("colors", True) force_colors = kwargs.get("force_colors", False) sort = kwargs.get("sort", True) seed = kwargs.get("seed", None) if seed is None: seed = random.randrange(100000000) timeout = kwargs.get("timeout", False) slow = kwargs.get("slow", False) enhance_asserts = kwargs.get("enhance_asserts", False) split = kwargs.get('split', None) blacklist = kwargs.get('blacklist', []) blacklist = convert_to_native_paths(blacklist) fast_threshold = kwargs.get('fast_threshold', None) slow_threshold = kwargs.get('slow_threshold', None) r = PyTestReporter(verbose=verbose, tb=tb, colors=colors, force_colors=force_colors, split=split) t = SymPyTests(r, kw, post_mortem, seed, fast_threshold=fast_threshold, slow_threshold=slow_threshold) # Disable warnings for external modules import sympy.external sympy.external.importtools.WARN_OLD_VERSION = False sympy.external.importtools.WARN_NOT_INSTALLED = False # Show deprecation warnings import warnings warnings.simplefilter("error", SymPyDeprecationWarning) test_files = t.get_test_files('sympy') not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)] if len(paths) == 0: matched = not_blacklisted else: paths = convert_to_native_paths(paths) matched = [] for f in not_blacklisted: basename = os.path.basename(f) for p in paths: if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p): matched.append(f) break if slow: # Seed to evenly shuffle slow tests among splits random.seed(41992450) random.shuffle(matched) if split: matched = split_list(matched, split) t._testfiles.extend(matched) return int(not t.test(sort=sort, timeout=timeout, slow=slow, enhance_asserts=enhance_asserts))
[docs]def doctest(*paths, **kwargs): """ Runs doctests in all \*.py files in the sympy directory which match any of the given strings in ``paths`` or all tests if paths=[]. Notes: - Paths can be entered in native system format or in unix, forward-slash format. - Files that are on the blacklist can be tested by providing their path; they are only excluded if no paths are given. Examples ======== >>> import sympy Run all tests: >>> sympy.doctest() # doctest: +SKIP Run one file: >>> sympy.doctest("sympy/core/basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP >>> sympy.doctest("polynomial.rst") # doctest: +SKIP Run all tests in sympy/functions/ and some particular file: >>> sympy.doctest("/functions", "basic.py") # doctest: +SKIP Run any file having polynomial in its name, doc/src/modules/polynomial.rst, sympy/functions/special/polynomials.py, and sympy/polys/polynomial.py: >>> sympy.doctest("polynomial") # doctest: +SKIP The ``split`` option can be passed to split the test run into parts. The split currently only splits the test files, though this may change in the future. ``split`` should be a string of the form 'a/b', which will run part ``a`` of ``b``. Note that the regular doctests and the Sphinx doctests are split independently. For instance, to run the first half of the test suite: >>> sympy.doctest(split='1/2') # doctest: +SKIP The ``subprocess`` and ``verbose`` options are the same as with the function ``test()``. See the docstring of that function for more information. """ subprocess = kwargs.pop("subprocess", True) rerun = kwargs.pop("rerun", 0) # count up from 0, do not print 0 print_counter = lambda i : (print("rerun %d" % (rerun-i)) if rerun-i else None) if subprocess: # loop backwards so last i is 0 for i in range(rerun, -1, -1): print_counter(i) ret = run_in_subprocess_with_hash_randomization("_doctest", function_args=paths, function_kwargs=kwargs) if ret is False: break val = not bool(ret) # exit on the first failure or if done if not val or i == 0: return val # rerun even if hash randomization is not supported for i in range(rerun, -1, -1): print_counter(i) val = not bool(_doctest(*paths, **kwargs)) if not val or i == 0: return val
def _doctest(*paths, **kwargs): """ Internal function that actually runs the doctests. All keyword arguments from ``doctest()`` are passed to this function except for ``subprocess``. Returns 0 if tests passed and 1 if they failed. See the docstrings of ``doctest()`` and ``test()`` for more information. """ normal = kwargs.get("normal", False) verbose = kwargs.get("verbose", False) colors = kwargs.get("colors", True) force_colors = kwargs.get("force_colors", False) blacklist = kwargs.get("blacklist", []) split = kwargs.get('split', None) blacklist.extend([ "doc/src/modules/plotting.rst", # generates live plots "sympy/physics/gaussopt.py", # raises deprecation warning "sympy/galgebra.py", # raises ImportError ]) if import_module('numpy') is None: blacklist.extend([ "sympy/plotting/experimental_lambdify.py", "sympy/plotting/plot_implicit.py", "examples/advanced/autowrap_integrators.py", "examples/advanced/autowrap_ufuncify.py", "examples/intermediate/sample.py", "examples/intermediate/mplot2d.py", "examples/intermediate/mplot3d.py", "doc/src/modules/numeric-computation.rst" ]) else: if import_module('matplotlib') is None: blacklist.extend([ "examples/intermediate/mplot2d.py", "examples/intermediate/mplot3d.py" ]) else: # Use a non-windowed backend, so that the tests work on Travis import matplotlib matplotlib.use('Agg') # don't display matplotlib windows from sympy.plotting.plot import unset_show unset_show() if import_module('pyglet') is None: blacklist.extend(["sympy/plotting/pygletplot"]) if import_module('theano') is None: blacklist.extend(["doc/src/modules/numeric-computation.rst"]) # disabled because of doctest failures in asmeurer's bot blacklist.extend([ "sympy/utilities/autowrap.py", "examples/advanced/autowrap_integrators.py", "examples/advanced/autowrap_ufuncify.py" ]) # blacklist these modules until issue 4840 is resolved blacklist.extend([ "sympy/conftest.py", "sympy/utilities/benchmarking.py" ]) blacklist = convert_to_native_paths(blacklist) # Disable warnings for external modules import sympy.external sympy.external.importtools.WARN_OLD_VERSION = False sympy.external.importtools.WARN_NOT_INSTALLED = False # Show deprecation warnings import warnings warnings.simplefilter("error", SymPyDeprecationWarning) r = PyTestReporter(verbose, split=split, colors=colors,\ force_colors=force_colors) t = SymPyDocTests(r, normal) test_files = t.get_test_files('sympy') test_files.extend(t.get_test_files('examples', init_only=False)) not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)] if len(paths) == 0: matched = not_blacklisted else: # take only what was requested...but not blacklisted items # and allow for partial match anywhere or fnmatch of name paths = convert_to_native_paths(paths) matched = [] for f in not_blacklisted: basename = os.path.basename(f) for p in paths: if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p): matched.append(f) break if split: matched = split_list(matched, split) t._testfiles.extend(matched) # run the tests and record the result for this *py portion of the tests if t._testfiles: failed = not t.test() else: failed = False # N.B. # -------------------------------------------------------------------- # Here we test *.rst files at or below doc/src. Code from these must # be self supporting in terms of imports since there is no importing # of necessary modules by doctest.testfile. If you try to pass *.py # files through this they might fail because they will lack the needed # imports and smarter parsing that can be done with source code. # test_files = t.get_test_files('doc/src', '*.rst', init_only=False) test_files.sort() not_blacklisted = [f for f in test_files if not any(b in f for b in blacklist)] if len(paths) == 0: matched = not_blacklisted else: # Take only what was requested as long as it's not on the blacklist. # Paths were already made native in *py tests so don't repeat here. # There's no chance of having a *py file slip through since we # only have *rst files in test_files. matched = [] for f in not_blacklisted: basename = os.path.basename(f) for p in paths: if p in f or fnmatch(basename, p): matched.append(f) break if split: matched = split_list(matched, split) setup_pprint() first_report = True for rst_file in matched: if not os.path.isfile(rst_file): continue old_displayhook = sys.displayhook try: out = sympytestfile( rst_file, module_relative=False, encoding='utf-8', optionflags=pdoctest.ELLIPSIS | pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | pdoctest.IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL) finally: # make sure we return to the original displayhook in case some # doctest has changed that sys.displayhook = old_displayhook rstfailed, tested = out if tested: failed = rstfailed or failed if first_report: first_report = False msg = 'rst doctests start' if not t._testfiles: r.start(msg=msg) else: r.write_center(msg) print() # use as the id, everything past the first 'sympy' file_id = rst_file[rst_file.find('sympy') + len('sympy') + 1:] print(file_id, end=" ") # get at least the name out so it is know who is being tested wid = r.terminal_width - len(file_id) - 1 # update width test_file = '[%s]' % (tested) report = '[%s]' % (rstfailed or 'OK') print(''.join( [test_file, ' '*(wid - len(test_file) - len(report)), report]) ) # the doctests for *py will have printed this message already if there was # a failure, so now only print it if there was intervening reporting by # testing the *rst as evidenced by first_report no longer being True. if not first_report and failed: print() print("DO *NOT* COMMIT!") return int(failed) sp = re.compile(r'([0-9]+)/([1-9][0-9]*)')
[docs]def split_list(l, split): """ Splits a list into part a of b split should be a string of the form 'a/b'. For instance, '1/3' would give the split one of three. If the length of the list is not divisible by the number of splits, the last split will have more items. >>> from sympy.utilities.runtests import split_list >>> a = list(range(10)) >>> split_list(a, '1/3') [0, 1, 2] >>> split_list(a, '2/3') [3, 4, 5] >>> split_list(a, '3/3') [6, 7, 8, 9] """ m = sp.match(split) if not m: raise ValueError("split must be a string of the form a/b where a and b are ints") i, t = map(int, m.groups()) return l[(i - 1)*len(l)//t:i*len(l)//t]
from collections import namedtuple SymPyTestResults = namedtuple('TestResults', 'failed attempted')
[docs]def sympytestfile(filename, module_relative=True, name=None, package=None, globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, parser=pdoctest.DocTestParser(), encoding=None): """ Test examples in the given file. Return (#failures, #tests). Optional keyword arg ``module_relative`` specifies how filenames should be interpreted: - If ``module_relative`` is True (the default), then ``filename`` specifies a module-relative path. By default, this path is relative to the calling module's directory; but if the ``package`` argument is specified, then it is relative to that package. To ensure os-independence, ``filename`` should use "/" characters to separate path segments, and should not be an absolute path (i.e., it may not begin with "/"). - If ``module_relative`` is False, then ``filename`` specifies an os-specific path. The path may be absolute or relative (to the current working directory). Optional keyword arg ``name`` gives the name of the test; by default use the file's basename. Optional keyword argument ``package`` is a Python package or the name of a Python package whose directory should be used as the base directory for a module relative filename. If no package is specified, then the calling module's directory is used as the base directory for module relative filenames. It is an error to specify ``package`` if ``module_relative`` is False. Optional keyword arg ``globs`` gives a dict to be used as the globals when executing examples; by default, use {}. A copy of this dict is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's examples start with a clean slate. Optional keyword arg ``extraglobs`` gives a dictionary that should be merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By default, no extra globals are used. Optional keyword arg ``verbose`` prints lots of stuff if true, prints only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv. Optional keyword arg ``report`` prints a summary at the end when true, else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed). Optional keyword arg ``optionflags`` or's together module constants, and defaults to 0. Possible values (see the docs for details): - DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 - DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE - NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE - ELLIPSIS - SKIP - IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL - REPORT_UDIFF - REPORT_CDIFF - REPORT_NDIFF - REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE Optional keyword arg ``raise_on_error`` raises an exception on the first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be post-mortem debugged. Optional keyword arg ``parser`` specifies a DocTestParser (or subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files. Optional keyword arg ``encoding`` specifies an encoding that should be used to convert the file to unicode. Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates) global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual. Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose) when you're done fiddling. """ if package and not module_relative: raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-" "relative paths.") # Relativize the path if not PY3: text, filename = pdoctest._load_testfile( filename, package, module_relative) if encoding is not None: text = text.decode(encoding) else: text, filename = pdoctest._load_testfile( filename, package, module_relative, encoding) # If no name was given, then use the file's name. if name is None: name = os.path.basename(filename) # Assemble the globals. if globs is None: globs = {} else: globs = globs.copy() if extraglobs is not None: globs.update(extraglobs) if '__name__' not in globs: globs['__name__'] = '__main__' if raise_on_error: runner = pdoctest.DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) else: runner = SymPyDocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags) runner._checker = SymPyOutputChecker() # Read the file, convert it to a test, and run it. test = parser.get_doctest(text, globs, name, filename, 0) runner.run(test, compileflags=future_flags) if report: runner.summarize() if pdoctest.master is None: pdoctest.master = runner else: pdoctest.master.merge(runner) return SymPyTestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries)
class SymPyTests(object): def __init__(self, reporter, kw="", post_mortem=False, seed=None, fast_threshold=None, slow_threshold=None): self._post_mortem = post_mortem self._kw = kw self._count = 0 self._root_dir = sympy_dir self._reporter = reporter self._reporter.root_dir(self._root_dir) self._testfiles = [] self._seed = seed if seed is not None else random.random() # Defaults in seconds, from human / UX design limits # http://www.nngroup.com/articles/response-times-3-important-limits/ # # These defaults are *NOT* set in stone as we are measuring different # things, so others feel free to come up with a better yardstick :) if fast_threshold: self._fast_threshold = float(fast_threshold) else: self._fast_threshold = 0.1 if slow_threshold: self._slow_threshold = float(slow_threshold) else: self._slow_threshold = 10 def test(self, sort=False, timeout=False, slow=False, enhance_asserts=False): """ Runs the tests returning True if all tests pass, otherwise False. If sort=False run tests in random order. """ if sort: self._testfiles.sort() elif slow: pass else: random.seed(self._seed) random.shuffle(self._testfiles) self._reporter.start(self._seed) for f in self._testfiles: try: self.test_file(f, sort, timeout, slow, enhance_asserts) except KeyboardInterrupt: print(" interrupted by user") self._reporter.finish() raise return self._reporter.finish() def _enhance_asserts(self, source): from ast import (NodeTransformer, Compare, Name, Store, Load, Tuple, Assign, BinOp, Str, Mod, Assert, parse, fix_missing_locations) ops = {"Eq": '==', "NotEq": '!=', "Lt": '<', "LtE": '<=', "Gt": '>', "GtE": '>=', "Is": 'is', "IsNot": 'is not', "In": 'in', "NotIn": 'not in'} class Transform(NodeTransformer): def visit_Assert(self, stmt): if isinstance(stmt.test, Compare): compare = stmt.test values = [compare.left] + compare.comparators names = [ "_%s" % i for i, _ in enumerate(values) ] names_store = [ Name(n, Store()) for n in names ] names_load = [ Name(n, Load()) for n in names ] target = Tuple(names_store, Store()) value = Tuple(values, Load()) assign = Assign([target], value) new_compare = Compare(names_load[0], compare.ops, names_load[1:]) msg_format = "\n%s " + "\n%s ".join([ ops[op.__class__.__name__] for op in compare.ops ]) + "\n%s" msg = BinOp(Str(msg_format), Mod(), Tuple(names_load, Load())) test = Assert(new_compare, msg, lineno=stmt.lineno, col_offset=stmt.col_offset) return [assign, test] else: return stmt tree = parse(source) new_tree = Transform().visit(tree) return fix_missing_locations(new_tree) def test_file(self, filename, sort=True, timeout=False, slow=False, enhance_asserts=False): reporter = self._reporter funcs = [] try: gl = {'__file__': filename} try: if PY3: open_file = lambda: open(filename, encoding="utf8") else: open_file = lambda: open(filename) with open_file() as f: source = f.read() if self._kw: for l in source.splitlines(): if l.lstrip().startswith('def '): if any(l.find(k) != -1 for k in self._kw): break else: return if enhance_asserts: try: source = self._enhance_asserts(source) except ImportError: pass code = compile(source, filename, "exec") exec_(code, gl) except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt): raise except ImportError: reporter.import_error(filename, sys.exc_info()) return except Exception: reporter.test_exception(sys.exc_info()) clear_cache() self._count += 1 random.seed(self._seed) pytestfile = "" if "XFAIL" in gl: pytestfile = inspect.getsourcefile(gl["XFAIL"]) pytestfile2 = "" if "slow" in gl: pytestfile2 = inspect.getsourcefile(gl["slow"]) disabled = gl.get("disabled", False) if not disabled: # we need to filter only those functions that begin with 'test_' # that are defined in the testing file or in the file where # is defined the XFAIL decorator funcs = [gl[f] for f in gl.keys() if f.startswith("test_") and (inspect.isfunction(gl[f]) or inspect.ismethod(gl[f])) and (inspect.getsourcefile(gl[f]) == filename or inspect.getsourcefile(gl[f]) == pytestfile or inspect.getsourcefile(gl[f]) == pytestfile2)] if slow: funcs = [f for f in funcs if getattr(f, '_slow', False)] # Sorting of XFAILed functions isn't fixed yet :-( funcs.sort(key=lambda x: inspect.getsourcelines(x)[1]) i = 0 while i < len(funcs): if