# coding: utf-8 # Licensed under the Apache License: http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # For details: https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/blob/master/NOTICE.txt """Tests for process behavior of coverage.py.""" import distutils.sysconfig import glob import os import os.path import re import stat import sys import textwrap import time from xml.etree import ElementTree import pytest import coverage from coverage import env from coverage.data import line_counts from coverage.files import python_reported_file from coverage.misc import output_encoding from tests.coveragetest import CoverageTest, TESTS_DIR from tests.helpers import re_lines class ProcessTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of the per-process behavior of coverage.py.""" def test_save_on_exit(self): self.make_file("mycode.py", """\ h = "Hello" w = "world" """) self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.run_command("coverage run mycode.py") self.assert_exists(".coverage") def test_environment(self): # Checks that we can import modules from the tests directory at all! self.make_file("mycode.py", """\ import covmod1 import covmodzip1 a = 1 print('done') """) self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") out = self.run_command("coverage run mycode.py") self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') def make_b_or_c_py(self): """Create b_or_c.py, used in a few of these tests.""" # "b_or_c.py b" will run 6 lines. # "b_or_c.py c" will run 7 lines. # Together, they run 8 lines. self.make_file("b_or_c.py", """\ import sys a = 1 if sys.argv[1] == 'b': b = 1 else: c = 1 c2 = 2 d = 1 print('done') """) def test_combine_parallel_data(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") # After two -p runs, there should be two .coverage.machine.123 files. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) # Running combine again should fail, because there are no parallel data # files to combine. status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage combine") self.assertEqual(status, 1) self.assertEqual(out, "No data to combine\n") # And the originally combined data is still there. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) def test_combine_parallel_data_with_a_corrupt_file(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") # After two -p runs, there should be two .coverage.machine.123 files. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) # Make a bogus data file. self.make_file(".coverage.bad", "This isn't a coverage data file.") # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage . out = self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_exists(".coverage.bad") warning_regex = ( r"Coverage.py warning: Couldn't use data file '.*\.coverage\.bad': " r"file (is encrypted or )?is not a database" ) self.assertRegex(out, warning_regex) # After combining, those two should be the only data files. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) def test_combine_no_usable_files(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issues/629/multiple-use-of-combine-leads-to-empty self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Make bogus data files. self.make_file(".coverage.bad1", "This isn't a coverage data file.") self.make_file(".coverage.bad2", "This isn't a coverage data file.") # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage, but nothing is readable. status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage combine") self.assertEqual(status, 1) for n in "12": self.assert_exists(".coverage.bad{}".format(n)) warning_regex = ( r"Coverage.py warning: Couldn't use data file '.*\.coverage.bad{0}': " r"file (is encrypted or )?is not a database" .format(n) ) self.assertRegex(out, warning_regex) self.assertRegex(out, r"No usable data files") # After combining, we should have a main file and two parallel files. self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has 6 lines # executed (we only did b, not c). data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 6) def test_combine_parallel_data_in_two_steps(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) # Combine the (one) parallel coverage data file into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine --append") self.assert_exists(".coverage") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) def test_combine_parallel_data_no_append(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) # Combine the (one) parallel coverage data file into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) out = self.run_command("coverage run -p b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 1) # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage, but don't # use the data in .coverage already. self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has only 7 lines # because we didn't keep the data from running b. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 7) def test_append_data(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) out = self.run_command("coverage run --append b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) def test_append_data_with_different_file(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] data_file = .mycovdata """) out = self.run_command("coverage run b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_exists(".mycovdata") out = self.run_command("coverage run --append b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") self.assert_exists(".mycovdata") # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData(".mycovdata") data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) def test_append_can_create_a_data_file(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() out = self.run_command("coverage run --append b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has only 6 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 6) def test_combine_with_rc(self): self.make_b_or_c_py() self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] source = . parallel = true """) out = self.run_command("coverage run b_or_c.py b") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") out = self.run_command("coverage run b_or_c.py c") self.assertEqual(out, 'done\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") # After two runs, there should be two .coverage.machine.123 files. