This commit is contained in:
Alexander Belopolsky 2012-06-22 16:09:42 -04:00
commit 7e3e496abb
1 changed files with 20 additions and 18 deletions

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@ -222,36 +222,38 @@ class SkipitemTest(unittest.TestCase):
in Python/getargs.c, but neglected to update our poor friend
skipitem() in the same file. (If so, shame on you!)
This function brute-force tests all** ASCII characters (1 to 127
inclusive) as format units, checking to see that
PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords() return consistent errors both when
the unit is attempted to be used and when it is skipped. If the
format unit doesn't exist, we'll get one of two specific error
messages (one for used, one for skipped); if it does exist we
*won't* get that error--we'll get either no error or some other
error. If we get the "does not exist" error for one test and
not for the other, there's a mismatch, and the test fails.
With a few exceptions**, this function brute-force tests all
printable ASCII*** characters (32 to 126 inclusive) as format units,
checking to see that PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords() return consistent
errors both when the unit is attempted to be used and when it is
skipped. If the format unit doesn't exist, we'll get one of two
specific error messages (one for used, one for skipped); if it does
exist we *won't* get that error--we'll get either no error or some
other error. If we get the specific "does not exist" error for one
test and not for the other, there's a mismatch, and the test fails.
** Some format units have special funny semantics and it would
be difficult to accomodate them here. Since these are all
well-established and properly skipped in skipitem() we can
get away with not testing them--this test is really intended
to catch *new* format units.
*** Python C source files must be ASCII. Therefore it's impossible
to have non-ASCII format units.
** Okay, it actually skips some ASCII characters. Some characters
have special funny semantics, and it would be difficult to
accomodate them here.
"""
empty_tuple = ()
tuple_1 = (0,)
dict_b = {'b':1}
keywords = ["a", "b"]
# Python C source files must be ASCII,
# therefore we'll never have a format unit > 127
for i in range(1, 128):
for i in range(32, 127):
c = chr(i)
# skip non-printable characters, no one is insane enough to define
# one as a format unit
# skip parentheses, the error reporting is inconsistent about them
# skip 'e', it's always a two-character code
# skip '|' and '$', they don't represent arguments anyway
if (not c.isprintable()) or (c in '()e|$'):
if c in '()e|$':
continue
# test the format unit when not skipped