cpython/Doc
Mario Corchero d65b783b69
gh-61215: New mock to wait for multi-threaded events to happen (#16094)
mock: Add `ThreadingMock` class

Add a new class that allows to wait for a call to happen by using
`Event` objects. This mock class can be used to test and validate
expectations of multithreading code.

It uses two attributes for events to distinguish calls with any argument
and calls with specific arguments.

The calls with specific arguments need a lock to prevent two calls in
parallel from creating the same event twice.

The timeout is configured at class and constructor level to allow users
to set a timeout, we considered passing it as an argument to the
function but it could collide with a function parameter. Alternatively
we also considered passing it as positional only but from an API
caller perspective it was unclear what the first number meant on the
function call, think `mock.wait_until_called(1, "arg1", "arg2")`, where
1 is the timeout.

Lastly we also considered adding the new attributes to magic mock
directly rather than having a custom mock class for multi threading
scenarios, but we preferred to have specialised class that can be
composed if necessary. Additionally, having added it to `MagicMock`
directly would have resulted in `AsyncMock` having this logic, which
would not work as expected, since when if user "waits" on a
coroutine does not have the same meaning as waiting on a standard
call.

Co-authored-by: Karthikeyan Singaravelan <tir.karthi@gmail.com>
2023-07-03 07:56:54 +01:00
..
_static
c-api gh-101100: Docs: Fix references to several numeric dunders (#106278) 2023-06-30 15:27:09 +01:00
data gh-105927: Add PyWeakref_GetRef() function (#105932) 2023-06-21 11:40:09 +02:00
distributing
extending gh-104922: Doc: add note about PY_SSIZE_T_CLEAN (#106314) 2023-07-03 00:54:35 +09:00
faq gh-105844: Use devguide terminology to denote versions (#105882) 2023-06-18 12:25:23 +02:00
howto gh-105332: [Enum] Fix unpickling flags in edge-cases (GH-105348) 2023-06-08 11:40:15 -07:00
includes
install gh-105844: Consistently use 'minor version' for X.Y versions (#105851) 2023-06-16 10:41:47 +02:00
installing Remove or update bitbucket links (GH-101963) 2023-03-08 11:24:39 +01:00
library gh-61215: New mock to wait for multi-threaded events to happen (#16094) 2023-07-03 07:56:54 +01:00
reference Replace the esoteric term 'datum' when describing dict comprehensions (#106119) 2023-07-02 20:22:40 -07:00
tools Docs: Avoid a DeprecationWarning in `pyspecific.py` when running with Sphinx >=6.1 (#105886) 2023-06-23 08:58:45 +01:00
tutorial gh-104479: Update outdated tutorial floating-point reference (#104681) 2023-05-25 23:26:16 -07:00
using gh-106232: Make timeit doc command lines compatible with Windows. (#106296) 2023-06-30 22:34:31 -04:00
whatsnew gh-106320: Remove _PyInterpreterState_Get() alias (#106321) 2023-07-01 23:44:07 +00:00
Makefile Docs: move sphinx-lint to pre-commit (#105750) 2023-06-18 11:52:05 +00:00
README.rst
about.rst
bugs.rst
conf.py gh-75552: Remove deprecated tkinter.tix module (GH-104902) 2023-05-27 12:34:19 -05:00
constraints.txt Docs: move sphinx-lint to pre-commit (#105750) 2023-06-18 11:52:05 +00:00
contents.rst
copyright.rst
glossary.rst gh-101100: Fix reference to asynchronous methods (#106172) 2023-06-28 10:43:11 +00:00
license.rst gh-104773: PEP 594: Remove the audioop module (#104937) 2023-05-25 17:59:00 +02:00
make.bat
requirements-oldest-sphinx.txt build(deps): bump requests from 2.29.0 to 2.31.0 in /Doc (#105368) 2023-06-06 14:35:51 +02:00
requirements.txt Docs: move sphinx-lint to pre-commit (#105750) 2023-06-18 11:52:05 +00:00

README.rst

Python Documentation README
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

This directory contains the reStructuredText (reST) sources to the Python
documentation.  You don't need to build them yourself, `prebuilt versions are
available <https://docs.python.org/dev/download.html>`_.

