pysys.process.user¶
Contains pysys.process.user.ProcessUser
which supports using processes from PySys, and provides the
shared functionality of subclasses pysys.basetest.BaseTest
and pysys.baserunner.BaseRunner
.
STDOUTERR_TUPLE¶
- class pysys.process.user.STDOUTERR_TUPLE(stdout, stderr)[source]¶
Bases:
pysys.process.user.stdouterr
Returned by
ProcessUser.allocateUniqueStdOutErr
to hold a pair of(stdout,stderr)
names.Create new instance of stdouterr(stdout, stderr)
- property key¶
Returns the key (the prefix without the
.out
or.err
), to which you can append your own extension. For example to create a log file with the same base name as the stdout/err files:self.startProcess(..., arguments=['--logfile', stdouterr.key+'.log'], ...)
ProcessUser¶
- class pysys.process.user.ProcessUser[source]¶
Bases:
object
ProcessUser provides support for safely using processes in PySys, including starting processes (with an appropriate output directory), waiting for them to do what they’re supposed to do, and finally ensuring all processes and ports are cleaned up when each test (or the overall runner) terminates.
As the common base class of both
pysys.basetest.BaseTest
andpysys.baserunner.BaseRunner
, ProcessUser also holds shared functionality such as dynamic port allocation, copying files, creating directories etc, and keeps track of the “outcome” generated by some methods (although the outcome value is only used when it is subclassed by BaseTest).Each ProcessUser instance is responsible for managing the lifetime of the processes started using its
startProcess
method, and ensuring they are all terminated when thecleanup
method is invoked. Additional functions to be executed during cleanup can be registered usingaddCleanupFunction
, for example to delete large output directories, or terminate non-process resources such as docker containers or remote servers.Apart from the
addOutcome
method this class is not thread-safe, so if you need to access it from multiple threads be sure to add your own locking around use of its fields and methods, including any cleanup functions.- Variables
~.input (str) – Full path to the directory containing input files (e.g.
testdir/Input
)~.output (str) – Full path to the directory that output files should be written to (e.g.
testdir/Output/<platformname>
)~.log (logging.Logger) – The Python
Logger
instance that should be used to record progress and status information.~.project (pysys.config.project.Project) – A reference to the singleton project instance containing the configuration of this PySys test project as defined by
pysysproject.xml
. The project can be used to access information such as the project properties which are shared across all tests (e.g. for hosts and credentials).~.disableCoverage (bool) –
Set to True to disable all code coverage collection for processes started from this instance. This is automatically set for any tests marked with the “disableCoverage” group in their
pysystest.*
file.The built-in Python code coverage functionality in
startPython
checks this flag. It is recommended that any other languages supporting code coverage also check the self.disableCoverage flag.
Additional variables that affect only the behaviour of a single method are documented in the associated method.
- log¶
The logger instance that should be used to log from this class.
- project¶
The
pysys.config.project.Project
instance containing settings for this PySys project.
- lock¶
A recursive lock that can be used for protecting the fields of this instance from access by background threads, as needed.
- allocateUniqueStdOutErr(processKey)[source]¶
Allocate unique filenames of the form
processKey[.n].out/.err
which can be used for thestartProcess
stdouterr
parameter.The first time this is called it will return names like
('outdir/myprocess.out', 'outdir/myprocess.err')
, the second time it will return('outdir/myprocess.1.out', 'outdir/myprocess.1.err')
, then('outdir/myprocess.2.out', 'outdir/myprocess.2.err')
etc.- Parameters
processKey (str) – A user-defined identifier that will form the prefix onto which
[.n].out
is appended- Returns
A STDOUTERR_TUPLE named tuple of (stdout, stderr), where each is an absolute path.
- Return type
- getInstanceCount(displayName)[source]¶
(Deprecated) Return the number of processes started within the testcase matching the supplied displayName.
