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# Some simple queue module tests, plus some failure conditions
# to ensure the Queue locks remain stable.
import queue
import sys
import threading
import time
import unittest
from test import support

QUEUE_SIZE = 5

def qfull(q):
    return q.maxsize > 0 and q.qsize() == q.maxsize

# A thread to run a function that unclogs a blocked Queue.
class _TriggerThread(threading.Thread):
    def __init__(self, fn, args):
        self.fn = fn
        self.args = args
        self.startedEvent = threading.Event()
        threading.Thread.__init__(self)

    def run(self):
        # The sleep isn't necessary, but is intended to give the blocking
        # function in the main thread a chance at actually blocking before
        # we unclog it.  But if the sleep is longer than the timeout-based
        # tests wait in their blocking functions, those tests will fail.
        # So we give them much longer timeout values compared to the
        # sleep here (I aimed at 10 seconds for blocking functions --
        # they should never actually wait that long - they should make
        # progress as soon as we call self.fn()).
        time.sleep(0.1)
        self.startedEvent.set()
        self.fn(*self.args)


# Execute a function that blocks, and in a separate thread, a function that
# triggers the release.  Returns the result of the blocking function.  Caution:
# block_func must guarantee to block until trigger_func is called, and
# trigger_func must guarantee to change queue state so that block_func can make
# enough progress to return.  In particular, a block_func that just raises an
# exception regardless of whether trigger_func is called will lead to
# timing-dependent sporadic failures, and one of those went rarely seen but
# undiagnosed for years.  Now block_func must be unexceptional.  If block_func
# is supposed to raise an exception, call do_exceptional_blocking_test()
# instead.

class BlockingTestMixin:

    def do_blocking_test(self, block_func, block_args, trigger_func, trigger_args):
        self.t = _TriggerThread(trigger_func, trigger_args)
        self.t.start()
        self.result = block_func(*block_args)
        # If block_func returned before our thread made the call, we failed!
        if not self.t.startedEvent.is_set():
            self.fail("blocking function '%r' appeared not to block" %
                      block_func)
        self.t.join(10) # make sure the thread terminates
        if self.t.is_alive():
            self.fail("trigger function '%r' appeared to not return" %
                      trigger_func)
        return self.result

    # Call this instead if block_func is supposed to raise an exception.
    def do_exceptional_blocking_test(self,block_func, block_args, trigger_func,
                                   trigger_args, expected_exception_class):
        self.t = _TriggerThread(trigger_func, trigger_args)
        self.t.start()
        try:
            try:
                block_func(*block_args)
            except expected_exception_class:
                raise
            else:
                self.fail("expected exception of kind %r" %
                                 expected_exception_class)
        finally:
            self.t.join(10) # make sure the thread terminates
            if self.t.is_alive():
                self.fail("trigger function '%r' appeared to not return" %
                                 trigger_func)
            if not self.t.startedEvent.is_set():
                self.fail("trigger thread ended but event never set")


class BaseQueueTest(unittest.TestCase, BlockingTestMixin):
    def setUp(self):
        self.cum = 0
        self.cumlock = threading.Lock()