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") self.assert_exists(".coveragerc") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage file and see that b_or_c.py has all 8 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['b_or_c.py'], 8) # Reporting should still work even with the .rc file out = self.run_command("coverage report") self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, textwrap.dedent("""\ Name Stmts Miss Cover ------------------------------- b_or_c.py 8 0 100% """)) def test_combine_with_aliases(self): self.make_file("d1/x.py", """\ a = 1 b = 2 print("%s %s" % (a, b)) """) self.make_file("d2/x.py", """\ # 1 # 2 # 3 c = 4 d = 5 print("%s %s" % (c, d)) """) self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] source = . parallel = True [paths] source = src */d1 */d2 """) out = self.run_command("coverage run " + os.path.normpath("d1/x.py")) self.assertEqual(out, '1 2\n') out = self.run_command("coverage run " + os.path.normpath("d2/x.py")) self.assertEqual(out, '4 5\n') self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) # Read the coverage data file and see that the two different x.py # files have been combined together. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() summary = line_counts(data, fullpath=True) self.assertEqual(len(summary), 1) actual = os.path.normcase(os.path.abspath(list(summary.keys())[0])) expected = os.path.normcase(os.path.abspath('src/x.py')) self.assertEqual(expected, actual) self.assertEqual(list(summary.values())[0], 6) def test_erase_parallel(self): self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] data_file = data.dat parallel = True """) self.make_file("data.dat") self.make_file("data.dat.fooey") self.make_file("data.dat.gooey") self.make_file(".coverage") self.run_command("coverage erase") self.assert_doesnt_exist("data.dat") self.assert_doesnt_exist("data.dat.fooey") self.assert_doesnt_exist("data.dat.gooey") self.assert_exists(".coverage") def test_missing_source_file(self): # Check what happens if the source is missing when reporting happens. self.make_file("fleeting.py", """\ s = 'goodbye, cruel world!' """) self.run_command("coverage run fleeting.py") os.remove("fleeting.py") out = self.run_command("coverage html -d htmlcov") self.assertRegex(out, "No source for code: '.*fleeting.py'") self.assertNotIn("Traceback", out) # It happens that the code paths are different for *.py and other # files, so try again with no extension. self.make_file("fleeting", """\ s = 'goodbye, cruel world!' """) self.run_command("coverage run fleeting") os.remove("fleeting") status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage html -d htmlcov") self.assertRegex(out, "No source for code: '.*fleeting'") self.assertNotIn("Traceback", out) self.assertEqual(status, 1) def test_running_missing_file(self): status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage run xyzzy.py") self.assertRegex(out, "No file to run: .*xyzzy.py") self.assertNotIn("raceback", out) self.assertNotIn("rror", out) self.assertEqual(status, 1) def test_code_throws(self): self.make_file("throw.py", """\ def f1(): raise Exception("hey!") def f2(): f1() f2() """) # The important thing is for "coverage run" and "python" to report the # same traceback. status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage run throw.py") out2 = self.run_command("python throw.py") if env.PYPY: # Pypy has an extra frame in the traceback for some reason out2 = re_lines(out2, "toplevel", match=False) self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, out2) # But also make sure that the output is what we expect. path = python_reported_file('throw.py') msg = 'File "{}", line 5,? in f2'.format(re.escape(path)) self.assertRegex(out, msg) self.assertIn('raise Exception("hey!")', out) self.assertEqual(status, 1) def test_code_exits(self): self.make_file("exit.py", """\ import sys def f1(): print("about to exit..") sys.exit(17) def f2(): f1() f2() """) # The important thing is for "coverage run" and "python" to have the # same output. No traceback. status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage run exit.py") status2, out2 = self.run_command_status("python exit.py") self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, out2) self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, "about to exit..\n") self.assertEqual(status, status2) self.assertEqual(status, 17) def test_code_exits_no_arg(self): self.make_file("exit_none.py", """\ import sys def f1(): print("about to exit quietly..") sys.exit() f1() """) status, out = self.run_command_status("coverage run exit_none.py") status2, out2 = self.run_command_status("python exit_none.py") self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, out2) self.assertMultiLineEqual(out, "about to exit quietly..\n") self.assertEqual(status, status2) self.assertEqual(status, 0) def test_fork(self): if not hasattr(os, 'fork'): self.skipTest("Can't test os.fork since it doesn't exist.") self.make_file("fork.py", """\ import os def child(): print('Child!') def main(): ret = os.fork() if ret == 0: child() else: os.waitpid(ret, 0) main() """) out = self.run_command("coverage run -p fork.py") self.assertEqual(out, 'Child!