summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/logging.rst3
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/pyexpat.rst10
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/stdtypes.rst16
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst14
-rw-r--r--Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst11
-rw-r--r--Include/pyerrors.h2
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/output/test_cProfile92
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/output/test_extcall117
-rwxr-xr-xLib/test/regrtest.py75
-rwxr-xr-xLib/test/test_dbm.py83
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_dict.py10
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_dummy_threading.py108
-rwxr-xr-xLib/test/test_errno.py83
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_extcall.py536
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_parser.py3
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_pep247.py105
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_smtplib.py8
-rwxr-xr-xLib/test/test_strftime.py315
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_thread.py16
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_types.py9
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_winsound.py12
-rw-r--r--Lib/test/test_zlib.py1
-rw-r--r--Misc/developers.txt6
-rw-r--r--Modules/datetimemodule.c2
-rw-r--r--Objects/stringlib/formatter.h7
-rw-r--r--Objects/unicodeobject.c38
-rw-r--r--PCbuild/python.vcproj2
-rw-r--r--Python/memmove.c25
-rw-r--r--Python/pystrtod.c98
-rw-r--r--Python/strerror.c19
-rwxr-xr-xconfigure105
-rw-r--r--configure.in8
-rw-r--r--pyconfig.h.in3
33 files changed, 980 insertions, 962 deletions
diff --git a/Doc/library/logging.rst b/Doc/library/logging.rst
index a7693fb..8ffa301 100644
--- a/Doc/library/logging.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/logging.rst
@@ -724,7 +724,8 @@ functions.
.. function:: shutdown()
Informs the logging system to perform an orderly shutdown by flushing and
- closing all handlers.
+ closing all handlers. This should be called at application exit and no
+ further use of the logging system should be made after this call.
.. function:: setLoggerClass(klass)
diff --git a/Doc/library/pyexpat.rst b/Doc/library/pyexpat.rst
index 3a3305c..e19a4d5 100644
--- a/Doc/library/pyexpat.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/pyexpat.rst
@@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ The :mod:`xml.parsers.expat` module contains two functions:
must be a string naming the encoding used by the XML data. Expat doesn't
support as many encodings as Python does, and its repertoire of encodings can't
be extended; it supports UTF-8, UTF-16, ISO-8859-1 (Latin1), and ASCII. If
- *encoding* is given it will override the implicit or explicit encoding of the
+ *encoding* [1]_ is given it will override the implicit or explicit encoding of the
document.
Expat can optionally do XML namespace processing for you, enabled by providing a
@@ -848,3 +848,11 @@ The ``errors`` object has the following attributes:
.. data:: XML_ERROR_SUSPEND_PE
:noindex:
+
+.. rubric:: Footnotes
+
+.. [#] The encoding string included in XML output should conform to the
+ appropriate standards. For example, "UTF-8" is valid, but "UTF8" is
+ not. See http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/REC-xml11-20060816/#NT-EncodingDecl
+ and http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets .
+
diff --git a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
index 58905e0..f06ca2c 100644
--- a/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/stdtypes.rst
@@ -1000,6 +1000,22 @@ functions based on regular expressions.
Return the numeric string left filled with zeros in a string of length
*width*. A sign prefix is handled correctly. The original string is
returned if *width* is less than ``len(s)``.
+
+
+.. method:: str.isnumeric()
+
+ Return ``True`` if there are only numeric characters in S, ``False``
+ otherwise. Numeric characters include digit characters, and all characters
+ that have the Unicode numeric value property, e.g. U+2155,
+ VULGAR FRACTION ONE FIFTH.
+
+
+.. method:: str.isdecimal()
+
+ Return ``True`` if there are only decimal characters in S, ``False``
+ otherwise. Decimal characters include digit characters, and all characters
+ that that can be used to form decimal-radix numbers, e.g. U+0660,
+ ARABIC-INDIC DIGIT ZERO.
diff --git a/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst b/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
index 75f381e..de67d07 100644
--- a/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/xml.dom.minidom.rst
@@ -147,10 +147,10 @@ module documentation. This section lists the differences between the API and
document. Encoding this string in an encoding other than UTF-8 is likely
incorrect, since UTF-8 is the default encoding of XML.
- With an explicit *encoding* argument, the result is a :class:`bytes` object
- in the specified encoding. It is recommended that this argument is always
- specified. To avoid :exc:`UnicodeError` exceptions in case of unrepresentable
- text data, the encoding argument should be specified as "utf-8".
+ With an explicit *encoding* [1]_ argument, the result is a byte string in the
+ specified encoding. It is recommended that this argument is always specified. To
+ avoid :exc:`UnicodeError` exceptions in case of unrepresentable text data, the
+ encoding argument should be specified as "utf-8".
.. method:: Node.toprettyxml([indent[, newl[, encoding]]])
@@ -252,3 +252,9 @@ The following interfaces have no implementation in :mod:`xml.dom.minidom`:
Most of these reflect information in the XML document that is not of general
utility to most DOM users.
+.. rubric:: Footnotes
+
+.. [#] The encoding string included in XML output should conform to the
+ appropriate standards. For example, "UTF-8" is valid, but "UTF8" is
+ not. See http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/REC-xml11-20060816/#NT-EncodingDecl
+ and http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets .
diff --git a/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst b/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst
index 5590476..61bc559 100644
--- a/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/xml.etree.elementtree.rst
@@ -357,7 +357,7 @@ ElementTree Objects
.. method:: ElementTree.write(file[, encoding])
Writes the element tree to a file, as XML. *file* is a file name, or a file
- object opened for writing. *encoding* is the output encoding (default is
+ object opened for writing. *encoding* [1]_ is the output encoding (default is
US-ASCII).
This is the XML file that is going to be manipulated::
@@ -510,3 +510,12 @@ This is an example of counting the maximum depth of an XML file::
>>> parser.feed(exampleXml)
>>> parser.close()
4
+
+
+.. rubric:: Footnotes
+
+.. [#] The encoding string included in XML output should conform to the
+ appropriate standards. For example, "UTF-8" is valid, but "UTF8" is
+ not. See http://www.w3.org/TR/2006/REC-xml11-20060816/#NT-EncodingDecl
+ and http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets .
+
diff --git a/Include/pyerrors.h b/Include/pyerrors.h
index ecbb059..6b520e2 100644
--- a/Include/pyerrors.h
+++ b/Include/pyerrors.h
@@ -152,6 +152,8 @@ PyAPI_DATA(PyObject *) PyExc_WindowsError;
PyAPI_DATA(PyObject *) PyExc_VMSError;
#endif
+PyAPI_DATA(PyObject *) PyExc_BufferError;
+
PyAPI_DATA(PyObject *) PyExc_MemoryErrorInst;
PyAPI_DATA(PyObject *) PyExc_RecursionErrorInst;
diff --git a/Lib/test/output/test_cProfile b/Lib/test/output/test_cProfile
deleted file mode 100644
index 1221c63..0000000
--- a/Lib/test/output/test_cProfile
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,92 +0,0 @@
-test_cProfile
- 124 function calls (104 primitive calls) in 1.000 CPU seconds
-
- Ordered by: standard name
-
- ncalls tottime percall cumtime percall filename:lineno(function)
- 1 0.000 0.000 1.000 1.000 <string>:1(<module>)
- 2 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 io.py:1213(flush)
- 1 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 io.py:269(flush)
- 1 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 io.py:656(closed)
- 1 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 io.py:874(flush)
- 8 0.064 0.008 0.080 0.010 test_cProfile.py:103(subhelper)
- 28 0.028 0.001 0.028 0.001 test_cProfile.py:115(__getattr__)
- 1 0.270 0.270 1.000 1.000 test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc)
- 23/3 0.150 0.007 0.170 0.057 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
- 20 0.020 0.001 0.020 0.001 test_cProfile.py:53(mul)
- 2 0.040 0.020 0.600 0.300 test_cProfile.py:60(helper)
- 4 0.116 0.029 0.120 0.030 test_cProfile.py:78(helper1)
- 2 0.000 0.000 0.140 0.070 test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect)
- 8 0.312 0.039 0.400 0.050 test_cProfile.py:93(helper2)
- 1 0.000 0.000 1.000 1.000 {exec}
- 12 0.000 0.000 0.012 0.001 {hasattr}
- 4 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 {method 'append' of 'list' objects}
- 1 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 {method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects}
- 4 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 {sys.exc_info}
-
-
- Ordered by: standard name
-
-Function called...
- ncalls tottime cumtime
-<string>:1(<module>) -> 1 0.270 1.000 test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc)
-io.py:1213(flush) -> 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:269(flush)
- 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:874(flush)
-io.py:269(flush) ->
-io.py:656(closed) ->
-io.py:874(flush) -> 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:656(closed)
-test_cProfile.py:103(subhelper) -> 16 0.016 0.016 test_cProfile.py:115(__getattr__)
-test_cProfile.py:115(__getattr__) ->
-test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc) -> 1 0.014 0.130 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
- 2 0.040 0.600 test_cProfile.py:60(helper)
-test_cProfile.py:40(factorial) -> 20/3 0.130 0.147 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
- 20 0.020 0.020 test_cProfile.py:53(mul)
-test_cProfile.py:53(mul) ->
-test_cProfile.py:60(helper) -> 4 0.116 0.120 test_cProfile.py:78(helper1)
- 2 0.000 0.140 test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect)
- 6 0.234 0.300 test_cProfile.py:93(helper2)
-test_cProfile.py:78(helper1) -> 4 0.000 0.004 {hasattr}
- 4 0.000 0.000 {method 'append' of 'list' objects}
- 4 0.000 0.000 {sys.exc_info}
-test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect) -> 2 0.006 0.040 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
- 2 0.078 0.100 test_cProfile.py:93(helper2)
-test_cProfile.py:93(helper2) -> 8 0.064 0.080 test_cProfile.py:103(subhelper)
- 8 0.000 0.008 {hasattr}
-{exec} -> 1 0.000 1.000 <string>:1(<module>)
- 2 0.000 0.000 io.py:1213(flush)
-{hasattr} -> 12 0.012 0.012 test_cProfile.py:115(__getattr__)
-{method 'append' of 'list' objects} ->
-{method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects} ->
-{sys.exc_info} ->
-
-
- Ordered by: standard name
-
-Function was called by...