    def simple_queue_test(self, q):
        if q.qsize():
            raise RuntimeError("Call this function with an empty queue")
        # I guess we better check things actually queue correctly a little :)
        q.put(111)
        q.put(333)
        q.put(222)
        target_order = dict(Queue = [111, 333, 222],
                            LifoQueue = [222, 333, 111],
                            PriorityQueue = [111, 222, 333])
        actual_order = [q.get(), q.get(), q.get()]
        self.assertEquals(actual_order, target_order[q.__class__.__name__],
                          "Didn't seem to queue the correct data!")
        for i in range(QUEUE_SIZE-1):
            q.put(i)
            self.assertTrue(q.qsize(), "Queue should not be empty")
        self.assertTrue(not qfull(q), "Queue should not be full")
        last = 2 * QUEUE_SIZE
        full = 3 * 2 * QUEUE_SIZE
        q.put(last)
        self.assertTrue(qfull(q), "Queue should be full")
        try:
            q.put(full, block=0)
            self.fail("Didn't appear to block with a full queue")
        except queue.Full:
            pass
        try:
            q.put(full, timeout=0.01)
            self.fail("Didn't appear to time-out with a full queue")
        except queue.Full:
            pass
        # Test a blocking put
        self.do_blocking_test(q.put, (full,), q.get, ())
        self.do_blocking_test(q.put, (full, True, 10), q.get, ())
        # Empty it
        for i in range(QUEUE_SIZE):
            q.get()
        self.assertTrue(not q.qsize(), "Queue should be empty")
        try:
            q.get(block=0)
            self.fail("Didn't appear to block with an empty queue")
        except queue.Empty:
            pass
        try:
            q.get(timeout=0.01)
            self.fail("Didn't appear to time-out with an empty queue")
        except queue.Empty:
            pass
        # Test a blocking get
        self.do_blocking_test(q.get, (), q.put, ('empty',))
        self.do_blocking_test(q.get, (True, 10), q.put, ('empty',))


    def worker(self, q):
        while True:
            x = q.get()
            if x < 0:
                q.task_done()
                return
            with self.cumlock:
                self.cum += x
            q.task_done()

    def queue_join_test(self, q):
        self.cum = 0
        for i in (0,1):
            threading.Thread(target=self.worker, args=(q,)).start()
        for i in range(100):
            q.put(i)
        q.join()
        self.assertEquals(self.cum, sum(range(100)),
                          "q.join() did not block until all tasks were done")
        for i in (0,1):
            q.put(-1)         # instruct the threads to close
        q.join()                # verify that you can join twice

    def test_queue_task_done(self):
        # Test to make sure a queue task completed successfully.
        q = self.type2test()
        try:
            q.task_done()
        except ValueError:
            pass
        else:
            self.fail("Did not detect task count going negative")

    def test_queue_join(self):
        # Test that a queue join()s successfully, and before anything else
        # (done twice for insurance).
        q = self.type2test()
        self.queue_join_test(q)
        self.queue_join_test(q)
        try:
            q.task_done()
        except ValueError:
            pass
        else:
            self.fail("Did not detect task count going negative")

    def test_simple_queue(self):
        # Do it a couple of times on the same queue.
        # Done twice to make sure works with same instance reused.
        q = self.type2test(QUEUE_SIZE)
        self.simple_queue_test(q)
        self.simple_queue_test(q)


class QueueTest(BaseQueueTest):
    type2test = queue.Queue

class LifoQueueTest(BaseQueueTest):
    type2test = queue.LifoQueue

class PriorityQueueTest(BaseQueueTest):
    type2test = queue.PriorityQueue



# A Queue subclass that can provoke failure at a moment's notice :)
class FailingQueueException(Exception):
    pass

class FailingQueue(queue.Queue):
    def __init__(self, *args):
        self.fail_next_put = False
        self.fail_next_get = False
        queue.Queue.__init__(self, *args)
    def _put(self, item):
        if self.fail_next_put:
            self.fail_next_put = False
            raise FailingQueueException("You Lose")
        return queue.Queue._put(self, item)
    def _get(self):
        if self.fail_next_get:
            self.fail_next_get = False
            raise FailingQueueException("You Lose")
        return queue.Queue._get(self)

class FailingQueueTest(unittest.TestCase, BlockingTestMixin):

