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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
7 # Provided as-is; use at your own risk; no warranty; no promises; enjoy!
9 r"""Module doctest -- a framework for running examples in docstrings.
11 In simplest use, end each module M to be tested with:
13 def _test():
14 import doctest
15 doctest.testmod()
17 if __name__ == "__main__":
18 _test()
20 Then running the module as a script will cause the examples in the
21 docstrings to get executed and verified:
23 python M.py
25 This won't display anything unless an example fails, in which case the
26 failing 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
28 line of output is "Test failed.".
30 Run it with the -v switch instead:
32 python M.py -v
34 and a detailed report of all examples tried is printed to stdout, along
35 with assorted summaries at the end.
37 You can force verbose mode by passing "verbose=True" to testmod, or prohibit
38 it by passing "verbose=False". In either of those cases, sys.argv is not
39 examined by testmod.
41 There are a variety of other ways to run doctests, including integration
42 with the unittest framework, and support for running non-Python text
43 files containing doctests. There are also many ways to override parts
44 of doctest's default behaviors. See the Library Reference Manual for
45 details.
46 """
48 __docformat__ = 'reStructuredText en'
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 # 1. Utility Functions
66 # 2. Example & DocTest
67 'Example',
68 'DocTest',
69 # 3. Doctest Parser
70 'DocTestParser',
71 # 4. Doctest Finder
72 'DocTestFinder',
73 # 5. Doctest Runner
74 'DocTestRunner',
75 'OutputChecker',
76 'DocTestFailure',
77 'UnexpectedException',
78 'DebugRunner',
79 # 6. Test Functions
80 'testmod',
81 'testfile',
82 'run_docstring_examples',
83 # 7. Unittest Support
84 'DocTestSuite',
85 'DocFileSuite',
86 'set_unittest_reportflags',
87 # 8. Debugging Support
88 'script_from_examples',
89 'testsource',
90 'debug_src',
91 'debug',
94 import __future__
96 import sys, traceback, inspect, linecache, os, re
97 import unittest, difflib, pdb, tempfile
98 import warnings
99 from io import StringIO
100 from collections import namedtuple
102 TestResults = namedtuple('TestResults', 'failed attempted')
104 # There are 4 basic classes:
105 # - Example: a <source, want> pair, plus an intra-docstring line number.
106 # - DocTest: a collection of examples, parsed from a docstring, plus
107 # info about where the docstring came from (name, filename, lineno).
108 # - DocTestFinder: extracts DocTests from a given object's docstring and
109 # its contained objects' docstrings.
110 # - DocTestRunner: runs DocTest cases, and accumulates statistics.
112 # So the basic picture is:
114 # list of:
115 # +------+ +---------+ +-------+
116 # |object| --DocTestFinder-> | DocTest | --DocTestRunner-> |results|
117 # +------+ +---------+ +-------+
118 # | Example |
119 # | ... |
120 # | Example |
121 # +---------+
123 # Option constants.
125 OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME = {}
126 def register_optionflag(name):
127 # Create a new flag unless `name` is already known.
128 return OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME.setdefault(name, 1 << len(OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME))
130 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1')
131 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE = register_optionflag('DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE')
132 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE = register_optionflag('NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE')
133 ELLIPSIS = register_optionflag('ELLIPSIS')
134 SKIP = register_optionflag('SKIP')
135 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL = register_optionflag('IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL')
137 COMPARISON_FLAGS = (DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 |
138 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE |
139 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE |
140 ELLIPSIS |
141 SKIP |
142 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL)
144 REPORT_UDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_UDIFF')
145 REPORT_CDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_CDIFF')
146 REPORT_NDIFF = register_optionflag('REPORT_NDIFF')
147 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE = register_optionflag('REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE')
149 REPORTING_FLAGS = (REPORT_UDIFF |
150 REPORT_CDIFF |
151 REPORT_NDIFF |
152 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE)
154 # Special string markers for use in `want` strings:
155 BLANKLINE_MARKER = '<BLANKLINE>'
156 ELLIPSIS_MARKER = '...'
158 ######################################################################
159 ## Table of Contents
160 ######################################################################
161 # 1. Utility Functions
162 # 2. Example & DocTest -- store test cases
163 # 3. DocTest Parser -- extracts examples from strings
164 # 4. DocTest Finder -- extracts test cases from objects
165 # 5. DocTest Runner -- runs test cases
166 # 6. Test Functions -- convenient wrappers for testing
167 # 7. Unittest Support
168 # 8. Debugging Support
169 # 9. Example Usage
171 ######################################################################
172 ## 1. Utility Functions
173 ######################################################################
175 def _extract_future_flags(globs):
177 Return the compiler-flags associated with the future features that
178 have been imported into the given namespace (globs).
180 flags = 0
181 for fname in __future__.all_feature_names:
182 feature = globs.get(fname, None)
183 if feature is getattr(__future__, fname):
184 flags |= feature.compiler_flag
185 return flags
187 def _normalize_module(module, depth=2):
189 Return the module specified by `module`. In particular:
190 - If `module` is a module, then return module.
191 - If `module` is a string, then import and return the
192 module with that name.
193 - If `module` is None, then return the calling module.
194 The calling module is assumed to be the module of
195 the stack frame at the given depth in the call stack.
197 if inspect.ismodule(module):
198 return module
199 elif isinstance(module, str):
200 return __import__(module, globals(), locals(), ["*"])
201 elif module is None:
202 return sys.modules[sys._getframe(depth).f_globals['__name__']]
203 else:
204 raise TypeError("Expected a module, string, or None")
206 def _load_testfile(filename, package, module_relative, encoding):
207 if module_relative:
208 package = _normalize_module(package, 3)
209 filename = _module_relative_path(package, filename)
210 if hasattr(package, '__loader__'):
211 if hasattr(package.__loader__, 'get_data'):
212 file_contents = package.__loader__.get_data(filename)
213 file_contents = file_contents.decode(encoding)
214 # get_data() opens files as 'rb', so one must do the equivalent
215 # conversion as universal newlines would do.
216 return file_contents.replace(os.linesep, '\n'), filename
217 return open(filename, encoding=encoding).read(), filename
219 def _indent(s, indent=4):
221 Add the given number of space characters to the beginning every
222 non-blank line in `s`, and return the result.
224 # This regexp matches the start of non-blank lines:
225 return re.sub('(?m)^(?!$)', indent*' ', s)
227 def _exception_traceback(exc_info):
229 Return a string containing a traceback message for the given
230 exc_info tuple (as returned by sys.exc_info()).
232 # Get a traceback message.
233 excout = StringIO()
234 exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb = exc_info
235 traceback.print_exception(exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb, file=excout)
236 return excout.getvalue()
238 # Override some StringIO methods.
239 class _SpoofOut(StringIO):
240 def getvalue(self):
241 result = StringIO.getvalue(self)
242 # If anything at all was written, make sure there's a trailing
243 # newline. There's no way for the expected output to indicate
244 # that a trailing newline is missing.
245 if result and not result.endswith("\n"):
246 result += "\n"
247 return result
249 def truncate(self, size=None):
250 StringIO.truncate(self, size)
252 # Worst-case linear-time ellipsis matching.
253 def _ellipsis_match(want, got):
255 Essentially the only subtle case:
256 >>> _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa')
257 False
259 if ELLIPSIS_MARKER not in want:
260 return want == got
262 # Find "the real" strings.
263 ws = want.split(ELLIPSIS_MARKER)
264 assert len(ws) >= 2
266 # Deal with exact matches possibly needed at one or both ends.
267 startpos, endpos = 0, len(got)
268 w = ws[0]
269 if w: # starts with exact match
270 if got.startswith(w):
271 startpos = len(w)
272 del ws[0]
273 else:
274 return False
275 w = ws[-1]
276 if w: # ends with exact match
277 if got.endswith(w):
278 endpos -= len(w)
279 del ws[-1]
280 else:
281 return False
283 if startpos > endpos:
284 # Exact end matches required more characters than we have, as in
285 # _ellipsis_match('aa...aa', 'aaa')
286 return False
288 # For the rest, we only need to find the leftmost non-overlapping
289 # match for each piece. If there's no overall match that way alone,
290 # there's no overall match period.
291 for w in ws:
292 # w may be '' at times, if there are consecutive ellipses, or
293 # due to an ellipsis at the start or end of `want`. That's OK.
294 # Search for an empty string succeeds, and doesn't change startpos.
295 startpos = got.find(w, startpos, endpos)
296 if startpos < 0:
297 return False
298 startpos += len(w)
300 return True
302 def _comment_line(line):
303 "Return a commented form of the given line"
304 line = line.rstrip()
305 if line:
306 return '# '+line
307 else:
308 return '#'
310 class _OutputRedirectingPdb(pdb.Pdb):
312 A specialized version of the python debugger that redirects stdout
313 to a given stream when interacting with the user. Stdout is *not*
314 redirected when traced code is executed.
316 def __init__(self, out):
317 self.__out = out
318 self.__debugger_used = False
319 pdb.Pdb.__init__(self, stdout=out)
321 def set_trace(self, frame=None):
322 self.__debugger_used = True
323 if frame is None:
324 frame = sys._getframe().f_back
325 pdb.Pdb.set_trace(self, frame)
327 def set_continue(self):
328 # Calling set_continue unconditionally would break unit test
329 # coverage reporting, as Bdb.set_continue calls sys.settrace(None).
330 if self.__debugger_used:
331 pdb.Pdb.set_continue(self)
333 def trace_dispatch(self, *args):
334 # Redirect stdout to the given stream.
335 save_stdout = sys.stdout
336 sys.stdout = self.__out
337 # Call Pdb's trace dispatch method.
338 try:
339 return pdb.Pdb.trace_dispatch(self, *args)
340 finally:
341 sys.stdout = save_stdout
343 # [XX] Normalize with respect to os.path.pardir?
344 def _module_relative_path(module, path):
345 if not inspect.ismodule(module):
346 raise TypeError('Expected a module: %r' % module)
347 if path.startswith('/'):
348 raise ValueError('Module-relative files may not have absolute paths')
350 # Find the base directory for the path.
351 if hasattr(module, '__file__'):
352 # A normal module/package
353 basedir = os.path.split(module.__file__)[0]
354 elif module.__name__ == '__main__':
355 # An interactive session.