- Deprecated
The recommended way to allocate unique names is now
allocateUniqueStdOutErr
The ProcessUser class maintains a reference count of processes started within the class instance via the
startProcess()
method. The reference count is maintained against a logical name for the process, which is thedisplayName
used in the method call tostartProcess()
, or the basename of the command if no displayName was supplied. The method returns the number of processes started with the supplied logical name, or 0 if no processes have been started.- Parameters
displayName – The process display name
- Returns
The number of processes started matching the command basename
- Return type
int
- getBoolProperty(propertyName, default=False)[source]¶
Get a True/False indicating whether the specified attribute is set on this object (typically as a result of specifying -X on the command line), or else from the project configuration.
See also
pysys.baserunner.getXArg()
andpysys.config.project.Project.getProperty()
.- Parameters
propertyName – The name of a property set on the command line or project configuration.
- startPython(arguments, disableCoverage=False, **kwargs)[source]¶
Start a Python process with the specified arguments.
Uses the same Python process the tests are running under.
If PySys was run with the argument
-XcodeCoverage
or-XpythonCoverage
thenstartPython
will add the necessary arguments to enable generation of code coverage. Note that this requried the coverage.py library to be installed. If a project property calledpythonCoverageArgs
exists then its value will be added as (space-delimited) arguments to the coverage tool.- Parameters
arguments – The arguments to pass to the Python executable. Typically the first one be either the name of a Python script to execute, or
-m
followed by a module name.kwargs – See
startProcess
for detail on available arguments.disableCoverage – Disables code coverage for this specific process. Coverage can also be disabled by setting
self.disableCoverage==True
on this test instance.
- Returns
The process handle of the process.
- Return type
- startProcess(command, arguments, environs=None, workingDir=None, state=None, timeout=600, stdout=None, stderr=None, displayName=None, abortOnError=None, expectedExitStatus='==0', ignoreExitStatus=None, onError=None, quiet=False, stdouterr=None, background=False, info={}, processFactory=<class 'pysys.process.helper.ProcessImpl'>)[source]¶
Start a process running in the foreground or background, and return the
pysys.process.Process
object.Typical use is:
myexecutable = self.startProcess('path_to_my_executable', arguments=['myoperation', 'arg1','arg2'], environs=self.createEnvirons(addToLibPath=['my_ld_lib_path']), # if a customized environment is needed stdouterr=self.allocateUniqueStdOutErr('myoperation'), # for stdout/err files, pick a suitable logical name for what it's doing background=True # or remove for default behaviour of executing in foreground )
The method allows spawning of new processes in a platform independent way. The command, arguments, environment and working directory to run the process in can all be specified in the arguments to the method, along with the filenames used for capturing the stdout and stderr of the process. Processes may be started in the foreground, in which case the method does not return until the process has completed or a time out occurs, or in the background in which case the method returns immediately to the caller returning a handle to the process to allow manipulation at a later stage, typically with
waitProcess
.All processes started in the background are automatically killed on completion of the test via the
cleanup()
destructor. To wait for background processes to complete duringexecute
and/or beforeverify
commences, callwaitForBackgroundProcesses()
. This is especially useful when you have a test that needs to execute lots of processes asynchronously, since having them all execute concurrently in the background and then callingwaitForBackgroundProcesses()
will be a lot quicker than executing them serially in the foreground.When starting a process that will listen on a server socket, use
getNextAvailableTCPPort
to allocate a free port before calling this method.Note that although is is possible to use this command to execute OS shell commands, that should only used for testing of shell scripts - other logic such as file system operations can be executed more easily and robustly using built-in Python (
os
module) or PySys (e.g.BaseTest.copy
) functions.Changed in version 1.6.0: Added onError parameter and default behaviour of logging stderr/out when there’s a failure. Added info parameter.
Changed in version 2.0: Added processFactory parameter.
