Issue #28376: The constructor of range_iterator now checks that step is not 0.

Patch by Oren Milman.
This commit is contained in:
Serhiy Storchaka 2016-10-08 21:43:11 +03:00
parent 3bd9fde4df
commit 44759bcf13
3 changed files with 43 additions and 3 deletions

View File

@ -493,6 +493,35 @@ class RangeTest(unittest.TestCase):
test_id = "reversed(range({}, {}, {}))".format(start, end, step)
self.assert_iterators_equal(iter1, iter2, test_id, limit=100)
@test.support.cpython_only
def test_range_iterator_invocation(self):
import _testcapi
rangeiter_type = type(iter(range(0)))
# rangeiter_new doesn't take keyword arguments
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
rangeiter_type(a=1)
# rangeiter_new takes exactly 3 arguments
self.assertRaises(TypeError, rangeiter_type)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, rangeiter_type, 1)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, rangeiter_type, 1, 1)
self.assertRaises(TypeError, rangeiter_type, 1, 1, 1, 1)
# start, stop and stop must fit in C long
for good_val in [_testcapi.LONG_MAX, _testcapi.LONG_MIN]:
rangeiter_type(good_val, good_val, good_val)
for bad_val in [_testcapi.LONG_MAX + 1, _testcapi.LONG_MIN - 1]:
self.assertRaises(OverflowError,
rangeiter_type, bad_val, 1, 1)
self.assertRaises(OverflowError,
rangeiter_type, 1, bad_val, 1)
self.assertRaises(OverflowError,
rangeiter_type, 1, 1, bad_val)
# step mustn't be zero
self.assertRaises(ValueError, rangeiter_type, 1, 1, 0)
def test_slice(self):
def check(start, stop, step=None):
i = slice(start, stop, step)

View File

@ -10,6 +10,9 @@ Release date: TBA
Core and Builtins
-----------------
- Issue #28376: The constructor of range_iterator now checks that step is not 0.
Patch by Oren Milman.
- Issue #26906: Resolving special methods of uninitialized type now causes
implicit initialization of the type instead of a fail.

View File

@ -937,12 +937,20 @@ rangeiter_new(PyTypeObject *type, PyObject *args, PyObject *kw)
{
long start, stop, step;
if (!_PyArg_NoKeywords("rangeiter()", kw))
if (!_PyArg_NoKeywords("range_iterator()", kw)) {
return NULL;
}
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args, "lll;rangeiter() requires 3 int arguments",
&start, &stop, &step))
if (!PyArg_ParseTuple(args,
"lll;range_iterator() requires 3 int arguments",
&start, &stop, &step)) {
return NULL;
}
if (step == 0) {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_ValueError,
"range_iterator() arg 3 must not be zero");
return NULL;
}
return fast_range_iter(start, stop, step);
}