356 if len(sys.argv)>0 and sys.argv[0] != '':
357 basedir = os.path.split(sys.argv[0])[0]
358 else:
359 basedir = os.curdir
360 else:
361 # A module w/o __file__ (this includes builtins)
362 raise ValueError("Can't resolve paths relative to the module " +
363 module + " (it has no __file__)")
365 # Combine the base directory and the path.
366 return os.path.join(basedir, *(path.split('/')))
368 ######################################################################
369 ## 2. Example & DocTest
370 ######################################################################
371 ## - An "example" is a <source, want> pair, where "source" is a
372 ## fragment of source code, and "want" is the expected output for
373 ## "source." The Example class also includes information about
374 ## where the example was extracted from.
376 ## - A "doctest" is a collection of examples, typically extracted from
377 ## a string (such as an object's docstring). The DocTest class also
378 ## includes information about where the string was extracted from.
380 class Example:
382 A single doctest example, consisting of source code and expected
383 output. `Example` defines the following attributes:
385 - source: A single Python statement, always ending with a newline.
386 The constructor adds a newline if needed.
388 - want: The expected output from running the source code (either
389 from stdout, or a traceback in case of exception). `want` ends
390 with a newline unless it's empty, in which case it's an empty
391 string. The constructor adds a newline if needed.
393 - exc_msg: The exception message generated by the example, if
394 the example is expected to generate an exception; or `None` if
395 it is not expected to generate an exception. This exception
396 message is compared against the return value of
397 `traceback.format_exception_only()`. `exc_msg` ends with a
398 newline unless it's `None`. The constructor adds a newline
399 if needed.
401 - lineno: The line number within the DocTest string containing
402 this Example where the Example begins. This line number is
403 zero-based, with respect to the beginning of the DocTest.
405 - indent: The example's indentation in the DocTest string.
406 I.e., the number of space characters that preceed the
407 example's first prompt.
409 - options: A dictionary mapping from option flags to True or
410 False, which is used to override default options for this
411 example. Any option flags not contained in this dictionary
412 are left at their default value (as specified by the
413 DocTestRunner's optionflags). By default, no options are set.
415 def __init__(self, source, want, exc_msg=None, lineno=0, indent=0,
416 options=None):
417 # Normalize inputs.
418 if not source.endswith('\n'):
419 source += '\n'
420 if want and not want.endswith('\n'):
421 want += '\n'
422 if exc_msg is not None and not exc_msg.endswith('\n'):
423 exc_msg += '\n'
424 # Store properties.
425 self.source = source
426 self.want = want
427 self.lineno = lineno
428 self.indent = indent
429 if options is None: options = {}
430 self.options = options
431 self.exc_msg = exc_msg
433 class DocTest:
435 A collection of doctest examples that should be run in a single
436 namespace. Each `DocTest` defines the following attributes:
438 - examples: the list of examples.
440 - globs: The namespace (aka globals) that the examples should
441 be run in.
443 - name: A name identifying the DocTest (typically, the name of
444 the object whose docstring this DocTest was extracted from).
446 - filename: The name of the file that this DocTest was extracted
447 from, or `None` if the filename is unknown.
449 - lineno: The line number within filename where this DocTest
450 begins, or `None` if the line number is unavailable. This
451 line number is zero-based, with respect to the beginning of
452 the file.
454 - docstring: The string that the examples were extracted from,
455 or `None` if the string is unavailable.
457 def __init__(self, examples, globs, name, filename, lineno, docstring):
459 Create a new DocTest containing the given examples. The
460 DocTest's globals are initialized with a copy of `globs`.
462 assert not isinstance(examples, str), \
463 "DocTest no longer accepts str; use DocTestParser instead"
464 self.examples = examples
465 self.docstring = docstring
466 self.globs = globs.copy()
467 self.name = name
468 self.filename = filename
469 self.lineno = lineno
471 def __repr__(self):
472 if len(self.examples) == 0:
473 examples = 'no examples'
474 elif len(self.examples) == 1:
475 examples = '1 example'
476 else:
477 examples = '%d examples' % len(self.examples)
478 return ('<DocTest %s from %s:%s (%s)>' %
479 (self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, examples))
482 # This lets us sort tests by name:
483 def __lt__(self, other):
484 if not isinstance(other, DocTest):
485 return NotImplemented
486 return ((self.name, self.filename, self.lineno, id(self))
488 (other.name, other.filename, other.lineno, id(other)))
490 ######################################################################
491 ## 3. DocTestParser
492 ######################################################################
494 class DocTestParser:
496 A class used to parse strings containing doctest examples.
498 # This regular expression is used to find doctest examples in a
499 # string. It defines three groups: `source` is the source code
500 # (including leading indentation and prompts); `indent` is the
501 # indentation of the first (PS1) line of the source code; and
502 # `want` is the expected output (including leading indentation).
503 _EXAMPLE_RE = re.compile(r'''
504 # Source consists of a PS1 line followed by zero or more PS2 lines.
505 (?P<source>
506 (?:^(?P<indent> [ ]*) >>> .*) # PS1 line
507 (?:\n [ ]* \.\.\. .*)*) # PS2 lines
509 # Want consists of any non-blank lines that do not start with PS1.
510 (?P<want> (?:(?![ ]*$) # Not a blank line
511 (?![ ]*>>>) # Not a line starting with PS1
512 .*$\n? # But any other line
514 ''', re.MULTILINE | re.VERBOSE)
516 # A regular expression for handling `want` strings that contain
517 # expected exceptions. It divides `want` into three pieces:
518 # - the traceback header line (`hdr`)
519 # - the traceback stack (`stack`)
520 # - the exception message (`msg`), as generated by
521 # traceback.format_exception_only()
522 # `msg` may have multiple lines. We assume/require that the
523 # exception message is the first non-indented line starting with a word
524 # character following the traceback header line.
525 _EXCEPTION_RE = re.compile(r"""
526 # Grab the traceback header. Different versions of Python have
527 # said different things on the first traceback line.
528 ^(?P<hdr> Traceback\ \(
529 (?: most\ recent\ call\ last
530 | innermost\ last
531 ) \) :
533 \s* $ # toss trailing whitespace on the header.
534 (?P<stack> .*?) # don't blink: absorb stuff until...
535 ^ (?P<msg> \w+ .*) # a line *starts* with alphanum.
536 """, re.VERBOSE | re.MULTILINE | re.DOTALL)
538 # A callable returning a true value iff its argument is a blank line
539 # or contains a single comment.
540 _IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT = re.compile(r'^[ ]*(#.*)?$').match
542 def parse(self, string, name='<string>'):
544 Divide the given string into examples and intervening text,
545 and return them as a list of alternating Examples and strings.
546 Line numbers for the Examples are 0-based. The optional
547 argument `name` is a name identifying this string, and is only
548 used for error messages.
550 string = string.expandtabs()
551 # If all lines begin with the same indentation, then strip it.
552 min_indent = self._min_indent(string)
553 if min_indent > 0:
554 string = '\n'.join([l[min_indent:] for l in string.split('\n')])
556 output = []
557 charno, lineno = 0, 0
558 # Find all doctest examples in the string:
559 for m in self._EXAMPLE_RE.finditer(string):
560 # Add the pre-example text to `output`.
561 output.append(string[charno:m.start()])
562 # Update lineno (lines before this example)
563 lineno += string.count('\n', charno, m.start())
564 # Extract info from the regexp match.
565 (source, options, want, exc_msg) = \
566 self._parse_example(m, name, lineno)
567 # Create an Example, and add it to the list.
568 if not self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source):
569 output.append( Example(source, want, exc_msg,
570 lineno=lineno,
571 indent=min_indent+len(m.group('indent')),
572 options=options) )
573 # Update lineno (lines inside this example)
574 lineno += string.count('\n', m.start(), m.end())
575 # Update charno.
576 charno = m.end()
577 # Add any remaining post-example text to `output`.
578 output.append(string[charno:])
579 return output
581 def get_doctest(self, string, globs, name, filename, lineno):
583 Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and
584 collect them into a `DocTest` object.
586 `globs`, `name`, `filename`, and `lineno` are attributes for
587 the new `DocTest` object. See the documentation for `DocTest`
588 for more information.
590 return DocTest(self.get_examples(string, name), globs,
591 name, filename, lineno, string)
593 def get_examples(self, string, name='<string>'):
595 Extract all doctest examples from the given string, and return
596 them as a list of `Example` objects. Line numbers are
597 0-based, because it's most common in doctests that nothing
598 interesting appears on the same line as opening triple-quote,
599 and so the first interesting line is called \"line 1\" then.
601 The optional argument `name` is a name identifying this
602 string, and is only used for error messages.
604 return [x for x in self.parse(string, name)
605 if isinstance(x, Example)]
607 def _parse_example(self, m, name, lineno):
609 Given a regular expression match from `_EXAMPLE_RE` (`m`),
610 return a pair `(source, want)`, where `source` is the matched
611 example's source code (with prompts and indentation stripped);
612 and `want` is the example's expected output (with indentation
613 stripped).
615 `name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number
616 where the example starts; both are used for error messages.
618 # Get the example's indentation level.
619 indent = len(m.group('indent'))
621 # Divide source into lines; check that they're properly
622 # indented; and then strip their indentation & prompts.
623 source_lines = m.group('source').split('\n')
624 self._check_prompt_blank(source_lines, indent, name, lineno)
625 self._check_prefix(source_lines[1:], ' '*indent + '.', name, lineno)
626 source = '\n'.join([sl[indent+4:] for sl in source_lines])
628 # Divide want into lines; check that it's properly indented; and
629 # then strip the indentation. Spaces before the last newline should
630 # be preserved, so plain rstrip() isn't good enough.
631 want = m.group('want')
632 want_lines = want.split('\n')
633 if len(want_lines) > 1 and re.match(r' *$', want_lines[-1]):
634 del want_lines[-1] # forget final newline & spaces after it
635 self._check_prefix(want_lines, ' '*indent, name,
636 lineno + len(source_lines))
637 want = '\n'.join([wl[indent:] for wl in want_lines])
639 # If `want` contains a traceback message, then extract it.
