from test.support import verbose, reap_children from test.support.import_helper import import_module # Skip these tests if termios or fcntl are not available import_module('termios') # fcntl is a proxy for not being one of the wasm32 platforms even though we # don't use this module... a proper check for what crashes those is needed. import_module("fcntl") import errno import os import pty import tty import sys import select import signal import socket import io # readline import unittest import warnings TEST_STRING_1 = b"I wish to buy a fish license.\n" TEST_STRING_2 = b"For my pet fish, Eric.\n" _HAVE_WINSZ = hasattr(tty, "TIOCGWINSZ") and hasattr(tty, "TIOCSWINSZ") if verbose: def debug(msg): print(msg) else: def debug(msg): pass # Note that os.read() is nondeterministic so we need to be very careful # to make the test suite deterministic. A normal call to os.read() may # give us less than expected. # # Beware, on my Linux system, if I put 'foo\n' into a terminal fd, I get # back 'foo\r\n' at the other end. The behavior depends on the termios # setting. The newline translation may be OS-specific. To make the # test suite deterministic and OS-independent, the functions _readline # and normalize_output can be used. def normalize_output(data): # Some operating systems do conversions on newline. We could possibly fix # that by doing the appropriate termios.tcsetattr()s. I couldn't figure out # the right combo on Tru64. So, just normalize the output and doc the # problem O/Ses by allowing certain combinations for some platforms, but # avoid allowing other differences (like extra whitespace, trailing garbage, # etc.) # This is about the best we can do without getting some feedback # from someone more knowledgable. # OSF/1 (Tru64) apparently turns \n into \r\r\n. if data.endswith(b'\r\r\n'): return data.replace(b'\r\r\n', b'\n') if data.endswith(b'\r\n'): return data.replace(b'\r\n', b'\n') return data def _readline(fd): """Read one line. May block forever if no newline is read.""" reader = io.FileIO(fd, mode='rb', closefd=False) return reader.readline() def expectedFailureIfStdinIsTTY(fun): # avoid isatty() try: tty.tcgetattr(pty.STDIN_FILENO) return unittest.expectedFailure(fun) except tty.error: pass return fun # Marginal testing of pty suite. Cannot do extensive 'do or fail' testing # because pty code is not too portable. class PtyTest(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): old_sighup = signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, self.handle_sighup) self.addCleanup(signal.signal, signal.SIGHUP, old_sighup) # Save original stdin window size. self.stdin_dim = None if _HAVE_WINSZ: try: self.stdin_dim = tty.tcgetwinsize(pty.STDIN_FILENO) self.addCleanup(tty.tcsetwinsize, pty.STDIN_FILENO, self.stdin_dim) except tty.error: pass @staticmethod def handle_sighup(signum, frame): pass @expectedFailureIfStdinIsTTY def test_openpty(self): try: mode = tty.tcgetattr(pty.STDIN_FILENO) except tty.error: # Not a tty or bad/closed fd. debug("tty.tcgetattr(pty.STDIN_FILENO) failed") mode = None new_dim = None if self.stdin_dim: try: # Modify pty.STDIN_FILENO window size; we need to # check if pty.openpty() is able to set pty slave # window size accordingly. debug("Setting pty.STDIN_FILENO window size.") debug(f"original size: (row, col) = {self.stdin_dim}") target_dim = (self.stdin_dim[0] + 1, self.stdin_dim[1] + 1) debug(f"target size: (row, col) = {target_dim}") tty.tcsetwinsize(pty.STDIN_FILENO, target_dim) # Were we able to set the window size # of pty.STDIN_FILENO successfully? new_dim = tty.tcgetwinsize(pty.STDIN_FILENO) self.assertEqual(new_dim, target_dim, "pty.STDIN_FILENO window size unchanged") except OSError: warnings.warn("Failed to set pty.STDIN_FILENO window size.") pass try: debug("Calling pty.openpty()") try: master_fd, slave_fd, slave_name = pty.openpty(mode, new_dim, True) except TypeError: master_fd, slave_fd = pty.openpty() slave_name = None debug(f"Got {master_fd=}, {slave_fd=}, {slave_name=}") except OSError: # " An optional feature could not be imported " ... ? raise