Documentation on authoring Python documentation, including information about
both style and markup, is available in the "`Documenting Python
<https://devguide.python.org/documenting/>`_" chapter of the
developers guide.


Building the docs
=================

The documentation is built with several tools which are not included in this
tree but are maintained separately and are available from
`PyPI <https://pypi.org/>`_.

* `Sphinx <https://pypi.org/project/Sphinx/>`_
* `blurb <https://pypi.org/project/blurb/>`_
* `python-docs-theme <https://pypi.org/project/python-docs-theme/>`_

The easiest way to install these tools is to create a virtual environment and
install the tools into there.

Using make
----------

To get started on UNIX, you can create a virtual environment and build
documentation with the commands::

  make venv
  make html

The virtual environment in the ``venv`` directory will contain all the tools
necessary to build the documentation downloaded and installed from PyPI.
If you'd like to create the virtual environment in a different location,
you can specify it using the ``VENVDIR`` variable.

You can also skip creating the virtual environment altogether, in which case
the Makefile will look for instances of ``sphinx-build`` and ``blurb``
installed on your process ``PATH`` (configurable with the ``SPHINXBUILD`` and
``BLURB`` variables).

On Windows, we try to emulate the Makefile as closely as possible with a
``make.bat`` file. If you need to specify the Python interpreter to use,
set the PYTHON environment variable.

Available make targets are:

* "clean", which removes all build files and the virtual environment.

* "clean-venv", which removes the virtual environment directory.

* "venv", which creates a virtual environment with all necessary tools
  installed.

* "html", which builds standalone HTML files for offline viewing.

* "htmlview", which re-uses the "html" builder, but then opens the main page
  in your default web browser.

* "htmlhelp", which builds HTML files and a HTML Help project file usable to
  convert them into a single Compiled HTML (.chm) file -- these are popular
  under Microsoft Windows, but very handy on every platform.

  To create the CHM file, you need to run the Microsoft HTML Help Workshop
  over the generated project (.hhp) file.  The make.bat script does this for
  you on Windows.

* "latex", which builds LaTeX source files as input to "pdflatex" to produce
  PDF documents.

* "text", which builds a plain text file for each source file.

* "epub", which builds an EPUB document, suitable to be viewed on e-book
  readers.

* "linkcheck", which checks all external references to see whether they are
  broken, redirected or malformed, and outputs this information to stdout as
  well as a plain-text (.txt) file.

* "changes", which builds an overview over all versionadded/versionchanged/
  deprecated items in the current version. This is meant as a help for the
  writer of the "What's New" document.

* "coverage", which builds a coverage overview for standard library modules and
  C API.

* "pydoc-topics", which builds a Python module containing a dictionary with
  plain text documentation for the labels defined in
  ``tools/pyspecific.py`` -- pydoc needs these to show topic and keyword help.

* "check", which checks for frequent markup errors.

* "serve", which serves the build/html directory on port 8000.

* "dist", (Unix only) which creates distributable archives of HTML, text,
  PDF, and EPUB builds.


Without make
------------

First, install the tool dependencies from PyPI.

Then, from the ``Doc`` directory, run ::

   sphinx-build -b<builder> . build/<builder>

where ``<builder>`` is one of html, text, latex, or htmlhelp (for explanations
see the make targets above).

Deprecation header
==================

You can define the ``outdated`` variable in ``html_context`` to show a
red banner on each page redirecting to the "latest" version.

The link points to the same page on ``/3/``, sadly for the moment the
language is lost during the process.


Contributing
============

Bugs in the content should be reported to the
`Python bug tracker <https://github.com/python/cpython/issues>`_.

Bugs in the toolset should be reported to the tools themselves.

You can also send a mail to the Python Documentation Team at docs@python.org,
and we will process your request as soon as possible.

If you want to help the Documentation Team, you are always welcome.  Just send
a mail to docs@python.org.