\n') self.assert_doesnt_exist(".coverage") # After running the forking program, there should be two # .coverage.machine.123 files. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 2) # The two data files should have different random numbers at the end of # the file name. data_files = glob.glob(".coverage.*") nums = set(name.rpartition(".")[-1] for name in data_files) self.assertEqual(len(nums), 2, "Same random: %s" % (data_files,)) # Combine the parallel coverage data files into .coverage . self.run_command("coverage combine") self.assert_exists(".coverage") # After combining, there should be only the .coverage file. self.assert_file_count(".coverage.*", 0) data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['fork.py'], 9) def test_warnings_during_reporting(self): # While fixing issue #224, the warnings were being printed far too # often. Make sure they're not any more. self.make_file("hello.py", """\ import sys, os, the_other print("Hello") """) self.make_file("the_other.py", """\ print("What?") """) self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] source = . xyzzy """) self.run_command("coverage run hello.py") out = self.run_command("coverage html") self.assertEqual(out.count("Module xyzzy was never imported."), 0) def test_warns_if_never_run(self): # Note: the name of the function can't have "warning" in it, or the # absolute path of the file will have "warning" in it, and an assertion # will fail. out = self.run_command("coverage run i_dont_exist.py") path = python_reported_file('i_dont_exist.py') self.assertIn("No file to run: '{}'".format(path), out) self.assertNotIn("warning", out) self.assertNotIn("Exception", out) out = self.run_command("coverage run -m no_such_module") self.assertTrue( ("No module named no_such_module" in out) or ("No module named 'no_such_module'" in out) ) self.assertNotIn("warning", out) self.assertNotIn("Exception", out) def test_warnings_trace_function_changed_with_threads(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/164 if env.METACOV: self.skipTest("Can't test tracers changing during metacoverage") self.make_file("bug164.py", """\ import threading import time class MyThread (threading.Thread): def run(self): print("Hello") thr = MyThread() thr.start() thr.join() """) out = self.run_command("coverage run --timid bug164.py") self.assertIn("Hello\n", out) self.assertNotIn("warning", out) def test_warning_trace_function_changed(self): self.make_file("settrace.py", """\ import sys print("Hello") sys.settrace(None) print("Goodbye") """) out = self.run_command("coverage run --timid settrace.py") self.assertIn("Hello\n", out) self.assertIn("Goodbye\n", out) self.assertIn("Trace function changed", out) def test_timid(self): # Test that the --timid command line argument properly swaps the tracer # function for a simpler one. # # This is complicated by the fact that the tests are run twice for each # version: once with a compiled C-based trace function, and once without # it, to also test the Python trace function. So this test has to examine # an environment variable set in igor.py to know whether to expect to see # the C trace function or not. # When meta-coverage testing, this test doesn't work, because it finds # coverage.py's own trace function. if os.environ.get('COVERAGE_COVERAGE', ''): self.skipTest("Can't test timid during coverage measurement.") self.make_file("showtrace.py", """\ # Show the current frame's trace function, so that we can test what the # command-line options do to the trace function used. import sys # Show what the trace function is. If a C-based function is used, then f_trace # may be None. trace_fn = sys._getframe(0).f_trace if trace_fn is None: trace_name = "None" else: # Get the name of the tracer class. Py3k has a different way to get it. try: trace_name = trace_fn.im_class.__name__ except AttributeError: try: trace_name = trace_fn.__self__.__class__.__name__ except AttributeError: # A C-based function could also manifest as an f_trace value # which doesn't have im_class or __self__. trace_name = trace_fn.__class__.__name__ print(trace_name) """) # When running without coverage, no trace function py_out = self.run_command("python showtrace.py") self.assertEqual(py_out, "None\n") cov_out = self.run_command("coverage run showtrace.py") if os.environ.get('COVERAGE_TEST_TRACER', 'c') == 'c': # If the C trace function is being tested, then regular running should have # the C function, which registers itself as f_trace. self.assertEqual(cov_out, "CTracer\n") else: # If the Python trace function is being tested, then regular running will # also show the Python function. self.assertEqual(cov_out, "PyTracer\n") # When running timidly, the trace function is always Python. timid_out = self.run_command("coverage run --timid showtrace.py") self.assertEqual(timid_out, "PyTracer\n") def test_warn_preimported(self): self.make_file("hello.py", """\ import goodbye import coverage cov = coverage.Coverage(include=["good*"], check_preimported=True) cov.start() print(goodbye.f()) cov.stop() """) self.make_file("goodbye.py", """\ def f(): return "Goodbye!" """) goodbye_path = os.path.abspath("goodbye.py") out = self.run_command("python hello.py") self.assertIn("Goodbye!", out) msg = ( "Coverage.py warning: " "Already imported a file that will be measured: {0} " "(already-imported)").format(goodbye_path) self.assertIn(msg, out) @pytest.mark.expensive def test_fullcoverage(self): # pragma: no metacov if env.PY2: # This doesn't work on Python 2. self.skipTest("fullcoverage doesn't work on Python 2.") # It only works with the C tracer, and if we aren't measuring ourselves. if not env.C_TRACER or env.METACOV: self.skipTest("fullcoverage only works with the C tracer.") # fullcoverage is a trick to get stdlib modules measured from # the very beginning of the process. Here we import os and # then check how many lines are measured. self.make_file("getenv.py", """\ import os print("FOOEY == %s" % os.getenv("FOOEY")) """) fullcov = os.path.join( os.path.dirname(coverage.