isgeneratorfunction(funcs[i]): # some tests can be generators, that return the actual # test functions. We unpack it below: f = funcs.pop(i) for fg in f(): func = fg[0] args = fg[1:] fgw = lambda: func(*args) funcs.insert(i, fgw) i += 1 else: i += 1 # drop functions that are not selected with the keyword expression: funcs = [x for x in funcs if self.matches(x)] if not funcs: return except Exception: reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(funcs)) raise reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(funcs)) if not sort: random.shuffle(funcs) for f in funcs: start = time.time() reporter.entering_test(f) try: if getattr(f, '_slow', False) and not slow: raise Skipped("Slow") if timeout: self._timeout(f, timeout) else: random.seed(self._seed) f() except KeyboardInterrupt: if getattr(f, '_slow', False): reporter.test_skip("KeyboardInterrupt") else: raise except Exception: if timeout: signal.alarm(0) # Disable the alarm. It could not be handled before. t, v, tr = sys.exc_info() if t is AssertionError: reporter.test_fail((t, v, tr)) if self._post_mortem: pdb.post_mortem(tr) elif t.__name__ == "Skipped": reporter.test_skip(v) elif t.__name__ == "XFail": reporter.test_xfail() elif t.__name__ == "XPass": reporter.test_xpass(v) else: reporter.test_exception((t, v, tr)) if self._post_mortem: pdb.post_mortem(tr) else: reporter.test_pass() taken = time.time() - start if taken > self._slow_threshold: reporter.slow_test_functions.append((f.__name__, taken)) if getattr(f, '_slow', False) and slow: if taken < self._fast_threshold: reporter.fast_test_functions.append((f.__name__, taken)) reporter.leaving_filename() def _timeout(self, function, timeout): def callback(x, y): signal.alarm(0) raise Skipped("Timeout") signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, callback) signal.alarm(timeout) # Set an alarm with a given timeout function() signal.alarm(0) # Disable the alarm def matches(self, x): """ Does the keyword expression self._kw match "x"? Returns True/False. Always returns True if self._kw is "". """ if not self._kw: return True for kw in self._kw: if x.__name__.find(kw) != -1: return True return False def get_test_files(self, dir, pat='test_*.py'): """ Returns the list of test_*.py (default) files at or below directory ``dir`` relative to the sympy home directory. """ dir = os.path.join(self._root_dir, convert_to_native_paths([dir])[0]) g = [] for path, folders, files in os.walk(dir): g.extend([os.path.join(path, f) for f in files if fnmatch(f, pat)]) return sorted([sys_normcase(gi) for gi in g]) class SymPyDocTests(object): def __init__(self, reporter, normal): self._count = 0 self._root_dir = sympy_dir self._reporter = reporter self._reporter.root_dir(self._root_dir) self._normal = normal self._testfiles = [] def test(self): """ Runs the tests and returns True if all tests pass, otherwise False. """ self._reporter.start() for f in self._testfiles: try: self.test_file(f) except KeyboardInterrupt: print(" interrupted by user") self._reporter.finish() raise return self._reporter.finish() def test_file(self, filename): clear_cache() from sympy.core.compatibility import StringIO rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:] dirname, file = os.path.split(filename) module = rel_name.replace(os.sep, '.')[:-3] if rel_name.startswith("examples"): # Examples files do not have __init__.py files, # So we have to temporarily extend sys.path to import them sys.path.insert(0, dirname) module = file[:-3] # remove ".py" setup_pprint() try: module = pdoctest._normalize_module(module) tests = SymPyDocTestFinder().find(module) except (SystemExit, KeyboardInterrupt): raise except ImportError: self._reporter.import_error(filename, sys.exc_info()) return finally: if rel_name.startswith("examples"): del sys.path[0] tests = [test for test in tests if len(test.examples) > 0] # By default tests are sorted by alphabetical order by function name. # We sort by line number so one can edit the file sequentially from # bottom to top. However, if there are decorated functions, their line # numbers will be too large and for now one must just search for these # by text and function name. tests.sort(key=lambda x: -x.lineno) if not tests: return self._reporter.entering_filename(filename, len(tests)) for test in tests: assert len(test.examples) != 0 # check if there are external dependencies which need to be met if '_doctest_depends_on' in test.globs: has_dependencies = self._process_dependencies(test.globs['_doctest_depends_on']) if has_dependencies is not True: # has_dependencies is either True or a message self._reporter.test_skip(v="\n" + has_dependencies) continue if self._reporter._verbose: self._reporter.write("\n{} ".format(test.name)) runner = SymPyDocTestRunner(optionflags=pdoctest.ELLIPSIS | pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | pdoctest.IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL) runner._checker = SymPyOutputChecker() old = sys.stdout new = StringIO() sys.stdout = new # If the testing is normal, the doctests get importing magic to # provide the global namespace. If not normal (the default) then # then must run on their own; all imports must be explicit within # a function's docstring. Once imported that import will be # available to the rest of the tests in a given function's # docstring (unless clear_globs=True below). if not self._normal: test.globs = {} # if this is uncommented then all the test would get is what # comes by default with a "from sympy import *" #exec('from sympy import *') in test.globs test.globs['print_function'] = print_function try: f, t = runner.run(test, compileflags=future_flags, out=new.write, clear_globs=False) except KeyboardInterrupt: raise finally: sys.stdout = old if f > 0: self._reporter.doctest_fail(test.name, new.getvalue()) else: self._reporter.test_pass() self._reporter.leaving_filename() def get_test_files(self, dir, pat='*.py', init_only=True): """ Returns the list of \*.py files (default) from which docstrings will be tested which are at or below directory ``dir``. By default, only those that have an __init__.py in their parent directory and do not start with ``test_`` will be included. """ def importable(x): """ Checks if given pathname x is an importable module by checking for __init__.py file. Returns True/False. Currently we only test if the __init__.py file exists in the directory with the file "x" (in theory we should also test all the parent dirs). """ init_py = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(x), "__init__.py") return os.path.exists(init_py) dir = os.path.join(self._root_dir, convert_to_native_paths([dir])[0]) g = [] for path, folders, files in os.walk(dir): g.extend([os.path.join(path, f) for f in files if not f.startswith('test_') and fnmatch(f, pat)]) if init_only: # skip files that are not importable (i.e. missing __init__.py) g = [x for x in g if importable(x)] return [sys_normcase(gi) for gi in g] def _process_dependencies(self, deps): """ Returns ``False`` if some dependencies are not met and the test should be skipped otherwise returns ``True``. """ executables = deps.get('exe', None) moduledeps = deps.get('modules', None) viewers = deps.get('disable_viewers', None) pyglet = deps.get('pyglet', None) # print deps if executables is not None: for ex in executables: found = find_executable(ex) if found is None: return "Could not find %s" % ex if moduledeps is not None: for extmod in moduledeps: if extmod == 'matplotlib': matplotlib = import_module( 'matplotlib', __import__kwargs={'fromlist': ['pyplot', 'cm', 'collections']}, min_module_version='1.0.0', catch=(RuntimeError,)) if matplotlib is not None: pass else: return "Could not import matplotlib" else: # TODO min version support mod = import_module(extmod) if mod is not None: version = "unknown" if hasattr(mod, '__version__'): version = mod.__version__ else: return "Could not import %s" % mod if viewers is not None: import tempfile tempdir = tempfile.mkdtemp() os.environ['PATH'] = '%s:%s' % (tempdir, os.environ['PATH']) if PY3: vw = '#!/usr/bin/env python3\n' \ 'import sys\n' \ 'if len(sys.argv) <= 1:\n' \ ' exit("wrong number of args")\n' else: vw = '#!/usr/bin/env python\n' \ 'import sys\n' \ 'if len(sys.argv) <= 1:\n' \ ' exit("wrong number of args")\n' for viewer in viewers: with open(os.path.join(tempdir, viewer), 'w') as fh: fh.write(vw) # make the file executable os.chmod(os.path.join(tempdir, viewer), stat.S_IREAD | stat.S_IWRITE | stat.S_IXUSR) if pyglet: # monkey-patch pyglet s.t. it does not open a window during # doctesting import pyglet class DummyWindow(object): def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): self.has_exit=True self.width = 600 self.height = 400 def set_vsync(self, x): pass def switch_to(self): pass def push_handlers(self, x): pass def close(self): pass pyglet.window.Window = DummyWindow return True
[docs]class SymPyDocTestFinder(DocTestFinder): """ A class used to extract the DocTests that are relevant to a given object, from its docstring and the docstrings of its contained objects. Doctests can currently be extracted from the following object types: modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods, classmethods, and properties. Modified from doctest's version by looking harder for code in the case that it looks like the the code comes from a different module. In the case of decorated functions (e.g. @vectorize) they appear to come from a different module (e.g. multidemensional) even though their code is not there. """ def _find(self, tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, seen): """ Find tests for the given object and any contained objects, and add them to ``tests``. """ if self._verbose: print('Finding tests in %s' % name) # If we've already processed this object, then ignore it. if id(obj) in seen: return seen[id(obj)] = 1 # Make sure we don't run doctests for classes outside of sympy, such # as in numpy or scipy. if inspect.isclass(obj): if obj.__module__.split('.')[0] != 'sympy': return # Find a test for this object, and add it to the list of tests. test = self._get_test(obj, name, module, globs, source_lines) if test is not None: tests.append(test) if not self._recurse: return # Look for tests in a module's contained objects. if inspect.ismodule(obj): for rawname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): # Recurse to functions & classes. if inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val): # Make sure we don't run doctests functions or classes # from different modules if val.__module__ != module.__name__: continue assert self._from_module(module, val), \ "%s is not in module %s (rawname %s)" % (val, module, rawname) try: valname = '%s.%s' % (name, rawname) self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, globs, seen) except KeyboardInterrupt: raise # Look for tests in a module's __test__ dictionary. for valname, val in getattr(obj, '__test__', {}).items(): if not isinstance(valname, string_types): raise ValueError("SymPyDocTestFinder.find: __test__ keys " "must be strings: %r" % (type(valname),)) if not (inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or inspect.ismethod(val) or inspect.ismodule(val) or isinstance(val, string_types)): raise ValueError("SymPyDocTestFinder.find: __test__ values " "must be strings, functions, methods, " "classes, or modules: %r" % (type(val),)) valname = '%s.__test__.%s' % (name, valname) self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, globs, seen) # Look for tests in a class's contained objects. if inspect.isclass(obj): for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items(): # Special handling for staticmethod/classmethod. if isinstance(val, staticmethod): val = getattr(obj, valname) if isinstance(val, classmethod): val = getattr(obj, valname).__func__ # Recurse to methods, properties, and nested classes. if (inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or isinstance(val, property)): # Make sure we don't run doctests functions or classes # from different modules if isinstance(val, property): if hasattr(val.fget, '__module__'): if val.fget.__module__ != module.__name__: continue else: if val.__module__ != module.