- ncalls tottime cumtime
-<string>:1(<module>) <- 1 0.000 1.000 {exec}
-io.py:1213(flush) <- 2 0.000 0.000 {exec}
-io.py:269(flush) <- 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:1213(flush)
-io.py:656(closed) <- 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:874(flush)
-io.py:874(flush) <- 1 0.000 0.000 io.py:1213(flush)
-test_cProfile.py:103(subhelper) <- 8 0.064 0.080 test_cProfile.py:93(helper2)
-test_cProfile.py:115(__getattr__) <- 16 0.016 0.016 test_cProfile.py:103(subhelper)
- 12 0.012 0.012 {hasattr}
-test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc) <- 1 0.270 1.000 <string>:1(<module>)
-test_cProfile.py:40(factorial) <- 1 0.014 0.130 test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc)
- 20/3 0.130 0.147 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
- 2 0.006 0.040 test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect)
-test_cProfile.py:53(mul) <- 20 0.020 0.020 test_cProfile.py:40(factorial)
-test_cProfile.py:60(helper) <- 2 0.040 0.600 test_cProfile.py:30(testfunc)
-test_cProfile.py:78(helper1) <- 4 0.116 0.120 test_cProfile.py:60(helper)
-test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect) <- 2 0.000 0.140 test_cProfile.py:60(helper)
-test_cProfile.py:93(helper2) <- 6 0.234 0.300 test_cProfile.py:60(helper)
- 2 0.078 0.100 test_cProfile.py:89(helper2_indirect)
-{exec} <-
-{hasattr} <- 4 0.000 0.004 test_cProfile.py:78(helper1)
- 8 0.000 0.008 test_cProfile.py:93(helper2)
-{method 'append' of 'list' objects} <- 4 0.000 0.000 test_cProfile.py:78(helper1)
-{method 'disable' of '_lsprof.Profiler' objects} <-
-{sys.exc_info} <- 4 0.000 0.000 test_cProfile.py:78(helper1)
-
-
diff --git a/Lib/test/output/test_extcall b/Lib/test/output/test_extcall
deleted file mode 100644
index 63f5b71..0000000
--- a/Lib/test/output/test_extcall
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,117 +0,0 @@
-test_extcall
-() {}
-(1,) {}
-(1, 2) {}
-(1, 2, 3) {}
-(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
-(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
-(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
-(1, 2, 3) {'a': 4, 'b': 5}
-(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 6, 'b': 7}
-(1, 2, 3, 6, 7) {'a': 8, 'b': 9, 'x': 4, 'y': 5}
-(1, 2, 3) {'a': 4, 'b': 5}
-(1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 6, 'b': 7}
-(1, 2, 3, 6, 7) {'a': 8, 'b': 9, 'x': 4, 'y': 5}
-TypeError: g() takes at least 1 positional argument (0 given)
-TypeError: g() takes at least 1 positional argument (0 given)
-TypeError: g() takes at least 1 positional argument (0 given)
-1 () {}
-1 (2,) {}
-1 (2, 3) {}
-1 (2, 3, 4, 5) {}
-0 (1, 2) {}
-0 (1, 2, 3) {}
-1 () {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3, 'd': 4}
-{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
-{'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
-g() got multiple values for keyword argument 'x'
-g() got multiple values for keyword argument 'b'
-f() keywords must be strings
-h() got an unexpected keyword argument 'e'
-h() argument after * must be a sequence, not function
-dir() argument after * must be a sequence, not function
-NoneType object argument after * must be a sequence, not function
-h() argument after ** must be a mapping, not function
-dir() argument after ** must be a mapping, not function
-NoneType object argument after ** must be a mapping, not function
-dir() got multiple values for keyword argument 'b'
-3 512 True
-3
-3
-5
-5
-za () {} -> za() takes exactly 1 positional argument (0 given)
-za () {'a': 'aa'} -> ok za aa B D E V a
-za () {'d': 'dd'} -> za() got an unexpected keyword argument 'd'
-za () {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> za() got an unexpected keyword argument 'd'
-za () {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> za() got an unexpected keyword argument 'b'
-za (1, 2) {} -> za() takes exactly 1 positional argument (2 given)
-za (1, 2) {'a': 'aa'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (2 given)
-za (1, 2) {'d': 'dd'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (2 given)
-za (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (2 given)
-za (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (2 given)
-za (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {} -> za() takes exactly 1 positional argument (5 given)
-za (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (5 given)
-za (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'d': 'dd'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (5 given)
-za (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (5 given)
-za (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> za() takes exactly 1 non-keyword positional argument (5 given)
-zade () {} -> zade() takes at least 1 positional argument (0 given)
-zade () {'a': 'aa'} -> ok zade aa B d e V a
-zade () {'d': 'dd'} -> zade() takes at least 1 non-keyword positional argument (0 given)
-zade () {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> ok zade aa B dd e V d
-zade () {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zade() got an unexpected keyword argument 'b'
-zade (1, 2) {} -> ok zade 1 B 2 e V e
-zade (1, 2) {'a': 'aa'} -> zade() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zade (1, 2) {'d': 'dd'} -> zade() got multiple values for keyword argument 'd'
-zade (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zade() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zade (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zade() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zade (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {} -> zade() takes at most 3 positional arguments (5 given)
-zade (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa'} -> zade() takes at most 3 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zade (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'d': 'dd'} -> zade() takes at most 3 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zade (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zade() takes at most 3 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zade (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zade() takes at most 3 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zabk () {} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 positional arguments (0 given)
-zabk () {'a': 'aa'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabk () {'d': 'dd'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (0 given)
-zabk () {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabk () {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> ok zabk aa bb D E V {'d': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'}
-zabk (1, 2) {} -> ok zabk 1 2 D E V {}
-zabk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabk (1, 2) {'d': 'dd'} -> ok zabk 1 2 D E V {'d': 'dd'}
-zabk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 positional arguments (5 given)
-zabk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zabk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'d': 'dd'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zabk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zabk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabk() takes exactly 2 non-keyword positional arguments (5 given)
-zabdv () {} -> zabdv() takes at least 2 positional arguments (0 given)
-zabdv () {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdv() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabdv () {'d': 'dd'} -> zabdv() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (0 given)
-zabdv () {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdv() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabdv () {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabdv() got an unexpected keyword argument 'e'
-zabdv (1, 2) {} -> ok zabdv 1 2 d E () e
-zabdv (1, 2) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdv (1, 2) {'d': 'dd'} -> ok zabdv 1 2 dd E () d
-zabdv (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdv (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdv (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {} -> ok zabdv 1 2 3 E (4, 5) e
-zabdv (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdv (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'d': 'dd'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'd'
-zabdv (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdv (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabdv() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk () {} -> zabdevk() takes at least 2 positional arguments (0 given)
-zabdevk () {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdevk() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabdevk () {'d': 'dd'} -> zabdevk() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (0 given)
-zabdevk () {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdevk() takes at least 2 non-keyword positional arguments (1 given)
-zabdevk () {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> ok zabdevk aa bb dd ee () {}
-zabdevk (1, 2) {} -> ok zabdevk 1 2 d e () {}
-zabdevk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk (1, 2) {'d': 'dd'} -> ok zabdevk 1 2 dd e () {}
-zabdevk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk (1, 2) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {} -> ok zabdevk 1 2 3 4 (5,) {}
-zabdevk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'d': 'dd'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'd'
-zabdevk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'd': 'dd'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
-zabdevk (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 'aa', 'b': 'bb', 'd': 'dd', 'e': 'ee'} -> zabdevk() got multiple values for keyword argument 'a'
diff --git a/Lib/test/regrtest.py b/Lib/test/regrtest.py
index cb7cf75..20d3777 100755
--- a/Lib/test/regrtest.py
+++ b/Lib/test/regrtest.py
@@ -12,10 +12,9 @@ Command line options:
-w: verbose2 -- re-run failed tests in verbose mode
-d: debug -- print traceback for failed tests
-q: quiet -- don't print anything except if a test fails
--g: generate -- write the output file for a test instead of comparing it
-x: exclude -- arguments are tests to *exclude*
-s: single -- run only a single test (see below)
--S: start -- start running all the tests with the specified one first
+-S: slow -- print the slowest 10 tests
-r: random -- randomize test execution order
-f: fromfile -- read names of tests to run from a file (see below)
-l: findleaks -- if GC is available detect tests that leak memory
@@ -127,14 +126,15 @@ example, to run all the tests except for the bsddb tests, give the
option '-uall,-bsddb'.
"""
-import os
-import sys
import getopt
+import os
import random
-import warnings
import re
import io
+import sys
+import time
import traceback
+import warnings
from inspect import isabstract
# I see no other way to suppress these warnings;
@@ -186,8 +186,7 @@ def usage(msg):
def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
exclude=False, single=False, randomize=False, fromfile=None,
findleaks=False, use_resources=None, trace=False, coverdir='coverage',
- runleaks=False, huntrleaks=None, verbose2=False, debug=False,
- start=None):
+ runleaks=False, huntrleaks=False, verbose2=False, print_slow=False):
"""Execute a test suite.
This also parses command-line options and modifies its behavior
@@ -204,17 +203,17 @@ def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
command-line will be used. If that's empty, too, then all *.py
files beginning with test_ will be used.
- The other default arguments (verbose, quiet, generate, exclude, single,
- randomize, findleaks, use_resources, trace and coverdir) allow programmers
- calling main() directly to set the values that would normally be set by
- flags on the command line.
+ The other default arguments (verbose, quiet, generate, exclude,
+ single, randomize, findleaks, use_resources, trace, coverdir, and
+ print_slow) allow programmers calling main() directly to set the
+ values that would normally be set by flags on the command line.
"""
test_support.record_original_stdout(sys.stdout)
try:
- opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'dhvgqxsS:rf:lu:t:TD:NLR:wM:n',
- ['help', 'verbose', 'quiet', 'generate',
- 'exclude', 'single', 'random', 'fromfile',
+ opts, args = getopt.getopt(sys.argv[1:], 'hvgqxsSrf:lu:t:TD:NLR:wM:',
+ ['help', 'verbose', 'quiet', 'exclude',
+ 'single', 'slow', 'random', 'fromfile',
'findleaks', 'use=', 'threshold=', 'trace',
'coverdir=', 'nocoverdir', 'runleaks',
'huntrleaks=', 'verbose2', 'memlimit=',
@@ -239,14 +238,14 @@ def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
elif o in ('-q', '--quiet'):
quiet = True;
verbose = 0
- elif o in ('-g', '--generate'):
- generate = True
elif o in ('-x', '--exclude'):
exclude = True
elif o in ('-S', '--start'):
start = a
elif o in ('-s', '--single'):
single = True
+ elif o in ('-S', '--slow'):
+ print_slow = True
elif o in ('-r', '--randomize'):
randomize = True
elif o in ('-f', '--fromfile'):
@@ -376,18 +375,19 @@ def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
tests = tests or args or findtests(testdir, stdtests, nottests)
if single:
tests = tests[:1]
- # Remove all the tests that precede start if it's set.
- if start:
- try:
- del tests[:tests.index(start)]
- except ValueError:
- print("Couldn't find starting test (%s), using all tests" % start)
+ ## Remove all the tests that precede start if it's set.
+ #if start:
+ # try:
+ # del tests[:tests.index(start)]
+ # except ValueError:
+ # print("Couldn't find starting test (%s), using all tests" % start)
if randomize:
random.shuffle(tests)
if trace:
import trace
tracer = trace.Trace(ignoredirs=[sys.prefix, sys.exec_prefix],
trace=False, count=True)
+ test_times = []
test_support.verbose = verbose # Tell tests to be moderately quiet
test_support.use_resources = use_resources
save_modules = sys.modules.keys()
@@ -398,12 +398,13 @@ def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
if trace:
# If we're tracing code coverage, then we don't exit with status
# if on a false return value from main.
- tracer.runctx('runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, testdir)',
+ tracer.runctx('runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet,'
+ ' test_times, testdir)',
globals=globals(), locals=vars())
else:
try:
- ok = runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, testdir,
- huntrleaks)
+ ok = runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, test_times,
+ testdir, huntrleaks)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
# print a newline separate from the ^C
print()
@@ -444,6 +445,11 @@ def main(tests=None, testdir=None, verbose=0, quiet=False, generate=False,
if verbose:
print("CAUTION: stdout isn't compared in verbose mode:")
print("a test that passes in verbose mode may fail without it.")