    def failing_queue_test(self, q):
        if q.qsize():
            raise RuntimeError("Call this function with an empty queue")
        for i in range(QUEUE_SIZE-1):
            q.put(i)
        # Test a failing non-blocking put.
        q.fail_next_put = True
        try:
            q.put("oops", block=0)
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        q.fail_next_put = True
        try:
            q.put("oops", timeout=0.1)
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        q.put("last")
        self.assertTrue(qfull(q), "Queue should be full")
        # Test a failing blocking put
        q.fail_next_put = True
        try:
            self.do_blocking_test(q.put, ("full",), q.get, ())
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        # Check the Queue isn't damaged.
        # put failed, but get succeeded - re-add
        q.put("last")
        # Test a failing timeout put
        q.fail_next_put = True
        try:
            self.do_exceptional_blocking_test(q.put, ("full", True, 10), q.get, (),
                                              FailingQueueException)
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        # Check the Queue isn't damaged.
        # put failed, but get succeeded - re-add
        q.put("last")
        self.assertTrue(qfull(q), "Queue should be full")
        q.get()
        self.assertTrue(not qfull(q), "Queue should not be full")
        q.put("last")
        self.assertTrue(qfull(q), "Queue should be full")
        # Test a blocking put
        self.do_blocking_test(q.put, ("full",), q.get, ())
        # Empty it
        for i in range(QUEUE_SIZE):
            q.get()
        self.assertTrue(not q.qsize(), "Queue should be empty")
        q.put("first")
        q.fail_next_get = True
        try:
            q.get()
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        self.assertTrue(q.qsize(), "Queue should not be empty")
        q.fail_next_get = True
        try:
            q.get(timeout=0.1)
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        self.assertTrue(q.qsize(), "Queue should not be empty")
        q.get()
        self.assertTrue(not q.qsize(), "Queue should be empty")
        q.fail_next_get = True
        try:
            self.do_exceptional_blocking_test(q.get, (), q.put, ('empty',),
                                              FailingQueueException)
            self.fail("The queue didn't fail when it should have")
        except FailingQueueException:
            pass
        # put succeeded, but get failed.
        self.assertTrue(q.qsize(), "Queue should not be empty")
        q.get()
        self.assertTrue(not q.qsize(), "Queue should be empty")

    def test_failing_queue(self):
        # Test to make sure a queue is functioning correctly.
        # Done twice to the same instance.
        q = FailingQueue(QUEUE_SIZE)
        self.failing_queue_test(q)
        self.failing_queue_test(q)


def test_main():
    support.run_unittest(QueueTest, LifoQueueTest, PriorityQueueTest,
                              FailingQueueTest)


