/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/testtools/runtest.py is in python-testtools 0.9.35-0ubuntu1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
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"""Individual test case execution."""
__all__ = [
'MultipleExceptions',
'RunTest',
]
import sys
from testtools.testresult import ExtendedToOriginalDecorator
class MultipleExceptions(Exception):
"""Represents many exceptions raised from some operation.
:ivar args: The sys.exc_info() tuples for each exception.
"""
class RunTest(object):
"""An object to run a test.
RunTest objects are used to implement the internal logic involved in
running a test. TestCase.__init__ stores _RunTest as the class of RunTest
to execute. Passing the runTest= parameter to TestCase.__init__ allows a
different RunTest class to be used to execute the test.
Subclassing or replacing RunTest can be useful to add functionality to the
way that tests are run in a given project.
:ivar case: The test case that is to be run.
:ivar result: The result object a case is reporting to.
:ivar handlers: A list of (ExceptionClass, handler_function) for
exceptions that should be caught if raised from the user
code. Exceptions that are caught are checked against this list in
first to last order. There is a catch-all of 'Exception' at the end
of the list, so to add a new exception to the list, insert it at the
front (which ensures that it will be checked before any existing base
classes in the list. If you add multiple exceptions some of which are
subclasses of each other, add the most specific exceptions last (so
they come before their parent classes in the list).
:ivar exception_caught: An object returned when _run_user catches an
exception.
:ivar _exceptions: A list of caught exceptions, used to do the single
reporting of error/failure/skip etc.
"""
def __init__(self, case, handlers=None):
"""Create a RunTest to run a case.
:param case: A testtools.TestCase test case object.
:param handlers: Exception handlers for this RunTest. These are stored
in self.handlers and can be modified later if needed.
"""
self.case = case
self.handlers = handlers or []
self.exception_caught = object()
self._exceptions = []
def run(self, result=None):
"""Run self.case reporting activity to result.
:param result: Optional testtools.TestResult to report activity to.
:return: The result object the test was run against.
"""
if result is None:
actual_result = self.case.defaultTestResult()
actual_result.startTestRun()
else:
actual_result = result
try:
return self._run_one(actual_result)
finally:
if result is None:
actual_result.stopTestRun()
def _run_one(self, result):
"""Run one test reporting to result.
:param result: A testtools.TestResult to report activity to.
This result object is decorated with an ExtendedToOriginalDecorator
to ensure that the latest TestResult API can be used with
confidence by client code.
:return: The result object the test was run against.
"""
return self._run_prepared_result(ExtendedToOriginalDecorator(result))
def _run_prepared_result(self, result):
"""Run one test reporting to result.
:param result: A testtools.TestResult to report activity to.
:return: The result object the test was run against.
"""
result.startTest(self.case)
self.result = result
try:
self._exceptions = []
self._run_core()
if self._exceptions:
# One or more caught exceptions, now trigger the test's
# reporting method for just one.
e = self._exceptions.pop()
for exc_class, handler in self.handlers:
if isinstance(e, exc_class):
handler(self.case, self.result, e)
break
finally:
result.stopTest(self.case)
return result
def _run_core(self):
"""Run the user supplied test code."""
if self.exception_caught == self._run_user(self.case._run_setup,
self.result):
# Don't run the test method if we failed getting here.
self._run_cleanups(self.result)
return
# Run everything from here on in. If any of the methods raise an
# exception we'll have failed.
failed = False
try:
if self.exception_caught == self._run_user(
self.case._run_test_method, self.result):
failed = True
finally:
try:
if self.exception_caught == self._run_user(
self.case._run_teardown, self.result):
failed = True
finally:
try:
if self.exception_caught == self._run_user(
self._run_cleanups, self.result):
failed = True
finally:
if getattr(self.case, 'force_failure', None):
self._run_user(_raise_force_fail_error)
failed = True
if not failed:
self.result.addSuccess(self.case,
details=self.case.getDetails())
def _run_cleanups(self, result):
"""Run the cleanups that have been added with addCleanup.
See the docstring for addCleanup for more information.
:return: None if all cleanups ran without error,
``exception_caught`` if there was an error.
"""
failing = False
while self.case._cleanups:
function, arguments, keywordArguments = self.case._cleanups.pop()
got_exception = self._run_user(
function, *arguments, **keywordArguments)
if got_exception == self.exception_caught:
failing = True
if failing:
return self.exception_caught
def _run_user(self, fn, *args, **kwargs):
"""Run a user supplied function.
Exceptions are processed by `_got_user_exception`.
:return: Either whatever 'fn' returns or ``exception_caught`` if
'fn' raised an exception.
"""
try:
return fn(*args, **kwargs)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except:
return self._got_user_exception(sys.exc_info())
def _got_user_exception(self, exc_info, tb_label='traceback'):
"""Called when user code raises an exception.
If 'exc_info' is a `MultipleExceptions`, then we recurse into it
unpacking the errors that it's made up from.
:param exc_info: A sys.exc_info() tuple for the user error.
:param tb_label: An optional string label for the error. If
not specified, will default to 'traceback'.
:return: 'exception_caught' if we catch one of the exceptions that
have handlers in 'handlers', otherwise raise the error.
"""
if exc_info[0] is MultipleExceptions:
for sub_exc_info in exc_info[1].args:
self._got_user_exception(sub_exc_info, tb_label)
return self.exception_caught
try:
e = exc_info[1]
self.case.onException(exc_info, tb_label=tb_label)
finally:
del exc_info
for exc_class, handler in self.handlers:
if isinstance(e, exc_class):
self._exceptions.append(e)
return self.exception_caught
raise e
def _raise_force_fail_error():
raise AssertionError("Forced Test Failure")
# Signal that this is part of the testing framework, and that code from this
# should not normally appear in tracebacks.
__unittest = True
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