640 m = self._EXCEPTION_RE.match(want)
641 if m:
642 exc_msg = m.group('msg')
643 else:
644 exc_msg = None
646 # Extract options from the source.
647 options = self._find_options(source, name, lineno)
649 return source, options, want, exc_msg
651 # This regular expression looks for option directives in the
652 # source code of an example. Option directives are comments
653 # starting with "doctest:". Warning: this may give false
654 # positives for string-literals that contain the string
655 # "#doctest:". Eliminating these false positives would require
656 # actually parsing the string; but we limit them by ignoring any
657 # line containing "#doctest:" that is *followed* by a quote mark.
658 _OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE = re.compile(r'#\s*doctest:\s*([^\n\'"]*)$',
659 re.MULTILINE)
661 def _find_options(self, source, name, lineno):
663 Return a dictionary containing option overrides extracted from
664 option directives in the given source string.
666 `name` is the string's name, and `lineno` is the line number
667 where the example starts; both are used for error messages.
669 options = {}
670 # (note: with the current regexp, this will match at most once:)
671 for m in self._OPTION_DIRECTIVE_RE.finditer(source):
672 option_strings = m.group(1).replace(',', ' ').split()
673 for option in option_strings:
674 if (option[0] not in '+-' or
675 option[1:] not in OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME):
676 raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s '
677 'has an invalid option: %r' %
678 (lineno+1, name, option))
679 flag = OPTIONFLAGS_BY_NAME[option[1:]]
680 options[flag] = (option[0] == '+')
681 if options and self._IS_BLANK_OR_COMMENT(source):
682 raise ValueError('line %r of the doctest for %s has an option '
683 'directive on a line with no example: %r' %
684 (lineno, name, source))
685 return options
687 # This regular expression finds the indentation of every non-blank
688 # line in a string.
689 _INDENT_RE = re.compile('^([ ]*)(?=\S)', re.MULTILINE)
691 def _min_indent(self, s):
692 "Return the minimum indentation of any non-blank line in `s`"
693 indents = [len(indent) for indent in self._INDENT_RE.findall(s)]
694 if len(indents) > 0:
695 return min(indents)
696 else:
697 return 0
699 def _check_prompt_blank(self, lines, indent, name, lineno):
701 Given the lines of a source string (including prompts and
702 leading indentation), check to make sure that every prompt is
703 followed by a space character. If any line is not followed by
704 a space character, then raise ValueError.
706 for i, line in enumerate(lines):
707 if len(line) >= indent+4 and line[indent+3] != ' ':
708 raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s '
709 'lacks blank after %s: %r' %
710 (lineno+i+1, name,
711 line[indent:indent+3], line))
713 def _check_prefix(self, lines, prefix, name, lineno):
715 Check that every line in the given list starts with the given
716 prefix; if any line does not, then raise a ValueError.
718 for i, line in enumerate(lines):
719 if line and not line.startswith(prefix):
720 raise ValueError('line %r of the docstring for %s has '
721 'inconsistent leading whitespace: %r' %
722 (lineno+i+1, name, line))
725 ######################################################################
726 ## 4. DocTest Finder
727 ######################################################################
729 class DocTestFinder:
731 A class used to extract the DocTests that are relevant to a given
732 object, from its docstring and the docstrings of its contained
733 objects. Doctests can currently be extracted from the following
734 object types: modules, functions, classes, methods, staticmethods,
735 classmethods, and properties.
738 def __init__(self, verbose=False, parser=DocTestParser(),
739 recurse=True, exclude_empty=True):
741 Create a new doctest finder.
743 The optional argument `parser` specifies a class or
744 function that should be used to create new DocTest objects (or
745 objects that implement the same interface as DocTest). The
746 signature for this factory function should match the signature
747 of the DocTest constructor.
749 If the optional argument `recurse` is false, then `find` will
750 only examine the given object, and not any contained objects.
752 If the optional argument `exclude_empty` is false, then `find`
753 will include tests for objects with empty docstrings.
755 self._parser = parser
756 self._verbose = verbose
757 self._recurse = recurse
758 self._exclude_empty = exclude_empty
760 def find(self, obj, name=None, module=None, globs=None, extraglobs=None):
762 Return a list of the DocTests that are defined by the given
763 object's docstring, or by any of its contained objects'
764 docstrings.
766 The optional parameter `module` is the module that contains
767 the given object. If the module is not specified or is None, then
768 the test finder will attempt to automatically determine the
769 correct module. The object's module is used:
771 - As a default namespace, if `globs` is not specified.
772 - To prevent the DocTestFinder from extracting DocTests
773 from objects that are imported from other modules.
774 - To find the name of the file containing the object.
775 - To help find the line number of the object within its
776 file.
778 Contained objects whose module does not match `module` are ignored.
780 If `module` is False, no attempt to find the module will be made.
781 This is obscure, of use mostly in tests: if `module` is False, or
782 is None but cannot be found automatically, then all objects are
783 considered to belong to the (non-existent) module, so all contained
784 objects will (recursively) be searched for doctests.
786 The globals for each DocTest is formed by combining `globs`
787 and `extraglobs` (bindings in `extraglobs` override bindings
788 in `globs`). A new copy of the globals dictionary is created
789 for each DocTest. If `globs` is not specified, then it
790 defaults to the module's `__dict__`, if specified, or {}
791 otherwise. If `extraglobs` is not specified, then it defaults
792 to {}.
795 # If name was not specified, then extract it from the object.
796 if name is None:
797 name = getattr(obj, '__name__', None)
798 if name is None:
799 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: name must be given "
800 "when obj.__name__ doesn't exist: %r" %
801 (type(obj),))
803 # Find the module that contains the given object (if obj is
804 # a module, then module=obj.). Note: this may fail, in which
805 # case module will be None.
806 if module is False:
807 module = None
808 elif module is None:
809 module = inspect.getmodule(obj)
811 # Read the module's source code. This is used by
812 # DocTestFinder._find_lineno to find the line number for a
813 # given object's docstring.
814 try:
815 file = inspect.getsourcefile(obj)
816 except TypeError:
817 source_lines = None
818 else:
819 if not file:
820 # Check to see if it's one of our special internal "files"
821 # (see __patched_linecache_getlines).
822 file = inspect.getfile(obj)
823 if not file[0]+file[-2:] == '<]>': file = None
824 if file is None: source_lines = None
825 else:
826 if module is not None:
827 # Supply the module globals in case the module was
828 # originally loaded via a PEP 302 loader and
829 # file is not a valid filesystem path
830 source_lines = linecache.getlines(file, module.__dict__)
831 else:
832 # No access to a loader, so assume it's a normal
833 # filesystem path
834 source_lines = linecache.getlines(file)
835 if not source_lines:
836 source_lines = None
838 # Initialize globals, and merge in extraglobs.
839 if globs is None:
840 if module is None:
841 globs = {}
842 else:
843 globs = module.__dict__.copy()
844 else:
845 globs = globs.copy()
846 if extraglobs is not None:
847 globs.update(extraglobs)
848 if '__name__' not in globs:
849 globs['__name__'] = '__main__' # provide a default module name
851 # Recursively expore `obj`, extracting DocTests.
852 tests = []
853 self._find(tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, {})
854 # Sort the tests by alpha order of names, for consistency in
855 # verbose-mode output. This was a feature of doctest in Pythons
856 # <= 2.3 that got lost by accident in 2.4. It was repaired in
857 # 2.4.4 and 2.5.
858 tests.sort()
859 return tests
861 def _from_module(self, module, object):
863 Return true if the given object is defined in the given
864 module.
866 if module is None:
867 return True
868 elif inspect.getmodule(object) is not None:
869 return module is inspect.getmodule(object)
870 elif inspect.isfunction(object):
871 return module.__dict__ is object.__globals__
872 elif inspect.isclass(object):
873 return module.__name__ == object.__module__
874 elif hasattr(object, '__module__'):
875 return module.__name__ == object.__module__
876 elif isinstance(object, property):
877 return True # [XX] no way not be sure.
878 else:
879 raise ValueError("object must be a class or function")
881 def _find(self, tests, obj, name, module, source_lines, globs, seen):
883 Find tests for the given object and any contained objects, and
884 add them to `tests`.
886 if self._verbose:
887 print('Finding tests in %s' % name)
889 # If we've already processed this object, then ignore it.
890 if id(obj) in seen:
891 return
892 seen[id(obj)] = 1
894 # Find a test for this object, and add it to the list of tests.
895 test = self._get_test(obj, name, module, globs, source_lines)
896 if test is not None:
897 tests.append(test)
899 # Look for tests in a module's contained objects.
900 if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse:
901 for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items():
902 valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname)
903 # Recurse to functions & classes.
904 if ((inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val)) and
905 self._from_module(module, val)):
906 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines,
907 globs, seen)
909 # Look for tests in a module's __test__ dictionary.
910 if inspect.ismodule(obj) and self._recurse:
911 for valname, val in getattr(obj, '__test__', {}).items():
912 if not isinstance(valname, str):
913 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ keys "
914 "must be strings: %r" %
915 (type(valname),))
916 if not (inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or
917 inspect.ismethod(val) or inspect.ismodule(val) or
918 isinstance(val, str)):
919 raise ValueError("DocTestFinder.find: __test__ values "
920 "must be strings, functions, methods, "
921 "classes, or modules: %r" %
922 (type(val),))
923 valname = '%s.__test__.%s' % (name, valname)
924 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines,
925 globs, seen)
927 # Look for tests in a class's contained objects.
928 if inspect.isclass(obj) and self._recurse:
929 for valname, val in obj.__dict__.items():
930 # Special handling for staticmethod/classmethod.
931 if isinstance(val, staticmethod):
932 val = getattr(obj, valname)
933 if isinstance(val, classmethod):
934 val = getattr(obj, valname).__func__
936 # Recurse to methods, properties, and nested classes.
937 if ((inspect.isfunction(val) or inspect.isclass(val) or
938 isinstance(val, property)) and
939 self._from_module(module, val)):
940 valname = '%s.%s' % (name, valname)
941 self._find(tests, val, valname, module, source_lines,
942 globs, seen)
944 def _get_test(self, obj, name, module, globs, source_lines):
946 Return a DocTest for the given object, if it defines a docstring;
947 otherwise, return None.
949 # Extract the object's docstring. If it doesn't have one,
950 # then return None (no test for this object).