- Parameters
command (str) – The path to the executable to be launched (should include the full path)
arguments (list[str]) – A list of arguments to pass to the command. Any non-string values in the list are converted to strings automatically.
environs (dict(str,str)) – A dictionary specifying the environment to run the process in. If a None or empty dictionary is passed,
getDefaultEnvirons
will be invoked to produce a suitable clean default environment for thiscommand
, containing a minimal set of variables. If you wish to specify a customized environment,createEnvirons()
is a great way to create it.workingDir (str) – The working directory for the process to run in (defaults to the testcase output subdirectory)
background (bool) – Set to True to start the process in the background. By default processes are started in the foreground, meaning execution of the test will continue only once the process has terminated.
state – Alternative way to set
background=True
. Run the process either in theFOREGROUND
orBACKGROUND
(defaults toFOREGROUND
). Setting state=BACKGROUND is equivalent to setting background=True; in new tests using background=True is the preferred way to do this.timeout (int) – The number of seconds after which to terminate processes running in the foreground. For processes that complete in a few seconds or less, it is best to avoid overriding this and stick with the default. However for long-running foreground processes it will be necessary to set a larger number, for example if running a soak test where the process needs to run for up to 2 hours you could set
timeout=2*60*60
.stdouterr (str) – The filename prefix to use for the stdout and stderr of the process (
out
/err
will be appended), or a tuple of (stdout,stderr) as returned fromallocateUniqueStdOutErr
. The stdouterr prefix is also used to form a default display name for the process if none is explicitly provided. The files are created relative to the test output directory. The filenames can be accessed from the returned process object using.stdout/err
frompysys.process.Process
.stdout (str) – The filename used to capture the stdout of the process. It is usually simpler to use
stdouterr
instead of this.stderr (str) – The filename used to capture the stderr of the process. It is usually simpler to use
stdouterr
instead of this.displayName (str) – Logical name of the process used for display in log messages, and the str(…) representation of the returned process object (defaults to a string generated from the stdouterr and/or the command).
abortOnError (bool) – If true abort the test on any error outcome (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting)
expectedExitStatus (str) – The condition string used to determine whether the exit status/code returned by the process is correct. The default is ‘==0’, as an exit code of zero usually indicates success, but if you are expecting a non-zero exit status (for example because you are testing correct handling of a failure condition) this could be set to ‘!=0’ or a specific value such as ‘==5’.
ignoreExitStatus (bool) –
If False, a BLOCKED outcome is added if the process terminates with an exit code that doesn’t match expectedExitStatus (or if the command cannot be run at all). This can be set to True in cases where you do not care whether the command succeeds or fails, or wish to handle the exit status separately with more complicated logic.
The default value of ignoreExitStatus=None means the value will be taken from the project property defaultIgnoreExitStatus, which can be configured in the project XML (the recommended default property value is defaultIgnoreExitStatus=False), or is set to True for compatibility with older PySys releases if no project property is set.
onError (Callable[pysys.process.Process]->str) –
A function that will be called if the process times out or returns an unexpected exit status (unless ignoreExitStatus=True), before any abort exception is raised. This provides a convenient place to add logging of diagnostic information (perhaps using the stdout/err of the process) and/or extracting and returning an error message from the output, for example:
onError=lambda process: self.logFileContents(process.stderr, tail=True) or self.logFileContents(process.stdout, tail=True)
.If a string value is returned from it will be added to the failure reason, e.g.
onError=lambda process: self.logFileContents(process.stderr, tail=True) and self.grepOrNone(process.stderr, 'Error: (.*)')
.If no onError function is specified, the default is to log the last few lines of stderr (or if empty, stdout) when a process fails and abortOnError=True.
The
self.logFileContentsDefaultExcludes
variable can be used to add regular expressions to exclude unimportant lines of output such as standard startup lines (seelogFileContents
).quiet (bool) – If True, this method will not do any INFO or WARN level logging (only DEBUG level), unless a failure outcome is appended. This parameter can be useful to avoid filling up the log where it is necessary to repeatedly execute a command check for completion of some operation until it succeeds; in such cases you should usually set ignoreExitStatus=True as well since both success and failure exit statuses are valid.
info (dict[str,obj]) – A dictionary of user-defined information about this process that will be set as a field on the returned Process instance. This is useful for keeping track of things like server port numbers and log file paths.
processFactory (callable[kwargs]) –
A callable (such as a class constructor) that returns an instance or subclass of
pysys.process.helper.ProcessImpl
. This can be used either to provide a custom process subclass with extra features, or to make modifications to the arguments or environment that were specified by the code that invokedstartProcess()
.The signature must consist of a
**kwargs
parameter, the members of which will be populated by the parameters listed in the constructor ofpysys.process.Process
, and can be modified by the factory. For example:def myProcessFactory(**kwargs): kwargs['arguments'] = kwargs['arguments'][0]+['my_extra_arg']+kwargs['arguments'][1:] return pysys.process.helper.ProcessImpl(**kwargs)
- Returns
The process object.