__file__), "fullcoverage" ) self.set_environ("FOOEY", "BOO") self.set_environ("PYTHONPATH", fullcov) out = self.run_command("python -m coverage run -L getenv.py") self.assertEqual(out, "FOOEY == BOO\n") data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() # The actual number of executed lines in os.py when it's # imported is 120 or so. Just running os.getenv executes # about 5. self.assertGreater(line_counts(data)['os.py'], 50) def test_lang_c(self): if env.JYTHON: # Jython as of 2.7.1rc3 won't compile a filename that isn't utf8. self.skipTest("Jython can't handle this test") if env.PYPY3 and env.PYPYVERSION >= (7, 1, 1): # pragma: obscure self.xfail("https://bitbucket.org/pypy/pypy/issues/3074") # LANG=C forces getfilesystemencoding on Linux to 'ascii', which causes # failures with non-ascii file names. We don't want to make a real file # with strange characters, though, because that gets the test runners # tangled up. This will isolate the concerns to the coverage.py code. # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issues/533/exception-on-unencodable-file-name self.make_file("weird_file.py", r""" globs = {} code = "a = 1\nb = 2\n" exec(compile(code, "wut\xe9\xea\xeb\xec\x01\x02.py", 'exec'), globs) print(globs['a']) print(globs['b']) """) self.set_environ("LANG", "C") out = self.run_command("coverage run weird_file.py") self.assertEqual(out, "1\n2\n") def test_deprecation_warnings(self): # Test that coverage doesn't trigger deprecation warnings. # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/305/pendingdeprecationwarning-the-imp-module self.make_file("allok.py", """\ import warnings warnings.simplefilter('default') import coverage print("No warnings!") """) # Some of our testing infrastructure can issue warnings. # Turn it all off for the sub-process. self.del_environ("COVERAGE_TESTING") out = self.run_command("python allok.py") self.assertEqual(out, "No warnings!\n") def test_run_twice(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/353/40a3-introduces-an-unexpected-third-case self.make_file("foo.py", """\ def foo(): pass """) self.make_file("run_twice.py", """\ import sys import coverage for i in [1, 2]: sys.stderr.write("Run %s\\n" % i) inst = coverage.Coverage(source=['foo']) inst.load() inst.start() import foo inst.stop() inst.save() """) out = self.run_command("python run_twice.py") self.assertEqual( out, "Run 1\n" "Run 2\n" "Coverage.py warning: Module foo was previously imported, but not measured " "(module-not-measured)\n" ) def test_module_name(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issues/478/help-shows-silly-program-name-when-running out = self.run_command("python -m coverage") self.assertIn("Use 'coverage help' for help", out) TRY_EXECFILE = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "modules/process_test/try_execfile.py") class EnvironmentTest(CoverageTest): """Tests using try_execfile.py to test the execution environment.""" def assert_tryexecfile_output(self, expected, actual): """Assert that the output we got is a successful run of try_execfile.py. `expected` and `actual` must be the same, modulo a few slight known platform differences. """ # First, is this even credible try_execfile.py output? self.assertIn('"DATA": "xyzzy"', actual) if env.JYTHON: # pragma: only jython # Argv0 is different for Jython, remove that from the comparison. expected = re_lines(expected, r'\s+"argv0":', match=False) actual = re_lines(actual, r'\s+"argv0":', match=False) self.assertMultiLineEqual(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_is_like_python(self): with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("run_me.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python run_me.py") actual = self.run_command("coverage run run_me.py") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_far_away_is_like_python(self): with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("sub/overthere/prog.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python sub/overthere/prog.py") actual = self.run_command("coverage run sub/overthere/prog.py") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_is_like_python_dashm(self): # These -m commands assume the coverage tree is on the path. expected = self.run_command("python -m process_test.try_execfile") actual = self.run_command("coverage run -m process_test.try_execfile") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dir_is_like_python_dir(self): if env.PYVERSION == (3, 5, 4, 'final', 0, 0): # pragma: obscure self.skipTest("3.5.4 broke this: https://bugs.python.org/issue32551") with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("with_main/__main__.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python with_main") actual = self.run_command("coverage run with_main") # PyPy includes the current directory in the path when running a # directory, while CPython and coverage.py do not. Exclude that from # the comparison also... if env.PYPY: ignored = re.escape(os.getcwd()) expected = re_lines(expected, ignored, match=False) actual = re_lines(actual, ignored, match=False) self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_dir_no_init_is_like_python(self): with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("with_main/__main__.