__name__: continue assert self._from_module(module, val), \ "%s is not in module %s (valname %s)" % ( val, module, valname) valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname) self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines, globs, seen) def _get_test(self, obj, name, module, globs, source_lines): """ Return a DocTest for the given object, if it defines a docstring; otherwise, return None. """ lineno = None # Extract the object's docstring. If it doesn't have one, # then return None (no test for this object). if isinstance(obj, string_types): # obj is a string in the case for objects in the polys package. # Note that source_lines is a binary string (compiled polys # modules), which can't be handled by _find_lineno so determine # the line number here. docstring = obj matches = re.findall("line \d+", name) assert len(matches) == 1, \ "string '%s' does not contain lineno " % name # NOTE: this is not the exact linenumber but its better than no # lineno ;) lineno = int(matches[0][5:]) else: try: if obj.__doc__ is None: docstring = '' else: docstring = obj.__doc__ if not isinstance(docstring, string_types): docstring = str(docstring) except (TypeError, AttributeError): docstring = '' # Don't bother if the docstring is empty. if self._exclude_empty and not docstring: return None # check that properties have a docstring because _find_lineno # assumes it if isinstance(obj, property): if obj.fget.__doc__ is None: return None # Find the docstring's location in the file. if lineno is None: # handling of properties is not implemented in _find_lineno so do # it here if hasattr(obj, 'func_closure') and obj.func_closure is not None: tobj = obj.func_closure[0].cell_contents elif isinstance(obj, property): tobj = obj.fget else: tobj = obj lineno = self._find_lineno(tobj, source_lines) if lineno is None: return None # Return a DocTest for this object. if module is None: filename = None else: filename = getattr(module, '__file__', module.__name__) if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"): filename = filename[:-1] if hasattr(obj, '_doctest_depends_on'): globs['_doctest_depends_on'] = obj._doctest_depends_on else: globs['_doctest_depends_on'] = {} return self._parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, name, filename, lineno)
[docs]class SymPyDocTestRunner(DocTestRunner): """ A class used to run DocTest test cases, and accumulate statistics. The ``run`` method is used to process a single DocTest case. It returns a tuple ``(f, t)``, where ``t`` is the number of test cases tried, and ``f`` is the number of test cases that failed. Modified from the doctest version to not reset the sys.displayhook (see issue 5140). See the docstring of the original DocTestRunner for more information. """
[docs] def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True): """ Run the examples in ``test``, and display the results using the writer function ``out``. The examples are run in the namespace ``test.globs``. If ``clear_globs`` is true (the default), then this namespace will be cleared after the test runs, to help with garbage collection. If you would like to examine the namespace after the test completes, then use ``clear_globs=False``. ``compileflags`` gives the set of flags that should be used by the Python compiler when running the examples. If not specified, then it will default to the set of future-import flags that apply to ``globs``. The output of each example is checked using ``SymPyDocTestRunner.check_output``, and the results are formatted by the ``SymPyDocTestRunner.report_*`` methods. """ self.test = test if compileflags is None: compileflags = pdoctest._extract_future_flags(test.globs) save_stdout = sys.stdout if out is None: out = save_stdout.write sys.stdout = self._fakeout # Patch pdb.set_trace to restore sys.stdout during interactive # debugging (so it's not still redirected to self._fakeout). # Note that the interactive output will go to *our* # save_stdout, even if that's not the real sys.stdout; this # allows us to write test cases for the set_trace behavior. save_set_trace = pdb.set_trace self.debugger = pdoctest._OutputRedirectingPdb(save_stdout) self.debugger.reset() pdb.set_trace = self.debugger.set_trace # Patch linecache.getlines, so we can see the example's source # when we're inside the debugger. self.save_linecache_getlines = pdoctest.linecache.getlines linecache.getlines = self.__patched_linecache_getlines try: test.globs['print_function'] = print_function return self.__run(test, compileflags, out) finally: sys.stdout = save_stdout pdb.set_trace = save_set_trace linecache.getlines = self.save_linecache_getlines if clear_globs: test.globs.clear()
# We have to override the name mangled methods. SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__patched_linecache_getlines = \ DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__patched_linecache_getlines SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__run = DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__run SymPyDocTestRunner._SymPyDocTestRunner__record_outcome = \ DocTestRunner._DocTestRunner__record_outcome
[docs]class SymPyOutputChecker(pdoctest.OutputChecker): """ Compared to the OutputChecker from the stdlib our OutputChecker class supports numerical comparison of floats occuring in the output of the doctest examples """ def __init__(self): # NOTE OutputChecker is an old-style class with no __init__ method, # so we can't call the base class version of __init__ here got_floats = r'(\d+\.\d*|\.\d+)' # floats in the 'want' string may contain ellipses want_floats = got_floats + r'(\.{3})?' front_sep = r'\s|\+|\-|\*|,' back_sep = front_sep + r'|j|e' fbeg = r'^%s(?=%s|$)' % (got_floats, back_sep) fmidend = r'(?<=%s)%s(?=%s|$)' % (front_sep, got_floats, back_sep) self.num_got_rgx = re.compile(r'(%s|%s)' %(fbeg, fmidend)) fbeg = r'^%s(?=%s|$)' % (want_floats, back_sep) fmidend = r'(?<=%s)%s(?=%s|$)' % (front_sep, want_floats, back_sep) self.num_want_rgx = re.compile(r'(%s|%s)' %(fbeg, fmidend))
