1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
|
from test.test_support import verbose, verify, TestFailed
import sys
import new
class Eggs:
def get_yolks(self):
return self.yolks
print 'new.module()'
m = new.module('Spam')
if verbose:
print m
m.Eggs = Eggs
sys.modules['Spam'] = m
import Spam
def get_more_yolks(self):
return self.yolks + 3
print 'new.classobj()'
C = new.classobj('Spam', (Spam.Eggs,), {'get_more_yolks': get_more_yolks})
if verbose:
print C
print 'new.instance()'
c = new.instance(C, {'yolks': 3})
if verbose:
print c
o = new.instance(C)
verify(o.__dict__ == {},
"new __dict__ should be empty")
del o
o = new.instance(C, None)
verify(o.__dict__ == {},
"new __dict__ should be empty")
del o
def break_yolks(self):
self.yolks = self.yolks - 2
print 'new.instancemethod()'
im = new.instancemethod(break_yolks, c, C)
if verbose:
print im
verify(c.get_yolks() == 3 and c.get_more_yolks() == 6,
'Broken call of hand-crafted class instance')
im()
verify(c.get_yolks() == 1 and c.get_more_yolks() == 4,
'Broken call of hand-crafted instance method')
# It's unclear what the semantics should be for a code object compiled at
# module scope, but bound and run in a function. In CPython, `c' is global
# (by accident?) while in Jython, `c' is local. The intent of the test
# clearly is to make `c' global, so let's be explicit about it.
codestr = '''
global c
a = 1
b = 2
c = a + b
'''
ccode = compile(codestr, '<string>', 'exec')
# Jython doesn't have a __builtins__, so use a portable alternative
import __builtin__
g = {'c': 0, '__builtins__': __builtin__}
# this test could be more robust
print 'new.function()'
func = new.function(ccode, g)
if verbose:
print func
func()
verify(g['c'] == 3,
'Could not create a proper function object')
# test the various extended flavors of function.new
def f(x):
def g(y):
return x + y
return g
g = f(4)
new.function(f.func_code, {}, "blah")
g2 = new.function(g.func_code, {}, "blah", (2,), g.func_closure)
verify(g2() == 6)
g3 = new.function(g.func_code, {}, "blah", None, g.func_closure)
verify(g3(5) == 9)
def test_closure(func, closure, exc):
try:
new.function(func.func_code, {}, "", None, closure)
except exc:
pass
else:
print "corrupt closure accepted"
test_closure(g, None, TypeError) # invalid closure
test_closure(g, (1,), TypeError) # non-cell in closure
test_closure(g, (1, 1), ValueError) # closure is wrong size
test_closure(f, g.func_closure, ValueError) # no closure needed
print 'new.code()'
# bogus test of new.code()
# Note: Jython will never have new.code()
if hasattr(new, 'code'):
def f(a): pass
c = f.func_code
argcount = c.co_argcount
nlocals = c.co_nlocals
stacksize = c.co_stacksize
flags = c.co_flags
codestring = c.co_code
constants = c.co_consts
names = c.co_names
varnames = c.co_varnames
filename = c.co_filename
name = c.co_name
firstlineno = c.co_firstlineno
lnotab = c.co_lnotab
freevars = c.co_freevars
cellvars = c.co_cellvars
d = new.code(argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, names, varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab, freevars, cellvars)
# test backwards-compatibility version with no freevars or cellvars
d = new.code(argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, names, varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab)
try: # this used to trigger a SystemError
d = new.code(-argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, names, varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, "negative co_argcount didn't trigger an exception"
try: # this used to trigger a SystemError
d = new.code(argcount, -nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, names, varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab)
except ValueError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, "negative co_nlocals didn't trigger an exception"
try: # this used to trigger a Py_FatalError!
d = new.code(argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, (5,), varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab)
except TypeError:
pass
else:
raise TestFailed, "non-string co_name didn't trigger an exception"
# new.code used to be a way to mutate a tuple...
class S(str): pass
t = (S("ab"),)
d = new.code(argcount, nlocals, stacksize, flags, codestring,
constants, t, varnames, filename, name,
firstlineno, lnotab)
verify(type(t[0]) is S, "eek, tuple changed under us!")
if verbose:
print d
|