951 if isinstance(obj, str):
952 docstring = obj
953 else:
954 try:
955 if obj.__doc__ is None:
956 docstring = ''
957 else:
958 docstring = obj.__doc__
959 if not isinstance(docstring, str):
960 docstring = str(docstring)
961 except (TypeError, AttributeError):
962 docstring = ''
964 # Find the docstring's location in the file.
965 lineno = self._find_lineno(obj, source_lines)
967 # Don't bother if the docstring is empty.
968 if self._exclude_empty and not docstring:
969 return None
971 # Return a DocTest for this object.
972 if module is None:
973 filename = None
974 else:
975 filename = getattr(module, '__file__', module.__name__)
976 if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"):
977 filename = filename[:-1]
978 return self._parser.get_doctest(docstring, globs, name,
979 filename, lineno)
981 def _find_lineno(self, obj, source_lines):
983 Return a line number of the given object's docstring. Note:
984 this method assumes that the object has a docstring.
986 lineno = None
988 # Find the line number for modules.
989 if inspect.ismodule(obj):
990 lineno = 0
992 # Find the line number for classes.
993 # Note: this could be fooled if a class is defined multiple
994 # times in a single file.
995 if inspect.isclass(obj):
996 if source_lines is None:
997 return None
998 pat = re.compile(r'^\s*class\s*%s\b' %
999 getattr(obj, '__name__', '-'))
1000 for i, line in enumerate(source_lines):
1001 if pat.match(line):
1002 lineno = i
1003 break
1005 # Find the line number for functions & methods.
1006 if inspect.ismethod(obj): obj = obj.__func__
1007 if inspect.isfunction(obj): obj = obj.__code__
1008 if inspect.istraceback(obj): obj = obj.tb_frame
1009 if inspect.isframe(obj): obj = obj.f_code
1010 if inspect.iscode(obj):
1011 lineno = getattr(obj, 'co_firstlineno', None)-1
1013 # Find the line number where the docstring starts. Assume
1014 # that it's the first line that begins with a quote mark.
1015 # Note: this could be fooled by a multiline function
1016 # signature, where a continuation line begins with a quote
1017 # mark.
1018 if lineno is not None:
1019 if source_lines is None:
1020 return lineno+1
1021 pat = re.compile('(^|.*:)\s*\w*("|\')')
1022 for lineno in range(lineno, len(source_lines)):
1023 if pat.match(source_lines[lineno]):
1024 return lineno
1026 # We couldn't find the line number.
1027 return None
1029 ######################################################################
1030 ## 5. DocTest Runner
1031 ######################################################################
1033 class DocTestRunner:
1035 A class used to run DocTest test cases, and accumulate statistics.
1036 The `run` method is used to process a single DocTest case. It
1037 returns a tuple `(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of test cases
1038 tried, and `f` is the number of test cases that failed.
1040 >>> tests = DocTestFinder().find(_TestClass)
1041 >>> runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=False)
1042 >>> tests.sort(key = lambda test: test.name)
1043 >>> for test in tests:
1044 ... print(test.name, '->', runner.run(test))
1045 _TestClass -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
1046 _TestClass.__init__ -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
1047 _TestClass.get -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=2)
1048 _TestClass.square -> TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
1050 The `summarize` method prints a summary of all the test cases that
1051 have been run by the runner, and returns an aggregated `(f, t)`
1052 tuple:
1054 >>> runner.summarize(verbose=1)
1055 4 items passed all tests:
1056 2 tests in _TestClass
1057 2 tests in _TestClass.__init__
1058 2 tests in _TestClass.get
1059 1 tests in _TestClass.square
1060 7 tests in 4 items.
1061 7 passed and 0 failed.
1062 Test passed.
1063 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=7)
1065 The aggregated number of tried examples and failed examples is
1066 also available via the `tries` and `failures` attributes:
1068 >>> runner.tries
1070 >>> runner.failures
1073 The comparison between expected outputs and actual outputs is done
1074 by an `OutputChecker`. This comparison may be customized with a
1075 number of option flags; see the documentation for `testmod` for
1076 more information. If the option flags are insufficient, then the
1077 comparison may also be customized by passing a subclass of
1078 `OutputChecker` to the constructor.
1080 The test runner's display output can be controlled in two ways.
1081 First, an output function (`out) can be passed to
1082 `TestRunner.run`; this function will be called with strings that
1083 should be displayed. It defaults to `sys.stdout.write`. If
1084 capturing the output is not sufficient, then the display output
1085 can be also customized by subclassing DocTestRunner, and
1086 overriding the methods `report_start`, `report_success`,
1087 `report_unexpected_exception`, and `report_failure`.
1089 # This divider string is used to separate failure messages, and to
1090 # separate sections of the summary.
1091 DIVIDER = "*" * 70
1093 def __init__(self, checker=None, verbose=None, optionflags=0):
1095 Create a new test runner.
1097 Optional keyword arg `checker` is the `OutputChecker` that
1098 should be used to compare the expected outputs and actual
1099 outputs of doctest examples.
1101 Optional keyword arg 'verbose' prints lots of stuff if true,
1102 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff '-v' is in
1103 sys.argv.
1105 Optional argument `optionflags` can be used to control how the
1106 test runner compares expected output to actual output, and how
1107 it displays failures. See the documentation for `testmod` for
1108 more information.
1110 self._checker = checker or OutputChecker()
1111 if verbose is None:
1112 verbose = '-v' in sys.argv
1113 self._verbose = verbose
1114 self.optionflags = optionflags
1115 self.original_optionflags = optionflags
1117 # Keep track of the examples we've run.
1118 self.tries = 0
1119 self.failures = 0
1120 self._name2ft = {}
1122 # Create a fake output target for capturing doctest output.
1123 self._fakeout = _SpoofOut()
1125 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1126 # Reporting methods
1127 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1129 def report_start(self, out, test, example):
1131 Report that the test runner is about to process the given
1132 example. (Only displays a message if verbose=True)
1134 if self._verbose:
1135 if example.want:
1136 out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) +
1137 'Expecting:\n' + _indent(example.want))
1138 else:
1139 out('Trying:\n' + _indent(example.source) +
1140 'Expecting nothing\n')
1142 def report_success(self, out, test, example, got):
1144 Report that the given example ran successfully. (Only
1145 displays a message if verbose=True)
1147 if self._verbose:
1148 out("ok\n")
1150 def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got):
1152 Report that the given example failed.
1154 out(self._failure_header(test, example) +
1155 self._checker.output_difference(example, got, self.optionflags))
1157 def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info):
1159 Report that the given example raised an unexpected exception.
1161 out(self._failure_header(test, example) +
1162 'Exception raised:\n' + _indent(_exception_traceback(exc_info)))
1164 def _failure_header(self, test, example):
1165 out = [self.DIVIDER]
1166 if test.filename:
1167 if test.lineno is not None and example.lineno is not None:
1168 lineno = test.lineno + example.lineno + 1
1169 else:
1170 lineno = '?'
1171 out.append('File "%s", line %s, in %s' %
1172 (test.filename, lineno, test.name))
1173 else:
1174 out.append('Line %s, in %s' % (example.lineno+1, test.name))
1175 out.append('Failed example:')
1176 source = example.source
1177 out.append(_indent(source))
1178 return '\n'.join(out)
1180 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1181 # DocTest Running
1182 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1184 def __run(self, test, compileflags, out):
1186 Run the examples in `test`. Write the outcome of each example
1187 with one of the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods, using the
1188 writer function `out`. `compileflags` is the set of compiler
1189 flags that should be used to execute examples. Return a tuple
1190 `(f, t)`, where `t` is the number of examples tried, and `f`
1191 is the number of examples that failed. The examples are run
1192 in the namespace `test.globs`.
1194 # Keep track of the number of failures and tries.
1195 failures = tries = 0
1197 # Save the option flags (since option directives can be used
1198 # to modify them).
1199 original_optionflags = self.optionflags
1201 SUCCESS, FAILURE, BOOM = range(3) # `outcome` state
1203 check = self._checker.check_output
1205 # Process each example.
1206 for examplenum, example in enumerate(test.examples):
1208 # If REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE is set, then supress
1209 # reporting after the first failure.
1210 quiet = (self.optionflags & REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE and
1211 failures > 0)
1213 # Merge in the example's options.
1214 self.optionflags = original_optionflags
1215 if example.options:
1216 for (optionflag, val) in example.options.items():
1217 if val:
1218 self.optionflags |= optionflag
1219 else:
1220 self.optionflags &= ~optionflag
1222 # If 'SKIP' is set, then skip this example.
1223 if self.optionflags & SKIP:
1224 continue
1226 # Record that we started this example.
1227 tries += 1
1228 if not quiet:
1229 self.report_start(out, test, example)
1231 # Use a special filename for compile(), so we can retrieve
1232 # the source code during interactive debugging (see
1233 # __patched_linecache_getlines).
1234 filename = '<doctest %s[%d]>' % (test.name, examplenum)
1236 # Run the example in the given context (globs), and record
1237 # any exception that gets raised. (But don't intercept
1238 # keyboard interrupts.)
1239 try:
1240 # Don't blink! This is where the user's code gets run.
1241 exec(compile(example.source, filename, "single",
1242 compileflags, 1), test.globs)
1243 self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ====
1244 exception = None
1245 except KeyboardInterrupt:
1246 raise
1247 except:
1248 exception = sys.exc_info()
1249 self.debugger.set_continue() # ==== Example Finished ====
1251 got = self._fakeout.getvalue() # the actual output
1252 self._fakeout.truncate(0)
1253 outcome = FAILURE # guilty until proved innocent or insane
1255 # If the example executed without raising any exceptions,
1256 # verify its output.
1257 if exception is None:
1258 if check(example.want, got, self.optionflags):
1259 outcome = SUCCESS
1261 # The example raised an exception: check if it was expected.
1262 else:
1263 exc_msg = traceback.format_exception_only(*exception[:2])[-1]
1264 if not quiet:
1265 got += _exception_traceback(exception)
1267 # If `example.exc_msg` is None, then we weren't expecting
1268 # an exception.
1269 if example.exc_msg is None:
1270 outcome = BOOM
1272 # We expected an exception: see whether it matches.