[docs] def check_output(self, want, got, optionflags): """ Return True iff the actual output from an example (`got`) matches the expected output (`want`). These strings are always considered to match if they are identical; but depending on what option flags the test runner is using, several non-exact match types are also possible. See the documentation for `TestRunner` for more information about option flags. """ # Handle the common case first, for efficiency: # if they're string-identical, always return true. if got == want: return True # TODO parse integers as well ? # Parse floats and compare them. If some of the parsed floats contain # ellipses, skip the comparison. matches = self.num_got_rgx.finditer(got) numbers_got = [match.group(1) for match in matches] # list of strs matches = self.num_want_rgx.finditer(want) numbers_want = [match.group(1) for match in matches] # list of strs if len(numbers_got) != len(numbers_want): return False if len(numbers_got) > 0: nw_ = [] for ng, nw in zip(numbers_got, numbers_want): if '...' in nw: nw_.append(ng) continue else: nw_.append(nw) if abs(float(ng)-float(nw)) > 1e-5: return False got = self.num_got_rgx.sub(r'%s', got) got = got % tuple(nw_) # <BLANKLINE> can be used as a special sequence to signify a # blank line, unless the DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag is used. if not (optionflags & pdoctest.DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE): # Replace <BLANKLINE> in want with a blank line. want = re.sub('(?m)^%s\s*?$' % re.escape(pdoctest.BLANKLINE_MARKER), '', want) # If a line in got contains only spaces, then remove the # spaces. got = re.sub('(?m)^\s*?$', '', got) if got == want: return True # This flag causes doctest to ignore any differences in the # contents of whitespace strings. Note that this can be used # in conjunction with the ELLIPSIS flag. if optionflags & pdoctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE: got = ' '.join(got.split()) want = ' '.join(want.split()) if got == want: return True # The ELLIPSIS flag says to let the sequence "..." in `want` # match any substring in `got`. if optionflags & pdoctest.ELLIPSIS: if pdoctest._ellipsis_match(want, got): return True # We didn't find any match; return false. return False
[docs]class Reporter(object): """ Parent class for all reporters. """ pass
[docs]class PyTestReporter(Reporter): """ Py.test like reporter. Should produce output identical to py.test. """ def __init__(self, verbose=False, tb="short", colors=True, force_colors=False, split=None): self._verbose = verbose self._tb_style = tb self._colors = colors self._force_colors = force_colors self._xfailed = 0 self._xpassed = [] self._failed = [] self._failed_doctest = [] self._passed = 0 self._skipped = 0 self._exceptions = [] self._terminal_width = None self._default_width = 80 self._split = split # TODO: Should these be protected? self.slow_test_functions = [] self.fast_test_functions = [] # this tracks the x-position of the cursor (useful for positioning # things on the screen), without the need for any readline library: self._write_pos = 0 self._line_wrap = False def root_dir(self, dir): self._root_dir = dir @property def terminal_width(self): if self._terminal_width is not None: return self._terminal_width def findout_terminal_width(): if sys.platform == "win32": # Windows support is based on: # # http://code.activestate.com/recipes/ # 440694-determine-size-of-console-window-on-windows/ from ctypes import windll, create_string_buffer h = windll.kernel32.GetStdHandle(-12) csbi = create_string_buffer(22) res = windll.kernel32.GetConsoleScreenBufferInfo(h, csbi) if res: import struct (_, _, _, _, _, left, _, right, _, _, _) = \ struct.unpack("hhhhHhhhhhh", csbi.raw) return right - left else: return self._default_width if hasattr(sys.stdout, 'isatty') and not sys.stdout.isatty(): return self._default_width # leave PIPEs alone try: process = subprocess.Popen(['stty', '-a'], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) stdout = process.stdout.read() if PY3: stdout = stdout.decode("utf-8") except (OSError, IOError): pass else: # We support the following output formats from stty: # # 1) Linux -> columns 80 # 2) OS X -> 80 columns # 3) Solaris -> columns = 80 re_linux = r"columns\s+(?P<columns>\d+);" re_osx = r"(?P<columns>\d+)\s*columns;" re_solaris = r"columns\s+=\s+(?P<columns>\d+);" for regex in (re_linux, re_osx, re_solaris): match = re.search(regex, stdout) if match is not None: columns = match.group('columns') try: width = int(columns) except ValueError: pass if width != 0: return width return self._default_width width = findout_terminal_width() self._terminal_width = width return width
[docs] def write(self, text, color="", align="left", width=None, force_colors=False): """ Prints a text on the screen. It uses sys.stdout.write(), so no readline library is necessary. Parameters ========== color : choose from the colors below, "" means default color align : "left"/"right", "left" is a normal print, "right" is aligned on the right-hand side of the screen, filled with spaces if necessary width : the screen width """ color_templates = ( ("Black", "0;30"), ("Red", "0;31"), ("Green", "0;32"), ("Brown", "0;33"), ("Blue", "0;34"), ("Purple", "0;35"), ("Cyan", "0;36"), ("LightGray", "0;37"), ("DarkGray", "1;30"), ("LightRed", "1;31"), ("LightGreen", "1;32"), ("Yellow", "1;33"), ("LightBlue", "1;34"), ("LightPurple", "1;35"), ("LightCyan", "1;36"), ("White", "1;37"), ) colors = {} for name, value in color_templates: colors[name] = value c_normal = '\033[0m' c_color = '\033[%sm' if width is None: width = self.terminal_width if align == "right": if self._write_pos + len(text) > width: # we don't fit on the current line, create a new line self.write("\n") self.write(" "*(width - self._write_pos - len(text))) if not self._force_colors and hasattr(sys.stdout, 'isatty') and not \ sys.stdout.isatty(): # the stdout is not a terminal, this for example happens if the # output is piped to less, e.g. "bin/test | less". In this case, # the terminal control sequences would be printed verbatim, so # don't use any colors. color = "" elif sys.platform == "win32": # Windows consoles don't support ANSI escape sequences color = "" elif not self._colors: color = "" if self._line_wrap: if text[0] != "\n": sys.stdout.write("\n") # Avoid UnicodeEncodeError when printing out test failures if PY3 and IS_WINDOWS: text = text.encode('raw_unicode_escape').decode('utf8', 'ignore') elif PY3 and not sys.stdout.encoding.lower().startswith('utf'): text = text.encode(sys.stdout.encoding, 'backslashreplace' ).decode(sys.stdout.encoding) if color == "": sys.stdout.write(text) else: sys.stdout.write("%s%s%s" % (c_color % colors[color], text, c_normal)) sys.stdout.flush() l = text.rfind("\n") if l == -1: self._write_pos += len(text) else: self._write_pos = len(text) - l - 1 self._line_wrap = self._write_pos >= width self._write_pos %= width