+ if print_slow:
+ test_times.sort(reverse=True)
+ print("10 slowest tests:")
+ for time, test in test_times[:10]:
+ print("%s: %.1fs" % (test, time))
if bad:
print(count(len(bad), "test"), "failed:")
printlist(bad)
@@ -537,15 +543,14 @@ def findtests(testdir=None, stdtests=STDTESTS, nottests=NOTTESTS):
tests.sort()
return stdtests + tests
-def runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, testdir=None,
- huntrleaks=None, debug=False):
+def runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, test_times,
+ testdir=None, huntrleaks=False):
"""Run a single test.
test -- the name of the test
- generate -- if true, generate output, instead of running the test
- and comparing it to a previously created output file
verbose -- if true, print more messages
quiet -- if true, don't print 'skipped' messages (probably redundant)
+ test_times -- a list of (time, test_name) pairs
testdir -- test directory
huntrleaks -- run multiple times to test for leaks; requires a debug
build; a triple corresponding to -R's three arguments
@@ -559,13 +564,13 @@ def runtest(test, generate, verbose, quiet, testdir=None,
"""
try:
- return runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet, testdir,
- huntrleaks, debug)
+ return runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet, test_times,
+ testdir, huntrleaks)
finally:
cleanup_test_droppings(test, verbose)
-def runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet,
- testdir=None, huntrleaks=None, debug=False):
+def runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet, test_times,
+ testdir=None, huntrleaks=False, debug=False):
test_support.unload(test)
if not testdir:
testdir = findtestdir()
@@ -587,6 +592,7 @@ def runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet,
else:
# Always import it from the test package
abstest = 'test.' + test
+ start_time = time.time()
the_package = __import__(abstest, globals(), locals(), [])
the_module = getattr(the_package, test)
# Old tests run to completion simply as a side-effect of
@@ -597,6 +603,8 @@ def runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet,
indirect_test()
if huntrleaks:
dash_R(the_module, test, indirect_test, huntrleaks)
+ test_time = time.time() - start_time
+ test_times.append((test_time, test))
finally:
sys.stdout = save_stdout
except test_support.ResourceDenied as msg:
@@ -648,6 +656,7 @@ def runtest_inner(test, generate, verbose, quiet,
fp.close()
else:
expected = test + "\n"
+ expected = test + "\n"
if output == expected or huntrleaks:
return 1
print("test", test, "produced unexpected output:")
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_dbm.py b/Lib/test/test_dbm.py
index 1a40ef6..44b712c 100755
--- a/Lib/test/test_dbm.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_dbm.py
@@ -1,61 +1,40 @@
-#! /usr/bin/env python
-"""Test script for the dbm module
- Roger E. Masse
-"""
+from test import test_support
+import unittest
import os
+import random
import dbm
from dbm import error
-from test.test_support import verbose, verify, TestSkipped, TESTFN
-# make filename unique to allow multiple concurrent tests
-# and to minimize the likelihood of a problem from an old file
-filename = TESTFN
-
-def cleanup():
- for suffix in ['', '.pag', '.dir', '.db']:
- try:
- os.unlink(filename + suffix)
- except OSError as e:
- (errno, strerror) = e.errno, e.strerror
- # if we can't delete the file because of permissions,
- # nothing will work, so skip the test
- if errno == 1:
- raise TestSkipped('unable to remove: ' + filename + suffix)
-
-def test_keys():
- d = dbm.open(filename, 'c')
- verify(d.keys() == [])
- d[b'a'] = b'b'
- d[b'12345678910'] = b'019237410982340912840198242'
- d.keys()
- if b'a' in d:
- if verbose:
- print('Test dbm keys: ', d.keys())
-
- d.close()
-
-def test_modes():
- d = dbm.open(filename, 'r')
- d.close()
- d = dbm.open(filename, 'rw')
- d.close()
- d = dbm.open(filename, 'w')
- d.close()
- d = dbm.open(filename, 'n')
- d.close()
+class DbmTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
+
+ def setUp(self):
+ self.filename = test_support.TESTFN
+ self.d = dbm.open(self.filename, 'c')
+ self.d.close()
+
+ def tearDown(self):
+ for suffix in ['', '.pag', '.dir', '.db']:
+ test_support.unlink(self.filename + suffix)
+
+ def test_keys(self):
+ self.d = dbm.open(self.filename, 'c')
+ self.assert_(self.d.keys() == [])
+ self.d['a'] = 'b'
+ self.d['12345678910'] = '019237410982340912840198242'
+ self.d.keys()
+ self.assert_(b'a' in self.d)
+ self.d.close()
+
+ def test_modes(self):
+ for mode in ['r', 'rw', 'w', 'n']:
+ try:
+ self.d = dbm.open(self.filename, mode)
+ self.d.close()
+ except dbm.error:
+ self.fail()
def test_main():
- cleanup()
- try:
- test_keys()
- test_modes()
- except:
- cleanup()
- raise
-
- cleanup()
-
-
+ test_support.run_unittest(DbmTestCase)
if __name__ == '__main__':
test_main()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_dict.py b/Lib/test/test_dict.py
index 1997dc5..01d47da 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_dict.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_dict.py
@@ -13,12 +13,14 @@ class DictTest(unittest.TestCase):
def test_literal_constructor(self):
# check literal constructor for different sized dicts (to exercise the BUILD_MAP oparg
- items = []
- for n in range(400):
+ for n in (0, 1, 6, 256, 400):
+ items = [(''.join([random.choice(string.ascii_letters)
+ for j in range(8)]),
+ i)
+ for i in range(n)]
+ random.shuffle(items)
dictliteral = '{' + ', '.join('%r: %d' % item for item in items) + '}'
self.assertEqual(eval(dictliteral), dict(items))
- items.append((''.join([random.choice(string.ascii_letters) for j in range(8)]), n))
- random.shuffle(items)
def test_bool(self):
self.assert_(not {})
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_dummy_threading.py b/Lib/test/test_dummy_threading.py
index 6f16241..2d0dadd 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_dummy_threading.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_dummy_threading.py
@@ -1,71 +1,63 @@
-# Very rudimentary test of threading module
-
-# Create a bunch of threads, let each do some work, wait until all are done
-
-from test.test_support import verbose
+from test import test_support
+import unittest
import dummy_threading as _threading
import time
+class DummyThreadingTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
-class TestThread(_threading.Thread):
+ class TestThread(_threading.Thread):
- def run(self):
+ def run(self):
+ global running
+ global sema
+ global mutex
+ # Uncomment if testing another module, such as the real 'threading'
+ # module.
+ #delay = random.random() * 2
+ delay = 0
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print('task', self.getName(), 'will run for', delay, 'sec')
+ sema.acquire()
+ mutex.acquire()
+ running += 1
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print(running, 'tasks are running')
+ mutex.release()
+ time.sleep(delay)
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print('task', self.getName(), 'done')
+ mutex.acquire()
+ running -= 1
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print(self.getName(), 'is finished.', running, 'tasks are running')
+ mutex.release()
+ sema.release()
+
+ def setUp(self):
+ self.numtasks = 10
+ global sema
+ sema = _threading.BoundedSemaphore(value=3)
+ global mutex
+ mutex = _threading.RLock()
global running
- # Uncomment if testing another module, such as the real 'threading'
- # module.
- #delay = random.random() * 2
- delay = 0
- if verbose:
- print('task', self.getName(), 'will run for', delay, 'sec')
- sema.acquire()
- mutex.acquire()
- running = running + 1
- if verbose:
- print(running, 'tasks are running')
- mutex.release()
- time.sleep(delay)
- if verbose:
- print('task', self.getName(), 'done')
- mutex.acquire()
- running = running - 1
- if verbose:
- print(self.getName(), 'is finished.', running, 'tasks are running')
- mutex.release()
- sema.release()
+ running = 0
+ self.threads = []
-def starttasks():
- for i in range(numtasks):
- t = TestThread(name="<thread %d>"%i)
- threads.append(t)
- t.start()
+ def test_tasks(self):
+ for i in range(self.numtasks):
+ t = self.TestThread(name="<thread %d>"%i)
+ self.threads.append(t)
+ t.start()
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print('waiting for all tasks to complete')
+ for t in self.threads:
+ t.join()
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print('all tasks done')
def test_main():
- # This takes about n/3 seconds to run (about n/3 clumps of tasks, times
- # about 1 second per clump).
- global numtasks
- numtasks = 10
-
- # no more than 3 of the 10 can run at once
- global sema
- sema = _threading.BoundedSemaphore(value=3)
- global mutex
- mutex = _threading.RLock()
- global running
- running = 0
-
- global threads
- threads = []
-
- starttasks()
-
- if verbose:
- print('waiting for all tasks to complete')
- for t in threads:
- t.join()
- if verbose:
- print('all tasks done')
-
+ test_support.run_unittest(DummyThreadingTestCase)
if __name__ == '__main__':
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_errno.py b/Lib/test/test_errno.py
index 25937dc..70bbfbc 100755
--- a/Lib/test/test_errno.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_errno.py
@@ -4,46 +4,83 @@
"""
import errno
-from test.test_support import verbose
+from test import test_support
+import unittest
errors = ['E2BIG', 'EACCES', 'EADDRINUSE', 'EADDRNOTAVAIL', 'EADV',
'EAFNOSUPPORT', 'EAGAIN', 'EALREADY', 'EBADE', 'EBADF',
'EBADFD', 'EBADMSG', 'EBADR', 'EBADRQC', 'EBADSLT',
'EBFONT', 'EBUSY', 'ECHILD', 'ECHRNG', 'ECOMM',
'ECONNABORTED', 'ECONNREFUSED', 'ECONNRESET',
- 'EDEADLK', 'EDEADLOCK', 'EDESTADDRREQ', 'EDOM',
+ 'EDEADLK', 'EDEADLOCK', 'EDESTADDRREQ', 'EDOTDOT', 'EDOM',
'EDQUOT', 'EEXIST', 'EFAULT', 'EFBIG', 'EHOSTDOWN',
'EHOSTUNREACH', 'EIDRM', 'EILSEQ', 'EINPROGRESS',
- 'EINTR', 'EINVAL', 'EIO', 'EISCONN', 'EISDIR',
+ 'EINTR', 'EINVAL', 'EIO', 'EISCONN', 'EISDIR', 'EISNAM',
'EL2HLT', 'EL2NSYNC', 'EL3HLT', 'EL3RST', 'ELIBACC',
'ELIBBAD', 'ELIBEXEC', 'ELIBMAX', 'ELIBSCN', 'ELNRNG',
'ELOOP', 'EMFILE', 'EMLINK', 'EMSGSIZE', 'EMULTIHOP',
- 'ENAMETOOLONG', 'ENETDOWN', 'ENETRESET', 'ENETUNREACH',
+ 'ENAMETOOLONG', 'ENAVAIL', 'ENETDOWN', 'ENETRESET', 'ENETUNREACH',
'ENFILE', 'ENOANO', 'ENOBUFS', 'ENOCSI', 'ENODATA',
'ENODEV', 'ENOENT', 'ENOEXEC', 'ENOLCK', 'ENOLINK',
'ENOMEM', 'ENOMSG', 'ENONET', 'ENOPKG', 'ENOPROTOOPT',
'ENOSPC', 'ENOSR', 'ENOSTR', 'ENOSYS', 'ENOTBLK',
- 'ENOTCONN', 'ENOTDIR', 'ENOTEMPTY', 'ENOTOBACCO', 'ENOTSOCK',
+ 'ENOTCONN', 'ENOTDIR', 'ENOTEMPTY', 'ENOTNAM', 'ENOTOBACCO', 'ENOTSOCK',
'ENOTTY', 'ENOTUNIQ', 'ENXIO', 'EOPNOTSUPP',
'EOVERFLOW', 'EPERM', 'EPFNOSUPPORT', 'EPIPE',
'EPROTO', 'EPROTONOSUPPORT', 'EPROTOTYPE',
- 'ERANGE', 'EREMCHG', 'EREMOTE', 'ERESTART',
+ 'ERANGE', 'EREMCHG', 'EREMOTE', 'EREMOTEIO', 'ERESTART',
'EROFS', 'ESHUTDOWN', 'ESOCKTNOSUPPORT', 'ESPIPE',
'ESRCH', 'ESRMNT', 'ESTALE', 'ESTRPIPE', 'ETIME',
- 'ETIMEDOUT', 'ETOOMANYREFS', 'ETXTBSY', 'EUNATCH',
- 'EUSERS', 'EWOULDBLOCK', 'EXDEV', 'EXFULL']
-
-#
-# This is a wee bit bogus since the module only conditionally adds
-# errno constants if they have been defined by errno.h However, this
-# test seems to work on SGI, Sparc & intel Solaris, and linux.