- Return type
- getDefaultEnvirons(command=None, **kwargs)[source]¶
Create a new dictionary of environment variables, suitable for passing to
startProcess()
, with a minimal clean set of environment variables for this platform, unaffected (as much as possible) by the environment that the tests are being run under.This environment contains a minimal PATH/LD_LIBRARY_PATH but does not attempt to replicate the full set of default environment variables on each OS, and in particular it does not include any that identify the current username or home area. Additional environment variables can be added as needed with
createEnvirons
overrides. If you don’t care about minimizing the risk of your local environment affecting the test processes you start, just useenvirons=os.environ
to allow child processes to inherit the entire parent environment.The
createEnvirons()
andstartProcess()
methods use this as the basis for creating a new set of default environment variables.If needed this method can be overridden in subclasses to add common environment variables for every process invoked by startProcess, for example to enable options such as code coverage for Java/Python/etc. This is also a good place to customize behaviour for different operating systems.
Some features of this method can be configured by setting project properties:
defaultEnvirons.ENV_KEY
: if any properties with this prefix are defined, an environment variable with the ENV_KEY is set by this method (unless the property value is empty). For example, to set a default JVM heap size for all processes with theJAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS
environment variable you could setdefaultEnvirons.JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS = -Xmx512M
.defaultEnvironsDefaultLang
: if set to a value such asen_US.UTF-8
the specified value is set for the LANG= variable on Unix; otherwise, the LANG variable is not set (which might result in use of the legacy POSIX/C encoding).defaultEnvironsTempDir
: if set the expression will be passed to Pythoneval()
and used to set the OS-specific temp directory environment variables. A typical value isself.output
.defaultEnvironsLegacyMode
: set to true to enable compatibility mode which keeps the behaviour the same as PySys v1.1, 1.2 and 1.3, namely using a completely empty default environment on Unix, and a copy of the entire parent environment on Windows. This is not recommended unless you have a lot of legacy tests that cannot easily be changed to only set minimal required environment variables usingcreateEnvirons()
.
- Parameters
command –
If known, the full path of the executable for which a default environment is being created (when called from
startProcess
this is always set). This allows default environment variables to be customized for different process types e.g. Java, Python, etc.When using
command=sys.executable
to launch another copy of the current Python executable, extra items from this process’s path environment variables are added to the returned dictionary so that it can start correctly. On Unix-based systems this includes copying all of the load library path environment variable from the parent process.kwargs – Overrides of this method should pass any additional kwargs down to the super implementation, to allow for future extensions.
- Returns
A new dictionary containing the environment variables.
- createEnvirons(overrides=None, addToLibPath=[], addToExePath=[], command=None, **kwargs)[source]¶
Create a new customized dictionary of environment variables suitable for passing to
startProcess()
’senvirons=
argument.As a starting point, this method uses the value returned by
getDefaultEnvirons()
for thiscommand
. See the documentation on that method for more details. If you don’t care about minimizing the risk of your local environment affecting the test processes you start, just useenvirons=os.environ
to allow child processes to inherit the entire parent environment instead of using this method.- Parameters
overrides – A dictionary of environment variables whose values will be used instead of any existing values. You can use
os.getenv('VARNAME','')
if you need to pass selected variables from the current process as part of the overrides list. If the value is set to None then any variable of this name will be deleted. Use unicode strings if possible (byte strings will be converted depending on the platform). A list of dictionaries can be specified, in which case the latest will override the earlier if there are any conflicts.addToLibPath – A path or list of paths to be prepended to the default value for the environment variable used to load libraries (or the value specified in overrides, if any), i.e.
[DY]LD_LIBRARY_PATH
on Unix orPATH
on Windows. This is usually more convenient than adding it directly tooverrides
.addToExePath – A path or list of paths to be prepended to the default value for the environment variable used to locate executables (or the value specified in overrides, if any), i.e.
