cpython/Lib/test/test_urllibnet.py
Victor Stinner 0855b2c8b6
[3.12] gh-108834: Sync libregrtest with the main branch (#108966)
* gh-108834: regrtest reruns failed tests in subprocesses (#108839)

When using --rerun option, regrtest now re-runs failed tests
in verbose mode in fresh worker processes to have more
deterministic behavior. So it can write its final report even
if a test killed a worker progress.

Add --fail-rerun option to regrtest: exit with non-zero exit code
if a test failed pass passed when re-run in verbose mode (in a
fresh process). That's now more useful since tests can pass
when re-run in a fresh worker progress, whereas they failed
when run after other tests when tests are run sequentially.

Rename --verbose2 option (-w) to --rerun. Keep --verbose2 as a
deprecated alias.

Changes:

* Fix and enhance statistics in regrtest summary. Add "(filtered)"
  when --match and/or --ignore options are used.
* Add RunTests class.
* Add TestResult.get_rerun_match_tests() method
* Rewrite code to serialize/deserialize worker arguments as JSON
  using a new WorkerJob class.
* Fix stats when a test is run with --forever --rerun.
* If failed test names cannot be parsed, log a warning and don't
  filter tests.
* test_regrtest.test_rerun_success() now uses a marker file, since
  the test is re-run in a separated process.
* Add tests on normalize_test_name() function.
* Add test_success() and test_skip() tests to test_regrtest.

(cherry picked from commit 31c2945f14)

* gh-108834: regrtest --fail-rerun exits with code 5 (#108896)

When the --fail-rerun option is used and a test fails and then pass,
regrtest now uses exit code 5 ("rerun) instead of 2 ("bad test").

(cherry picked from commit 1170d5a292)

* gh-108416: Mark slow but not CPU bound test methods with requires_resource('walltime') (GH-108480)

(cherry picked from commit 1e0d62793a)

* Manually sync Lib/test/libregrtest/ from main

---------

Co-authored-by: Serhiy Storchaka <storchaka@gmail.com>
2023-09-08 15:14:17 +02:00