1273 elif check(example.exc_msg, exc_msg, self.optionflags):
1274 outcome = SUCCESS
1276 # Another chance if they didn't care about the detail.
1277 elif self.optionflags & IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL:
1278 m1 = re.match(r'[^:]*:', example.exc_msg)
1279 m2 = re.match(r'[^:]*:', exc_msg)
1280 if m1 and m2 and check(m1.group(0), m2.group(0),
1281 self.optionflags):
1282 outcome = SUCCESS
1284 # Report the outcome.
1285 if outcome is SUCCESS:
1286 if not quiet:
1287 self.report_success(out, test, example, got)
1288 elif outcome is FAILURE:
1289 if not quiet:
1290 self.report_failure(out, test, example, got)
1291 failures += 1
1292 elif outcome is BOOM:
1293 if not quiet:
1294 self.report_unexpected_exception(out, test, example,
1295 exception)
1296 failures += 1
1297 else:
1298 assert False, ("unknown outcome", outcome)
1300 # Restore the option flags (in case they were modified)
1301 self.optionflags = original_optionflags
1303 # Record and return the number of failures and tries.
1304 self.__record_outcome(test, failures, tries)
1305 return TestResults(failures, tries)
1307 def __record_outcome(self, test, f, t):
1309 Record the fact that the given DocTest (`test`) generated `f`
1310 failures out of `t` tried examples.
1312 f2, t2 = self._name2ft.get(test.name, (0,0))
1313 self._name2ft[test.name] = (f+f2, t+t2)
1314 self.failures += f
1315 self.tries += t
1317 __LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE = re.compile(r'<doctest '
1318 r'(?P<name>[\w\.]+)'
1319 r'\[(?P<examplenum>\d+)\]>$')
1320 def __patched_linecache_getlines(self, filename, module_globals=None):
1321 m = self.__LINECACHE_FILENAME_RE.match(filename)
1322 if m and m.group('name') == self.test.name:
1323 example = self.test.examples[int(m.group('examplenum'))]
1324 return example.source.splitlines(True)
1325 else:
1326 return self.save_linecache_getlines(filename, module_globals)
1328 def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True):
1330 Run the examples in `test`, and display the results using the
1331 writer function `out`.
1333 The examples are run in the namespace `test.globs`. If
1334 `clear_globs` is true (the default), then this namespace will
1335 be cleared after the test runs, to help with garbage
1336 collection. If you would like to examine the namespace after
1337 the test completes, then use `clear_globs=False`.
1339 `compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by
1340 the Python compiler when running the examples. If not
1341 specified, then it will default to the set of future-import
1342 flags that apply to `globs`.
1344 The output of each example is checked using
1345 `DocTestRunner.check_output`, and the results are formatted by
1346 the `DocTestRunner.report_*` methods.
1348 self.test = test
1350 if compileflags is None:
1351 compileflags = _extract_future_flags(test.globs)
1353 save_stdout = sys.stdout
1354 if out is None:
1355 out = save_stdout.write
1356 sys.stdout = self._fakeout
1358 # Patch pdb.set_trace to restore sys.stdout during interactive
1359 # debugging (so it's not still redirected to self._fakeout).
1360 # Note that the interactive output will go to *our*
1361 # save_stdout, even if that's not the real sys.stdout; this
1362 # allows us to write test cases for the set_trace behavior.
1363 save_set_trace = pdb.set_trace
1364 self.debugger = _OutputRedirectingPdb(save_stdout)
1365 self.debugger.reset()
1366 pdb.set_trace = self.debugger.set_trace
1368 # Patch linecache.getlines, so we can see the example's source
1369 # when we're inside the debugger.
1370 self.save_linecache_getlines = linecache.getlines
1371 linecache.getlines = self.__patched_linecache_getlines
1373 try:
1374 return self.__run(test, compileflags, out)
1375 finally:
1376 sys.stdout = save_stdout
1377 pdb.set_trace = save_set_trace
1378 linecache.getlines = self.save_linecache_getlines
1379 if clear_globs:
1380 test.globs.clear()
1381 import builtins
1382 builtins._ = None
1384 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1385 # Summarization
1386 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1387 def summarize(self, verbose=None):
1389 Print a summary of all the test cases that have been run by
1390 this DocTestRunner, and return a tuple `(f, t)`, where `f` is
1391 the total number of failed examples, and `t` is the total
1392 number of tried examples.
1394 The optional `verbose` argument controls how detailed the
1395 summary is. If the verbosity is not specified, then the
1396 DocTestRunner's verbosity is used.
1398 if verbose is None:
1399 verbose = self._verbose
1400 notests = []
1401 passed = []
1402 failed = []
1403 totalt = totalf = 0
1404 for x in self._name2ft.items():
1405 name, (f, t) = x
1406 assert f <= t
1407 totalt += t
1408 totalf += f
1409 if t == 0:
1410 notests.append(name)
1411 elif f == 0:
1412 passed.append( (name, t) )
1413 else:
1414 failed.append(x)
1415 if verbose:
1416 if notests:
1417 print(len(notests), "items had no tests:")
1418 notests.sort()
1419 for thing in notests:
1420 print(" ", thing)
1421 if passed:
1422 print(len(passed), "items passed all tests:")
1423 passed.sort()
1424 for thing, count in passed:
1425 print(" %3d tests in %s" % (count, thing))
1426 if failed:
1427 print(self.DIVIDER)
1428 print(len(failed), "items had failures:")
1429 failed.sort()
1430 for thing, (f, t) in failed:
1431 print(" %3d of %3d in %s" % (f, t, thing))
1432 if verbose:
1433 print(totalt, "tests in", len(self._name2ft), "items.")
1434 print(totalt - totalf, "passed and", totalf, "failed.")
1435 if totalf:
1436 print("***Test Failed***", totalf, "failures.")
1437 elif verbose:
1438 print("Test passed.")
1439 return TestResults(totalf, totalt)
1441 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1442 # Backward compatibility cruft to maintain doctest.master.
1443 #/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
1444 def merge(self, other):
1445 d = self._name2ft
1446 for name, (f, t) in other._name2ft.items():
1447 if name in d:
1448 # Don't print here by default, since doing
1449 # so breaks some of the buildbots
1450 #print("*** DocTestRunner.merge: '" + name + "' in both" \
1451 # " testers; summing outcomes.")
1452 f2, t2 = d[name]
1453 f = f + f2
1454 t = t + t2
1455 d[name] = f, t
1457 class OutputChecker:
1459 A class used to check the whether the actual output from a doctest
1460 example matches the expected output. `OutputChecker` defines two
1461 methods: `check_output`, which compares a given pair of outputs,
1462 and returns true if they match; and `output_difference`, which
1463 returns a string describing the differences between two outputs.
1465 def _toAscii(self, s):
1467 Convert string to hex-escaped ASCII string.
1469 return str(s.encode('ASCII', 'backslashreplace'), "ASCII")
1471 def check_output(self, want, got, optionflags):
1473 Return True iff the actual output from an example (`got`)
1474 matches the expected output (`want`). These strings are
1475 always considered to match if they are identical; but
1476 depending on what option flags the test runner is using,
1477 several non-exact match types are also possible. See the
1478 documentation for `TestRunner` for more information about
1479 option flags.
1482 # If `want` contains hex-escaped character such as "\u1234",
1483 # then `want` is a string of six characters(e.g. [\,u,1,2,3,4]).
1484 # On the other hand, `got` could be an another sequence of
1485 # characters such as [\u1234], so `want` and `got` should
1486 # be folded to hex-escaped ASCII string to compare.
1487 got = self._toAscii(got)
1488 want = self._toAscii(want)
1490 # Handle the common case first, for efficiency:
1491 # if they're string-identical, always return true.
1492 if got == want:
1493 return True
1495 # The values True and False replaced 1 and 0 as the return
1496 # value for boolean comparisons in Python 2.3.
1497 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1):
1498 if (got,want) == ("True\n", "1\n"):
1499 return True
1500 if (got,want) == ("False\n", "0\n"):
1501 return True
1503 # <BLANKLINE> can be used as a special sequence to signify a
1504 # blank line, unless the DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE flag is used.
1505 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE):
1506 # Replace <BLANKLINE> in want with a blank line.
1507 want = re.sub('(?m)^%s\s*?$' % re.escape(BLANKLINE_MARKER),
1508 '', want)
1509 # If a line in got contains only spaces, then remove the
1510 # spaces.
1511 got = re.sub('(?m)^\s*?$', '', got)
1512 if got == want:
1513 return True
1515 # This flag causes doctest to ignore any differences in the
1516 # contents of whitespace strings. Note that this can be used
1517 # in conjunction with the ELLIPSIS flag.
1518 if optionflags & NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE:
1519 got = ' '.join(got.split())
1520 want = ' '.join(want.split())
1521 if got == want:
1522 return True
1524 # The ELLIPSIS flag says to let the sequence "..." in `want`
1525 # match any substring in `got`.
1526 if optionflags & ELLIPSIS:
1527 if _ellipsis_match(want, got):
1528 return True
1530 # We didn't find any match; return false.
1531 return False
1533 # Should we do a fancy diff?
1534 def _do_a_fancy_diff(self, want, got, optionflags):
1535 # Not unless they asked for a fancy diff.
1536 if not optionflags & (REPORT_UDIFF |
1537 REPORT_CDIFF |
1538 REPORT_NDIFF):
1539 return False
1541 # If expected output uses ellipsis, a meaningful fancy diff is
1542 # too hard ... or maybe not. In two real-life failures Tim saw,
1543 # a diff was a major help anyway, so this is commented out.
1544 # [todo] _ellipsis_match() knows which pieces do and don't match,
1545 # and could be the basis for a kick-ass diff in this case.
1546 ##if optionflags & ELLIPSIS and ELLIPSIS_MARKER in want:
1547 ## return False
1549 # ndiff does intraline difference marking, so can be useful even
1550 # for 1-line differences.
1551 if optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF:
1552 return True
1554 # The other diff types need at least a few lines to be helpful.
1555 return want.count('\n') > 2 and got.count('\n') > 2
1557 def output_difference(self, example, got, optionflags):
1559 Return a string describing the differences between the
1560 expected output for a given example (`example`) and the actual
1561 output (`got`). `optionflags` is the set of option flags used
1562 to compare `want` and `got`.