PATH
on both Unix and Windows. This is usually more convenient than adding it directly tooverrides
.command – If known, the full path of the executable for which a default environment is being created (passed to
getDefaultEnvirons
).kwargs – Overrides of this method should pass any additional kwargs down to the super implementation, to allow for future extensions.
- Returns
A new dictionary containing the environment variables.
- stopProcess(process, abortOnError=None)[source]¶
Stops the specified process, if it is currently running.
Does nothing if the process is not running.
This is equivalent to calling
pysys.process.Process.stop()
, except it also logs an info message when the process is stopped.- Parameters
process – The process handle returned from the
startProcess
methodabortOnError – If True abort the test on any error outcome (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting), if False a failure to stop the process will just be logged as a warning.
- signalProcess(process, signal, abortOnError=None)[source]¶
Send a signal to a running process.
This method uses the
pysys.process.Process.signal
method to send a signal to a running process.Should the request to send the signal to the running process fail, a
BLOCKED
outcome will be added to the outcome list.- Parameters
process – The process handle returned from the
startProcess
methodsignal – The integer value of the signal to send
abortOnError – If True aborts the test with an exception on any error, if False just log it as a warning. (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting)
- waitProcess(process, timeout=600, abortOnError=None, checkExitStatus=False)[source]¶
Wait for a background process to terminate.
For a convenient way to wait for all remaining background processes to complete, see
waitForBackgroundProcesses
.Timeouts will result in an exception and TIMEDOUT outcome unless the project property
defaultAbortOnError==False
is set.- Parameters
process (pysys.process.Process) – The process handle returned from the
startProcess
methodtimeout (int) – The timeout value in seconds to wait before returning, for example
timeout=TIMEOUTS['WaitForProcess']
.abortOnError (bool) – If True aborts the test with an exception on any error, if False just log it as a warning. (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting)
checkExitStatus (bool) – By default this method does not check the exit status, but set this argument to True to check that the exit status matches the
expectedExitStatus
specified in the call tostartProcess
(typically==0
). Note that this argument is not affected by thedefaultIgnoreExitStatus
project property. The last few lines of the stderr (or stdout) will be logged if the exit status is wrong.
- Returns
The process’s
exitStatus
. This will be None if the process timed out and abortOnError is disabled.
- pollWait(secs)[source]¶
Sleeps the current thread for the specified number of seconds, between polling/checking for some condition to be met.
Unlike
pysys.basetest.BaseTest.wait
(which should be used for larger waits inside tests), pollWait does not log anything.Use this method instead of
time.sleep
as it provides PySys the chance to abort test execution early when requested.- Parameters
secs (float) – The time to sleep for, typically a few hundred milliseconds. Do not use this method for really long waits.
- waitForBackgroundProcesses(includes=[], excludes=[], timeout=600, abortOnError=None, checkExitStatus=True)[source]¶
Wait for any running background processes to terminate, then check that all background processes completed with the expected exit status.
This can be useful for speeding up a test that needs to run many processes, by executing all its subprocesses in parallel in the background (and then waiting for completion) rather than one-by-one in the foreground.
Timeouts will result in a TIMEDOUT outcome and an exception unless the project property
defaultAbortOnError==False
is set.- Parameters
includes (list[pysys.process.Process]) – A list of processes to wait for, each returned by
startProcess()
. If none are specified, this method will wait for (and check the exit status of) all background processes.excludes (list[pysys.process.Process]) – A list of processes which are not expected to have terminated yet (this is only useful when not setting includes=[]).
timeout (int) – The total time in seconds to wait for all processes to have completed, for example
timeout=TIMEOUTS['WaitForProcess']
.abortOnError (bool) – If True aborts the test with an exception on any error, if False appends an outcome but does not raise an exception.
checkExitStatus (bool) – By default this method not only waits for completion but also checks the exit status of all (included) background processes (regardless of when they completed), but set this argument to False to disable checking that the exit status of the processes matches the
expectedExitStatus
specified in the call tostartProcess
(typically==0
). The last few lines of the stderr (or stdout) will be logged if the exit status is wrong.
- writeProcess(process, data, addNewLine=True)[source]¶
Write binary data to the stdin of a process.
