#-*- coding: ISO-8859-1 -*- # pysqlite2/test/regression.py: pysqlite regression tests # # Copyright (C) 2006 Gerhard Häring # # This file is part of pysqlite. # # This software is provided 'as-is', without any express or implied # warranty. In no event will the authors be held liable for any damages # arising from the use of this software. # # Permission is granted to anyone to use this software for any purpose, # including commercial applications, and to alter it and redistribute it # freely, subject to the following restrictions: # # 1. The origin of this software must not be misrepresented; you must not # claim that you wrote the original software. If you use this software # in a product, an acknowledgment in the product documentation would be # appreciated but is not required. # 2. Altered source versions must be plainly marked as such, and must not be # misrepresented as being the original software. # 3. This notice may not be removed or altered from any source distribution. import datetime import unittest import sqlite3 as sqlite class RegressionTests(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self.con = sqlite.connect(":memory:") def tearDown(self): self.con.close() def CheckPragmaUserVersion(self): # This used to crash pysqlite because this pragma command returns NULL for the column name cur = self.con.cursor() cur.execute("pragma user_version") def CheckPragmaSchemaVersion(self): # This still crashed pysqlite <= 2.2.1 con = sqlite.connect(":memory:", detect_types=sqlite.PARSE_COLNAMES) try: cur = self.con.cursor() cur.execute("pragma schema_version") finally: cur.close() con.close() def CheckStatementReset(self): # pysqlite 2.1.0 to 2.2.0 have the problem that not all statements are # reset before a rollback, but only those that are still in the # statement cache. The others are not accessible from the connection object. con = sqlite.connect(":memory:", cached_statements=5) cursors = [con.cursor() for x in range(5)] cursors[0].execute("create table test(x)") for i in range(10): cursors[0].executemany("insert into test(x) values (?)", [(x,) for x in range(10)]) for i in range(5): cursors[i].execute(" " * i + "select x from test") con.rollback() def CheckColumnNameWithSpaces(self): cur = self.con.cursor() cur.execute('select 1 as "foo bar [datetime]"') self.failUnlessEqual(cur.description[0][0], "foo bar") cur.execute('select 1 as "foo baz"') self.failUnlessEqual(cur.description[0][0], "foo baz") def CheckStatementAvailable(self): # pysqlite up to 2.3.2 crashed on this, because the active statement handle was not checked # before trying to fetch data from it. close() destroys the active statement ... con = sqlite.connect(":memory:", detect_types=sqlite.PARSE_DECLTYPES) cur = con.cursor() cur.execute("select 4 union select 5") cur.close() cur.fetchone() cur.fetchone() def CheckStatementFinalizationOnCloseDb(self): # pysqlite versions <= 2.3.3 only finalized statements in the statement # cache when closing the database. statements that were still # referenced in cursors weren't closed an could provoke " # "OperationalError: Unable to close due to unfinalised statements". con = sqlite.connect(":memory:") cursors = [] # default statement cache size is 100 for i in range(105): cur = con.cursor() cursors.append(cur) cur.execute("select 1 x union select " + str(i)) con.close() def CheckOnConflictRollback(self): if sqlite.sqlite_version_info < (3, 2, 2): return con = sqlite.connect(":memory:") con.execute("create table foo(x, unique(x) on conflict rollback)") con.execute("insert into foo(x) values (1)") try: con.execute("insert into foo(x) values (1)") except sqlite.DatabaseError: pass con.execute("insert into foo(x) values (2)") try: con.commit() except sqlite.OperationalError: self.fail("pysqlite knew nothing about the implicit ROLLBACK") def CheckWorkaroundForBuggySqliteTransferBindings(self): """ pysqlite would crash with older SQLite versions unless a workaround is implemented. """ self.con.execute("create table foo(bar)") self.con.execute("drop table foo") self.con.execute("create table foo(bar)") def CheckEmptyStatement(self): """ pysqlite used to segfault with SQLite versions 3.5.x. These return NULL for "no-operation" statements """ self.con.execute("") def CheckTypeMapUsage(self): """ pysqlite until 2.4.1 did not rebuild the row_cast_map when recompiling a statement. This test exhibits the problem. """ SELECT = "select * from foo" con = sqlite.connect(":memory:",detect_types=sqlite.PARSE_DECLTYPES) con.execute("create table foo(bar timestamp)") con.execute("insert into foo(bar) values (?)", (datetime.datetime.now(),)) con.execute(SELECT) con.execute("drop table foo") con.execute("create table foo(bar integer)") con.execute("insert into foo(bar) values (5)") con.execute(SELECT) def CheckErrorMsgDecodeError(self): # When porting the module to Python 3.0, the error message about # decoding errors disappeared. This verifies they're back again. failure = None try: self.con.execute("select 'xxx' || ? || 'yyy' colname", (bytes(bytearray([250])),)).fetchone() failure = "should have raised an OperationalError with detailed description" except sqlite.OperationalError as e: msg = e.args[0] if not msg.startswith("Could not decode to UTF-8 column 'colname' with text 'xxx"): failure = "OperationalError did not have expected description text" if failure: self.fail(failure) def suite(): regression_suite = unittest.makeSuite(RegressionTests, "Check") return unittest.TestSuite((regression_suite,)) def test(): runner = unittest.TextTestRunner() runner.run(suite()) if __name__ == "__main__": test()