Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view test/test_userauditor.py @ 6610:db3f0ba75b4a
Change checkpoint_data and restore_connection_on_error to subtransaction
checkpoint_data and restore_connection_on_error used to commit() and
rollback() the db connection. This causes additional I/O and load.
Changed them to use 'SAVEPOINT name' and 'ROLLBACK TO name' to get a
faster method for handling errors within a tranaction.
One thing to note is that postgresql (unlike SQL std) doesn't
overwrite an older savepoint with he same name. It keeps all
savepoints but only rolls back to the newest one with a given name.
This could be a resource issue. I left a commented out release
statement in case somebody runs into an issue due to too many
savepoints. I expect it to slow down the import but....
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Sat, 29 Jan 2022 11:29:36 -0500 |
| parents | 89aa919997c0 |
| children |
line wrap: on
line source
import os, unittest, shutil from .db_test_base import setupTracker from .test_dates import skip_pytz class UserAuditorTest(unittest.TestCase): def setUp(self): self.dirname = '_test_user_auditor' self.instance = setupTracker(self.dirname) self.db = self.instance.open('admin') self.db.tx_Source = "cli" self.db.user.create(username='kyle', address='kyle@example.com', realname='Kyle Broflovski', roles='User') def tearDown(self): self.db.close() try: shutil.rmtree(self.dirname) except OSError as error: if error.errno not in (errno.ENOENT, errno.ESRCH): raise def testBadTimezones(self): self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.create, username='eric', timezone='24') userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='3000') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='24') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='-24') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='-3000') @skip_pytz def testBadTimezonesPyTZ(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(KeyError, self.db.user.set, userid, timezone='MiddleOf/Nowhere') def testGoodTimezones(self): self.db.user.create(username='test_user01', timezone='12') userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') # TODO: roundup should accept non-integer offsets since those are valid # this is the offset for Tehran, Iran #self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='3.5') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='-23') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='23') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='0') @skip_pytz def testGoodTimezonesPyTZ(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.db.user.create(username='test_user02', timezone='MST') self.db.user.set(userid, timezone='US/Eastern') def testBadEmailAddresses(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='kyle @ example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='one@example.com,two@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='weird@@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, address='embedded\nnewline@example.com') # verify that we check alternates as well self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, alternate_addresses='kyle @ example.com') # make sure we accept local style addresses self.db.user.set(userid, address='kyle') # verify we are case insensitive self.db.user.set(userid, address='kyle@EXAMPLE.COM') def testUniqueEmailAddresses(self): self.db.user.create(username='kenny', address='kenny@example.com', alternate_addresses='sp_ken@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.create, username='test_user01', address='kenny@example.com') uid = self.db.user.create(username='eric', address='eric@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='kenny@example.com') # make sure we check alternates self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='kenny@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, address='sp_ken@example.com') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, uid, alternate_addresses='kenny@example.com') def testBadRoles(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, roles='BadRole') self.assertRaises(ValueError, self.db.user.set, userid, roles='User,BadRole') def testGoodRoles(self): userid = self.db.user.lookup('kyle') # make sure we handle commas in weird places self.db.user.set(userid, roles='User,') self.db.user.set(userid, roles=',User') # make sure we strip whitespace self.db.user.set(userid, roles=' User ') # check for all-whitespace (treat as no role) self.db.user.set(userid, roles=' ') def testBadUsernames(self): ''' ky,le raises: ValueError: Username/Login Name must consist only of the letters a-z (any case), digits 0-9 and the symbols: @._-!+% ''' for name in [ "ky'le", "ky<br>le", "ky,le" ]: with self.assertRaises(ValueError) as ctx: self.db.user.create(username=name, address='kyle@example.com', realname='Kyle Broflovski', roles='User') self.assertEqual(str(ctx.exception), "Username/Login Name must " "consist only of the letters a-z (any case), " "digits 0-9 and the symbols: @._-!+%") self.db.user.create(username='rouilj-1+mya_ddr@users.example.com', address='kyle1@example.com', realname='Kyle Broflovski', roles='User') # vim: filetype=python sts=4 sw=4 et si
