view tests/check-gendoc @ 45095:8e04607023e5

procutil: ensure that procutil.std{out,err}.write() writes all bytes Python 3 offers different kind of streams and it’s not guaranteed for all of them that calling write() writes all bytes. When Python is started in unbuffered mode, sys.std{out,err}.buffer are instances of io.FileIO, whose write() can write less bytes for platform-specific reasons (e.g. Linux has a 0x7ffff000 bytes maximum and could write less if interrupted by a signal; when writing to Windows consoles, it’s limited to 32767 bytes to avoid the "not enough space" error). This can lead to silent loss of data, both when using sys.std{out,err}.buffer (which may in fact not be a buffered stream) and when using the text streams sys.std{out,err} (I’ve created a CPython bug report for that: https://bugs.python.org/issue41221). Python may fix the problem at some point. For now, we implement our own wrapper for procutil.std{out,err} that calls the raw stream’s write() method until all bytes have been written. We don’t use sys.std{out,err} for larger writes, so I think it’s not worth the effort to patch them.
author Manuel Jacob <me@manueljacob.de>
date Fri, 10 Jul 2020 12:27:58 +0200
parents 69c99898a48f
children
line wrap: on
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#!/bin/sh
HGENCODING=UTF-8
export HGENCODING

echo ".. -*- coding: utf-8 -*-" > gendoc.txt
echo "" >> gendoc.txt
LANGUAGE=$1 "$PYTHON" "$TESTDIR/../doc/gendoc.py" >> gendoc.txt 2> /dev/null || exit

echo "checking for parse errors"
"$PYTHON" "$TESTDIR/../doc/docchecker" gendoc.txt
"$PYTHON" "$TESTDIR/../doc/runrst" html gendoc.txt /dev/null