cpython/Lib/test/test_importlib/frozen/test_loader.py

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from test.test_importlib import abc, util
machinery = util.import_importlib('importlib.machinery')
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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from test.support import captured_stdout, import_helper, STDLIB_DIR
import _imp
import contextlib
import marshal
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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import os.path
import types
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import unittest
import warnings
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@contextlib.contextmanager
def deprecated():
with warnings.catch_warnings():
warnings.simplefilter('ignore', DeprecationWarning)
yield
@contextlib.contextmanager
def fresh(name, *, oldapi=False):
with util.uncache(name):
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
if oldapi:
with deprecated():
yield
else:
yield
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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def resolve_stdlib_file(name, ispkg=False):
assert name
if ispkg:
return os.path.join(STDLIB_DIR, *name.split('.'), '__init__.py')
else:
return os.path.join(STDLIB_DIR, *name.split('.')) + '.py'
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class ExecModuleTests(abc.LoaderTests):
def exec_module(self, name, origname=None):
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
is_package = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.is_package(name)
spec = self.machinery.ModuleSpec(
name,
self.machinery.FrozenImporter,
origin='frozen',
is_package=is_package,
loader_state=types.SimpleNamespace(
origname=origname or name,
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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filename=resolve_stdlib_file(origname or name, is_package),
),
)
module = types.ModuleType(name)
module.__spec__ = spec
assert not hasattr(module, 'initialized')
with fresh(name):
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self.machinery.FrozenImporter.exec_module(module)
with captured_stdout() as stdout:
module.main()
self.assertTrue(module.initialized)
self.assertTrue(hasattr(module, '__spec__'))
self.assertEqual(module.__spec__.origin, 'frozen')
return module, stdout.getvalue()
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def test_module(self):
name = '__hello__'
module, output = self.exec_module(name)
check = {'__name__': name}
for attr, value in check.items():
self.assertEqual(getattr(module, attr), value)
self.assertEqual(output, 'Hello world!\n')
self.assertTrue(hasattr(module, '__spec__'))
self.assertEqual(module.__spec__.loader_state.origname, name)
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def test_package(self):
name = '__phello__'
module, output = self.exec_module(name)
check = {'__name__': name}
for attr, value in check.items():
attr_value = getattr(module, attr)
self.assertEqual(attr_value, value,
'for {name}.{attr}, {given!r} != {expected!r}'.format(
name=name, attr=attr, given=attr_value,
expected=value))
self.assertEqual(output, 'Hello world!\n')
self.assertEqual(module.__spec__.loader_state.origname, name)
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def test_lacking_parent(self):
name = '__phello__.spam'
with util.uncache('__phello__'):
module, output = self.exec_module(name)
check = {'__name__': name}
for attr, value in check.items():
attr_value = getattr(module, attr)
self.assertEqual(attr_value, value,
'for {name}.{attr}, {given} != {expected!r}'.format(
name=name, attr=attr, given=attr_value,
expected=value))
self.assertEqual(output, 'Hello world!\n')
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def test_module_repr_indirect_through_spec(self):
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name = '__hello__'
module, output = self.exec_module(name)
self.assertEqual(repr(module),
"<module '__hello__' (frozen)>")
# No way to trigger an error in a frozen module.
test_state_after_failure = None
def test_unloadable(self):
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
assert self.machinery.FrozenImporter.find_spec('_not_real') is None
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with self.assertRaises(ImportError) as cm:
self.exec_module('_not_real')
self.assertEqual(cm.exception.name, '_not_real')
(Frozen_ExecModuleTests,
Source_ExecModuleTests
) = util.test_both(ExecModuleTests, machinery=machinery)
class LoaderTests(abc.LoaderTests):
def load_module(self, name):
with fresh(name, oldapi=True):
module = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.load_module(name)
with captured_stdout() as stdout:
module.main()
return module, stdout
def test_module(self):
module, stdout = self.load_module('__hello__')
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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filename = resolve_stdlib_file('__hello__')
check = {'__name__': '__hello__',
'__package__': '',
'__loader__': self.machinery.FrozenImporter,
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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'__file__': filename,
}
for attr, value in check.items():
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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self.assertEqual(getattr(module, attr, None), value)
self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), 'Hello world!\n')
def test_package(self):
module, stdout = self.load_module('__phello__')
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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filename = resolve_stdlib_file('__phello__', ispkg=True)
pkgdir = os.path.dirname(filename)
check = {'__name__': '__phello__',
'__package__': '__phello__',
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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'__path__': [pkgdir],
'__loader__': self.machinery.FrozenImporter,
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
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'__file__': filename,
}
for attr, value in check.items():
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
2021-10-14 18:32:18 -03:00