if __name__ == "__main__":
    test_main()
s="hl slc"># check a little farther below the next power of two k = int(1.00001 + _log(n, 2)) self.assertEqual(k, numbits) # note the stronger assertion self.assertTrue(2**k > n > 2**(k-1)) # note the stronger assertion class MersenneTwister_TestBasicOps(TestBasicOps): gen = random.Random() def test_setstate_first_arg(self): self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.gen.setstate, (1, None, None)) def test_setstate_middle_arg(self): # Wrong type, s/b tuple self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.setstate, (2, None, None)) # Wrong length, s/b 625 self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.gen.setstate, (2, (1,2,3), None)) # Wrong type, s/b tuple of 625 ints self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.setstate, (2, ('a',)*625, None)) # Last element s/b an int also self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.setstate, (2, (0,)*624+('a',), None)) def test_referenceImplementation(self): # Compare the python implementation with results from the original # code. Create 2000 53-bit precision random floats. Compare only # the last ten entries to show that the independent implementations # are tracking. Here is the main() function needed to create the # list of expected random numbers: # void main(void){ # int i; # unsigned long init[4]={61731, 24903, 614, 42143}, length=4; # init_by_array(init, length); # for (i=0; i<2000; i++) { # printf("%.15f ", genrand_res53()); # if (i%5==4) printf("\n"); # } # } expected = [0.45839803073713259, 0.86057815201978782, 0.92848331726782152, 0.35932681119782461, 0.081823493762449573, 0.14332226470169329, 0.084297823823520024, 0.53814864671831453, 0.089215024911993401, 0.78486196105372907] self.gen.seed(61731 + (24903<<32) + (614<<64) + (42143<<96)) actual = self.randomlist(2000)[-10:] for a, e in zip(actual, expected): self.assertAlmostEqual(a,e,places=14) def test_strong_reference_implementation(self): # Like test_referenceImplementation, but checks for exact bit-level # equality. This should pass on any box where C double contains # at least 53 bits of precision (the underlying algorithm suffers # no rounding errors -- all results are exact). from math import ldexp expected = [0x0eab3258d2231f, 0x1b89db315277a5, 0x1db622a5518016, 0x0b7f9af0d575bf, 0x029e4c4db82240, 0x04961892f5d673, 0x02b291598e4589, 0x11388382c15694, 0x02dad977c9e1fe, 0x191d96d4d334c6] self.gen.seed(61731 + (24903<<32) + (614<<64) + (42143<<96)) actual = self.randomlist(2000)[-10:] for a, e in zip(actual, expected): self.assertEqual(int(ldexp(a, 53)), e) def test_long_seed(self): # This is most interesting to run in debug mode, just to make sure # nothing blows up. Under the covers, a dynamically resized array # is allocated, consuming space proportional to the number of bits # in the seed. Unfortunately, that's a quadratic-time algorithm, # so don't make this horribly big. seed = (1 << (10000 * 8)) - 1 # about 10K bytes self.gen.seed(seed) def test_53_bits_per_float(self): # This should pass whenever a C double has 53 bit precision. span = 2 ** 53 cum = 0 for i in range(100): cum |= int(self.gen.random() * span) self.assertEqual(cum, span-1) def test_bigrand(self): # The randrange routine should build-up the required number of bits # in stages so that all bit positions are active. span = 2 ** 500 cum = 0 for i in range(100): r = self.gen.randrange(span) self.assertTrue(0 <= r < span) cum |= r self.assertEqual(cum, span-1) def test_bigrand_ranges(self): for i in [40,80, 160, 200, 211, 250, 375, 512, 550]: start = self.gen.randrange(2 ** i) stop = self.gen.randrange(2 ** (i-2)) if stop <= start: return self.assertTrue(start <= self.gen.randrange(start, stop) < stop) def test_rangelimits(self): for start, stop in [(-2,0), (-(2**60)-2,-(2**60)), (2**60,2**60+2)]: self.assertEqual(set(range(start,stop)), set([self.gen.randrange(start,stop) for i in range(100)])) def test_genrandbits(self): # Verify cross-platform repeatability self.gen.seed(1234567) self.assertEqual(self.gen.getrandbits(100), 97904845777343510404718956115) # Verify ranges for k in range(1, 1000): self.assertTrue(0 <= self.gen.getrandbits(k) < 2**k) # Verify all bits active getbits = self.gen.getrandbits for span in [1, 2, 3, 4, 31, 32, 32, 52, 53, 54, 119, 127, 128, 129]: cum = 0 for i in range(100): cum |= getbits(span) self.assertEqual(cum, 2**span-1) # Verify argument checking self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.getrandbits) self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.getrandbits, 'a') self.assertRaises(TypeError, self.gen.getrandbits, 1, 