Mercurial > hg
view tests/test-extensions-wrapfunction.py @ 43325:7d4f2e4899c5 stable
py3: fix headencode() with display=False
We previously called str() on a email.header.Header object. On Python 2,
this returns a bytestring and the __str__ method is actually an alias to
.encode() method. On Python 3, __str__ does not perform encoding (and
returns a unicode string). To keep a consistent behavior across Python
versions, we explicitly use .encode() and we wrap the result with
encoding.strtolocal() to get a bytestring in all cases. As a side effect
of forcing bytes conversion, we need to decode back in _addressencode().
This is to make test-notify.t pass on Python 3.
Also note that headers are now encoded in some patchbomb tests; this is
because the charset is not always "us-ascii" ("iso-8859-1" otherwise) on
Python 3.
author | Denis Laxalde <denis.laxalde@logilab.fr> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 24 Oct 2019 17:16:43 +0200 |
parents | 2372284d9457 |
children | 6000f5b25c9b |
line wrap: on
line source
from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function from mercurial import extensions def genwrapper(x): def f(orig, *args, **kwds): return [x] + orig(*args, **kwds) f.x = x return f def getid(wrapper): return getattr(wrapper, 'x', '-') wrappers = [genwrapper(i) for i in range(5)] class dummyclass(object): def getstack(self): return ['orig'] dummy = dummyclass() def batchwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) print('wrap %d: %s' % (getid(w), dummy.getstack())) def batchunwrap(wrappers): for w in wrappers: result = None try: result = extensions.unwrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', w) msg = str(dummy.getstack()) except (ValueError, IndexError) as e: msg = e.__class__.__name__ print('unwrap %s: %s: %s' % (getid(w), getid(result), msg)) batchwrap(wrappers + [wrappers[0]]) batchunwrap( [ (wrappers[i] if i is not None and i >= 0 else None) for i in [3, None, 0, 4, 0, 2, 1, None] ] ) wrap0 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[0]) wrap1 = extensions.wrappedfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[1]) # Use them in a different order from how they were created to check that # the wrapping happens in __enter__, not in __init__ print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap1: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) with wrap0: print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Bad programmer forgets to unwrap the function, but the context # managers still unwrap their wrappings. extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'getstack', wrappers[2]) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) print('context manager', dummy.getstack()) # Wrap callable object which has no __name__ class callableobj(object): def __call__(self): return ['orig'] dummy.cobj = callableobj() extensions.wrapfunction(dummy, 'cobj', wrappers[0]) print('wrap callable object', dummy.cobj())