attr_value = getattr(module, attr, None)
self.assertEqual(attr_value, value,
"for __phello__.%s, %r != %r" %
(attr, attr_value, value))
self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), 'Hello world!\n')
def test_lacking_parent(self):
with util.uncache('__phello__'):
module, stdout = self.load_module('__phello__.spam')
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
2021-10-14 18:32:18 -03:00
filename = resolve_stdlib_file('__phello__.spam')
check = {'__name__': '__phello__.spam',
'__package__': '__phello__',
'__loader__': self.machinery.FrozenImporter,
bpo-21736: Set __file__ on frozen stdlib modules. (gh-28656) Currently frozen modules do not have __file__ set. In their spec, origin is set to "frozen" and they are marked as not having a location. (Similarly, for frozen packages __path__ is set to an empty list.) However, for frozen stdlib modules we are able to extrapolate __file__ as long as we can determine the stdlib directory at runtime. (We now do so since gh-28586.) Having __file__ set is helpful for a number of reasons. Likewise, having a non-empty __path__ means we can import submodules of a frozen package from the filesystem (e.g. we could partially freeze the encodings module). This change sets __file__ (and adds to __path__) for frozen stdlib modules. It uses sys._stdlibdir (from gh-28586) and the frozen module alias information (from gh-28655). All that work is done in FrozenImporter (in Lib/importlib/_bootstrap.py). Also, if a frozen module is imported before importlib is bootstrapped (during interpreter initialization) then we fix up that module and its spec during the importlib bootstrapping step (i.e. imporlib._bootstrap._setup()) to match what gets set by FrozenImporter, including setting the file info (if the stdlib dir is known). To facilitate this, modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() have __origname__ set using the frozen module alias info. __origname__ is popped off during importlib bootstrap. (To be clear, even with this change the new code to set __file__ during fixups in imporlib._bootstrap._setup() doesn't actually get triggered yet. This is because sys._stdlibdir hasn't been set yet in interpreter initialization at the point importlib is bootstrapped. However, we do fix up such modules at that point to otherwise match the result of importing through FrozenImporter, just not the __file__ and __path__ parts. Doing so will require changes in the order in which things happen during interpreter initialization. That can be addressed separately. Once it is, the file-related fixup code from this PR will kick in.) Here are things this change does not do: * set __file__ for non-stdlib modules (no way of knowing the parent dir) * set __file__ if the stdlib dir is not known (nor assume the expense of finding it) * relatedly, set __file__ if the stdlib is in a zip file * verify that the filename set to __file__ actually exists (too expensive) * update __path__ for frozen packages that alias a non-package (since there is no package dir) Other things this change skips, but we may do later: * set __file__ on modules imported using PyImport_ImportFrozenModule() * set co_filename when we unmarshal the frozen code object while importing the module (e.g. in FrozenImporter.exec_module()) -- this would allow tracebacks to show source lines * implement FrozenImporter.get_filename() and FrozenImporter.get_source() https://bugs.python.org/issue21736
2021-10-14 18:32:18 -03:00
'__file__': filename,
}
for attr, value in check.items():
attr_value = getattr(module, attr)
self.assertEqual(attr_value, value,
"for __phello__.spam.%s, %r != %r" %
(attr, attr_value, value))
self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), 'Hello world!\n')
def test_module_reuse(self):
with fresh('__hello__', oldapi=True):
module1 = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.load_module('__hello__')
module2 = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.load_module('__hello__')
with captured_stdout() as stdout:
module1.main()
module2.main()
self.assertIs(module1, module2)
self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(),
'Hello world!\nHello world!\n')
2013-11-22 12:05:39 -04:00
# No way to trigger an error in a frozen module.
test_state_after_failure = None
def test_unloadable(self):
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
with deprecated():
assert self.machinery.FrozenImporter.find_module('_not_real') is None
with self.assertRaises(ImportError) as cm:
self.load_module('_not_real')
self.assertEqual(cm.exception.name, '_not_real')
(Frozen_LoaderTests,
Source_LoaderTests
) = util.test_both(LoaderTests, machinery=machinery)
class InspectLoaderTests:
"""Tests for the InspectLoader methods for FrozenImporter."""
def test_get_code(self):
# Make sure that the code object is good.
name = '__hello__'
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
code = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.get_code(name)
mod = types.ModuleType(name)
exec(code, mod.__dict__)
with captured_stdout() as stdout:
mod.main()
self.assertTrue(hasattr(mod, 'initialized'))
self.assertEqual(stdout.getvalue(), 'Hello world!\n')
def test_get_source(self):
# Should always return None.
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
result = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.get_source('__hello__')
2012-06-28 07:15:01 -03:00
self.assertIsNone(result)
def test_is_package(self):
# Should be able to tell what is a package.
test_for = (('__hello__', False), ('__phello__', True),
('__phello__.spam', False))
for name, is_package in test_for:
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
result = self.machinery.FrozenImporter.is_package(name)
self.assertEqual(bool(result), is_package)
def test_failure(self):
# Raise ImportError for modules that are not frozen.
for meth_name in ('get_code', 'get_source', 'is_package'):
method = getattr(self.machinery.FrozenImporter, meth_name)
with self.assertRaises(ImportError) as cm:
with import_helper.frozen_modules():
method('importlib')
self.assertEqual(cm.exception.name, 'importlib')
(Frozen_ILTests,
Source_ILTests
) = util.test_both(InspectLoaderTests, machinery=machinery)
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()