2) self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.gen.getrandbits, 0) self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.gen.getrandbits, -1) def test_randbelow_logic(self, _log=log, int=int): # check bitcount transition points: 2**i and 2**(i+1)-1 # show that: k = int(1.001 + _log(n, 2)) # is equal to or one greater than the number of bits in n for i in range(1, 1000): n = 1 << i # check an exact power of two numbits = i+1 k = int(1.00001 + _log(n, 2)) self.assertEqual(k, numbits) self.assertEqual(n, 2**(k-1)) n += n - 1 # check 1 below the next power of two k = int(1.00001 + _log(n, 2)) self.assertIn(k, [numbits, numbits+1]) self.assertTrue(2**k > n > 2**(k-2)) n -= n >> 15 # check a little farther below the next power of two k = int(1.00001 + _log(n, 2)) self.assertEqual(k, numbits) # note the stronger assertion self.assertTrue(2**k > n > 2**(k-1)) # note the stronger assertion def test_randrange_bug_1590891(self): start = 1000000000000 stop = -100000000000000000000 step = -200 x = self.gen.randrange(start, stop, step) self.assertTrue(stop < x <= start) self.assertEqual((x+stop)%step, 0) def gamma(z, sqrt2pi=(2.0*pi)**0.5): # Reflection to right half of complex plane if z < 0.5: return pi / sin(pi*z) / gamma(1.0-z) # Lanczos approximation with g=7 az = z + (7.0 - 0.5) return az ** (z-0.5) / exp(az) * sqrt2pi * fsum([ 0.9999999999995183, 676.5203681218835 / z, -1259.139216722289 / (z+1.0), 771.3234287757674 / (z+2.0), -176.6150291498386 / (z+3.0), 12.50734324009056 / (z+4.0), -0.1385710331296526 / (z+5.0), 0.9934937113930748e-05 / (z+6.0), 0.1659470187408462e-06 / (z+7.0), ]) class TestDistributions(unittest.TestCase): def test_zeroinputs(self): # Verify that distributions can handle a series of zero inputs' g = random.Random() x = [g.random() for i in range(50)] + [0.0]*5 g.random = x[:].pop; g.uniform(1,10) g.random = x[:].pop; g.paretovariate(1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.expovariate(1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.weibullvariate(1.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.normalvariate(0.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.gauss(0.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.lognormvariate(0.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.vonmisesvariate(0.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.gammavariate(0.01, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.gammavariate(1.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.gammavariate(200.0, 1.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.betavariate(3.0, 3.0) g.random = x[:].pop; g.triangular(0.0, 1.0, 1.0/3.0) def test_avg_std(self): # Use integration to test distribution average and standard deviation. # Only works for distributions which do not consume variates in pairs g = random.Random() N = 5000 x = [i/float(N) for i in range(1,N)] for variate, args, mu, sigmasqrd in [ (g.uniform, (1.0,10.0), (10.0+1.0)/2, (10.0-1.0)**2/12), (g.triangular, (0.0, 1.0, 1.0/3.0), 4.0/9.0, 7.0/9.0/18.0), (g.expovariate, (1.5,), 1/1.5, 1/1.5**2), (g.paretovariate, (5.0,), 5.0/(5.0-1), 5.0/((5.0-1)**2*(5.0-2))), (g.weibullvariate, (1.0, 3.0), gamma(1+1/3.0), gamma(1+2/3.0)-gamma(1+1/3.0)**2) ]: g.random = x[:].pop y = [] for i in range(len(x)): try: y.append(variate(*args)) except IndexError: pass s1 = s2 = 0 for e in y: s1 += e s2 += (e - mu) ** 2 N = len(y) self.assertAlmostEqual(s1/N, mu, places=2) self.assertAlmostEqual(s2/(N-1), sigmasqrd, places=2) class TestModule(unittest.TestCase): def testMagicConstants(self): self.assertAlmostEqual(random.NV_MAGICCONST, 1.71552776992141) self.assertAlmostEqual(random.TWOPI, 6.28318530718) self.assertAlmostEqual(random.LOG4, 1.38629436111989) self.assertAlmostEqual(random.SG_MAGICCONST, 2.50407739677627) def test__all__(self): # tests validity but not completeness of the __all__ list self.assertTrue(set(random.__all__) <= set(dir(random))) def test_random_subclass_with_kwargs(self): # SF bug #1486663 -- this used to erroneously raise a TypeError class Subclass(random.Random): def __init__(self, newarg=None): random.Random.__init__(self) Subclass(newarg=1) def test_main(verbose=None): testclasses = [MersenneTwister_TestBasicOps, TestDistributions, TestModule] try: random.SystemRandom().random() except NotImplementedError: pass else: testclasses.append(SystemRandom_TestBasicOps) support.run_unittest(*testclasses) # verify reference counting import sys if verbose and hasattr(sys, "gettotalrefcount"): counts = [None] * 5 for i in range(len(counts)): support.run_unittest(*testclasses) counts[i] = sys.gettotalrefcount() print(counts) if __name__ == "__main__": test_main(verbose=True)