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from xmlrpc.server import DocXMLRPCServer
import http.client
from test import support
import threading
import time
import unittest
PORT = None
def server(evt, numrequests):
serv = DocXMLRPCServer(("localhost", 0), logRequests=False)
try:
global PORT
PORT = serv.socket.getsockname()[1]
# Add some documentation
serv.set_server_title("DocXMLRPCServer Test Documentation")
serv.set_server_name("DocXMLRPCServer Test Docs")
serv.set_server_documentation(
"""This is an XML-RPC server's documentation, but the server can be used by
POSTing to /RPC2. Try self.add, too.""")
# Create and register classes and functions
class TestClass(object):
def test_method(self, arg):
"""Test method's docs. This method truly does very little."""
self.arg = arg
serv.register_introspection_functions()
serv.register_instance(TestClass())
def add(x, y):
"""Add two instances together. This follows PEP008, but has nothing
to do with RFC1952. Case should matter: pEp008 and rFC1952. Things
that start with http and ftp should be auto-linked, too:
http://google.com.
"""
return x + y
serv.register_function(add)
serv.register_function(lambda x, y: x-y)
while numrequests > 0:
serv.handle_request()
numrequests -= 1
except socket.timeout:
pass
finally:
serv.server_close()
PORT = None
evt.set()
class DocXMLRPCHTTPGETServer(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
# Enable server feedback
DocXMLRPCServer._send_traceback_header = True
self.evt = threading.Event()
threading.Thread(target=server, args=(self.evt, 1)).start()
# wait for port to be assigned
n = 1000
while n > 0 and PORT is None:
time.sleep(0.001)
n -= 1
self.client = http.client.HTTPConnection("localhost:%d" % PORT)
def tearDown(self):
self.client.close()
self.evt.wait()
# Disable server feedback
DocXMLRPCServer._send_traceback_header = False
def test_valid_get_response(self):
self.client.request("GET", "/")
response = self.client.getresponse()
self.assertEqual(response.status, 200)
self.assertEqual(response.getheader("Content-type"), "text/html")
# Server throws an exception if we don't start to read the data
response.read()
def test_invalid_get_response(self):
self.client.request("GET", "/spam")
response = self.client.getresponse()
self.assertEqual(response.status, 404)
self.assertEqual(response.getheader("Content-type"), "text/plain")
response.read()
def test_lambda(self):
"""Test that lambda functionality stays the same. The output produced
currently is, I suspect invalid because of the unencoded brackets in the
HTML, "<lambda>".
The subtraction lambda method is tested.
"""
self.client.request("GET", "/")
response = self.client.getresponse()
self.assert_(
b"""<dl><dt><a name="-<lambda>"><strong><lambda></strong></a>(x, y)</dt></dl>"""
in response.read())
def test_autolinking(self):
"""Test that the server correctly automatically wraps references to PEPS
and RFCs with links, and that it linkifies text starting with http or
ftp protocol prefixes.
The documentation for the "add" method contains the test material.
"""
self.client.request("GET", "/")
response = self.client.getresponse().read()
self.assert_( # This is ugly ... how can it be made better?
b"""<dl><dt><a name="-add"><strong>add</strong></a>(x, y)</dt><dd><tt>Add two instances together. This follows <a href="http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/">PEP008</a>, but has nothing<br>\nto do with <a href="http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc1952.txt">RFC1952</a>. Case should matter: pEp008 and rFC1952. Things<br>\nthat start with http and ftp should be auto-linked, too:<br>\n<a href="http://google.com">http://google.com</a>.</tt></dd></dl>"""
in response, response)
def test_system_methods(self):
"""Test the precense of three consecutive system.* methods.
This also tests their use of parameter type recognition and the systems
related to that process.
"""
self.client.request("GET", "/")
response = self.client.getresponse().read()
self.assert_(
b"""<dl><dt><a name="-system.methodHelp"><strong>system.methodHelp</strong></a>(method_name)</dt><dd><tt><a href="#-system.methodHelp">system.methodHelp</a>(\'add\') => "Adds two integers together"<br>\n <br>\nReturns a string containing documentation for the specified method.</tt></dd></dl>\n<dl><dt><a name="-system.methodSignature"><strong>system.methodSignature</strong></a>(method_name)</dt><dd><tt><a href="#-system.methodSignature">system.methodSignature</a>(\'add\') => [double, int, int]<br>\n <br>\nReturns a list describing the signature of the method. In the<br>\nabove example, the add method takes two integers as arguments<br>\nand returns a double result.<br>\n <br>\nThis server does NOT support system.methodSignature.</tt></dd></dl>\n<dl><dt><a name="-test_method"><strong>test_method</strong></a>(arg)</dt><dd><tt>Test method\'s docs. This method truly does very little.</tt></dd></dl>""" in response)
def test_autolink_dotted_methods(self):
"""Test that selfdot values are made strong automatically in the
documentation."""
self.client.request("GET", "/")
response = self.client.getresponse()
self.assert_(b"""Try self.<strong>add</strong>, too.""" in
response.read())
def test_main():
support.run_unittest(DocXMLRPCHTTPGETServer)
if __name__ == '__main__':
test_main()
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