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dupeguru/hscommon/testutil.py

192 lines
6.2 KiB
Python

# Created By: Virgil Dupras
# Created On: 2010-11-14
# Copyright 2015 Hardcoded Software (http://www.hardcoded.net)
#
# This software is licensed under the "GPLv3" License as described in the "LICENSE" file,
# which should be included with this package. The terms are also available at
# http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html
import pytest
def eq_(a, b, msg=None):
__tracebackhide__ = True
assert a == b, msg or "{!r} != {!r}".format(a, b)
def callcounter():
def f(*args, **kwargs):
f.callcount += 1
f.callcount = 0
return f
class CallLogger:
"""This is a dummy object that logs all calls made to it.
It is used to simulate the GUI layer.
"""
def __init__(self):
self.calls = []
def __getattr__(self, func_name):
def func(*args, **kw):
self.calls.append(func_name)
return func
def clear_calls(self):
del self.calls[:]
def check_gui_calls(self, expected, verify_order=False):
"""Checks that the expected calls have been made to 'self', then clears the log.
`expected` is an iterable of strings representing method names.
If `verify_order` is True, the order of the calls matters.
"""
__tracebackhide__ = True
if verify_order:
eq_(self.calls, expected)
else:
eq_(set(self.calls), set(expected))
self.clear_calls()
def check_gui_calls_partial(self, expected=None, not_expected=None, verify_order=False):
"""Checks that the expected calls have been made to 'self', then clears the log.
`expected` is an iterable of strings representing method names. Order doesn't matter.
Moreover, if calls have been made that are not in expected, no failure occur.
`not_expected` can be used for a more explicit check (rather than calling `check_gui_calls`
with an empty `expected`) to assert that calls have *not* been made.
"""
__tracebackhide__ = True
if expected is not None:
not_called = set(expected) - set(self.calls)
assert not not_called, f"These calls haven't been made: {not_called}"
if verify_order:
max_index = 0
for call in expected:
index = self.calls.index(call)
if index < max_index:
raise AssertionError(f"The call {call} hasn't been made in the correct order")
max_index = index
if not_expected is not None:
called = set(not_expected) & set(self.calls)
assert not called, f"These calls shouldn't have been made: {called}"
self.clear_calls()
class TestApp:
def __init__(self):
self._call_loggers = []
def clear_gui_calls(self):
for logger in self._call_loggers:
logger.clear_calls()
def make_logger(self, logger=None):
if logger is None:
logger = CallLogger()
self._call_loggers.append(logger)
return logger
def make_gui(self, name, class_, view=None, parent=None, holder=None):
if view is None:
view = self.make_logger()
if parent is None:
# The attribute "default_parent" has to be set for this to work correctly
parent = self.default_parent
if holder is None:
holder = self
setattr(holder, f"{name}_gui", view)
gui = class_(parent)
gui.view = view
setattr(holder, name, gui)
return gui
# To use @with_app, you have to import app in your conftest.py file.
def with_app(setupfunc):
def decorator(func):
func.setupfunc = setupfunc
return func
return decorator
@pytest.fixture
def app(request):
setupfunc = request.function.setupfunc
if hasattr(setupfunc, "__code__"):
argnames = setupfunc.__code__.co_varnames[: setupfunc.__code__.co_argcount]
def getarg(name):
if name == "self":
return request.function.__self__
else:
return request.getfixturevalue(name)
args = [getarg(argname) for argname in argnames]
else:
args = []
app = setupfunc(*args)
return app
def _unify_args(func, args, kwargs, args_to_ignore=None):
"""Unify args and kwargs in the same dictionary.
The result is kwargs with args added to it. func.func_code.co_varnames is used to determine
under what key each elements of arg will be mapped in kwargs.
if you want some arguments not to be in the results, supply a list of arg names in
args_to_ignore.
if f is a function that takes *args, func_code.co_varnames is empty, so args will be put
under 'args' in kwargs.
def foo(bar, baz)
_unifyArgs(foo, (42,), {'baz': 23}) --> {'bar': 42, 'baz': 23}
_unifyArgs(foo, (42,), {'baz': 23}, ['bar']) --> {'baz': 23}
"""
result = kwargs.copy()
if hasattr(func, "__code__"): # built-in functions don't have func_code
args = list(args)
if getattr(func, "__self__", None) is not None: # bound method, we have to add self to args list
args = [func.__self__] + args
defaults = list(func.__defaults__) if func.__defaults__ is not None else []
arg_count = func.__code__.co_argcount
arg_names = list(func.__code__.co_varnames)
if len(args) < arg_count: # We have default values
required_arg_count = arg_count - len(args)
args = args + defaults[-required_arg_count:]
for arg_name, arg in zip(arg_names, args):
# setdefault is used because if the arg is already in kwargs, we don't want to use default values
result.setdefault(arg_name, arg)
else:
# 'func' has a *args argument
result["args"] = args
if args_to_ignore:
for kw in args_to_ignore:
del result[kw]
return result
def log_calls(func):
"""Logs all func calls' arguments under func.calls.
func.calls is a list of _unify_args() result (dict).
Mostly used for unit testing.
"""
def wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
unified_args = _unify_args(func, args, kwargs)
wrapper.calls.append(unified_args)
return func(*args, **kwargs)
wrapper.calls = []
return wrapper