def write_center(self, text, delim="="): width = self.terminal_width if text != "": text = " %s " % text idx = (width - len(text)) // 2 t = delim*idx + text + delim*(width - idx - len(text)) self.write(t + "\n") def write_exception(self, e, val, tb): t = traceback.extract_tb(tb) # remove the first item, as that is always runtests.py t = t[1:] t = traceback.format_list(t) self.write("".join(t)) t = traceback.format_exception_only(e, val) self.write("".join(t)) def start(self, seed=None, msg="test process starts"): self.write_center(msg) executable = sys.executable v = tuple(sys.version_info) python_version = "%s.%s.%s-%s-%s" % v implementation = platform.python_implementation() if implementation == 'PyPy': implementation += " %s.%s.%s-%s-%s" % sys.pypy_version_info self.write("executable: %s (%s) [%s]\n" % (executable, python_version, implementation)) from .misc import ARCH self.write("architecture: %s\n" % ARCH) from sympy.core.cache import USE_CACHE self.write("cache: %s\n" % USE_CACHE) from sympy.core.compatibility import GROUND_TYPES, HAS_GMPY version = '' if GROUND_TYPES =='gmpy': if HAS_GMPY == 1: import gmpy elif HAS_GMPY == 2: import gmpy2 as gmpy version = gmpy.version() self.write("ground types: %s %s\n" % (GROUND_TYPES, version)) if seed is not None: self.write("random seed: %d\n" % seed) from .misc import HASH_RANDOMIZATION self.write("hash randomization: ") hash_seed = os.getenv("PYTHONHASHSEED") or '0' if HASH_RANDOMIZATION and (hash_seed == "random" or int(hash_seed)): self.write("on (PYTHONHASHSEED=%s)\n" % hash_seed) else: self.write("off\n") if self._split: self.write("split: %s\n" % self._split) self.write('\n') self._t_start = clock() def finish(self): self._t_end = clock() self.write("\n") global text, linelen text = "tests finished: %d passed, " % self._passed linelen = len(text) def add_text(mytext): global text, linelen """Break new text if too long.""" if linelen + len(mytext) > self.terminal_width: text += '\n' linelen = 0 text += mytext linelen += len(mytext) if len(self._failed) > 0: add_text("%d failed, " % len(self._failed)) if len(self._failed_doctest) > 0: add_text("%d failed, " % len(self._failed_doctest)) if self._skipped > 0: add_text("%d skipped, " % self._skipped) if self._xfailed > 0: add_text("%d expected to fail, " % self._xfailed) if len(self._xpassed) > 0: add_text("%d expected to fail but passed, " % len(self._xpassed)) if len(self._exceptions) > 0: add_text("%d exceptions, " % len(self._exceptions)) add_text("in %.2f seconds" % (self._t_end - self._t_start)) if self.slow_test_functions: self.write_center('slowest tests', '_') sorted_slow = sorted(self.slow_test_functions, key=lambda r: r[1]) for slow_func_name, taken in sorted_slow: print('%s - Took %.3f seconds' % (slow_func_name, taken)) if self.fast_test_functions: self.write_center('unexpectedly fast tests', '_') sorted_fast = sorted(self.fast_test_functions, key=lambda r: r[1]) for fast_func_name, taken in sorted_fast: print('%s - Took %.3f seconds' % (fast_func_name, taken)) if len(self._xpassed) > 0: self.write_center("xpassed tests", "_") for e in self._xpassed: self.write("%s: %s\n" % (e[0], e[1])) self.write("\n") if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._exceptions) > 0: for e in self._exceptions: filename, f, (t, val, tb) = e self.write_center("", "_") if f is None: s = "%s" % filename else: s = "%s:%s" % (filename, f.__name__) self.write_center(s, "_") self.write_exception(t, val, tb) self.write("\n") if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._failed) > 0: for e in self._failed: filename, f, (t, val, tb) = e self.write_center("", "_") self.write_center("%s:%s" % (filename, f.__name__), "_") self.write_exception(t, val, tb) self.write("\n") if self._tb_style != "no" and len(self._failed_doctest) > 0: for e in self._failed_doctest: filename, msg = e self.write_center("", "_") self.write_center("%s" % filename, "_") self.write(msg) self.write("\n") self.write_center(text) ok = len(self._failed) == 0 and len(self._exceptions) == 0 and \ len(self._failed_doctest) == 0 if not ok: self.write("DO *NOT* COMMIT!\n") return ok def entering_filename(self, filename, n): rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:] self._active_file = rel_name self._active_file_error = False self.write(rel_name) self.write("[%d] " % n) def leaving_filename(self): self.write(" ") if self._active_file_error: self.write("[FAIL]", "Red", align="right") else: self.write("[OK]", "Green", align="right") self.write("\n") if self._verbose: self.write("\n") def entering_test(self, f): self._active_f = f if self._verbose: self.write("\n" + f.__name__ + " ") def test_xfail(self): self._xfailed += 1 self.write("f", "Green") def test_xpass(self, v): message = str(v) self._xpassed.append((self._active_file, message)) self.write("X", "Green") def test_fail(self, exc_info): self._failed.append((self._active_file, self._active_f, exc_info)) self.write("F", "Red") self._active_file_error = True def doctest_fail(self, name, error_msg): # the first line contains "******", remove it: error_msg = "\n".join(error_msg.split("\n")[1:]) self._failed_doctest.append((name, error_msg)) self.write("F", "Red") self._active_file_error = True def test_pass(self, char="."): self._passed += 1 if self._verbose: self.write("ok", "Green") else: self.write(char, "Green") def test_skip(self, v=None): char = "s" self._skipped += 1 if v is not None: message = str(v) if message == "KeyboardInterrupt": char = "K" elif message == "Timeout": char = "T" elif message == "Slow": char = "w" if self._verbose: if v is not None: self.write(message + ' ', "Blue") else: self.write(" - ", "Blue") self.write(char, "Blue") def test_exception(self, exc_info): self._exceptions.append((self._active_file, self._active_f, exc_info)) self.write("E", "Red") self._active_file_error = True def import_error(self, filename, exc_info): self._exceptions.append((filename, None, exc_info)) rel_name = filename[len(self._root_dir) + 1:] self.write(rel_name) self.write("[?] Failed to import", "Red") self.write(" ") self.write("[FAIL]", "Red", align="right") self.write("\n")
sympy_dir = get_sympy_dir()