-#
-for error in errors:
- try:
- a = getattr(errno, error)
- except AttributeError:
- if verbose:
- print('%s: not found' % error)
- else:
- if verbose:
- print('%s: %d' % (error, a))
+ 'ETIMEDOUT', 'ETOOMANYREFS', 'ETXTBSY', 'EUCLEAN', 'EUNATCH',
+ 'EUSERS', 'EWOULDBLOCK', 'EXDEV', 'EXFULL',
+ 'WSABASEERR', 'WSADESCRIPTIO', 'WSAEACCES', 'WSAEADDRINUSE',
+ 'WSAEADDRNOTAVAIL', 'WSAEAFNOSUPPORT', 'WSAEALREADY',
+ 'WSAEBADF', 'WSAECONNABORTED', 'WSAECONNREFUSED',
+ 'WSAECONNRESET', 'WSAEDESTADDRREQ', 'WSAEDISCON',
+ 'WSAEDQUOT', 'WSAEFAULT', 'WSAEHOSTDOWN', 'WSAEHOSTUNREACH',
+ 'WSAEINPROGRESS', 'WSAEINTR', 'WSAEINVAL', 'WSAEISCONN',
+ 'WSAELOOP', 'WSAEMFILE', 'WSAEMSGSIZE', 'WSAENAMETOOLONG',
+ 'WSAENETDOWN', 'WSAENETRESET', 'WSAENETUNREACH',
+ 'WSAENOBUFS', 'WSAENOPROTOOPT', 'WSAENOTCONN',
+ 'WSAENOTEMPTY', 'WSAENOTSOCK', 'WSAEOPNOTSUPP',
+ 'WSAEPFNOSUPPORT', 'WSAEPROCLIM', 'WSAEPROTONOSUPPORT',
+ 'WSAEPROTOTYPE', 'WSAEREMOTE', 'WSAESHUTDOWN',
+ 'WSAESOCKTNOSUPPORT', 'WSAESTALE', 'WSAETIMEDOUT',
+ 'WSAETOOMANYREFS', 'WSAEUSERS', 'WSAEWOULDBLOCK',
+ 'WSAGETASYNCBUFLE', 'WSAGETASYNCERRO', 'WSAGETSELECTERRO',
+ 'WSAGETSELECTEVEN', 'WSAHOS', 'WSAMAKEASYNCREPL',
+ 'WSAMAKESELECTREPL', 'WSAN', 'WSANOTINITIALISED', 'WSASY',
+ 'WSASYSNOTREADY', 'WSATR', 'WSAVERNOTSUPPORTED']
+
+
+class ErrnoAttributeTests(unittest.TestCase):
+
+ def test_for_improper_attributes(self):
+ # No unexpected attributes should be on the module.
+ errors_set = set(errors)
+ for attribute in errno.__dict__.keys():
+ if attribute.isupper():
+ self.assert_(attribute in errors_set,
+ "%s is an unexpected error value" % attribute)
+
+ def test_using_errorcode(self):
+ # Every key value in errno.errorcode should be on the module.
+ for value in errno.errorcode.values():
+ self.assert_(hasattr(errno, value), 'no %s attr in errno' % value)
+
+
+class ErrorcodeTests(unittest.TestCase):
+
+ def test_attributes_in_errorcode(self):
+ for attribute in errno.__dict__.keys():
+ if attribute.isupper():
+ self.assert_(getattr(errno, attribute) in errno.errorcode,
+ 'no %s attr in errno.errorcode' % attribute)
+
+
+def test_main():
+ test_support.run_unittest(ErrnoAttributeTests, ErrorcodeTests)
+
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ test_main()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_extcall.py b/Lib/test/test_extcall.py
index bad1440..b6dc144 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_extcall.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_extcall.py
@@ -1,274 +1,262 @@
-from test.test_support import verify, TestFailed, sortdict
-from collections import UserDict, UserList
-
-def e(a, b):
- print(a, b)
-
-def f(*a, **k):
- print(a, sortdict(k))
-
-def g(x, *y, **z):
- print(x, y, sortdict(z))
-
-def h(j=1, a=2, h=3):
- print(j, a, h)
-
-f()
-f(1)
-f(1, 2)
-f(1, 2, 3)
-
-f(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5))
-f(1, 2, 3, *[4, 5])
-f(1, 2, 3, *UserList([4, 5]))
-f(1, 2, 3, **{'a':4, 'b':5})
-f(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5), **{'a':6, 'b':7})
-f(1, 2, 3, x=4, y=5, *(6, 7), **{'a':8, 'b':9})
-
-
-f(1, 2, 3, **UserDict(a=4, b=5))
-f(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5), **UserDict(a=6, b=7))
-f(1, 2, 3, x=4, y=5, *(6, 7), **UserDict(a=8, b=9))
-
-
-# Verify clearing of SF bug #733667
-try:
- e(c=3)
-except TypeError:
- pass
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: e() got an unexpected keyword argument 'c'")
-
-try:
- g()
-except TypeError as err:
- print("TypeError:", err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: not enough arguments; expected 1, got 0")
-
-try:
- g(*())
-except TypeError as err:
- print("TypeError:", err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: not enough arguments; expected 1, got 0")
-
-try:
- g(*(), **{})
-except TypeError as err:
- print("TypeError:", err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: not enough arguments; expected 1, got 0")
-
-g(1)
-g(1, 2)
-g(1, 2, 3)
-g(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5))
-class Nothing: pass
-try:
- g(*Nothing())
-except TypeError as attr:
- pass
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError")
-
-class Nothing:
- def __len__(self):
- return 5
-try:
- g(*Nothing())
-except TypeError as attr:
- pass
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError")
-
-class Nothing:
- def __len__(self):
- return 5
- def __getitem__(self, i):
- if i < 3:
- return i
- else:
- raise IndexError(i)
-g(*Nothing())
-
-class Nothing:
- def __init__(self):
- self.c = 0
- def __iter__(self):
- return self
-try:
- g(*Nothing())
-except TypeError as attr:
- pass
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError")
-
-class Nothing:
- def __init__(self):
- self.c = 0
- def __iter__(self):
- return self
- def __next__(self):
- if self.c == 4:
- raise StopIteration
- c = self.c
- self.c += 1
- return c
-g(*Nothing())
-
-# make sure the function call doesn't stomp on the dictionary?
-d = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
-d2 = d.copy()
-verify(d == d2)
-g(1, d=4, **d)
-print(sortdict(d))
-print(sortdict(d2))
-verify(d == d2, "function call modified dictionary")
-
-# what about willful misconduct?
-def saboteur(**kw):
- kw['x'] = locals() # yields a cyclic kw
- return kw
-d = {}
-kw = saboteur(a=1, **d)
-verify(d == {})
-# break the cycle
-del kw['x']
-
-try:
- g(1, 2, 3, **{'x':4, 'y':5})
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: keyword parameter redefined")
-
-try:
- g(1, 2, 3, a=4, b=5, *(6, 7), **{'a':8, 'b':9})
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: keyword parameter redefined")
-
-try:
- f(**{1:2})
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: keywords must be strings")
-
-try:
- h(**{'e': 2})
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: unexpected keyword argument: e")
-
-try:
- h(*h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: * argument must be a tuple")
-
-try:
- dir(*h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: * argument must be a tuple")
-
-try:
- None(*h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: * argument must be a tuple")
-
-try:
- h(**h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: ** argument must be a dictionary")
-
-try:
- dir(**h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: ** argument must be a dictionary")
-
-try:
- None(**h)
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: ** argument must be a dictionary")
-
-try:
- dir(b=1,**{'b':1})
-except TypeError as err:
- print(err)
-else:
- print("should raise TypeError: dir() got multiple values for keyword argument 'b'")
-
-def f2(*a, **b):
- return a, b
-
-d = {}
-for i in range(512):
- key = 'k%d' % i
- d[key] = i
-a, b = f2(1, *(2, 3), **d)
-print(len(a), len(b), b == d)
-
-class Foo:
- def method(self, arg1, arg2):
- return arg1 + arg2
-
-x = Foo()
-print(Foo.method(*(x, 1, 2)))
-print(Foo.method(x, *(1, 2)))
-print(Foo.method(*(1, 2, 3)))
-print(Foo.method(1, *(2, 3)))
-
-# A PyCFunction that takes only positional parameters should allow an
-# empty keyword dictionary to pass without a complaint, but raise a
-# TypeError if the dictionary is non-empty.
-id(1, **{})
-try:
- id(1, **{"foo": 1})
-except TypeError:
- pass
-else:
- raise TestFailed('expected TypeError; no exception raised')
-
-a, b, d, e, v, k = 'A', 'B', 'D', 'E', 'V', 'K'
-funcs = []
-maxargs = {}
-for args in ['', 'a', 'ab']:
- for defargs in ['', 'd', 'de']:
- for vararg in ['', 'v']:
- for kwarg in ['', 'k']:
- name = 'z' + args + defargs + vararg + kwarg
- arglist = list(args) + ['%s="%s"' % (x, x) for x in defargs]
- if vararg: arglist.append('*' + vararg)
- if kwarg: arglist.append('**' + kwarg)
- decl = (('def %s(%s): print("ok %s", a, b, d, e, v, ' +
- 'type(k) is type ("") and k or sortdict(k))')
- % (name, ', '.join(arglist), name))
- exec(decl)
- func = eval(name)
- funcs.append(func)
- maxargs[func] = len(args + defargs)
-
-for name in ['za', 'zade', 'zabk', 'zabdv', 'zabdevk']:
- func = eval(name)
- for args in [(), (1, 2), (1, 2, 3, 4, 5)]:
- for kwargs in ['', 'a', 'd', 'ad', 'abde']:
- kwdict = {}
- for k in kwargs: kwdict[k] = k + k
- print(func.__name__, args, sortdict(kwdict), '->', end=' ')
- try: func(*args, **kwdict)
- except TypeError as err: print(err)
+"""Doctest for method/function calls.
+
+We're going the use these types for extra testing
+
+ >>> from UserList import UserList
+ >>> from UserDict import UserDict
+
+We're defining four helper functions
+
+ >>> def e(a,b):
+ ... print a, b
+
+ >>> def f(*a, **k):
+ ... print a, test_support.sortdict(k)
+
+ >>> def g(x, *y, **z):
+ ... print x, y, test_support.sortdict(z)
+
+ >>> def h(j=1, a=2, h=3):
+ ... print j, a, h
+
+Argument list examples
+
+ >>> f()
+ () {}
+ >>> f(1)
+ (1,) {}
+ >>> f(1, 2)
+ (1, 2) {}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3)
+ (1, 2, 3) {}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5))
+ (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, *[4, 5])
+ (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, *UserList([4, 5]))
+ (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {}
+
+Here we add keyword arguments
+
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, **{'a':4, 'b':5})
+ (1, 2, 3) {'a': 4, 'b': 5}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, *[4, 5], **{'a':6, 'b':7})
+ (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 6, 'b': 7}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, x=4, y=5, *(6, 7), **{'a':8, 'b': 9})
+ (1, 2, 3, 6, 7) {'a': 8, 'b': 9, 'x': 4, 'y': 5}
+
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, **UserDict(a=4, b=5))
+ (1, 2, 3) {'a': 4, 'b': 5}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5), **UserDict(a=6, b=7))
+ (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) {'a': 6, 'b': 7}
+ >>> f(1, 2, 3, x=4, y=5, *(6, 7), **UserDict(a=8, b=9))
+ (1, 2, 3, 6, 7) {'a': 8, 'b': 9, 'x': 4, 'y': 5}
+
+Examples with invalid arguments (TypeErrors). We're also testing the function
+names in the exception messages.
+
+Verify clearing of SF bug #733667
+
+ >>> e(c=4)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: e() got an unexpected keyword argument 'c'
+
+ >>> g()
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)
+
+ >>> g(*())
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)
+
+ >>> g(*(), **{})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() takes at least 1 argument (0 given)
+
+ >>> g(1)
+ 1 () {}
+ >>> g(1, 2)
+ 1 (2,) {}
+ >>> g(1, 2, 3)
+ 1 (2, 3) {}
+ >>> g(1, 2, 3, *(4, 5))
+ 1 (2, 3, 4, 5) {}
+
+ >>> class Nothing: pass
+ ...
+ >>> g(*Nothing())
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() argument after * must be a sequence, not instance
+
+ >>> class Nothing:
+ ... def __len__(self): return 5
+ ...
+
+ >>> g(*Nothing())
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() argument after * must be a sequence, not instance
+
+ >>> class Nothing():
+ ... def __len__(self): return 5
+ ... def __getitem__(self, i):
+ ... if i<3: return i
+ ... else: raise IndexError(i)
+ ...
+
+ >>> g(*Nothing())
+ 0 (1, 2) {}
+
+ >>> class Nothing:
+ ... def __init__(self): self.c = 0
+ ... def __iter__(self): return self
+ ... def next(self):
+ ... if self.c == 4:
+ ... raise StopIteration
+ ... c = self.c
+ ... self.c += 1
+ ... return c
+ ...
+
+ >>> g(*Nothing())
+ 0 (1, 2, 3) {}
+
+Make sure that the function doesn't stomp the dictionary
+
+ >>> d = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
+ >>> d2 = d.copy()
+ >>> g(1, d=4, **d)
+ 1 () {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3, 'd': 4}
+ >>> d == d2
+ True
+
+What about willful misconduct?