1564 want = example.want
1565 # If <BLANKLINE>s are being used, then replace blank lines
1566 # with <BLANKLINE> in the actual output string.
1567 if not (optionflags & DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE):
1568 got = re.sub('(?m)^[ ]*(?=\n)', BLANKLINE_MARKER, got)
1570 # Check if we should use diff.
1571 if self._do_a_fancy_diff(want, got, optionflags):
1572 # Split want & got into lines.
1573 want_lines = want.splitlines(True) # True == keep line ends
1574 got_lines = got.splitlines(True)
1575 # Use difflib to find their differences.
1576 if optionflags & REPORT_UDIFF:
1577 diff = difflib.unified_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2)
1578 diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header
1579 kind = 'unified diff with -expected +actual'
1580 elif optionflags & REPORT_CDIFF:
1581 diff = difflib.context_diff(want_lines, got_lines, n=2)
1582 diff = list(diff)[2:] # strip the diff header
1583 kind = 'context diff with expected followed by actual'
1584 elif optionflags & REPORT_NDIFF:
1585 engine = difflib.Differ(charjunk=difflib.IS_CHARACTER_JUNK)
1586 diff = list(engine.compare(want_lines, got_lines))
1587 kind = 'ndiff with -expected +actual'
1588 else:
1589 assert 0, 'Bad diff option'
1590 # Remove trailing whitespace on diff output.
1591 diff = [line.rstrip() + '\n' for line in diff]
1592 return 'Differences (%s):\n' % kind + _indent(''.join(diff))
1594 # If we're not using diff, then simply list the expected
1595 # output followed by the actual output.
1596 if want and got:
1597 return 'Expected:\n%sGot:\n%s' % (_indent(want), _indent(got))
1598 elif want:
1599 return 'Expected:\n%sGot nothing\n' % _indent(want)
1600 elif got:
1601 return 'Expected nothing\nGot:\n%s' % _indent(got)
1602 else:
1603 return 'Expected nothing\nGot nothing\n'
1605 class DocTestFailure(Exception):
1606 """A DocTest example has failed in debugging mode.
1608 The exception instance has variables:
1610 - test: the DocTest object being run
1612 - example: the Example object that failed
1614 - got: the actual output
1616 def __init__(self, test, example, got):
1617 self.test = test
1618 self.example = example
1619 self.got = got
1621 def __str__(self):
1622 return str(self.test)
1624 class UnexpectedException(Exception):
1625 """A DocTest example has encountered an unexpected exception
1627 The exception instance has variables:
1629 - test: the DocTest object being run
1631 - example: the Example object that failed
1633 - exc_info: the exception info
1635 def __init__(self, test, example, exc_info):
1636 self.test = test
1637 self.example = example
1638 self.exc_info = exc_info
1640 def __str__(self):
1641 return str(self.test)
1643 class DebugRunner(DocTestRunner):
1644 r"""Run doc tests but raise an exception as soon as there is a failure.
1646 If an unexpected exception occurs, an UnexpectedException is raised.
1647 It contains the test, the example, and the original exception:
1649 >>> runner = DebugRunner(verbose=False)
1650 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42',
1651 ... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
1652 >>> try:
1653 ... runner.run(test)
1654 ... except UnexpectedException as f:
1655 ... failure = f
1657 >>> failure.test is test
1658 True
1660 >>> failure.example.want
1661 '42\n'
1663 >>> exc_info = failure.exc_info
1664 >>> raise exc_info[1] # Already has the traceback
1665 Traceback (most recent call last):
1667 KeyError
1669 We wrap the original exception to give the calling application
1670 access to the test and example information.
1672 If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised:
1674 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('''
1675 ... >>> x = 1
1676 ... >>> x
1677 ... 2
1678 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
1680 >>> try:
1681 ... runner.run(test)
1682 ... except DocTestFailure as f:
1683 ... failure = f
1685 DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test:
1687 >>> failure.test is test
1688 True
1690 As well as to the example:
1692 >>> failure.example.want
1693 '2\n'
1695 and the actual output:
1697 >>> failure.got
1698 '1\n'
1700 If a failure or error occurs, the globals are left intact:
1702 >>> del test.globs['__builtins__']
1703 >>> test.globs
1704 {'x': 1}
1706 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('''
1707 ... >>> x = 2
1708 ... >>> raise KeyError
1709 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
1711 >>> runner.run(test)
1712 Traceback (most recent call last):
1714 doctest.UnexpectedException: <DocTest foo from foo.py:0 (2 examples)>
1716 >>> del test.globs['__builtins__']
1717 >>> test.globs
1718 {'x': 2}
1720 But the globals are cleared if there is no error:
1722 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('''
1723 ... >>> x = 2
1724 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
1726 >>> runner.run(test)
1727 TestResults(failed=0, attempted=1)
1729 >>> test.globs
1734 def run(self, test, compileflags=None, out=None, clear_globs=True):
1735 r = DocTestRunner.run(self, test, compileflags, out, False)
1736 if clear_globs:
1737 test.globs.clear()
1738 return r
1740 def report_unexpected_exception(self, out, test, example, exc_info):
1741 raise UnexpectedException(test, example, exc_info)
1743 def report_failure(self, out, test, example, got):
1744 raise DocTestFailure(test, example, got)
1746 ######################################################################
1747 ## 6. Test Functions
1748 ######################################################################
1749 # These should be backwards compatible.
1751 # For backward compatibility, a global instance of a DocTestRunner
1752 # class, updated by testmod.
1753 master = None
1755 def testmod(m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None,
1756 report=True, optionflags=0, extraglobs=None,
1757 raise_on_error=False, exclude_empty=False):
1758 """m=None, name=None, globs=None, verbose=None, report=True,
1759 optionflags=0, extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False,
1760 exclude_empty=False
1762 Test examples in docstrings in functions and classes reachable
1763 from module m (or the current module if m is not supplied), starting
1764 with m.__doc__.
1766 Also test examples reachable from dict m.__test__ if it exists and is
1767 not None. m.__test__ maps names to functions, classes and strings;
1768 function and class docstrings are tested even if the name is private;
1769 strings are tested directly, as if they were docstrings.
1771 Return (#failures, #tests).
1773 See doctest.__doc__ for an overview.
1775 Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the module; by default
1776 use m.__name__.
1778 Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals
1779 when executing examples; by default, use m.__dict__. A copy of this
1780 dict is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's
1781 examples start with a clean slate.
1783 Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be
1784 merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By
1785 default, no extra globals are used. This is new in 2.4.
1787 Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints
1788 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv.
1790 Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true,
1791 else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is
1792 detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed).
1794 Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants,
1795 and defaults to 0. This is new in 2.3. Possible values (see the
1796 docs for details):
1798 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1
1799 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE
1800 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1801 ELLIPSIS
1802 SKIP
1803 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
1804 REPORT_UDIFF
1805 REPORT_CDIFF
1806 REPORT_NDIFF
1807 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
1809 Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the
1810 first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be
1811 post-mortem debugged.
1813 Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of
1814 class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates)
1815 global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master
1816 can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual.
1817 Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay
1818 displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose)
1819 when you're done fiddling.
1821 global master
1823 # If no module was given, then use __main__.
1824 if m is None:
1825 # DWA - m will still be None if this wasn't invoked from the command
1826 # line, in which case the following TypeError is about as good an error
1827 # as we should expect
1828 m = sys.modules.get('__main__')
1830 # Check that we were actually given a module.
1831 if not inspect.ismodule(m):
1832 raise TypeError("testmod: module required; %r" % (m,))
1834 # If no name was given, then use the module's name.
1835 if name is None:
1836 name = m.__name__
1838 # Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module.
1839 finder = DocTestFinder(exclude_empty=exclude_empty)
1841 if raise_on_error:
1842 runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
1843 else:
1844 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
1846 for test in finder.find(m, name, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs):
1847 runner.run(test)
1849 if report:
1850 runner.summarize()
1852 if master is None:
1853 master = runner
1854 else:
1855 master.merge(runner)
1857 return TestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries)
1859 def testfile(filename, module_relative=True, name=None, package=None,
1860 globs=None, verbose=None, report=True, optionflags=0,
1861 extraglobs=None, raise_on_error=False, parser=DocTestParser(),
1862 encoding=None):
1864 Test examples in the given file. Return (#failures, #tests).
1866 Optional keyword arg "module_relative" specifies how filenames
1867 should be interpreted:
1869 - If "module_relative" is True (the default), then "filename"
1870 specifies a module-relative path. By default, this path is
1871 relative to the calling module's directory; but if the
1872 "package" argument is specified, then it is relative to that
1873 package. To ensure os-independence, "filename" should use
1874 "/" characters to separate path segments, and should not
1875 be an absolute path (i.e., it may not begin with "/").
1877 - If "module_relative" is False, then "filename" specifies an
1878 os-specific path. The path may be absolute or relative (to
1879 the current working directory).
1881 Optional keyword arg "name" gives the name of the test; by default
1882 use the file's basename.
1884 Optional keyword argument "package" is a Python package or the
1885 name of a Python package whose directory should be used as the
1886 base directory for a module relative filename. If no package is
1887 specified, then the calling module's directory is used as the base
1888 directory for module relative filenames. It is an error to
1889 specify "package" if "module_relative" is False.
1891 Optional keyword arg "globs" gives a dict to be used as the globals
1892 when executing examples; by default, use {}. A copy of this dict
1893 is actually used for each docstring, so that each docstring's
1894 examples start with a clean slate.
1896 Optional keyword arg "extraglobs" gives a dictionary that should be
1897 merged into the globals that are used to execute examples. By
1898 default, no extra globals are used.
1900 Optional keyword arg "verbose" prints lots of stuff if true, prints
1901 only failures if false; by default, it's true iff "-v" is in sys.argv.
1903 Optional keyword arg "report" prints a summary at the end when true,
1904 else prints nothing at the end. In verbose mode, the summary is
1905 detailed, else very brief (in fact, empty if all tests passed).
