Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view test/test_pythonexpr.py @ 7211:506c86823abb
Add config argument to more password.Password invocations.
The work done to allow password_pbkdf2_default_rounds to be overridden
for testing requires that calls to password.Password include a config
argument.
This was needed because using the real value more than quadrupled
testing runtime.
However there are still a few places where config was not being set
when Password was called. I think this fixes all of the ones that are
called from a function that have access to a db.config object.
The remaining ones all call Password(encrypted=x). This results in
Password.unpack() being called. If x is not a propertly formatted
password string ("{scheme}...", it calls encodePassword. It then
should end up raising the ConfigNotSet exception. This is
probably what we want as it means the shape of "x" is not correct.
I don't understand why Password.unpack() attempts to encrypt the value
of encrypted if it doesn't match the right form. According to codecov,
this encryption branch is being used, so somewhere x is of the wrong
form. Hmmm....
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 04 Mar 2023 00:17:26 -0500 |
| parents | e70885fe72a4 |
| children |
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""" In Python 3, sometimes TAL "python:" expressions that refer to variables but not all variables are recognized. That is in Python 2.7 all variables used in a TAL "python:" expression are recognized as references. In Python 3.5 (perhaps earlier), some TAL "python:" expressions refer to variables but the reference generates an error like this: <class 'NameError'>: name 'some_tal_variable' is not defined even when the variable is defined. Output after this message lists the variable and its value. """ import unittest from roundup.cgi.PageTemplates.PythonExpr import PythonExpr as PythonExprClass class ExprTest(unittest.TestCase): def testExpr(self): expr = '[x for x in context.assignedto ' \ 'if x.realname not in user_realnames]' pe = PythonExprClass('test', expr, None) # Looking at the expression, only context and user_realnames are # external variables. The names assignedto and realname are members, # and x is local. required_names = ['context', 'user_realnames'] got_names = pe._f_varnames for required_name in required_names: self.assertIn(required_name, got_names)
