Mercurial > p > roundup > code
view roundup/anypy/strings.py @ 7399:deb8e7e6d66d
Skip redis tests if unable to communicate with the server.
If the redis module is in the test environment, the redis tests will
not be skipped. If connecting to redis during testing fails with a
ConnectionError because there is no redis server at localhost, or if
it fails with an AuthenticationError, you would fail a slew of tests.
This causes the tests to report as skipped if either of the two errors
occurs. It is very inefficient as it fails in setup() for the tests,
but at least it does report skipping the tests.
Also documented how to pass the redis password to the tests in the
test part of the install docs. Future note: running tests needs proper
docs in development.txt (including database setup) and a link left to
that doc in installation.txt.
| author | John Rouillard <rouilj@ieee.org> |
|---|---|
| date | Wed, 24 May 2023 12:52:53 -0400 |
| parents | 8e118eb20d86 |
| children | 417c8ddc98ac |
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# Roundup represents text internally using the native Python str type. # In Python 3, these are Unicode strings. In Python 2, these are # encoded using UTF-8, and the Python 2 unicode type is only used in a # few places, generally for interacting with external modules # requiring that type to be used. import sys import io _py3 = sys.version_info[0] > 2 if _py3: StringIO = io.StringIO else: StringIO = io.BytesIO def b2s(b): """Convert a UTF-8 encoded bytes object to the internal string format.""" if _py3: return b.decode('utf-8') else: return b def s2b(s): """Convert a string object to UTF-8 encoded bytes.""" if _py3: return s.encode('utf-8') else: return s def bs2b(s): """Convert a string object or UTF-8 encoded bytes to UTF-8 encoded bytes. """ if _py3: if isinstance(s, bytes): return s else: return s.encode('utf-8') else: return s def s2u(s, errors='strict'): """Convert a string object to a Unicode string.""" if _py3: return s else: return unicode(s, 'utf-8', errors) # noqa: 821 def u2s(u): """Convert a Unicode string to the internal string format.""" if _py3: return u else: return u.encode('utf-8') def us2u(s, errors='strict'): """Convert a string or Unicode string to a Unicode string.""" if _py3: return s else: if isinstance(s, unicode): # noqa: 821 return s else: return unicode(s, 'utf-8', errors) # noqa: 821 def us2s(u): """Convert a string or Unicode string to the internal string format.""" if _py3: return u else: if isinstance(u, unicode): # noqa: 821 return u.encode('utf-8') else: return u def uany2s(u): """Convert a Unicode string or other object to the internal string format. Objects that are not Unicode strings are passed to str().""" if _py3: return str(u) else: if isinstance(u, unicode): # noqa: 821 return u.encode('utf-8') else: return str(u) def is_us(s): """Return whether an object is a string or Unicode string.""" if _py3: return isinstance(s, str) else: return isinstance(s, str) or isinstance(s, unicode) # noqa: 821 def uchr(c): """Return the Unicode string containing the given character.""" if _py3: return chr(c) else: return unichr(c) # noqa: 821 # CSV files used for export and import represent strings in the style # used by repr in Python 2; this means that each byte of the UTF-8 # representation is represented by a \x escape if not a printable # ASCII character. When such a representation is interpreted by eval # in Python 3, the effect is that the Unicode characters in the # resulting string correspond to UTF-8 bytes, so encoding the string # as ISO-8859-1 produces the correct byte-string which must then be # decoded as UTF-8 to produce the correct Unicode string. The same # representations are also used for journal storage in RDBMS # databases, so that the database can be compatible between Python 2 # and Python 3. def repr_export(v): """Return a Python-2-style representation of a value for export to CSV.""" if _py3: if isinstance(v, str): return repr(s2b(v))[1:] elif isinstance(v, dict): repr_vals = [] for key, value in sorted(v.items()): repr_vals.append('%s: %s' % (repr_export(key), repr_export(value))) return '{%s}' % ', '.join(repr_vals) else: return repr(v) else: return repr(v) def eval_import(s): """Evaluate a Python-2-style value imported from a CSV file.""" if _py3: try: v = eval(s) except SyntaxError: # handle case where link operation reports id a long int # ('issue', 5002L, "status") rather than as a string. # This was a bug that existed and was fixed before or with v1.2.0 import re v = eval(re.sub(r', ([0-9]+)L,', r', \1,', s)) if isinstance(v, str): return v.encode('iso-8859-1').decode('utf-8') elif isinstance(v, dict): v_mod = {} for key, value in v.items(): if isinstance(key, str): key = key.encode('iso-8859-1').decode('utf-8') if isinstance(value, str): value = value.encode('iso-8859-1').decode('utf-8') v_mod[key] = value return v_mod else: return v else: return eval(s)