+
+ >>> def saboteur(**kw):
+ ... kw['x'] = 'm'
+ ... return kw
+
+ >>> d = {}
+ >>> kw = saboteur(a=1, **d)
+ >>> d
+ {}
+
+
+ >>> g(1, 2, 3, **{'x': 4, 'y': 5})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: g() got multiple values for keyword argument 'x'
+
+ >>> f(**{1:2})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: f() keywords must be strings
+
+ >>> h(**{'e': 2})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: h() got an unexpected keyword argument 'e'
+
+ >>> h(*h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: h() argument after * must be a sequence, not function
+
+ >>> dir(*h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: dir() argument after * must be a sequence, not function
+
+ >>> None(*h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: NoneType object argument after * must be a sequence, \
+not function
+
+ >>> h(**h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: h() argument after ** must be a mapping, not function
+
+ >>> dir(**h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: dir() argument after ** must be a mapping, not function
+
+ >>> None(**h)
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: NoneType object argument after ** must be a mapping, \
+not function
+
+ >>> dir(b=1, **{'b': 1})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: dir() got multiple values for keyword argument 'b'
+
+Another helper function
+
+ >>> def f2(*a, **b):
+ ... return a, b
+
+
+ >>> d = {}
+ >>> for i in xrange(512):
+ ... key = 'k%d' % i
+ ... d[key] = i
+ >>> a, b = f2(1, *(2,3), **d)
+ >>> len(a), len(b), b == d
+ (3, 512, True)
+
+ >>> class Foo:
+ ... def method(self, arg1, arg2):
+ ... return arg1+arg2
+
+ >>> x = Foo()
+ >>> Foo.method(*(x, 1, 2))
+ 3
+ >>> Foo.method(x, *(1, 2))
+ 3
+ >>> Foo.method(*(1, 2, 3))
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: unbound method method() must be called with Foo instance as \
+first argument (got int instance instead)
+
+ >>> Foo.method(1, *[2, 3])
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: unbound method method() must be called with Foo instance as \
+first argument (got int instance instead)
+
+A PyCFunction that takes only positional parameters shoud allow an
+empty keyword dictionary to pass without a complaint, but raise a
+TypeError if te dictionary is not empty
+
+ >>> try:
+ ... silence = id(1, *{})
+ ... True
+ ... except:
+ ... False
+ True
+
+ >>> id(1, **{'foo': 1})
+ Traceback (most recent call last):
+ ...
+ TypeError: id() takes no keyword arguments
+
+"""
+
+from test import test_support
+
+def test_main():
+ import test_extcall # self import
+ test_support.run_doctest(test_extcall, True)
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ test_main()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_parser.py b/Lib/test/test_parser.py
index 054d6d2..7269ccb 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_parser.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_parser.py
@@ -1,5 +1,6 @@
import parser
import unittest
+import sys
from test import test_support
#
@@ -465,6 +466,8 @@ class ParserStackLimitTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
def test_trigger_memory_error(self):
e = self._nested_expression(100)
+ print("Expecting 's_push: parser stack overflow' in next line",
+ file=sys.stderr)
self.assertRaises(MemoryError, parser.expr, e)
def test_main():
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_pep247.py b/Lib/test/test_pep247.py
index 2a2d7ac..fb59d6a 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_pep247.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_pep247.py
@@ -1,56 +1,67 @@
-#
-# Test suite to check compliance with PEP 247, the standard API for
-# hashing algorithms.
-#
+"""
+Test suite to check compilance with PEP 247, the standard API
+for hashing algorithms
+"""
+import warnings
+warnings.filterwarnings('ignore', 'the md5 module is deprecated.*',
+ DeprecationWarning)
+warnings.filterwarnings('ignore', 'the sha module is deprecated.*',
+ DeprecationWarning)
import hmac
+import md5
+import sha
+import unittest
+from test import test_support
-import hmac
-from test.test_support import verbose
-
-def check_hash_module(module, key=None):
- assert hasattr(module, 'digest_size'), "Must have digest_size"
- assert (module.digest_size is None or
- module.digest_size > 0), "digest_size must be None or positive"
-
- if key is not None:
- obj1 = module.new(key)
- obj2 = module.new(key, b"string")
-
- h1 = module.new(key, b"string").digest()
- obj3 = module.new(key) ; obj3.update(b"string") ; h2 = obj3.digest()
- assert h1 == h2, "Hashes must match"
-
- else:
- obj1 = module.new()
- obj2 = module.new(b"string")
-
- h1 = module.new(b"string").digest()
- obj3 = module.new() ; obj3.update(b"string") ; h2 = obj3.digest()
- assert h1 == h2, "Hashes must match"
-
- assert hasattr(obj1, 'digest_size'), "Objects must have digest_size attr"
- if module.digest_size is not None:
- assert obj1.digest_size == module.digest_size, "digest_size must match"
- assert obj1.digest_size == len(h1), "digest_size must match actual size"
- obj1.update(b"string")
- obj_copy = obj1.copy()
- assert obj1.digest() == obj_copy.digest(), "Copied objects must match"
- assert obj1.hexdigest() == obj_copy.hexdigest(), \
- "Copied objects must match"
- digest, hexdigest = obj1.digest(), obj1.hexdigest()
- hd2 = ""
- for byte in digest:
- hd2 += "%02x" % byte
- assert hd2 == hexdigest, "hexdigest doesn't appear correct"
-
- if verbose:
- print('Module', module.__name__, 'seems to comply with PEP 247')
+class Pep247Test(unittest.TestCase):
+ def check_module(self, module, key=None):
+ self.assert_(hasattr(module, 'digest_size'))
+ self.assert_(module.digest_size is None or module.digest_size > 0)
+ if not key is None:
+ obj1 = module.new(key)
+ obj2 = module.new(key, 'string')
+ h1 = module.new(key, 'string').digest()
+ obj3 = module.new(key)
+ obj3.update('string')
+ h2 = obj3.digest()
+ else:
+ obj1 = module.new()
+ obj2 = module.new('string')
+ h1 = module.new('string').digest()
+ obj3 = module.new()
+ obj3.update('string')
+ h2 = obj3.digest()
+ self.assertEquals(h1, h2)
+ self.assert_(hasattr(obj1, 'digest_size'))
-def test_main():
- check_hash_module(hmac, key=b'abc')
+ if not module.digest_size is None:
+ self.assertEquals(obj1.digest_size, module.digest_size)
+
+ self.assertEquals(obj1.digest_size, len(h1))
+ obj1.update('string')
+ obj_copy = obj1.copy()
+ self.assertEquals(obj1.digest(), obj_copy.digest())
+ self.assertEquals(obj1.hexdigest(), obj_copy.hexdigest())
+
+ digest, hexdigest = obj1.digest(), obj1.hexdigest()
+ hd2 = ""
+ for byte in digest:
+ hd2 += '%02x' % ord(byte)
+ self.assertEquals(hd2, hexdigest)
+ def test_md5(self):
+ self.check_module(md5)
+
+ def test_sha(self):
+ self.check_module(sha)
+
+ def test_hmac(self):
+ self.check_module(hmac, key='abc')
+
+def test_main():
+ test_support.run_unittest(Pep247Test)
if __name__ == '__main__':
test_main()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_smtplib.py b/Lib/test/test_smtplib.py
index a9d5672..e1c198f5 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_smtplib.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_smtplib.py
@@ -348,11 +348,11 @@ class SMTPSimTests(TestCase):
def testBasic(self):
# smoke test
- smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=3)
+ smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=15)
smtp.quit()
def testEHLO(self):
- smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=3)
+ smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=15)
# no features should be present before the EHLO
self.assertEqual(smtp.esmtp_features, {})
@@ -373,7 +373,7 @@ class SMTPSimTests(TestCase):
smtp.quit()
def testVRFY(self):
- smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=3)
+ smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=15)
for email, name in sim_users.items():
expected_known = (250, bytes('%s %s' %
@@ -388,7 +388,7 @@ class SMTPSimTests(TestCase):
smtp.quit()
def testEXPN(self):
- smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=3)
+ smtp = smtplib.SMTP(HOST, PORT, local_hostname='localhost', timeout=15)
for listname, members in sim_lists.items():
users = []
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_strftime.py b/Lib/test/test_strftime.py
index 0870134..5af5a0c 100755
--- a/Lib/test/test_strftime.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_strftime.py
@@ -1,158 +1,185 @@
-#! /usr/bin/env python
-
-# Sanity checker for time.strftime
-
-import time, calendar, sys, re
-from test.test_support import verbose
-
-def main():
- global verbose
- # For C Python, these tests expect C locale, so we try to set that
- # explicitly. For Jython, Finn says we need to be in the US locale; my
- # understanding is that this is the closest Java gets to C's "C" locale.
- # Jython ought to supply an _locale module which Does The Right Thing, but
- # this is the best we can do given today's state of affairs.
- try:
- import java
- java.util.Locale.setDefault(java.util.Locale.US)
- except ImportError:
- # Can't do this first because it will succeed, even in Jython
- import locale
- locale.setlocale(locale.LC_TIME, 'C')
- now = time.time()
- strftest(now)
- verbose = 0
- # Try a bunch of dates and times, chosen to vary through time of
- # day and daylight saving time
- for j in range(-5, 5):
- for i in range(25):
- strftest(now + (i + j*100)*23*3603)
+"""
+Unittest for time.strftime
+"""
+
+import calendar
+import sys
+import os
+import re
+from test import test_support
+import time
+import unittest
+
+
+# helper functions
+def fixasctime(s):
+ if s[8] == ' ':
+ s = s[:8] + '0' + s[9:]
+ return s
def escapestr(text, ampm):
- """Escape text to deal with possible locale values that have regex
- syntax while allowing regex syntax used for the comparison."""
+ """
+ Escape text to deal with possible locale values that have regex
+ syntax while allowing regex syntax used for comparison.
+ """
new_text = re.escape(text)
new_text = new_text.replace(re.escape(ampm), ampm)
- new_text = new_text.replace("\%", "%")
- new_text = new_text.replace("\:", ":")
- new_text = new_text.replace("\?", "?")
+ new_text = new_text.replace('\%', '%')
+ new_text = new_text.replace('\:', ':')
+ new_text = new_text.replace('\?', '?')
