Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view test/session_common.py @ 7695:2be7a8f66ea7
fix: windows install using pip mislocates share directory
The setup code that tries to make the share install path absolute
prependeds something like:
c:\program files\python_venv
to the paths. The equivalent on linux is recognized as an absolute
path. On windows this is treated oddly. This resulted in
the share files being placed in:
c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\site-packages\program files\python_venv\share
Roundup was unable to find the files there. On windows (where the
platform starts with 'win') don't make the path absolute. This puts
share in:
c:\program files\python_venv\Lib\share
and Roundup finds them.
The translations and templates are found by the roundup-server.
The docs are also installed under the share directory. The man pages
are not installed as windows doesn't have groff to format the source
documents.
This is the second fix from issues getting Roundup running on windows
discussed on mailing list by Simon Eigeldinger.
Thread starts with:
https://sourceforge.net/p/roundup/mailman/message/41557096/
subject: Installing Roundup on Windows 2023-10-05.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sun, 05 Nov 2023 23:01:29 -0500 |
| parents | fe0091279f50 |
| children | 39c482e6a246 |
line wrap: on
line source
import os, shutil, time, unittest from .db_test_base import config """ here are three different impementations for these. I am trying to fix them so they all act the same. set with invalid timestamp: session_dbm/memorydb - sets to invalid timestamp if new or existing item. session_rdbms - sets to time.time if new item, keeps original if item exists. (note that the timestamp is a separate column, the timestamp embedded in the value object in the db has the bad __timestamp. reconciled: set to time.time for new item, keeps original time of existing item. Also updateTimestamp does not update the marshalled values idea of __timestamp. So get(item, '__timestamp') will not work as expected for rdbms backends, need a sql query to get the timestamp column. FIXME need to add getTimestamp method to sessions_rdbms.py and sessions_dbm.py. """ import pytest, sys _py3 = sys.version_info[0] > 2 if _py3: skip_py2 = lambda func, *args, **kwargs: func else: from .pytest_patcher import mark_class skip_py2 = mark_class(pytest.mark.skip( reason="Skipping log test, test doesn't work on python2")) class SessionTest(object): def setUp(self): # remove previous test, ignore errors if os.path.exists(config.DATABASE): shutil.rmtree(config.DATABASE) os.makedirs(config.DATABASE + '/files') self.db = self.module.Database(config, 'admin') self.sessions = self.db.getSessionManager() self.otks = self.db.getOTKManager() def tearDown(self): if hasattr(self, 'db'): self.db.close() if os.path.exists(config.DATABASE): shutil.rmtree(config.DATABASE) def testList(self): '''Under dbm/memory sessions store, keys are returned as byte strings. self.s2b converts string to byte under those backends but is a no-op for rdbms based backends. Unknown why keys can be strings not bytes for get/set and work correctly. ''' self.sessions.list() self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!') self.sessions.set('random_key2', text='hello, world!') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.list().sort(), [self.s2b('random_key'), self.s2b('random_key2')].sort()) def testGetGetAllMissingKey(self): self.assertEqual(self.sessions.get('badc_key', 'text', 'default_val'), 'default_val') with self.assertRaises(KeyError) as e: self.sessions.get('badc_key', 'text') with self.assertRaises(KeyError) as e: self.sessions.getall('badc_key') def testGetAll(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!', otherval='bar') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.getall('random_key'), {'text': 'hello, world!', 'otherval': 'bar'}) def testDestroy(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.getall('random_key'), {'text': 'hello, world!'}) self.sessions.destroy('random_key') self.assertRaises(KeyError, self.sessions.getall, 'random_key') def testClear(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!') self.sessions.set('random_key2', text='hello, world!') self.sessions.set('random_key3', text='hello, world!') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.getall('random_key3'), {'text': 'hello, world!'}) self.assertEqual(len(self.sessions.list()), 3) self.sessions.clear() self.assertEqual(len(self.sessions.list()), 0) def testSetSession(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!', otherval='bar') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.get('random_key', 'text'), 'hello, world!') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.get('random_key', 'otherval'), 'bar') def testUpdateSession(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.get('random_key', 'text'), 'hello, world!') self.sessions.set('random_key', text='nope') self.assertEqual(self.sessions.get('random_key', 'text'), 'nope') def testBadTimestamp(self): self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world!', __timestamp='not a timestamp') ts = self.sessions.get('random_key', '__timestamp') self.assertNotEqual(ts, 'not a timestamp') # use {1,7} because db's don't pad the fraction to 7 digits. ts_re=r'^[0-9]{10,16}\.[0-9]{1,7}$' try: self.assertRegex(str(ts), ts_re) except AttributeError: # 2.7 version import warnings with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.filterwarnings("ignore",category=DeprecationWarning) self.assertRegexpMatches(str(ts), ts_re) # now update with a bad timestamp, original timestamp should # be kept. self.sessions.set('random_key', text='hello, world2!', __timestamp='not a timestamp') item = self.sessions.get('random_key', "text") item_ts = self.sessions.get('random_key', "__timestamp") self.assertEqual(item, 'hello, world2!') self.assertAlmostEqual(ts, item_ts, 2) # overridden in test_memory def testUpdateTimestamp(self): # make sure timestamp is older than one minute so update # will apply timestamp = time.time() - 62 self.sessions.set('random_session', text='hello, world!', __timestamp=timestamp) self.sessions.updateTimestamp('random_session') # this doesn't work as the rdbms backends have a # session_time, otk_time column and the timestamp in the # session marshalled payload isn't updated. The dbm # backend does update the __timestamp value so it works # for dbm. #self.assertNotEqual (self.sessions.get('random_session', # '__timestamp'), # timestamp) # use 61 to allow a 1 second delay in test self.assertGreater(self.get_ts()[0] - timestamp, 61) # overridden in test_anydbm def get_ts(self, key="random_session"): sql = '''select %(name)s_time from %(name)ss where %(name)s_key = '%(session)s';'''% \ {'name': self.sessions.name, 'session': key} self.sessions.cursor.execute(sql) db_tstamp = self.sessions.cursor.fetchone() return db_tstamp def testDataTypes(self): """make sure all data survives a round trip through the session database including data types. Found this was a problem when trying to store the data using a redis hash that has no native data types for booleans and numbers get returned by redis module as strings. """ in_data = {"text": 'hello, world!', "integer": 56, "float": 3.1425, "list": [ 1, "Two", 3.0, "Four" ], "boolean": True, "tuple": ("f", 4), } self.sessions.set('random_data', **in_data) out_data = self.sessions.getall('random_data') self.assertEqual(in_data, out_data) def testLifetime(self): ts = self.sessions.lifetime(300) week_ago = time.time() - 60*60*24*7 self.assertGreater(week_ago + 302, ts) self.assertLess(week_ago + 298, ts) def testGetUniqueKey(self): # 40 bytes of randomness gets larger when encoded key = self.sessions.getUniqueKey() self.assertEqual(len(key), 54) # length is bytes of randomness key = self.sessions.getUniqueKey(length=23) self.assertEqual(len(key), 31) key = self.sessions.getUniqueKey(length=200) self.assertEqual(len(key), 267) def testget_logger(self): logger = self.sessions.get_logger() # why do rdbms session use session/otk as the table name # while dbm uses sessions/otks? In any case check both. self.assertIn(logger.name, ["roundup.hyperdb.backends.sessions", "roundup.hyperdb.backends.session"]) logger = self.otks.get_logger() self.assertIn(logger.name, ["roundup.hyperdb.backends.otks", "roundup.hyperdb.backends.otk"]) def testget_logger_name_test(self): self.sessions.name="otks" logger = self.sessions.get_logger() self.assertEqual(logger.name, "roundup.hyperdb.backends.otks") @skip_py2 def test_log_warning(self): """Only python3 pytest has the right context handler for this, so skip this on python2. """ self.sessions.name = "newdb" with self.assertLogs(logger="roundup.hyperdb.backends.newdb") as logs: self.sessions.log_warning("hello world") self.assertEqual(len(logs.records), 1) self.assertEqual(logs.records[0].levelname, "WARNING") @skip_py2 def test_log_info(self): """Only python3 pytest has the right context handler for this, so skip this on python2. """ self.sessions.name = "newdb" with self.assertLogs(logger="roundup.hyperdb.backends.newdb") as logs: self.sessions.log_info("hello world") self.assertEqual(len(logs.records), 1) self.assertEqual(logs.records[0].levelname, "INFO") @skip_py2 def test_log_debug(self): """Only python3 pytest has the right context handler for this, so skip this on python2. """ self.sessions.name = "newdb" with self.assertLogs(logger="roundup.hyperdb.backends.newdb", level='DEBUG') as logs: self.sessions.log_debug("hello world") self.assertEqual(len(logs.records), 1) self.assertEqual(logs.records[0].levelname, "DEBUG")