This method uses
pysys.process.Process.write
to write binary data to the stdin of a process. This wrapper around the write method of the process helper only adds checking of the process running status prior to the write being performed, and logging to the testcase run log to detail the write.- Parameters
process (pysys.process.Process) – The process handle returned from the
startProcess()
methoddata (bytes) – The data to write to the process stdin. As only binary data can be written to a process stdin, if a character string rather than a byte object is passed as the data, it will be automatically converted to a bytes object using the encoding given by PREFERRED_ENCODING.
addNewLine (bool) – True if a new line character is to be added to the end of the data string
- waitForSocket(port, host='localhost', timeout=60, abortOnError=None, process=None, socketAddressFamily=AddressFamily.AF_INET)[source]¶
Wait until it is possible to establish a socket connection to a server running on the specified local or remote port.
This method blocks until connection to a particular host:port pair can be established. This is useful for test timing where a component under test creates a socket for client server interaction - calling of this method ensures that on return of the method call the server process is running and a client is able to create connections to it. If a connection cannot be made within the specified timeout interval, the method returns to the caller, or aborts the test if abortOnError=True.
Changed in version 1.5.1: Added host and socketAddressFamily parameters.
- Parameters
port – The port value in the socket host:port pair
host – The host value in the socket host:port pair
timeout – The timeout in seconds to wait for connection to the socket
abortOnError – If true abort the test on any failure (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting)
process – If a handle to a process is specified, the wait will abort if the process dies before the socket becomes available. It is recommended to set this wherever possible.
socketAddressFamily – The socket address family e.g. IPv4 vs IPv6. See Python’s
socket
module for details.
- waitForFile(file, filedir=None, timeout=30, abortOnError=None)[source]¶
Wait for a file to exist on disk.
This method blocks until a file is created on disk. This is useful for test timing where a component under test creates a file (e.g. for logging) indicating it has performed all initialisation actions and is ready for the test execution steps. If a file is not created on disk within the specified timeout interval, the method returns to the caller.
- Parameters
file – The basename of the file used to wait to be created
filedir – The dirname of the file (defaults to the testcase output subdirectory)
timeout – The timeout in seconds to wait for the file to be created
abortOnError – If true abort the test on any failure (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting)
- waitForSignal(file, filedir=None, expr='', **waitForGrepArgs)[source]¶
Old alias for
waitForGrep
; please usewaitForGrep
in new tests.All parameters are the same, except that in waitForSignal the (rarely used)
filedir
argument can be specified as the 2nd positional argument (afterfile
and beforeexpr
) whereas in waitForGrep it can only be specified as afiledir=
keyword argument.
- waitForGrep(file, expr='', condition='>=1', timeout=60, poll=0.25, ignores=[], process=None, errorExpr=[], errorIf=None, abortOnError=None, encoding=None, detailMessage='', filedir=None, reFlags=0, mappers=[], quiet=False)[source]¶
Wait for a regular expression line to be seen (one or more times) in a text file in the output directory (waitForGrep was formerly known as
waitForSignal
).This method provides some parameters that give helpful fail-fast behaviour with a descriptive outcome reason; use these whenever possible:
process=
to abort if success becomes impossible due to premature termination of the process that’s generating the outputerrorExpr=
to abort if an error message/expression is written to the file being greppederrorIf=
to abort if the specified lambda function returns an error string (which can be used if the error messages go to a different file than that being grepped
This will generate much clearer outcome reasons, which makes test failures easy to triage, and also avoids wasting time waiting for something that will never happen.
Example:
self.waitForGrep('myprocess.log', expr='INFO .*Started successfully', encoding='utf-8', process=myprocess, errorExpr=[' (ERROR|FATAL) ', 'Failed to start']) self.waitForGrep('myoutput.log', expr='My message', encoding='utf-8', process=myprocess, errorIf=lambda: self.grepOrNone('myprocess.err', ' ERROR .*'))
Note that waitForGrep fails the test if the expression is not found (unless abortOnError was set to False, which isn’t recommended), so there is no need to add duplication with an
assertGrep
to check for the same expression in your validation logic.You can extract information from the matched expression, optionally perform assertions on it, by using one or more
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups in the expression. A common pattern is to unpack the resulting dict using**kwargs
syntax and pass toBaseTest.assertThat
. For example:self.assertThat('username == expected', expected='myuser', **self.waitForGrep('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)"'))
New in version 1.5.1.