return new_text
-def strftest(now):
- if verbose:
- print("strftime test for", time.ctime(now))
- nowsecs = str(int(now))[:-1]
- gmt = time.gmtime(now)
- now = time.localtime(now)
-
- if now[3] < 12: ampm='(AM|am)'
- else: ampm='(PM|pm)'
-
- jan1 = time.localtime(time.mktime((now[0], 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0)))
-
- try:
- if now[8]: tz = time.tzname[1]
- else: tz = time.tzname[0]
- except AttributeError:
- tz = ''
-
- if now[3] > 12: clock12 = now[3] - 12
- elif now[3] > 0: clock12 = now[3]
- else: clock12 = 12
-
- # Make sure any characters that could be taken as regex syntax is
- # escaped in escapestr()
- expectations = (
- ('%a', calendar.day_abbr[now[6]], 'abbreviated weekday name'),
- ('%A', calendar.day_name[now[6]], 'full weekday name'),
- ('%b', calendar.month_abbr[now[1]], 'abbreviated month name'),
- ('%B', calendar.month_name[now[1]], 'full month name'),
- # %c see below
- ('%d', '%02d' % now[2], 'day of month as number (00-31)'),
- ('%H', '%02d' % now[3], 'hour (00-23)'),
- ('%I', '%02d' % clock12, 'hour (01-12)'),
- ('%j', '%03d' % now[7], 'julian day (001-366)'),
- ('%m', '%02d' % now[1], 'month as number (01-12)'),
- ('%M', '%02d' % now[4], 'minute, (00-59)'),
- ('%p', ampm, 'AM or PM as appropriate'),
- ('%S', '%02d' % now[5], 'seconds of current time (00-60)'),
- ('%U', '%02d' % ((now[7] + jan1[6])//7),
- 'week number of the year (Sun 1st)'),
- ('%w', '0?%d' % ((1+now[6]) % 7), 'weekday as a number (Sun 1st)'),
- ('%W', '%02d' % ((now[7] + (jan1[6] - 1)%7)//7),
- 'week number of the year (Mon 1st)'),
- # %x see below
- ('%X', '%02d:%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4], now[5]), '%H:%M:%S'),
- ('%y', '%02d' % (now[0]%100), 'year without century'),
- ('%Y', '%d' % now[0], 'year with century'),
- # %Z see below
- ('%%', '%', 'single percent sign'),
- )
- nonstandard_expectations = (
- # These are standard but don't have predictable output
- ('%c', fixasctime(time.asctime(now)), 'near-asctime() format'),
- ('%x', '%02d/%02d/%02d' % (now[1], now[2], (now[0]%100)),
- '%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S'),
- ('%Z', '%s' % tz, 'time zone name'),
-
- # These are some platform specific extensions
- ('%D', '%02d/%02d/%02d' % (now[1], now[2], (now[0]%100)), 'mm/dd/yy'),
- ('%e', '%2d' % now[2], 'day of month as number, blank padded ( 0-31)'),
- ('%h', calendar.month_abbr[now[1]], 'abbreviated month name'),
- ('%k', '%2d' % now[3], 'hour, blank padded ( 0-23)'),
- ('%n', '\n', 'newline character'),
- ('%r', '%02d:%02d:%02d %s' % (clock12, now[4], now[5], ampm),
- '%I:%M:%S %p'),
- ('%R', '%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4]), '%H:%M'),
- ('%s', nowsecs, 'seconds since the Epoch in UCT'),
- ('%t', '\t', 'tab character'),
- ('%T', '%02d:%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4], now[5]), '%H:%M:%S'),
- ('%3y', '%03d' % (now[0]%100),
- 'year without century rendered using fieldwidth'),
- )
+class StrftimeTest(unittest.TestCase):
- if verbose:
- print("Strftime test, platform: %s, Python version: %s" % \
- (sys.platform, sys.version.split()[0]))
+ def _update_variables(self, now):
+ # we must update the local variables on every cycle
+ self.gmt = time.gmtime(now)
+ now = time.localtime(now)
+
+ if now[3] < 12: self.ampm='(AM|am)'
+ else: self.ampm='(PM|pm)'
+
+ self.jan1 = time.localtime(time.mktime((now[0], 1, 1, 0, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0)))
- for e in expectations:
try:
- result = time.strftime(e[0], now)
- except ValueError as error:
- print("Standard '%s' format gave error:" % e[0], error)
- continue
- if re.match(escapestr(e[1], ampm), result): continue
- if not result or result[0] == '%':
- print("Does not support standard '%s' format (%s)" % (e[0], e[2]))
- else:
- print("Conflict for %s (%s):" % (e[0], e[2]))
- print(" Expected %s, but got %s" % (e[1], result))
-
- for e in nonstandard_expectations:
+ if now[8]: self.tz = time.tzname[1]
+ else: self.tz = time.tzname[0]
+ except AttributeError:
+ self.tz = ''
+
+ if now[3] > 12: self.clock12 = now[3] - 12
+ elif now[3] > 0: self.clock12 = now[3]
+ else: self.clock12 = 12
+
+ self.now = now
+
+ def setUp(self):
try:
- result = time.strftime(e[0], now)
- except ValueError as result:
- if verbose:
- print("Error for nonstandard '%s' format (%s): %s" % \
- (e[0], e[2], str(result)))
- continue
- if re.match(escapestr(e[1], ampm), result):
- if verbose:
- print("Supports nonstandard '%s' format (%s)" % (e[0], e[2]))
- elif not result or result[0] == '%':
- if verbose:
- print("Does not appear to support '%s' format (%s)" % (e[0],
- e[2]))
- else:
- if verbose:
- print("Conflict for nonstandard '%s' format (%s):" % (e[0],
- e[2]))
+ import java
+ java.util.Locale.setDefault(java.util.Locale.US)
+ except ImportError:
+ import locale
+ locale.setlocale(locale.LC_TIME, 'C')
+
+ def test_strftime(self):
+ now = time.time()
+ self._update_variables(now)
+ self.strftest1(now)
+ self.strftest2(now)
+
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print("Strftime test, platform: %s, Python version: %s" % \
+ (sys.platform, sys.version.split()[0]))
+
+ for j in range(-5, 5):
+ for i in range(25):
+ arg = now + (i+j*100)*23*3603
+ self._update_variables(arg)
+ self.strftest1(arg)
+ self.strftest2(arg)
+
+ def strftest1(self, now):
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print("strftime test for", time.ctime(now))
+ now = self.now
+ # Make sure any characters that could be taken as regex syntax is
+ # escaped in escapestr()
+ expectations = (
+ ('%a', calendar.day_abbr[now[6]], 'abbreviated weekday name'),
+ ('%A', calendar.day_name[now[6]], 'full weekday name'),
+ ('%b', calendar.month_abbr[now[1]], 'abbreviated month name'),
+ ('%B', calendar.month_name[now[1]], 'full month name'),
+ # %c see below
+ ('%d', '%02d' % now[2], 'day of month as number (00-31)'),
+ ('%H', '%02d' % now[3], 'hour (00-23)'),
+ ('%I', '%02d' % self.clock12, 'hour (01-12)'),
+ ('%j', '%03d' % now[7], 'julian day (001-366)'),
+ ('%m', '%02d' % now[1], 'month as number (01-12)'),
+ ('%M', '%02d' % now[4], 'minute, (00-59)'),
+ ('%p', self.ampm, 'AM or PM as appropriate'),
+ ('%S', '%02d' % now[5], 'seconds of current time (00-60)'),
+ ('%U', '%02d' % ((now[7] + self.jan1[6])//7),
+ 'week number of the year (Sun 1st)'),
+ ('%w', '0?%d' % ((1+now[6]) % 7), 'weekday as a number (Sun 1st)'),
+ ('%W', '%02d' % ((now[7] + (self.jan1[6] - 1)%7)//7),
+ 'week number of the year (Mon 1st)'),
+ # %x see below
+ ('%X', '%02d:%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4], now[5]), '%H:%M:%S'),
+ ('%y', '%02d' % (now[0]%100), 'year without century'),
+ ('%Y', '%d' % now[0], 'year with century'),
+ # %Z see below
+ ('%%', '%', 'single percent sign'),
+ )
+
+ for e in expectations:
+ # musn't raise a value error
+ try:
+ result = time.strftime(e[0], now)
+ except ValueError as error:
+ print("Standard '%s' format gaver error:" % (e[0], error))
+ continue
+ if re.match(escapestr(e[1], self.ampm), result):
+ continue
+ if not result or result[0] == '%':
+ print("Does not support standard '%s' format (%s)" % \
+ (e[0], e[2]))
+ else:
+ print("Conflict for %s (%s):" % (e[0], e[2]))
print(" Expected %s, but got %s" % (e[1], result))
-def fixasctime(s):
- if s[8] == ' ':
- s = s[:8] + '0' + s[9:]
- return s
+ def strftest2(self, now):
+ nowsecs = str(int(now))[:-1]
+ now = self.now
+
+ nonstandard_expectations = (
+ # These are standard but don't have predictable output
+ ('%c', fixasctime(time.asctime(now)), 'near-asctime() format'),
+ ('%x', '%02d/%02d/%02d' % (now[1], now[2], (now[0]%100)),
+ '%m/%d/%y %H:%M:%S'),
+ ('%Z', '%s' % self.tz, 'time zone name'),
+
+ # These are some platform specific extensions
+ ('%D', '%02d/%02d/%02d' % (now[1], now[2], (now[0]%100)), 'mm/dd/yy'),
+ ('%e', '%2d' % now[2], 'day of month as number, blank padded ( 0-31)'),
+ ('%h', calendar.month_abbr[now[1]], 'abbreviated month name'),
+ ('%k', '%2d' % now[3], 'hour, blank padded ( 0-23)'),
+ ('%n', '\n', 'newline character'),
+ ('%r', '%02d:%02d:%02d %s' % (self.clock12, now[4], now[5], self.ampm),
+ '%I:%M:%S %p'),
+ ('%R', '%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4]), '%H:%M'),
+ ('%s', nowsecs, 'seconds since the Epoch in UCT'),
+ ('%t', '\t', 'tab character'),
+ ('%T', '%02d:%02d:%02d' % (now[3], now[4], now[5]), '%H:%M:%S'),
+ ('%3y', '%03d' % (now[0]%100),
+ 'year without century rendered using fieldwidth'),
+ )
+
-main()
+ for e in nonstandard_expectations:
+ try:
+ result = time.strftime(e[0], now)
+ except ValueError as result:
+ msg = "Error for nonstandard '%s' format (%s): %s" % \
+ (e[0], e[2], str(result))
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print(msg)
+ continue
+ if re.match(escapestr(e[1], self.ampm), result):
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print("Supports nonstandard '%s' format (%s)" % (e[0], e[2]))
+ elif not result or result[0] == '%':
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print("Does not appear to support '%s' format (%s)" % \
+ (e[0], e[2]))
+ else:
+ if test_support.verbose:
+ print("Conflict for nonstandard '%s' format (%s):" % \
+ (e[0], e[2]))
+ print(" Expected %s, but got %s" % (e[1], result))
+
+def test_main():
+ test_support.run_unittest(StrftimeTest)
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+ test_main()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_thread.py b/Lib/test/test_thread.py
index c89c5a1..01d6655 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_thread.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_thread.py
@@ -9,10 +9,13 @@ import time
NUMTASKS = 10
NUMTRIPS = 3
+_print_mutex = thread.allocate_lock()
+
def verbose_print(arg):
"""Helper function for printing out debugging output."""
if test_support.verbose:
- print(arg)
+ with _print_mutex:
+ print(arg)
class BasicThreadTest(unittest.TestCase):
@@ -36,8 +39,8 @@ class ThreadRunningTests(BasicThreadTest):
def task(self, ident):
with self.random_mutex:
- delay = random.random() * NUMTASKS
- verbose_print("task %s will run for %s" % (ident, round(delay, 1)))
+ delay = random.random() / 10000.0
+ verbose_print("task %s will run for %sus" % (ident, round(delay*1e6)))
time.sleep(delay)
verbose_print("task %s done" % ident)
with self.running_mutex:
@@ -136,11 +139,12 @@ class BarrierTest(BasicThreadTest):
# give it a good chance to enter the next
# barrier before the others are all out
# of the current one
- delay = 0.001
+ delay = 0
else:
with self.random_mutex:
- delay = random.random() * NUMTASKS
- verbose_print("task %s will run for %s" % (ident, round(delay, 1)))
+ delay = random.random() / 10000.0
+ verbose_print("task %s will run for %sus" %
+ (ident, round(delay * 1e6)))
time.sleep(delay)
verbose_print("task %s entering %s" % (ident, i))
self.bar.enter()
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_types.py b/Lib/test/test_types.py
index 654bc11..dae250e 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_types.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_types.py
@@ -451,6 +451,15 @@ class TypesTests(unittest.TestCase):
test(1.1234e20, 'e', '1.123400e+20')
test(1.1234e20, 'E', '1.123400E+20')
+ # No format code means use g, but must have a decimal
+ # and a number after the decimal. This is tricky, because
+ # a totaly empty format specifier means something else.
+ # So, just use a sign flag
+ test(1e200, '+g', '+1e+200')
+ test(1e200, '+', '+1.0e+200')
+ test(1.1e200, '+g', '+1.1e+200')
+ test(1.1e200, '+', '+1.1e+200')
+
# % formatting
test(-1.0, '%', '-100.000000%')
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_winsound.py b/Lib/test/test_winsound.py
index 0d6ddf9..7cdc275 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_winsound.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_winsound.py
@@ -27,8 +27,16 @@ class BeepTest(unittest.TestCase):
winsound.Beep(37, 75)
winsound.Beep(32767, 75)
else:
- self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, winsound.Beep, 37, 75)
- self.assertRaises(RuntimeError, winsound.Beep, 32767, 75)
+ # The behaviour of winsound.Beep() seems to differ between
+ # different versions of Windows when there's either a) no
+ # sound card entirely, b) legacy beep driver has been disabled,
+ # or c) the legacy beep driver has been uninstalled. Sometimes
+ # RuntimeErrors are raised, sometimes they're not. Meh.