233 lines
9.4 KiB
Python

import unittest
from test import support
from test.support import os_helper
from test.support import socket_helper
import contextlib
import socket
import urllib.parse
import urllib.request
import os
import email.message
import time
support.requires('network')
class URLTimeoutTest(unittest.TestCase):
# XXX this test doesn't seem to test anything useful.
def setUp(self):
socket.setdefaulttimeout(support.INTERNET_TIMEOUT)
def tearDown(self):
socket.setdefaulttimeout(None)
def testURLread(self):
# clear _opener global variable
self.addCleanup(urllib.request.urlcleanup)
domain = urllib.parse.urlparse(support.TEST_HTTP_URL).netloc
with socket_helper.transient_internet(domain):
f = urllib.request.urlopen(support.TEST_HTTP_URL)
f.read()
class urlopenNetworkTests(unittest.TestCase):
"""Tests urllib.request.urlopen using the network.
These tests are not exhaustive. Assuming that testing using files does a
good job overall of some of the basic interface features. There are no
tests exercising the optional 'data' and 'proxies' arguments. No tests
for transparent redirection have been written.
setUp is not used for always constructing a connection to
http://www.pythontest.net/ since there a few tests that don't use that address
and making a connection is expensive enough to warrant minimizing unneeded
connections.
"""
url = 'http://www.pythontest.net/'
def setUp(self):
# clear _opener global variable
self.addCleanup(urllib.request.urlcleanup)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def urlopen(self, *args, **kwargs):
resource = args[0]
with socket_helper.transient_internet(resource):
r = urllib.request.urlopen(*args, **kwargs)
try:
yield r
finally:
r.close()
def test_basic(self):
# Simple test expected to pass.
with self.urlopen(self.url) as open_url:
for attr in ("read", "readline", "readlines", "fileno", "close",
"info", "geturl"):
self.assertTrue(hasattr(open_url, attr), "object returned from "
"urlopen lacks the %s attribute" % attr)
self.assertTrue(open_url.read(), "calling 'read' failed")
def test_readlines(self):
# Test both readline and readlines.
with self.urlopen(self.url) as open_url:
self.assertIsInstance(open_url.readline(), bytes,
"readline did not return a string")
self.assertIsInstance(open_url.readlines(), list,
"readlines did not return a list")
def test_info(self):
# Test 'info'.
with self.urlopen(self.url) as open_url:
info_obj = open_url.info()
self.assertIsInstance(info_obj, email.message.Message,
"object returned by 'info' is not an "
"instance of email.message.Message")
self.assertEqual(info_obj.get_content_subtype(), "html")
def test_geturl(self):
# Make sure same URL as opened is returned by geturl.
with self.urlopen(self.url) as open_url:
gotten_url = open_url.geturl()
self.assertEqual(gotten_url, self.url)
def test_getcode(self):
# test getcode() with the fancy opener to get 404 error codes
URL = self.url + "XXXinvalidXXX"
with socket_helper.transient_internet(URL):
with self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning):
open_url = urllib.request.FancyURLopener().open(URL)
try:
code = open_url.getcode()
finally:
open_url.close()
self.assertEqual(code, 404)
@support.requires_resource('walltime')
def test_bad_address(self):
# Make sure proper exception is raised when connecting to a bogus
# address.
# Given that both VeriSign and various ISPs have in
# the past or are presently hijacking various invalid
# domain name requests in an attempt to boost traffic
# to their own sites, finding a domain name to use
# for this test is difficult. RFC2606 leads one to
# believe that '.invalid' should work, but experience
# seemed to indicate otherwise. Single character
# TLDs are likely to remain invalid, so this seems to
# be the best choice. The trailing '.' prevents a
# related problem: The normal DNS resolver appends
# the domain names from the search path if there is
# no '.' the end and, and if one of those domains
# implements a '*' rule a result is returned.
# However, none of this will prevent the test from
# failing if the ISP hijacks all invalid domain
# requests. The real solution would be to be able to
# parameterize the framework with a mock resolver.
bogus_domain = "sadflkjsasf.i.nvali.d."
try:
socket.gethostbyname(bogus_domain)
except OSError:
# socket.gaierror is too narrow, since getaddrinfo() may also
# fail with EAI_SYSTEM and ETIMEDOUT (seen on Ubuntu 13.04),
# i.e. Python's TimeoutError.
pass
else:
# This happens with some overzealous DNS providers such as OpenDNS
self.skipTest("%r should not resolve for test to work" % bogus_domain)
failure_explanation = ('opening an invalid URL did not raise OSError; '
'can be caused by a broken DNS server '
'(e.g. returns 404 or hijacks page)')
with self.assertRaises(OSError, msg=failure_explanation):
urllib.request.urlopen("http://{}/".format(bogus_domain))
class urlretrieveNetworkTests(unittest.TestCase):
"""Tests urllib.request.urlretrieve using the network."""
def setUp(self):
# remove temporary files created by urlretrieve()
self.addCleanup(urllib.request.urlcleanup)
@contextlib.contextmanager
def urlretrieve(self, *args, **kwargs):
resource = args[0]
with socket_helper.transient_internet(resource):
file_location, info = urllib.request.urlretrieve(*args, **kwargs)
try:
yield file_location, info
finally:
os_helper.unlink(file_location)
def test_basic(self):
# Test basic functionality.
with self.urlretrieve(self.logo) as (file_location, info):
self.assertTrue(os.path.exists(file_location), "file location returned by"
" urlretrieve is not a valid path")
with open(file_location, 'rb') as f:
self.assertTrue(f.read(), "reading from the file location returned"
" by urlretrieve failed")
def test_specified_path(self):
# Make sure that specifying the location of the file to write to works.
with self.urlretrieve(self.logo,
os_helper.TESTFN) as (file_location, info):
self.assertEqual(file_location, os_helper.TESTFN)
self.assertTrue(os.path.exists(file_location))
with open(file_location, 'rb') as f:
self.assertTrue(f.read(), "reading from temporary file failed")
def test_header(self):
# Make sure header returned as 2nd value from urlretrieve is good.
with self.urlretrieve(self.logo) as (file_location, info):
self.assertIsInstance(info, email.message.Message,
"info is not an instance of email.message.Message")
logo = "http://www.pythontest.net/"
@support.requires_resource('walltime')
def test_data_header(self):
with self.urlretrieve(self.logo) as (file_location, fileheaders):
datevalue = fileheaders.get('Date')
dateformat = '%a, %d %b %Y %H:%M:%S GMT'
try:
time.strptime(datevalue, dateformat)
except ValueError:
self.fail('Date value not in %r format' % dateformat)
def test_reporthook(self):
records = []
def recording_reporthook(blocks, block_size, total_size):
records.append((blocks, block_size, total_size))
with self.urlretrieve(self.logo, reporthook=recording_reporthook) as (
file_location, fileheaders):
expected_size = int(fileheaders['Content-Length'])
records_repr = repr(records) # For use in error messages.
self.assertGreater(len(records), 1, msg="There should always be two "
"calls; the first one before the transfer starts.")
self.assertEqual(records[0][0], 0)
self.assertGreater(records[0][1], 0,
msg="block size can't be 0 in %s" % records_repr)
self.assertEqual(records[0][2], expected_size)
self.assertEqual(records[-1][2], expected_size)
block_sizes = {block_size for _, block_size, _ in records}
self.assertEqual({records[0][1]}, block_sizes,
msg="block sizes in %s must be equal" % records_repr)
self.assertGreaterEqual(records[-1][0]*records[0][1], expected_size,
msg="number of blocks * block size must be"
" >= total size in %s" % records_repr)
if __name__ == "__main__":
unittest.main()