#14638: pydoc now treats non-str __name__ as None instead of raising

Original patch by Peter Otten.
This commit is contained in:
R David Murray 2012-04-23 13:27:11 -04:00
parent 4c20c4e198
commit c313b1d9b0
3 changed files with 16 additions and 1 deletions

View File

@ -1498,7 +1498,8 @@ def resolve(thing, forceload=0):
raise ImportError, 'no Python documentation found for %r' % thing
return object, thing
else:
return thing, getattr(thing, '__name__', None)
name = getattr(thing, '__name__', None)
return thing, name if isinstance(name, str) else None
def render_doc(thing, title='Python Library Documentation: %s', forceload=0):
"""Render text documentation, given an object or a path to an object."""

View File

@ -249,6 +249,17 @@ class PyDocDocTest(unittest.TestCase):
result, doc_loc = get_pydoc_text(xml.etree)
self.assertEqual(doc_loc, "", "MODULE DOCS incorrectly includes a link")
def test_non_str_name(self):
# issue14638
# Treat illegal (non-str) name like no name
class A:
__name__ = 42
class B:
pass
adoc = pydoc.render_doc(A())
bdoc = pydoc.render_doc(B())
self.assertEqual(adoc.replace("A", "B"), bdoc)
def test_not_here(self):
missing_module = "test.i_am_not_here"
result = run_pydoc(missing_module)

View File

@ -50,6 +50,9 @@ Core and Builtins
Library
-------
- Issue #14638: pydoc now treats non-string __name__ values as if they
were missing, instead of raising an error.
- Issue #13684: Fix httplib tunnel issue of infinite loops for certain sites
which send EOF without trailing \r\n.