+ try:
+ winsound.Beep(37, 75)
+ winsound.Beep(32767, 75)
+ except RuntimeError:
+ pass
def test_increasingfrequency(self):
if _have_soundcard():
diff --git a/Lib/test/test_zlib.py b/Lib/test/test_zlib.py
index 6b7d4a6..0adf507 100644
--- a/Lib/test/test_zlib.py
+++ b/Lib/test/test_zlib.py
@@ -48,6 +48,7 @@ class ChecksumTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
+
class ExceptionTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
# make sure we generate some expected errors
def test_badlevel(self):
diff --git a/Misc/developers.txt b/Misc/developers.txt
index ba1c16b..7c9df33 100644
--- a/Misc/developers.txt
+++ b/Misc/developers.txt
@@ -17,6 +17,12 @@ the format to accommodate documentation needs as they arise.
Permissions History
-------------------
+- David Wolever was given SVN access on 17 March 2008 by MvL,
+ for 2to3 work.
+
+- Trent Nelson was given SVN access on 17 March 2008 by MvL,
+ for general contributions to Python.
+
- Mark Dickinson was given SVN access on 6 January 2008 by Facundo
Batista for his work on mathemathics and number related issues.
diff --git a/Modules/datetimemodule.c b/Modules/datetimemodule.c
index 0317dbf..711adba 100644
--- a/Modules/datetimemodule.c
+++ b/Modules/datetimemodule.c
@@ -1173,7 +1173,7 @@ make_Zreplacement(PyObject *object, PyObject *tzinfoarg)
static PyObject *
make_freplacement(PyObject *object)
{
- char freplacement[7];
+ char freplacement[64];
if (PyTime_Check(object))
sprintf(freplacement, "%06d", TIME_GET_MICROSECOND(object));
else if (PyDateTime_Check(object))
diff --git a/Objects/stringlib/formatter.h b/Objects/stringlib/formatter.h
index e8e83f4..3ca14fa 100644
--- a/Objects/stringlib/formatter.h
+++ b/Objects/stringlib/formatter.h
@@ -925,11 +925,16 @@ FORMAT_FLOAT(PyObject *value, PyObject *args)
}
/* parse the format_spec */
- if (!parse_internal_render_format_spec(format_spec, &format, 'g'))
+ if (!parse_internal_render_format_spec(format_spec, &format, '\0'))
goto done;
/* type conversion? */
switch (format.type) {
+ case '\0':
+ /* 'Z' means like 'g', but with at least one decimal. See
+ PyOS_ascii_formatd */
+ format.type = 'Z';
+ /* Deliberate fall through to the next case statement */
case 'e':
case 'E':
case 'f':
diff --git a/Objects/unicodeobject.c b/Objects/unicodeobject.c
index dcad808..fc3ef76 100644
--- a/Objects/unicodeobject.c
+++ b/Objects/unicodeobject.c
@@ -272,7 +272,8 @@ int unicode_resize(register PyUnicodeObject *unicode,
it contains). */
oldstr = unicode->str;
- PyMem_RESIZE(unicode->str, Py_UNICODE, length + 1);
+ unicode->str = PyObject_REALLOC(unicode->str,
+ sizeof(Py_UNICODE) * (length + 1));
if (!unicode->str) {
unicode->str = (Py_UNICODE *)oldstr;
PyErr_NoMemory();
@@ -322,20 +323,23 @@ PyUnicodeObject *_PyUnicode_New(Py_ssize_t length)
never downsize it. */
if ((unicode->length < length) &&
unicode_resize(unicode, length) < 0) {
- PyMem_DEL(unicode->str);
+ PyObject_DEL(unicode->str);
goto onError;
}
}
else {
- unicode->str = PyMem_NEW(Py_UNICODE, length + 1);
+ size_t new_size = sizeof(Py_UNICODE) * ((size_t)length + 1);
+ unicode->str = (Py_UNICODE*) PyObject_MALLOC(new_size);
}
PyObject_INIT(unicode, &PyUnicode_Type);
}
else {
+ size_t new_size;
unicode = PyObject_New(PyUnicodeObject, &PyUnicode_Type);
if (unicode == NULL)
return NULL;
- unicode->str = PyMem_NEW(Py_UNICODE, length + 1);
+ new_size = sizeof(Py_UNICODE) * ((size_t)length + 1);
+ unicode->str = (Py_UNICODE*) PyObject_MALLOC(new_size);
}
if (!unicode->str) {
@@ -389,7 +393,7 @@ void unicode_dealloc(register PyUnicodeObject *unicode)
numfree < PyUnicode_MAXFREELIST) {
/* Keep-Alive optimization */
if (unicode->length >= KEEPALIVE_SIZE_LIMIT) {
- PyMem_DEL(unicode->str);
+ PyObject_DEL(unicode->str);
unicode->str = NULL;
unicode->length = 0;
}
@@ -403,7 +407,7 @@ void unicode_dealloc(register PyUnicodeObject *unicode)
numfree++;
}
else {
- PyMem_DEL(unicode->str);
+ PyObject_DEL(unicode->str);
Py_XDECREF(unicode->defenc);
Py_TYPE(unicode)->tp_free((PyObject *)unicode);
}
@@ -640,7 +644,7 @@ PyUnicode_FromFormatV(const char *format, va_list vargs)
/* step 2: allocate memory for the results of
* PyObject_Str()/PyObject_Repr() calls */
if (callcount) {
- callresults = PyMem_Malloc(sizeof(PyObject *)*callcount);
+ callresults = PyObject_Malloc(sizeof(PyObject *)*callcount);
if (!callresults) {
PyErr_NoMemory();
return NULL;
@@ -787,7 +791,7 @@ PyUnicode_FromFormatV(const char *format, va_list vargs)
}
expand:
if (abuffersize > 20) {
- abuffer = PyMem_Malloc(abuffersize);
+ abuffer = PyObject_Malloc(abuffersize);
if (!abuffer) {
PyErr_NoMemory();
goto fail;
@@ -950,9 +954,9 @@ PyUnicode_FromFormatV(const char *format, va_list vargs)
end:
if (callresults)
- PyMem_Free(callresults);
+ PyObject_Free(callresults);
if (abuffer)
- PyMem_Free(abuffer);
+ PyObject_Free(abuffer);
_PyUnicode_Resize(&string, s - PyUnicode_AS_UNICODE(string));
return string;
fail:
@@ -962,10 +966,10 @@ PyUnicode_FromFormatV(const char *format, va_list vargs)
Py_DECREF(*callresult2);
++callresult2;
}
- PyMem_Free(callresults);
+ PyObject_Free(callresults);
}
if (abuffer)
- PyMem_Free(abuffer);
+ PyObject_Free(abuffer);
return NULL;
}
@@ -8277,8 +8281,8 @@ unicode_subscript(PyUnicodeObject* self, PyObject* item)
return PyUnicode_FromUnicode(self->str + start, slicelength);
} else {
source_buf = PyUnicode_AS_UNICODE((PyObject*)self);
- result_buf = (Py_UNICODE *)PyMem_MALLOC(slicelength*
- sizeof(Py_UNICODE));
+ result_buf = (Py_UNICODE *)PyObject_MALLOC(slicelength*
+ sizeof(Py_UNICODE));
if (result_buf == NULL)
return PyErr_NoMemory();
@@ -8288,7 +8292,7 @@ unicode_subscript(PyUnicodeObject* self, PyObject* item)
}
result = PyUnicode_FromUnicode(result_buf, slicelength);
- PyMem_FREE(result_buf);
+ PyObject_FREE(result_buf);
return result;
}
} else {
@@ -9030,7 +9034,7 @@ unicode_subtype_new(PyTypeObject *type, PyObject *args, PyObject *kwds)
Py_DECREF(tmp);
return NULL;
}
- pnew->str = PyMem_NEW(Py_UNICODE, n+1);
+ pnew->str = (Py_UNICODE*) PyObject_MALLOC(sizeof(Py_UNICODE) * (n+1));
if (pnew->str == NULL) {
_Py_ForgetReference((PyObject *)pnew);
PyObject_Del(pnew);
@@ -9147,7 +9151,7 @@ PyUnicode_ClearFreeList(void)
PyUnicodeObject *v = u;
u = *(PyUnicodeObject **)u;
if (v->str)
- PyMem_DEL(v->str);
+ PyObject_DEL(v->str);
Py_XDECREF(v->defenc);
PyObject_Del(v);
numfree--;
diff --git a/PCbuild/python.vcproj b/PCbuild/python.vcproj
index 17b29a2..f5f4605 100644
--- a/PCbuild/python.vcproj
+++ b/PCbuild/python.vcproj
@@ -290,7 +290,7 @@
AdditionalDependencies="odbccp32.lib"
OutputFile="$(OutDir)\python_d.exe"
SubSystem="1"
- StackReserveSize="2000000"
+ StackReserveSize="2100000"
BaseAddress="0x1d000000"
/>
<Tool
diff --git a/Python/memmove.c b/Python/memmove.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 6fb0dad..0000000
--- a/Python/memmove.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,25 +0,0 @@
-
-/* A perhaps slow but I hope correct implementation of memmove */
-
-extern char *memcpy(char *, char *, int);
-
-char *
-memmove(char *dst, char *src, int n)
-{
- char *realdst = dst;
- if (n <= 0)
- return dst;
- if (src >= dst+n || dst >= src+n)
- return memcpy(dst, src, n);
- if (src > dst) {
- while (--n >= 0)
- *dst++ = *src++;
- }
- else if (src < dst) {
- src += n;
- dst += n;
- while (--n >= 0)
- *--dst = *--src;
- }
- return realdst;
-}
diff --git a/Python/pystrtod.c b/Python/pystrtod.c
index 16efa9d..2ca8402 100644
--- a/Python/pystrtod.c
+++ b/Python/pystrtod.c
@@ -7,7 +7,6 @@
#define ISSPACE(c) ((c) == ' ' || (c) == '\f' || (c) == '\n' || \
(c) == '\r' || (c) == '\t' || (c) == '\v')
#define ISDIGIT(c) ((c) >= '0' && (c) <= '9')
-#define ISXDIGIT(c) (ISDIGIT(c) || ((c) >= 'a' && (c) <= 'f') || ((c) >= 'A' && (c) <= 'F'))
/**
@@ -123,7 +122,8 @@ PyOS_ascii_strtod(const char *nptr, char **endptr)
errno = EINVAL;
return val;
}
- /* For the other cases, we need not convert the decimal point */
+ /* For the other cases, we need not convert the decimal
+ point */
}
/* Set errno to zero, so that we can distinguish zero results
@@ -134,7 +134,8 @@ PyOS_ascii_strtod(const char *nptr, char **endptr)
{
char *copy, *c;
- /* We need to convert the '.' to the locale specific decimal point */
+ /* We need to convert the '.' to the locale specific decimal
+ point */
copy = (char *)PyMem_MALLOC(end - digits_pos +
1 + decimal_point_len);
if (copy == NULL) {
@@ -149,7 +150,8 @@ PyOS_ascii_strtod(const char *nptr, char **endptr)
c += decimal_point_pos - digits_pos;
memcpy(c, decimal_point, decimal_point_len);
c += decimal_point_len;
- memcpy(c, decimal_point_pos + 1, end - (decimal_point_pos + 1));
+ memcpy(c, decimal_point_pos + 1,
+ end - (decimal_point_pos + 1));
c += end - (decimal_point_pos + 1);
*c = 0;
@@ -198,7 +200,7 @@ as necessary to represent the exponent.
/**
* PyOS_ascii_formatd:
* @buffer: A buffer to place the resulting string in
- * @buf_len: The length of the buffer.
+ * @buf_size: The length of the buffer.
* @format: The printf()-style format to use for the
* code to use for converting.
* @d: The #gdouble to convert
@@ -209,12 +211,14 @@ as necessary to represent the exponent.
* specifiers are 'e', 'E', 'f', 'F', 'g', 'G', and 'n'.
*
* 'n' is the same as 'g', except it uses the current locale.
+ * 'Z' is the same as 'g', except it always has a decimal and
+ * at least one digit after the decimal.
*
* Return value: The pointer to the buffer with the converted string.