1907 Optional keyword arg "optionflags" or's together module constants,
1908 and defaults to 0. Possible values (see the docs for details):
1910 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1
1911 DONT_ACCEPT_BLANKLINE
1912 NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
1913 ELLIPSIS
1914 SKIP
1915 IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
1916 REPORT_UDIFF
1917 REPORT_CDIFF
1918 REPORT_NDIFF
1919 REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE
1921 Optional keyword arg "raise_on_error" raises an exception on the
1922 first unexpected exception or failure. This allows failures to be
1923 post-mortem debugged.
1925 Optional keyword arg "parser" specifies a DocTestParser (or
1926 subclass) that should be used to extract tests from the files.
1928 Optional keyword arg "encoding" specifies an encoding that should
1929 be used to convert the file to unicode.
1931 Advanced tomfoolery: testmod runs methods of a local instance of
1932 class doctest.Tester, then merges the results into (or creates)
1933 global Tester instance doctest.master. Methods of doctest.master
1934 can be called directly too, if you want to do something unusual.
1935 Passing report=0 to testmod is especially useful then, to delay
1936 displaying a summary. Invoke doctest.master.summarize(verbose)
1937 when you're done fiddling.
1939 global master
1941 if package and not module_relative:
1942 raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-"
1943 "relative paths.")
1945 # Relativize the path
1946 text, filename = _load_testfile(filename, package, module_relative,
1947 encoding or "utf-8")
1949 # If no name was given, then use the file's name.
1950 if name is None:
1951 name = os.path.basename(filename)
1953 # Assemble the globals.
1954 if globs is None:
1955 globs = {}
1956 else:
1957 globs = globs.copy()
1958 if extraglobs is not None:
1959 globs.update(extraglobs)
1960 if '__name__' not in globs:
1961 globs['__name__'] = '__main__'
1963 if raise_on_error:
1964 runner = DebugRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
1965 else:
1966 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
1968 # Read the file, convert it to a test, and run it.
1969 test = parser.get_doctest(text, globs, name, filename, 0)
1970 runner.run(test)
1972 if report:
1973 runner.summarize()
1975 if master is None:
1976 master = runner
1977 else:
1978 master.merge(runner)
1980 return TestResults(runner.failures, runner.tries)
1982 def run_docstring_examples(f, globs, verbose=False, name="NoName",
1983 compileflags=None, optionflags=0):
1985 Test examples in the given object's docstring (`f`), using `globs`
1986 as globals. Optional argument `name` is used in failure messages.
1987 If the optional argument `verbose` is true, then generate output
1988 even if there are no failures.
1990 `compileflags` gives the set of flags that should be used by the
1991 Python compiler when running the examples. If not specified, then
1992 it will default to the set of future-import flags that apply to
1993 `globs`.
1995 Optional keyword arg `optionflags` specifies options for the
1996 testing and output. See the documentation for `testmod` for more
1997 information.
1999 # Find, parse, and run all tests in the given module.
2000 finder = DocTestFinder(verbose=verbose, recurse=False)
2001 runner = DocTestRunner(verbose=verbose, optionflags=optionflags)
2002 for test in finder.find(f, name, globs=globs):
2003 runner.run(test, compileflags=compileflags)
2005 ######################################################################
2006 ## 7. Unittest Support
2007 ######################################################################
2009 _unittest_reportflags = 0
2011 def set_unittest_reportflags(flags):
2012 """Sets the unittest option flags.
2014 The old flag is returned so that a runner could restore the old
2015 value if it wished to:
2017 >>> import doctest
2018 >>> old = doctest._unittest_reportflags
2019 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(REPORT_NDIFF |
2020 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE) == old
2021 True
2023 >>> doctest._unittest_reportflags == (REPORT_NDIFF |
2024 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE)
2025 True
2027 Only reporting flags can be set:
2029 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(ELLIPSIS)
2030 Traceback (most recent call last):
2032 ValueError: ('Only reporting flags allowed', 8)
2034 >>> doctest.set_unittest_reportflags(old) == (REPORT_NDIFF |
2035 ... REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE)
2036 True
2038 global _unittest_reportflags
2040 if (flags & REPORTING_FLAGS) != flags:
2041 raise ValueError("Only reporting flags allowed", flags)
2042 old = _unittest_reportflags
2043 _unittest_reportflags = flags
2044 return old
2047 class DocTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
2049 def __init__(self, test, optionflags=0, setUp=None, tearDown=None,
2050 checker=None):
2052 unittest.TestCase.__init__(self)
2053 self._dt_optionflags = optionflags
2054 self._dt_checker = checker
2055 self._dt_test = test
2056 self._dt_setUp = setUp
2057 self._dt_tearDown = tearDown
2059 def setUp(self):
2060 test = self._dt_test
2062 if self._dt_setUp is not None:
2063 self._dt_setUp(test)
2065 def tearDown(self):
2066 test = self._dt_test
2068 if self._dt_tearDown is not None:
2069 self._dt_tearDown(test)
2071 test.globs.clear()
2073 def runTest(self):
2074 test = self._dt_test
2075 old = sys.stdout
2076 new = StringIO()
2077 optionflags = self._dt_optionflags
2079 if not (optionflags & REPORTING_FLAGS):
2080 # The option flags don't include any reporting flags,
2081 # so add the default reporting flags
2082 optionflags |= _unittest_reportflags
2084 runner = DocTestRunner(optionflags=optionflags,
2085 checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False)
2087 try:
2088 runner.DIVIDER = "-"*70
2089 failures, tries = runner.run(
2090 test, out=new.write, clear_globs=False)
2091 finally:
2092 sys.stdout = old
2094 if failures:
2095 raise self.failureException(self.format_failure(new.getvalue()))
2097 def format_failure(self, err):
2098 test = self._dt_test
2099 if test.lineno is None:
2100 lineno = 'unknown line number'
2101 else:
2102 lineno = '%s' % test.lineno
2103 lname = '.'.join(test.name.split('.')[-1:])
2104 return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n'
2105 ' File "%s", line %s, in %s\n\n%s'
2106 % (test.name, test.filename, lineno, lname, err)
2109 def debug(self):
2110 r"""Run the test case without results and without catching exceptions
2112 The unit test framework includes a debug method on test cases
2113 and test suites to support post-mortem debugging. The test code
2114 is run in such a way that errors are not caught. This way a
2115 caller can catch the errors and initiate post-mortem debugging.
2117 The DocTestCase provides a debug method that raises
2118 UnexpectedException errors if there is an unexepcted
2119 exception:
2121 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('>>> raise KeyError\n42',
2122 ... {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
2123 >>> case = DocTestCase(test)
2124 >>> try:
2125 ... case.debug()
2126 ... except UnexpectedException as f:
2127 ... failure = f
2129 The UnexpectedException contains the test, the example, and
2130 the original exception:
2132 >>> failure.test is test
2133 True
2135 >>> failure.example.want
2136 '42\n'
2138 >>> exc_info = failure.exc_info
2139 >>> raise exc_info[1] # Already has the traceback
2140 Traceback (most recent call last):
2142 KeyError
2144 If the output doesn't match, then a DocTestFailure is raised:
2146 >>> test = DocTestParser().get_doctest('''
2147 ... >>> x = 1
2148 ... >>> x
2149 ... 2
2150 ... ''', {}, 'foo', 'foo.py', 0)
2151 >>> case = DocTestCase(test)
2153 >>> try:
2154 ... case.debug()
2155 ... except DocTestFailure as f:
2156 ... failure = f
2158 DocTestFailure objects provide access to the test:
2160 >>> failure.test is test
2161 True
2163 As well as to the example:
2165 >>> failure.example.want
2166 '2\n'
2168 and the actual output:
2170 >>> failure.got
2171 '1\n'
2175 self.setUp()
2176 runner = DebugRunner(optionflags=self._dt_optionflags,
2177 checker=self._dt_checker, verbose=False)
2178 runner.run(self._dt_test, clear_globs=False)
2179 self.tearDown()
2181 def id(self):
2182 return self._dt_test.name
2184 def __repr__(self):
2185 name = self._dt_test.name.split('.')
2186 return "%s (%s)" % (name[-1], '.'.join(name[:-1]))
2188 __str__ = __repr__
2190 def shortDescription(self):
2191 return "Doctest: " + self._dt_test.name
2193 def DocTestSuite(module=None, globs=None, extraglobs=None, test_finder=None,
2194 **options):
2196 Convert doctest tests for a module to a unittest test suite.
2198 This converts each documentation string in a module that
2199 contains doctest tests to a unittest test case. If any of the
2200 tests in a doc string fail, then the test case fails. An exception
2201 is raised showing the name of the file containing the test and a
2202 (sometimes approximate) line number.
2204 The `module` argument provides the module to be tested. The argument
2205 can be either a module or a module name.
2207 If no argument is given, the calling module is used.
2209 A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments:
2211 setUp
2212 A set-up function. This is called before running the
2213 tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest
2214 object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the
2215 globs attribute of the test passed.
2217 tearDown
2218 A tear-down function. This is called after running the
2219 tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest
2220 object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the
2221 globs attribute of the test passed.
2223 globs
2224 A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests.
2226 optionflags
2227 A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer.
2230 if test_finder is None:
2231 test_finder = DocTestFinder()
2233 module = _normalize_module(module)
2234 tests = test_finder.find(module, globs=globs, extraglobs=extraglobs)
2235 if not tests:
2236 # Why do we want to do this? Because it reveals a bug that might
2237 # otherwise be hidden.
2238 raise ValueError(module, "has no tests")
2240 tests.sort()
2241 suite = unittest.TestSuite()
2242 for test in tests:
2243 if len(test.examples) == 0:
2244 continue
2245 if not test.filename:
2246 filename = module.__file__
2247 if filename[-4:] in (".pyc", ".pyo"):
2248 filename = filename[:-1]
2249 test.filename = filename
2250 suite.addTest(DocTestCase(test, **options))
2252 return suite
2254 class DocFileCase(DocTestCase):
2256 def id(self):
2257 return '_'.join(self._dt_test.name.split('.'))
2259 def __repr__(self):
2260 return self._dt_test.filename
2261 __str__ = __repr__
2263 def format_failure(self, err):
2264 return ('Failed doctest test for %s\n File "%s", line 0\n\n%s'
2265 % (self._dt_test.name, self._dt_test.filename, err)
2268 def DocFileTest(path, module_relative=True, package=None,
2269 globs=None, parser=DocTestParser(),
2270 encoding=None, **options):
2271 if globs is None:
2272 globs = {}
2273 else:
2274 globs = globs.copy()
2276 if package and not module_relative:
2277 raise ValueError("Package may only be specified for module-"
2278 "relative paths.")
