YouCompleteMe/python/ycm/test_utils.py
micbou 7b2155ab64 Refactor tests using a server instance
Create a Server_test class for tests that need a server instance.
2016-07-23 11:21:38 +02:00

190 lines
6.2 KiB
Python

# Copyright (C) 2011, 2012 Google Inc.
#
# This file is part of YouCompleteMe.
#
# YouCompleteMe is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# YouCompleteMe is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with YouCompleteMe. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
from __future__ import unicode_literals
from __future__ import print_function
from __future__ import division
from __future__ import absolute_import
from future import standard_library
standard_library.install_aliases()
from builtins import * # noqa
from mock import MagicMock
from hamcrest import assert_that, equal_to
import re
import sys
import nose
import functools
from ycmd.utils import ToUnicode
BUFNR_REGEX = re.compile( r"^bufnr\('(.+)', ([0-9]+)\)$" )
BUFWINNR_REGEX = re.compile( r"^bufwinnr\(([0-9]+)\)$" )
BWIPEOUT_REGEX = re.compile( r"^(?:silent! )bwipeout!? ([0-9]+)$" )
# One-and only instance of mocked Vim object. The first 'import vim' that is
# executed binds the vim module to the instance of MagicMock that is created,
# and subsquent assignments to sys.modules[ 'vim' ] don't retrospectively
# update them. The result is that while running the tests, we must assign only
# one instance of MagicMock to sys.modules[ 'vim' ] and always return it.
#
# More explanation is available:
# https://github.com/Valloric/YouCompleteMe/pull/1694
VIM_MOCK = MagicMock()
def MockGetBufferNumber( buffer_filename ):
for buffer in VIM_MOCK.buffers:
if buffer[ 'filename' ] == buffer_filename:
return buffer[ 'number' ]
return -1
def MockGetBufferWindowNumber( buffer_number ):
for buffer in VIM_MOCK.buffers:
if buffer[ 'number' ] == buffer_number and 'window' in buffer:
return buffer[ 'window' ]
return -1
def MockVimEval( value ):
if value == "g:ycm_min_num_of_chars_for_completion":
return 0
if value == "g:ycm_server_python_interpreter":
return ''
if value == "tempname()":
return '_TEMP_FILE_'
if value == "&previewheight":
# Default value from Vim
return 12
match = BUFNR_REGEX.search( value )
if match:
return MockGetBufferNumber( match.group( 1 ) )
match = BUFWINNR_REGEX.search( value )
if match:
return MockGetBufferWindowNumber( int( match.group( 1 ) ) )
raise ValueError( 'Unexpected evaluation: ' + value )
def MockWipeoutBuffer( buffer_number ):
buffers = VIM_MOCK.buffers
for index, buffer in enumerate( buffers ):
if buffer[ 'number' ] == buffer_number:
return buffers.pop( index )
def MockVimCommand( command ):
match = BWIPEOUT_REGEX.search( command )
if match:
return MockWipeoutBuffer( int( match.group( 1 ) ) )
raise RuntimeError( 'Unexpected command: ' + command )
def MockVimModule():
"""The 'vim' module is something that is only present when running inside the
Vim Python interpreter, so we replace it with a MagicMock for tests. If you
need to add additional mocks to vim module functions, then use 'patch' from
mock module, to ensure that the state of the vim mock is returned before the
next test. That is:
from ycm.test_utils import MockVimModule
from mock import patch
# Do this once
MockVimModule()
@patch( 'vim.eval', return_value='test' )
@patch( 'vim.command', side_effect=ValueError )
def test( vim_command, vim_eval ):
# use vim.command via vim_command, e.g.:
vim_command.assert_has_calls( ... )
Failure to use this approach may lead to unexpected failures in other
tests."""
VIM_MOCK.buffers = {}
VIM_MOCK.eval = MagicMock( side_effect = MockVimEval )
sys.modules[ 'vim' ] = VIM_MOCK
return VIM_MOCK
class ExtendedMock( MagicMock ):
"""An extension to the MagicMock class which adds the ability to check that a
callable is called with a precise set of calls in a precise order.
Example Usage:
from ycm.test_utils import ExtendedMock
@patch( 'test.testing', new_callable = ExtendedMock, ... )
def my_test( test_testing ):
...
"""
def assert_has_exact_calls( self, calls, any_order = False ):
self.assert_has_calls( calls, any_order )
assert_that( self.call_count, equal_to( len( calls ) ) )
def ExpectedFailure( reason, *exception_matchers ):
"""Defines a decorator to be attached to tests. This decorator
marks the test as being known to fail, e.g. where documenting or exercising
known incorrect behaviour.
The parameters are:
- |reason| a textual description of the reason for the known issue. This
is used for the skip reason
- |exception_matchers| additional arguments are hamcrest matchers to apply
to the exception thrown. If the matchers don't match, then the
test is marked as error, with the original exception.
If the test fails (for the correct reason), then it is marked as skipped.
If it fails for any other reason, it is marked as failed.
If the test passes, then it is also marked as failed."""
def decorator( test ):
@functools.wraps( test )
def Wrapper( *args, **kwargs ):
try:
test( *args, **kwargs )
except Exception as test_exception:
# Ensure that we failed for the right reason
test_exception_message = ToUnicode( test_exception )
try:
for matcher in exception_matchers:
assert_that( test_exception_message, matcher )
except AssertionError:
# Failed for the wrong reason!
import traceback
print( 'Test failed for the wrong reason: ' + traceback.format_exc() )
# Real failure reason is the *original* exception, we're only trapping
# and ignoring the exception that is expected.
raise test_exception
# Failed for the right reason
raise nose.SkipTest( reason )
else:
raise AssertionError( 'Test was expected to fail: {0}'.format(
reason ) )
return Wrapper
return decorator