view tests/basic_test_result.py @ 40545:6107d4549fcc stable

hgweb: cast bytearray to bytes PEP-3333 seems to indicate that bytes is the only allowed type that can be used to express the output of a WSGI application. And some WSGI environments seem to enforce this (mod_wsgi does). This commit universally casts bytearray instances to bytes to appease the WSGI specification. I found this because wireprotov2 is emitting bytearray instances. I'd like to keep things that way because the way it builds a data structure, bytearray is more efficient. I'd rather keep the low-level code efficient (and using bytearray) and cast at the edges than impose a performance penalty on code that may run outside WSGI contexts.
author Gregory Szorc <gregory.szorc@gmail.com>
date Fri, 09 Nov 2018 23:49:39 +0000
parents f4a214300957
children 2372284d9457
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function

import unittest

class TestResult(unittest._TextTestResult):

    def __init__(self, options, *args, **kwargs):
        super(TestResult, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
        self._options = options

        # unittest.TestResult didn't have skipped until 2.7. We need to
        # polyfill it.
        self.skipped = []

        # We have a custom "ignored" result that isn't present in any Python
        # unittest implementation. It is very similar to skipped. It may make
        # sense to map it into skip some day.
        self.ignored = []

        self.times = []
        self._firststarttime = None
        # Data stored for the benefit of generating xunit reports.
        self.successes = []
        self.faildata = {}

    def addFailure(self, test, reason):
        print("FAILURE!", test, reason)

    def addSuccess(self, test):
        print("SUCCESS!", test)

    def addError(self, test, err):
        print("ERR!", test, err)

    # Polyfill.
    def addSkip(self, test, reason):
        print("SKIP!", test, reason)

    def addIgnore(self, test, reason):
        print("IGNORE!", test, reason)

    def onStart(self, test):
        print("ON_START!", test)

    def onEnd(self):
        print("ON_END!")

    def addOutputMismatch(self, test, ret, got, expected):
        return False

    def stopTest(self, test, interrupted=False):
        super(TestResult, self).stopTest(test)