2280 # Relativize the path.
2281 doc, path = _load_testfile(path, package, module_relative,
2282 encoding or "utf-8")
2284 if "__file__" not in globs:
2285 globs["__file__"] = path
2287 # Find the file and read it.
2288 name = os.path.basename(path)
2290 # Convert it to a test, and wrap it in a DocFileCase.
2291 test = parser.get_doctest(doc, globs, name, path, 0)
2292 return DocFileCase(test, **options)
2294 def DocFileSuite(*paths, **kw):
2295 """A unittest suite for one or more doctest files.
2297 The path to each doctest file is given as a string; the
2298 interpretation of that string depends on the keyword argument
2299 "module_relative".
2301 A number of options may be provided as keyword arguments:
2303 module_relative
2304 If "module_relative" is True, then the given file paths are
2305 interpreted as os-independent module-relative paths. By
2306 default, these paths are relative to the calling module's
2307 directory; but if the "package" argument is specified, then
2308 they are relative to that package. To ensure os-independence,
2309 "filename" should use "/" characters to separate path
2310 segments, and may not be an absolute path (i.e., it may not
2311 begin with "/").
2313 If "module_relative" is False, then the given file paths are
2314 interpreted as os-specific paths. These paths may be absolute
2315 or relative (to the current working directory).
2317 package
2318 A Python package or the name of a Python package whose directory
2319 should be used as the base directory for module relative paths.
2320 If "package" is not specified, then the calling module's
2321 directory is used as the base directory for module relative
2322 filenames. It is an error to specify "package" if
2323 "module_relative" is False.
2325 setUp
2326 A set-up function. This is called before running the
2327 tests in each file. The setUp function will be passed a DocTest
2328 object. The setUp function can access the test globals as the
2329 globs attribute of the test passed.
2331 tearDown
2332 A tear-down function. This is called after running the
2333 tests in each file. The tearDown function will be passed a DocTest
2334 object. The tearDown function can access the test globals as the
2335 globs attribute of the test passed.
2337 globs
2338 A dictionary containing initial global variables for the tests.
2340 optionflags
2341 A set of doctest option flags expressed as an integer.
2343 parser
2344 A DocTestParser (or subclass) that should be used to extract
2345 tests from the files.
2347 encoding
2348 An encoding that will be used to convert the files to unicode.
2350 suite = unittest.TestSuite()
2352 # We do this here so that _normalize_module is called at the right
2353 # level. If it were called in DocFileTest, then this function
2354 # would be the caller and we might guess the package incorrectly.
2355 if kw.get('module_relative', True):
2356 kw['package'] = _normalize_module(kw.get('package'))
2358 for path in paths:
2359 suite.addTest(DocFileTest(path, **kw))
2361 return suite
2363 ######################################################################
2364 ## 8. Debugging Support
2365 ######################################################################
2367 def script_from_examples(s):
2368 r"""Extract script from text with examples.
2370 Converts text with examples to a Python script. Example input is
2371 converted to regular code. Example output and all other words
2372 are converted to comments:
2374 >>> text = '''
2375 ... Here are examples of simple math.
2377 ... Python has super accurate integer addition
2379 ... >>> 2 + 2
2380 ... 5
2382 ... And very friendly error messages:
2384 ... >>> 1/0
2385 ... To Infinity
2386 ... And
2387 ... Beyond
2389 ... You can use logic if you want:
2391 ... >>> if 0:
2392 ... ... blah
2393 ... ... blah
2394 ... ...
2396 ... Ho hum
2397 ... '''
2399 >>> print(script_from_examples(text))
2400 # Here are examples of simple math.
2402 # Python has super accurate integer addition
2404 2 + 2
2405 # Expected:
2406 ## 5
2408 # And very friendly error messages:
2411 # Expected:
2412 ## To Infinity
2413 ## And
2414 ## Beyond
2416 # You can use logic if you want:
2418 if 0:
2419 blah
2420 blah
2422 # Ho hum
2423 <BLANKLINE>
2425 output = []
2426 for piece in DocTestParser().parse(s):
2427 if isinstance(piece, Example):
2428 # Add the example's source code (strip trailing NL)
2429 output.append(piece.source[:-1])
2430 # Add the expected output:
2431 want = piece.want
2432 if want:
2433 output.append('# Expected:')
2434 output += ['## '+l for l in want.split('\n')[:-1]]
2435 else:
2436 # Add non-example text.
2437 output += [_comment_line(l)
2438 for l in piece.split('\n')[:-1]]
2440 # Trim junk on both ends.
2441 while output and output[-1] == '#':
2442 output.pop()
2443 while output and output[0] == '#':
2444 output.pop(0)
2445 # Combine the output, and return it.
2446 # Add a courtesy newline to prevent exec from choking (see bug #1172785)
2447 return '\n'.join(output) + '\n'
2449 def testsource(module, name):
2450 """Extract the test sources from a doctest docstring as a script.
2452 Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the
2453 test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object
2454 with the doc string with tests to be debugged.
2456 module = _normalize_module(module)
2457 tests = DocTestFinder().find(module)
2458 test = [t for t in tests if t.name == name]
2459 if not test:
2460 raise ValueError(name, "not found in tests")
2461 test = test[0]
2462 testsrc = script_from_examples(test.docstring)
2463 return testsrc
2465 def debug_src(src, pm=False, globs=None):
2466 """Debug a single doctest docstring, in argument `src`'"""
2467 testsrc = script_from_examples(src)
2468 debug_script(testsrc, pm, globs)
2470 def debug_script(src, pm=False, globs=None):
2471 "Debug a test script. `src` is the script, as a string."
2472 import pdb
2474 # Note that tempfile.NameTemporaryFile() cannot be used. As the
2475 # docs say, a file so created cannot be opened by name a second time
2476 # on modern Windows boxes, and exec() needs to open and read it.
2477 srcfilename = tempfile.mktemp(".py", "doctestdebug")
2478 f = open(srcfilename, 'w')
2479 f.write(src)
2480 f.close()
2482 try:
2483 if globs:
2484 globs = globs.copy()
2485 else:
2486 globs = {}
2488 if pm:
2489 try:
2490 exec(open(srcfilename).read(), globs, globs)
2491 except:
2492 print(sys.exc_info()[1])
2493 pdb.post_mortem(sys.exc_info()[2])
2494 else:
2495 fp = open(srcfilename)
2496 try:
2497 script = fp.read()
2498 finally:
2499 fp.close()
2500 pdb.run("exec(%r)" % script, globs, globs)
2502 finally:
2503 os.remove(srcfilename)
2505 def debug(module, name, pm=False):
2506 """Debug a single doctest docstring.
2508 Provide the module (or dotted name of the module) containing the
2509 test to be debugged and the name (within the module) of the object
2510 with the docstring with tests to be debugged.
2512 module = _normalize_module(module)
2513 testsrc = testsource(module, name)
2514 debug_script(testsrc, pm, module.__dict__)
2516 ######################################################################
2517 ## 9. Example Usage
2518 ######################################################################
2519 class _TestClass:
2521 A pointless class, for sanity-checking of docstring testing.
2523 Methods:
2524 square()
2525 get()
2527 >>> _TestClass(13).get() + _TestClass(-12).get()
2529 >>> hex(_TestClass(13).square().get())
2530 '0xa9'
2533 def __init__(self, val):
2534 """val -> _TestClass object with associated value val.
2536 >>> t = _TestClass(123)
2537 >>> print(t.get())
2541 self.val = val
2543 def square(self):
2544 """square() -> square TestClass's associated value
2546 >>> _TestClass(13).square().get()
2550 self.val = self.val ** 2
2551 return self
2553 def get(self):
2554 """get() -> return TestClass's associated value.
2556 >>> x = _TestClass(-42)
2557 >>> print(x.get())
2561 return self.val
2563 __test__ = {"_TestClass": _TestClass,
2564 "string": r"""
2565 Example of a string object, searched as-is.
2566 >>> x = 1; y = 2
2567 >>> x + y, x * y
2568 (3, 2)
2569 """,
2571 "bool-int equivalence": r"""
2572 In 2.2, boolean expressions displayed
2573 0 or 1. By default, we still accept
2574 them. This can be disabled by passing
2575 DONT_ACCEPT_TRUE_FOR_1 to the new
2576 optionflags argument.
2577 >>> 4 == 4
2579 >>> 4 == 4
2580 True
2581 >>> 4 > 4
2583 >>> 4 > 4
2584 False
2585 """,
2587 "blank lines": r"""
2588 Blank lines can be marked with <BLANKLINE>:
2589 >>> print('foo\n\nbar\n')
2591 <BLANKLINE>
2593 <BLANKLINE>
2594 """,
2596 "ellipsis": r"""
2597 If the ellipsis flag is used, then '...' can be used to
2598 elide substrings in the desired output:
2599 >>> print(list(range(1000))) #doctest: +ELLIPSIS
2600 [0, 1, 2, ..., 999]
2601 """,
2603 "whitespace normalization": r"""
2604 If the whitespace normalization flag is used, then
2605 differences in whitespace are ignored.
2606 >>> print(list(range(30))) #doctest: +NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
2607 [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14,
2608 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26,
2609 27, 28, 29]
2610 """,
2613 def _test():
2614 testfiles = [arg for arg in sys.argv[1:] if arg and arg[0] != '-']
2615 if testfiles:
2616 for filename in testfiles:
2617 if filename.endswith(".py"):
2618 # It is a module -- insert its dir into sys.path and try to
2619 # import it. If it is part of a package, that possibly won't work
2620 # because of package imports.
2621 dirname, filename = os.path.split(filename)
2622 sys.path.insert(0, dirname)
2623 m = __import__(filename[:-3])
2624 del sys.path[0]
2625 failures, _ = testmod(m)
2626 else:
2627 failures, _ = testfile(filename, module_relative=False)
2628 if failures:
2629 return 1
2630 else:
2631 r = unittest.TextTestRunner()
2632 r.run(DocTestSuite())
2633 return 0
2635 if __name__ == "__main__":
2636 sys.exit(_test())