**/
char *
PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
- size_t buf_len,
+ size_t buf_size,
const char *format,
double d)
{
@@ -227,20 +231,13 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
can't modify it directly. FLOAT_FORMATBUFLEN should be longer than
we ever need this to be. There's an upcoming check to ensure it's
big enough. */
+ /* Issue 2264: code 'Z' requires copying the format. 'Z' is 'g', but
+ also with at least one character past the decimal. */
char tmp_format[FLOAT_FORMATBUFLEN];
-/* g_return_val_if_fail (buffer != NULL, NULL); */
-/* g_return_val_if_fail (format[0] == '%', NULL); */
-/* g_return_val_if_fail (strpbrk (format + 1, "'l%") == NULL, NULL); */
-
/* The last character in the format string must be the format char */
format_char = format[format_len - 1];
-/* g_return_val_if_fail (format_char == 'e' || format_char == 'E' || */
-/* format_char == 'f' || format_char == 'F' || */
-/* format_char == 'g' || format_char == 'G', */
-/* NULL); */
-
if (format[0] != '%')
return NULL;
@@ -251,19 +248,24 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
if (strpbrk(format + 1, "'l%"))
return NULL;
+ /* Also curious about this function is that it accepts format strings
+ like "%xg", which are invalid for floats. In general, the
+ interface to this function is not very good, but changing it is
+ difficult because it's a public API. */
+
if (!(format_char == 'e' || format_char == 'E' ||
format_char == 'f' || format_char == 'F' ||
format_char == 'g' || format_char == 'G' ||
- format_char == 'n'))
+ format_char == 'n' || format_char == 'Z'))
return NULL;
- /* Map 'n' format_char to 'g', by copying the format string and
- replacing the final 'n' with a 'g' */
- if (format_char == 'n') {
+ /* Map 'n' or 'Z' format_char to 'g', by copying the format string and
+ replacing the final char with a 'g' */
+ if (format_char == 'n' || format_char == 'Z') {
if (format_len + 1 >= sizeof(tmp_format)) {
/* The format won't fit in our copy. Error out. In
- practice, this will never happen and will be detected
- by returning NULL */
+ practice, this will never happen and will be
+ detected by returning NULL */
return NULL;
}
strcpy(tmp_format, format);
@@ -271,8 +273,9 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
format = tmp_format;
}
+
/* Have PyOS_snprintf do the hard work */
- PyOS_snprintf(buffer, buf_len, format, d);
+ PyOS_snprintf(buffer, buf_size, format, d);
/* Get the current local, and find the decimal point character (or
string?). Convert that string back to a dot. Do not do this if
@@ -294,7 +297,8 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
while (isdigit(Py_CHARMASK(*p)))
p++;
- if (strncmp(p, decimal_point, decimal_point_len) == 0) {
+ if (strncmp(p, decimal_point,
+ decimal_point_len) == 0) {
*p = '.';
p++;
if (decimal_point_len > 1) {
@@ -343,7 +347,8 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
if we can delete some of the leading zeros */
if (significant_digit_cnt < MIN_EXPONENT_DIGITS)
significant_digit_cnt = MIN_EXPONENT_DIGITS;
- extra_zeros_cnt = exponent_digit_cnt - significant_digit_cnt;
+ extra_zeros_cnt = exponent_digit_cnt -
+ significant_digit_cnt;
/* Delete extra_zeros_cnt worth of characters from the
front of the exponent */
@@ -360,7 +365,7 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
until there are 2, if there's enough room */
int zeros = MIN_EXPONENT_DIGITS - exponent_digit_cnt;
if (start + zeros + exponent_digit_cnt + 1
- < buffer + buf_len) {
+ < buffer + buf_size) {
memmove(start + zeros, start,
exponent_digit_cnt + 1);
memset(start, '0', zeros);
@@ -368,6 +373,49 @@ PyOS_ascii_formatd(char *buffer,
}
}
+ /* If format_char is 'Z', make sure we have at least one character
+ after the decimal point (and make sure we have a decimal point). */
+ if (format_char == 'Z') {
+ int insert_count = 0;
+ char* chars_to_insert;
+
+ /* search for the first non-digit character */
+ p = buffer;
+ while (*p && isdigit(Py_CHARMASK(*p)))
+ ++p;
+
+ if (*p == '.') {
+ if (isdigit(Py_CHARMASK(*(p+1)))) {
+ /* Nothing to do, we already have a decimal
+ point and a digit after it */
+ }
+ else {
+ /* We have a decimal point, but no following
+ digit. Insert a zero after the decimal. */
+ ++p;
+ chars_to_insert = "0";
+ insert_count = 1;
+ }
+ }
+ else {
+ chars_to_insert = ".0";
+ insert_count = 2;
+ }
+ if (insert_count) {
+ size_t buf_len = strlen(buffer);
+ if (buf_len + insert_count + 1 >= buf_size) {
+ /* If there is not enough room in the buffer
+ for the additional text, just skip it. It's
+ not worth generating an error over. */
+ }
+ else {
+ memmove(p + insert_count, p,
+ buffer + strlen(buffer) - p + 1);
+ memcpy(p, chars_to_insert, insert_count);
+ }
+ }
+ }
+
return buffer;
}
diff --git a/Python/strerror.c b/Python/strerror.c
deleted file mode 100644
index 55f8342..0000000
--- a/Python/strerror.c
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,19 +0,0 @@
-
-/* PD implementation of strerror() for systems that don't have it.
- Author: Guido van Rossum, CWI Amsterdam, Oct. 1990, <guido@cwi.nl>. */
-
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include "Python.h"
-
-extern int sys_nerr;
-extern char *sys_errlist[];
-
-char *
-strerror(int err)
-{
- static char buf[20];
- if (err >= 0 && err < sys_nerr)
- return sys_errlist[err];
- PyOS_snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "Unknown errno %d", err);
- return buf;
-}
diff --git a/configure b/configure
index 5046065..a1f184c 100755
--- a/configure
+++ b/configure
@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
#! /bin/sh
-# From configure.in Revision: 61238 .
+# From configure.in Revision: 61306 .
# Guess values for system-dependent variables and create Makefiles.
# Generated by GNU Autoconf 2.61 for python 3.0.
#
@@ -4509,7 +4509,8 @@ echo "${ECHO_T}$ac_cv_no_strict_aliasing_ok" >&6; }
;;
# is there any other compiler on Darwin besides gcc?
Darwin*)
- BASECFLAGS="$BASECFLAGS -Wno-long-double -no-cpp-precomp -mno-fused-madd"
+ # -Wno-long-double, -no-cpp-precomp, and -mno-fused-madd
+ # used to be here, but non-Apple gcc doesn't accept them.
if test "${enable_universalsdk}"; then
BASECFLAGS="-arch ppc -arch i386 -isysroot ${UNIVERSALSDK} ${BASECFLAGS}"
fi
@@ -17413,6 +17414,102 @@ fi
done
+# Stuff for expat.
+
+for ac_func in memmove
+do
+as_ac_var=`echo "ac_cv_func_$ac_func" | $as_tr_sh`
+{ echo "$as_me:$LINENO: checking for $ac_func" >&5
+echo $ECHO_N "checking for $ac_func... $ECHO_C" >&6; }
+if { as_var=$as_ac_var; eval "test \"\${$as_var+set}\" = set"; }; then
+ echo $ECHO_N "(cached) $ECHO_C" >&6
+else
+ cat >conftest.$ac_ext <<_ACEOF
+/* confdefs.h. */
+_ACEOF
+cat confdefs.h >>conftest.$ac_ext
+cat >>conftest.$ac_ext <<_ACEOF
+/* end confdefs.h. */
+/* Define $ac_func to an innocuous variant, in case <limits.h> declares $ac_func.
+ For example, HP-UX 11i <limits.h> declares gettimeofday. */
+#define $ac_func innocuous_$ac_func
+
+/* System header to define __stub macros and hopefully few prototypes,
+ which can conflict with char $ac_func (); below.
+ Prefer <limits.h> to <assert.h> if __STDC__ is defined, since
+ <limits.h> exists even on freestanding compilers. */
+
+#ifdef __STDC__
+# include <limits.h>
+#else
+# include <assert.h>
+#endif
+
+#undef $ac_func
+
+/* Override any GCC internal prototype to avoid an error.
+ Use char because int might match the return type of a GCC
+ builtin and then its argument prototype would still apply. */
+#ifdef __cplusplus
+extern "C"
+#endif
+char $ac_func ();
+/* The GNU C library defines this for functions which it implements
+ to always fail with ENOSYS. Some functions are actually named
+ something starting with __ and the normal name is an alias. */
+#if defined __stub_$ac_func || defined __stub___$ac_func
+choke me
+#endif
+
+int
+main ()
+{
+return $ac_func ();
+ ;
+ return 0;
+}
+_ACEOF
+rm -f conftest.$ac_objext conftest$ac_exeext
+if { (ac_try="$ac_link"
+case "(($ac_try" in
+ *\"* | *\`* | *\\*) ac_try_echo=\$ac_try;;
+ *) ac_try_echo=$ac_try;;
+esac
+eval "echo \"\$as_me:$LINENO: $ac_try_echo\"") >&5
+ (eval "$ac_link") 2>conftest.er1
+ ac_status=$?
+ grep -v '^ *+' conftest.er1 >conftest.err
+ rm -f conftest.er1
+ cat conftest.err >&5
+ echo "$as_me:$LINENO: \$? = $ac_status" >&5
+ (exit $ac_status); } && {
+ test -z "$ac_c_werror_flag" ||
+ test ! -s conftest.err
+ } && test -s conftest$ac_exeext &&
+ $as_test_x conftest$ac_exeext; then
+ eval "$as_ac_var=yes"
+else
+ echo "$as_me: failed program was:" >&5
+sed 's/^/| /' conftest.$ac_ext >&5
+
+ eval "$as_ac_var=no"
+fi
+
+rm -f core conftest.err conftest.$ac_objext conftest_ipa8_conftest.oo \
+ conftest$ac_exeext conftest.$ac_ext
+fi
+ac_res=`eval echo '${'$as_ac_var'}'`
+ { echo "$as_me:$LINENO: result: $ac_res" >&5
+echo "${ECHO_T}$ac_res" >&6; }
+if test `eval echo '${'$as_ac_var'}'` = yes; then
+ cat >>confdefs.h <<_ACEOF
+#define `echo "HAVE_$ac_func" | $as_tr_cpp` 1
+_ACEOF
+
+fi
+done
+
+
# check for long file support functions
@@ -17517,9 +17614,7 @@ done
-
-
-for ac_func in dup2 getcwd strdup strerror memmove
+for ac_func in dup2 getcwd strdup
do
as_ac_var=`echo "ac_cv_func_$ac_func" | $as_tr_sh`
{ echo "$as_me:$LINENO: checking for $ac_func" >&5
diff --git a/configure.in b/configure.in
index 129b688..d402019 100644
--- a/configure.in
+++ b/configure.in
@@ -798,7 +798,8 @@ yes)
;;
# is there any other compiler on Darwin besides gcc?
Darwin*)
- BASECFLAGS="$BASECFLAGS -Wno-long-double -no-cpp-precomp -mno-fused-madd"
+ # -Wno-long-double, -no-cpp-precomp, and -mno-fused-madd
+ # used to be here, but non-Apple gcc doesn't accept them.
if test "${enable_universalsdk}"; then
BASECFLAGS="-arch ppc -arch i386 -isysroot ${UNIVERSALSDK} ${BASECFLAGS}"
fi
@@ -2497,10 +2498,13 @@ AC_CHECK_FUNCS(forkpty,,
)
)
+# Stuff for expat.
+AC_CHECK_FUNCS(memmove)
+
# check for long file support functions
AC_CHECK_FUNCS(fseek64 fseeko fstatvfs ftell64 ftello statvfs)
-AC_REPLACE_FUNCS(dup2 getcwd strdup strerror memmove)
+AC_REPLACE_FUNCS(dup2 getcwd strdup)
AC_CHECK_FUNCS(getpgrp,
AC_TRY_COMPILE([#include <unistd.h>],
[getpgrp(0);],
diff --git a/pyconfig.h.in b/pyconfig.h.in
index 1a0460d..135da3f 100644
--- a/pyconfig.h.in
+++ b/pyconfig.h.in
@@ -571,9 +571,6 @@
/* Define to 1 if you have the `strdup' function. */
#undef HAVE_STRDUP
-/* Define to 1 if you have the `strerror' function. */
-#undef HAVE_STRERROR
-
/* Define to 1 if you have the `strftime' function. */
#undef HAVE_STRFTIME