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python -m with_main") actual = self.run_command("coverage run -m with_main") if env.PY2: assert expected.endswith("No module named with_main\n") assert actual.endswith("No module named with_main\n") else: self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_dir_with_init_is_like_python(self): if env.PY2: self.skipTest("Python 2 runs __main__ twice, I can't be bothered to make it work.") with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("with_main/__main__.py", f.read()) self.make_file("with_main/__init__.py", "") expected = self.run_command("python -m with_main") actual = self.run_command("coverage run -m with_main") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_equal_to_doubledashsource(self): """regression test for #328 When imported by -m, a module's __name__ is __main__, but we need the --source machinery to know and respect the original name. """ # These -m commands assume the coverage tree is on the path. expected = self.run_command("python -m process_test.try_execfile") actual = self.run_command( "coverage run --source process_test.try_execfile -m process_test.try_execfile" ) self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_superset_of_doubledashsource(self): """Edge case: --source foo -m foo.bar""" # Ugh: without this config file, we'll get a warning about # Coverage.py warning: Module process_test was previously imported, # but not measured (module-not-measured) # # This is because process_test/__init__.py is imported while looking # for process_test.try_execfile. That import happens while setting # sys.path before start() is called. self.make_file(".coveragerc", """\ [run] disable_warnings = module-not-measured """) # These -m commands assume the coverage tree is on the path. expected = self.run_command("python -m process_test.try_execfile") actual = self.run_command( "coverage run --source process_test -m process_test.try_execfile" ) self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report") self.assertEqual(st, 0) self.assertEqual(self.line_count(out), 6, out) def test_coverage_run_script_imports_doubledashsource(self): # This file imports try_execfile, which compiles it to .pyc, so the # first run will have __file__ == "try_execfile.py" and the second will # have __file__ == "try_execfile.pyc", which throws off the comparison. # Setting dont_write_bytecode True stops the compilation to .pyc and # keeps the test working. self.make_file("myscript", """\ import sys; sys.dont_write_bytecode = True import process_test.try_execfile """) expected = self.run_command("python myscript") actual = self.run_command("coverage run --source process_test myscript") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report") self.assertEqual(st, 0) self.assertEqual(self.line_count(out), 6, out) def test_coverage_run_dashm_is_like_python_dashm_off_path(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/242 self.make_file("sub/__init__.py", "") with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("sub/run_me.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python -m sub.run_me") actual = self.run_command("coverage run -m sub.run_me") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_run_dashm_is_like_python_dashm_with__main__207(self): # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/207 self.make_file("package/__init__.py", "print('init')") self.make_file("package/__main__.py", "print('main')") expected = self.run_command("python -m package") actual = self.run_command("coverage run -m package") self.assertMultiLineEqual(expected, actual) def test_coverage_zip_is_like_python(self): # Test running coverage from a zip file itself. Some environments # (windows?) zip up the coverage main to be used as the coverage # command. with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("run_me.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python run_me.py") cov_main = os.path.join(TESTS_DIR, "covmain.zip") actual = self.run_command("python {} run run_me.py".format(cov_main)) self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_dashm_coverage_is_like_python(self): # https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/issues/919 with open(TRY_EXECFILE) as f: self.make_file("else/where/run_me.py", f.read()) expected = self.run_command("python else/where/run_me.py") actual = self.run_command("python -m coverage run else/where/run_me.py") self.assert_tryexecfile_output(expected, actual) def test_coverage_custom_script(self): # https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/issues/678 # If sys.path[0] isn't the Python default, then coverage.py won't # fiddle with it. self.make_file("a/b/c/thing.py", """\ SOMETHING = "hello-xyzzy" """) abc = os.path.abspath("a/b/c") self.make_file("run_coverage.py", """\ import sys sys.path[0:0] = [ r'{abc}', '/Users/somebody/temp/something/eggs/something-4.5.1-py2.7-xxx-10.13-x86_64.egg', ] import coverage.cmdline if __name__ == '__main__': sys.exit(coverage.cmdline.main()) """.format(abc=abc)) self.make_file("how_is_it.py", """\ import pprint, sys pprint.pprint(sys.path) import thing print(thing.SOMETHING) """) # If this test fails, it will be with "can't import thing". out = self.run_command("python run_coverage.py run how_is_it.py") self.assertIn("hello-xyzzy", out) out = self.run_command("python -m run_coverage run how_is_it.py") self.assertIn("hello-xyzzy", out) def test_bug_862(self): if env.WINDOWS: self.skipTest("Windows can't make symlinks") # This simulates how pyenv and pyenv-virtualenv end up creating the # coverage executable. self.make_file("elsewhere/bin/fake-coverage", """\ #!