unittest.SkipTest("Pseudo-terminals (seemingly) not functional.") # closing master_fd can raise a SIGHUP if the process is # the session leader: we installed a SIGHUP signal handler # to ignore this signal. self.addCleanup(os.close, master_fd) self.addCleanup(os.close, slave_fd) self.assertTrue(os.isatty(slave_fd), "slave_fd is not a tty") if mode: self.assertEqual(tty.tcgetattr(slave_fd), mode, "openpty() failed to set slave termios") if new_dim: self.assertEqual(tty.tcgetwinsize(slave_fd), new_dim, "openpty() failed to set slave window size") # Ensure the fd is non-blocking in case there's nothing to read. blocking = os.get_blocking(master_fd) try: os.set_blocking(master_fd, False) try: s1 = os.read(master_fd, 1024) self.assertEqual(b'', s1) except OSError as e: if e.errno != errno.EAGAIN: raise finally: # Restore the original flags. os.set_blocking(master_fd, blocking) debug("Writing to slave_fd") os.write(slave_fd, TEST_STRING_1) s1 = _readline(master_fd) self.assertEqual(b'I wish to buy a fish license.\n', normalize_output(s1)) debug("Writing chunked output") os.write(slave_fd, TEST_STRING_2[:5]) os.write(slave_fd, TEST_STRING_2[5:]) s2 = _readline(master_fd) self.assertEqual(b'For my pet fish, Eric.\n', normalize_output(s2)) def test_fork(self): debug("calling pty.fork()") pid, master_fd = pty.fork() self.addCleanup(os.close, master_fd) if pid == pty.CHILD: # stdout should be connected to a tty. if not os.isatty(1): debug("Child's fd 1 is not a tty?!") os._exit(3) # After pty.fork(), the child should already be a session leader. # (on those systems that have that concept.) debug("In child, calling os.setsid()") try: os.setsid() except OSError: # Good, we already were session leader debug("Good: OSError was raised.") pass except AttributeError: # Have pty, but not setsid()? debug("No setsid() available?") pass except: # We don't want this error to propagate, escaping the call to # os._exit() and causing very peculiar behavior in the calling # regrtest.py ! # Note: could add traceback printing here. debug("An unexpected error was raised.") os._exit(1) else: debug("os.setsid() succeeded! (bad!)") os._exit(2) os._exit(4) else: debug("Waiting for child (%d) to finish." % pid) # In verbose mode, we have to consume the debug output from the # child or the child will block, causing this test to hang in the # parent's waitpid() call. The child blocks after a # platform-dependent amount of data is written to its fd. On # Linux 2.6, it's 4000 bytes and the child won't block, but on OS # X even the small writes in the child above will block it. Also # on Linux, the read() will raise an OSError (input/output error) # when it tries to read past the end of the buffer but the child's # already exited, so catch and discard those exceptions. It's not # worth checking for EIO. while True: try: data = os.read(master_fd, 80) except OSError: break if not data: break sys.stdout.write(str(data.replace(b'\r\n', b'\n'), encoding='ascii')) ##line = os.read(master_fd, 80) ##lines = line.replace('\r\n', '\n').split('\n') ##if False and lines != ['In child, calling os.setsid()', ## 'Good: OSError was raised.', '']: ## raise TestFailed("Unexpected output from child: %r" % line) (pid, status) = os.waitpid(pid, 0) res = os.waitstatus_to_exitcode(status) debug("Child (%d) exited with code %d (status %d)." % (pid, res, status)) if res == 1: self.fail("Child raised an unexpected exception in os.setsid()") elif res == 2: self.fail("pty.fork() failed to make child a session leader.") elif res == 3: self.fail("Child spawned by pty.fork() did not have a tty as stdout") elif res != 4: self.fail("pty.fork() failed for unknown reasons.") ##debug("Reading from master_fd now that the child has exited") ##try: ## s1 = os.read(master_fd, 1024) ##except OSError: ## pass ##else: ## raise TestFailed("Read from master_fd did not raise exception") def test_master_read(self): # XXX(nnorwitz): this test leaks fds when there is an error. debug("Calling pty.openpty()") master_fd, slave_fd = pty.openpty() debug(f"Got master_fd '{master_fd}', slave_fd '{slave_fd}'") self.addCleanup(os.close, master_fd) debug("Closing slave_fd") os.close(slave_fd) debug("Reading from master_fd") try: data = os.read(master_fd, 1) except OSError: # Linux data = b"" self.assertEqual(data, b"") def test_spawn_doesnt_hang(self): pty.spawn([sys.executable, '-c', 'print("hi there")']) class SmallPtyTests(unittest.TestCase): """These tests don't spawn children or hang.""" def setUp(self): self.orig_stdin_fileno = pty.STDIN_FILENO self.orig_stdout_fileno = pty.STDOUT_FILENO self.orig_pty_close = pty.close self.orig_pty__copy = pty._copy self.orig_pty_fork = pty.fork self.orig_pty_select = pty.select self.orig_pty_setraw = pty.setraw self.orig_pty_tcgetattr = pty.tcgetattr self.orig_pty_tcsetattr = pty.tcsetattr self.orig_pty_waitpid = pty.waitpid self.fds = [] # A list of file descriptors to close. self.files = [] self.select_input = [] self.select_output = [] self.tcsetattr_mode_setting = None def tearDown(self): pty.STDIN_FILENO = self.orig_stdin_fileno pty.STDOUT_FILENO = self.orig_stdout_fileno pty.close = self.orig_pty_close pty._copy = self.orig_pty__copy pty.fork = self.orig_pty_fork pty.select = self.orig_pty_select pty.setraw = self.orig_pty_setraw pty.tcgetattr = self.orig_pty_tcgetattr pty.tcsetattr = self.orig_pty_tcsetattr pty.waitpid = self.orig_pty_waitpid for file in self.files: try: file.close() except OSError: pass for fd in self.fds: try: os.close(fd) except OSError: pass def _pipe(self): pipe_fds = os.pipe() self.fds.extend(pipe_fds) return pipe_fds def _socketpair(self): socketpair = socket.socketpair() self.files.extend(socketpair) return socketpair def _mock_select(self, rfds, wfds, xfds): # This will raise IndexError when no more expected calls exist. self.assertEqual((rfds, wfds, xfds), self.select_input.pop(0)) return self.select_output.pop(0) def _make_mock_fork(self, pid): def mock_fork(): return (pid, 12) return mock_fork def _mock_tcsetattr(self, fileno, opt, mode): self.tcsetattr_mode_setting = mode def test__copy_to_each(self): """Test the normal data case on both master_fd and stdin.""" read_from_stdout_fd, mock_stdout_fd = self._pipe() pty.STDOUT_FILENO = mock_stdout_fd mock_stdin_fd, write_to_stdin_fd = self._pipe() pty.STDIN_FILENO = mock_stdin_fd socketpair = self._socketpair() masters = [s.fileno() for s in socketpair] # Feed data. Smaller than PIPEBUF. These writes will not block. os.write(masters[1], b'from master') os.write(write_to_stdin_fd, b'from stdin') # Expect three select calls, the last one will cause IndexError pty.select = self._mock_select self.select_input.append(([mock_stdin_fd, masters[0]], [], [])) self.select_output.append(([mock_stdin_fd, masters[0]], [], [])) self.select_input.append(([mock_stdin_fd, masters[0]], [mock_stdout_fd, masters[0]], [])) self.select_output.append(([], [mock_stdout_fd, masters[0]], [])) self.select_input.append(([mock_stdin_fd, masters[0]], [], [])) with self.assertRaises(IndexError): pty._copy(masters[0]) # Test that the right data went to the right places. rfds = select.select([read_from_stdout_fd, masters[1]], [], [], 0)[0] self.assertEqual([read_from_stdout_fd, masters[1]], rfds) self.assertEqual(os.read(read_from_stdout_fd, 20), b'from master') self.assertEqual(os.read(masters[1], 20), b'from stdin') def test__restore_tty_mode_normal_return(self): """Test that spawn resets the tty mode no when _copy returns normally.""" # PID 1 is returned from mocked fork to run the parent branch # of code pty.fork = self._make_mock_fork(1) status_sentinel = object() pty.waitpid = lambda _1, _2: [None, status_sentinel] pty.close = lambda _: None pty._copy = lambda _1, _2, _3: None mode_sentinel = object() pty.tcgetattr = lambda fd: mode_sentinel pty.tcsetattr = self._mock_tcsetattr pty.setraw = lambda _: None self.assertEqual(pty.spawn([]), status_sentinel, "pty.waitpid process status not returned by pty.spawn") self.assertEqual(self.tcsetattr_mode_setting, mode_sentinel, "pty.tcsetattr not called with original mode value") def tearDownModule(): reap_children() if __name__ == "__main__": unittest.main()