{executable} import sys, pkg_resources sys.exit(pkg_resources.load_entry_point('coverage', 'console_scripts', 'coverage')()) """.format(executable=sys.executable)) os.chmod("elsewhere/bin/fake-coverage", stat.S_IREAD | stat.S_IEXEC) os.symlink("elsewhere", "somewhere") self.make_file("foo.py", "print('inside foo')") self.make_file("bar.py", "import foo") out = self.run_command("somewhere/bin/fake-coverage run bar.py") self.assertEqual("inside foo\n", out) def test_bug_909(self): # https://github.com/nedbat/coveragepy/issues/909 # The __init__ files were being imported before measurement started, # so the line in __init__.py was being marked as missed, and there were # warnings about measured files being imported before start. self.make_file("proj/__init__.py", "print('Init')") self.make_file("proj/thecode.py", "print('The code')") self.make_file("proj/tests/__init__.py", "") self.make_file("proj/tests/test_it.py", "import proj.thecode") expected = "Init\nThe code\n" actual = self.run_command("coverage run --source=proj -m proj.tests.test_it") assert expected == actual report = self.run_command("coverage report -m") # Name Stmts Miss Cover Missing # ------------------------------------------------------ # proj/__init__.py 1 0 100% # proj/tests/__init__.py 0 0 100% # proj/tests/test_it.py 1 0 100% # proj/thecode.py 1 0 100% # ------------------------------------------------------ # TOTAL 3 0 100% squeezed = self.squeezed_lines(report) assert squeezed[2].replace("\\", "/") == "proj/__init__.py 1 0 100%" class ExcepthookTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of sys.excepthook support.""" def test_excepthook(self): self.make_file("excepthook.py", """\ import sys def excepthook(*args): print('in excepthook') if maybe == 2: print('definitely') sys.excepthook = excepthook maybe = 1 raise RuntimeError('Error Outside') """) cov_st, cov_out = self.run_command_status("coverage run excepthook.py") py_st, py_out = self.run_command_status("python excepthook.py") if not env.JYTHON: self.assertEqual(cov_st, py_st) self.assertEqual(cov_st, 1) self.assertIn("in excepthook", py_out) self.assertEqual(cov_out, py_out) # Read the coverage file and see that excepthook.py has 7 lines # executed. data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['excepthook.py'], 7) def test_excepthook_exit(self): if env.PYPY or env.JYTHON: self.skipTest("non-CPython handles excepthook exits differently, punt for now.") self.make_file("excepthook_exit.py", """\ import sys def excepthook(*args): print('in excepthook') sys.exit(0) sys.excepthook = excepthook raise RuntimeError('Error Outside') """) cov_st, cov_out = self.run_command_status("coverage run excepthook_exit.py") py_st, py_out = self.run_command_status("python excepthook_exit.py") self.assertEqual(cov_st, py_st) self.assertEqual(cov_st, 0) self.assertIn("in excepthook", py_out) self.assertEqual(cov_out, py_out) def test_excepthook_throw(self): if env.PYPY: self.skipTest("PyPy handles excepthook throws differently, punt for now.") self.make_file("excepthook_throw.py", """\ import sys def excepthook(*args): # Write this message to stderr so that we don't have to deal # with interleaved stdout/stderr comparisons in the assertions # in the test. sys.stderr.write('in excepthook\\n') raise RuntimeError('Error Inside') sys.excepthook = excepthook raise RuntimeError('Error Outside') """) cov_st, cov_out = self.run_command_status("coverage run excepthook_throw.py") py_st, py_out = self.run_command_status("python excepthook_throw.py") if not env.JYTHON: self.assertEqual(cov_st, py_st) self.assertEqual(cov_st, 1) self.assertIn("in excepthook", py_out) self.assertEqual(cov_out, py_out) class AliasedCommandTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of the version-specific command aliases.""" run_in_temp_dir = False def setUp(self): if env.JYTHON: self.skipTest("Coverage command names don't work on Jython") super(AliasedCommandTest, self).setUp() def test_major_version_works(self): # "coverage2" works on py2 cmd = "coverage%d" % sys.version_info[0] out = self.run_command(cmd) self.assertIn("Code coverage for Python", out) def test_wrong_alias_doesnt_work(self): # "coverage3" doesn't work on py2 assert sys.version_info[0] in [2, 3] # Let us know when Python 4 is out... badcmd = "coverage%d" % (5 - sys.version_info[0]) out = self.run_command(badcmd) self.assertNotIn("Code coverage for Python", out) def test_specific_alias_works(self): # "coverage-2.7" works on py2.7 cmd = "coverage-%d.%d" % sys.version_info[:2] out = self.run_command(cmd) self.assertIn("Code coverage for Python", out) def test_aliases_used_in_messages(self): cmds = [ "coverage", "coverage%d" % sys.version_info[0], "coverage-%d.%d" % sys.version_info[:2], ] for cmd in cmds: out = self.run_command("%s foobar" % cmd) self.assertIn("Unknown command: 'foobar'", out) self.assertIn("Use '%s help' for help" % cmd, out) class PydocTest(CoverageTest): """Test that pydoc can get our information.""" run_in_temp_dir = False def assert_pydoc_ok(self, name, thing): """Check that pydoc of `name` finds the docstring from `thing`.""" # Run pydoc. out = self.run_command("python -m pydoc " + name) # It should say "Help on..", and not have a traceback self.assert_starts_with(out, "Help on ") self.assertNotIn("Traceback", out) # All of the lines in the docstring should be there somewhere. for line in thing.__doc__.splitlines(): self.assertIn(line.strip(), out) def test_pydoc_coverage(self): self.assert_pydoc_ok("coverage", coverage) def test_pydoc_coverage_coverage(self): self.assert_pydoc_ok("coverage.Coverage", coverage.Coverage) class FailUnderTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of the --fail-under switch.""" def setUp(self): super(FailUnderTest, self).setUp() self.make_file("forty_two_plus.py", """\ # I have 42.857% (3/7) coverage! a = 1 b = 2 if a > 3: b = 4 c = 5 d = 6 e = 7 """) st, _ = self.run_command_status("coverage run --source=. forty_two_plus.py") self.assertEqual(st, 0) def test_report_43_is_ok(self): st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report --fail-under=43") self.assertEqual(st, 0) self.assertEqual(self.last_line_squeezed(out), "forty_two_plus.py 7 4 43%") def test_report_43_is_not_ok(self): st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report --fail-under=44") self.assertEqual(st, 2) self.assertEqual(self.last_line_squeezed(out), "forty_two_plus.py 7 4 43%") def test_report_42p86_is_not_ok(self): self.make_file(".coveragerc", "[report]\nprecision = 2") st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report --fail-under=42.88") self.assertEqual(st, 2) self.assertEqual(self.last_line_squeezed(out), "forty_two_plus.py 7 4 42.86%") class FailUnderNoFilesTest(CoverageTest): """Test that nothing to report results in an error exit status.""" def test_report(self): self.make_file(".coveragerc", "[report]\nfail_under = 99\n") st, out = self.run_command_status("coverage report") self.assertIn('No data to report.', out) self.assertEqual(st, 1) class FailUnderEmptyFilesTest(CoverageTest): """Test that empty files produce the proper fail_under exit status.""" def test_report(self): self.make_file(".coveragerc", "[report]\nfail_under = 99\n") self.make_file("empty.py", "") st, _ = self.run_command_status("coverage run empty.py") self.assertEqual(st, 0) st, _ = self.run_command_status("coverage report") self.assertEqual(st, 2) class UnicodeFilePathsTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of using non-ascii characters in the names of files.""" def setUp(self): if env.JYTHON: self.skipTest("Jython doesn't like accented file names") super(UnicodeFilePathsTest, self).setUp() def test_accented_dot_py(self): # Make a file with a non-ascii character in the filename. self.make_file(u"h\xe2t.py", "print('accented')") out = self.run_command(u"coverage run --source=. h\xe2t.py") self.assertEqual(out, "accented\n") # The HTML report uses ascii-encoded HTML entities. out = self.run_command("coverage html") self.assertEqual(out, "") self.assert_exists(u"htmlcov/h\xe2t_py.html") with open("htmlcov/index.html") as indexf: index = indexf.read() self.assertIn('hât.py', index) # The XML report is always UTF8-encoded. out = self.run_command("coverage xml") self.assertEqual(out, "") with open("coverage.xml", "rb") as xmlf: xml = xmlf.read() self.assertIn(u' filename="h\xe2t.py"'.encode('utf8'), xml) self.assertIn(u' name="h\xe2t.py"'.encode('utf8'), xml) report_expected = ( u"Name Stmts Miss Cover\n" u"----------------------------\n" u"h\xe2t.py 1 0 100%\n" ) if env.PY2: report_expected = report_expected.encode(output_encoding()) out = self.run_command("coverage report") self.assertEqual(out, report_expected) def test_accented_directory(self): # Make a file with a non-ascii character in the directory name. self.make_file(u"\xe2/accented.py", "print('accented')") out = self.run_command(u"coverage run --source=. \xe2/accented.py") self.assertEqual(out, "accented\n") # The HTML report uses ascii-encoded HTML entities. out = self.run_command("coverage html") self.assertEqual(out, "") self.assert_exists(u"htmlcov/\xe2_accented_py.html") with open("htmlcov/index.html") as indexf: index = indexf.read() self.assertIn('â%saccented.py' % os.sep, index) # The XML report is always UTF8-encoded. out = self.run_command("coverage xml") self.assertEqual(out, "") with open("coverage.xml", "rb") as xmlf: xml = xmlf.read() self.assertIn(b' filename="\xc3\xa2/accented.py"', xml) self.assertIn(b' name="accented.py"', xml) dom = ElementTree.parse("coverage.xml") elts = dom.findall(u".//package[@name='â']") assert len(elts) == 1 assert elts[0].attrib == { "branch-rate": u"0", "complexity": u"0", "line-rate": u"1", "name": u"â", } report_expected = ( u"Name Stmts Miss Cover\n" u"-----------------------------------\n" u"\xe2%saccented.py 1 0 100%%\n" % os.sep ) if env.PY2: report_expected = report_expected.encode(output_encoding()) out = self.run_command("coverage report") self.assertEqual(out, report_expected) class YankedDirectoryTest(CoverageTest): """Tests of what happens when the current directory is deleted.""" def setUp(self): if env.WINDOWS: self.skipTest("Windows can't delete the directory in use.") super(YankedDirectoryTest, self).setUp() BUG_806 = """\ import os import sys import tempfile tmpdir = tempfile.mkdtemp() os.chdir(tmpdir) os.rmdir(tmpdir) print(sys.argv[1]) """ def test_removing_directory(self): self.make_file("bug806.py", self.BUG_806) out = self.run_command("coverage run bug806.py noerror") self.assertEqual(out, "noerror\n") def test_removing_directory_with_error(self): self.make_file("bug806.py", self.BUG_806) out = self.run_command("coverage run bug806.py") path = python_reported_file('bug806.py') self.assertEqual(out, textwrap.dedent("""\ Traceback (most recent call last): File "{}", line 8, in print(sys.argv[1]) IndexError: list index out of range """.format(path))) def possible_pth_dirs(): """Produce a sequence of directories for trying to write .pth files.""" # First look through sys.path, and if we find a .pth file, then it's a good # place to put ours. for pth_dir in sys.path: # pragma: part covered pth_files = glob.glob(os.path.join(pth_dir, "*.pth")) if pth_files: yield pth_dir # If we're still looking, then try the Python library directory. # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issue/339/pth-test-malfunctions yield distutils.sysconfig.get_python_lib() # pragma: cant happen def find_writable_pth_directory(): """Find a place to write a .pth file.""" for pth_dir in possible_pth_dirs(): # pragma: part covered try_it = os.path.join(pth_dir, "touch_{}.it".format(WORKER)) with open(try_it, "w") as f: try: f.write("foo") except (IOError, OSError): # pragma: cant happen continue os.remove(try_it) return pth_dir return None # pragma: cant happen WORKER = os.environ.get('PYTEST_XDIST_WORKER', '') PTH_DIR = find_writable_pth_directory() def persistent_remove(path): """Remove a file, and retry for a while if you can't.""" tries = 100 while tries: # pragma: part covered try: os.remove(path) except OSError: tries -= 1 time.sleep(.05) else: return raise Exception("Sorry, couldn't remove {!r}".format(path)) # pragma: cant happen class ProcessCoverageMixin(object): """Set up a .pth file to coverage-measure all sub-processes.""" def setUp(self): super(ProcessCoverageMixin, self).setUp() # Create the .pth file. self.assertTrue(PTH_DIR) pth_contents = "import coverage; coverage.process_startup()\n" pth_path = os.path.join(PTH_DIR, "subcover_{}.pth".format(WORKER)) with open(pth_path, "w") as pth: pth.write(pth_contents) self.pth_path = pth_path self.addCleanup(persistent_remove, self.pth_path) class ProcessStartupTest(ProcessCoverageMixin, CoverageTest): """Test that we can measure coverage in sub-processes.""" def setUp(self): super(ProcessStartupTest, self).setUp() # Main will run sub.py self.make_file("main.py", """\ import os, os.path, sys ex = os.path.basename(sys.executable) os.system(ex + " sub.py") """) # sub.py will write a few lines. self.make_file("sub.py", """\ f = open("out.txt", "w") f.write("Hello, world!\\n") f.close() """) def test_subprocess_with_pth_files(self): # pragma: no metacov if env.METACOV: self.skipTest("Can't test sub-process pth file suppport during metacoverage") # An existing data file should not be read when a subprocess gets # measured automatically. Create the data file here with bogus data in # it. data = coverage.CoverageData(".mycovdata") data.add_lines({os.path.abspath('sub.py'): dict.fromkeys(range(100))}) data.write() self.make_file("coverage.ini", """\ [run] data_file = .mycovdata """) self.set_environ("COVERAGE_PROCESS_START", "coverage.ini") import main # pylint: disable=unused-import with open("out.txt") as f: self.assertEqual(f.read(), "Hello, world!\n") # Read the data from .coverage self.assert_exists(".mycovdata") data = coverage.CoverageData(".mycovdata") data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['sub.py'], 3) def test_subprocess_with_pth_files_and_parallel(self): # pragma: no metacov # https://bitbucket.org/ned/coveragepy/issues/492/subprocess-coverage-strange-detection-of if env.METACOV: self.skipTest("Can't test sub-process pth file suppport during metacoverage") self.make_file("coverage.ini", """\ [run] parallel = true """) self.set_environ("COVERAGE_PROCESS_START", "coverage.ini") self.run_command("coverage run main.py") with open("out.txt") as f: self.assertEqual(f.read(), "Hello, world!\n") self.run_command("coverage combine") # assert that the combined .coverage data file is correct self.assert_exists(".coverage") data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() self.assertEqual(line_counts(data)['sub.py'], 3) # assert that there are *no* extra data files left over after a combine data_files = glob.glob(os.getcwd() + '/.coverage*') self.assertEqual(len(data_files), 1, "Expected only .coverage after combine, looks like there are " "extra data files that were not cleaned up: %r" % data_files) class ProcessStartupWithSourceTest(ProcessCoverageMixin, CoverageTest): """Show that we can configure {[run]source} during process-level coverage. There are three interesting variables, for a total of eight tests: 1. -m versus a simple script argument (for example, `python myscript`), 2. filtering for the top-level (main.py) or second-level (sub.py) module, and 3. whether the files are in a package or not. """ def assert_pth_and_source_work_together( self, dashm, package, source ): # pragma: no metacov """Run the test for a particular combination of factors. The arguments are all strings: * `dashm`: Either "" (run the program as a file) or "-m" (run the program as a module). * `package`: Either "" (put the source at the top level) or a package name to use to hold the source. * `source`: Either "main" or "sub", which file to use as the ``--source`` argument. """ if env.METACOV: self.skipTest("Can't test sub-process pth file support during metacoverage") def fullname(modname): """What is the full module name for `modname` for this test?""" if package and dashm: return '.'.join((package, modname)) else: return modname def path(basename): """Where should `basename` be created for this test?""" return os.path.join(package, basename) # Main will run sub.py. self.make_file(path("main.py"), """\ import %s a = 2 b = 3 """ % fullname('sub')) if package: self.make_file(path("__init__.py"), "") # sub.py will write a few lines. self.make_file(path("sub.py"), """\ # Avoid 'with' so Jython can play along. f = open("out.txt", "w") f.write("Hello, world!") f.close() """) self.make_file("coverage.ini", """\ [run] source = %s """ % fullname(source)) self.set_environ("COVERAGE_PROCESS_START", "coverage.ini") if dashm: cmd = "python -m %s" % fullname('main') else: cmd = "python %s" % path('main.py') self.run_command(cmd) with open("out.txt") as f: self.assertEqual(f.read(), "Hello, world!") # Read the data from .coverage self.assert_exists(".coverage") data = coverage.CoverageData() data.read() summary = line_counts(data) print(summary) self.assertEqual(summary[source + '.py'], 3) self.assertEqual(len(summary), 1) def test_dashm_main(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('-m', '', 'main') def test_script_main(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('', '', 'main') def test_dashm_sub(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('-m', '', 'sub') def test_script_sub(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('', '', 'sub') def test_dashm_pkg_main(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('-m', 'pkg', 'main') def test_script_pkg_main(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('', 'pkg', 'main') def test_dashm_pkg_sub(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('-m', 'pkg', 'sub') def test_script_pkg_sub(self): self.assert_pth_and_source_work_together('', 'pkg', 'sub')