- Parameters
file (str) – The path of the file to be searched. Usually this is a name/path relative to the
self.output
directory, but alternatively an absolute path can be specified.expr (str) – The regular expression to search for in the text file.
condition (str) – The condition to be met for the number of lines matching the regular expression; by default we wait until there is at least one occurrence.
timeout (int) – The number of seconds to wait for the regular expression before giving up and aborting the test with
pysys.constants.TIMEDOUT
(unless abortOnError=False in which case execution will continue).process (pysys.process.Process) – The process that is generating the specified file, to allow the wait to fail fast (instead of timing out) if the process dies before the expected signal appears. Can be None if the process is not known or is expected to terminate itself during this period.
errorExpr (list[str]) – Optional list of regular expressions, which if found in the file will cause waiting for the main expression to be aborted with a
pysys.constants.BLOCKED
outcome. This is useful to avoid waiting a long time for the expected expression when an ERROR is logged that means it will never happen, and also provides much clearer test failure messages in this case.errorIf (callable->str) –
A zero-arg function that returns False/None when there is no error, or a non-empty string if an error is detected which should cause us to abort looking for the grep expression. This function will be executed frequently (every
poll
seconds) so avoid doing anything time-consuming here unless you set a large polling interval. See above for an example.Added in PySys 1.6.0.
ignores (list[str]) – A list of regular expressions used to identify lines in the files which should be ignored when matching both
expr
anderrorExpr
.mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file, andpysys.mappers.JoinLines
can be used to put exception stack traces onto the same line as the error message.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 1.6.0.
poll (float) – The time in seconds between to poll the file looking for the regular expression and to check against the condition
abortOnError (bool) – If True abort the test on any error outcome (defaults to the defaultAbortOnError project setting, which for a modern project will be True).
encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file and convert from bytes to characters. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.detailMessage (str) –
An extra string to add to the start of the message logged when waiting to provide extra information about the wait condition. e.g.
detailMessage='Wait for server startup: '
.Added in v1.5.1. From v2.1+ the detail string is added at the beginning not the end.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.filedir (str) – Can be used to provide a directory name to add to the beginning of the
file
parameter; however usually it is clearer just to specify that directory in thefile
.quiet (bool) – Set this to true to suppress INFO-level logging, which can be useful when you wish to print your own progress message in a more high-level fashion.
- Return list[re.Match]
Usually this returns a list of
re.Match
objects found for theexpr
, or an empty list if there was no match.If the expr contains any
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups, and assuming the condition is still the default of “>=1” (i.e. not trying to find multiple matches), then instead of a list, a dict is returned containingdict(groupName: str, matchValue: str or None)
(or an empty{}
dict if there is no match) which allows the result to be passed toassertThat
for further checking of the matched groups (typically unpacked using the**
operator; see example above).
- addCleanupFunction(fn, ignoreErrors=False)[source]¶
Registers a function that will be called as part of the
cleanup
of this object.Cleanup functions should have no arguments, and are invoked in reverse order with the most recently added first (LIFO), and before the automatic termination of any remaining processes associated with this object.
Typical cleanup tasks are to cleanly shutdown processes (which is sometimes necessary to obtain code coverage information), and to (attempt to) delete large files/directories created by the test:
self.addCleanupFunction(lambda: self.cleanlyShutdownMyProcess(params)) self.addCleanupFunction(lambda: self.deleteDir('my-large-dir'), ignoreErrors=True) self.addCleanupFunction(lambda: self.deleteFile('my-large-file.log'), ignoreErrors=True)
- Parameters
fn (Callable[]) – The cleanup function.
ignoreErrors (bool) – By default, errors from cleanup functions will result in a test failure; set this to True to log them but not produce a test failure. This parameter was added in 1.6.0.
- cleanup()[source]¶
Tear down function that frees resources managed by this object, for example terminating processes it has started.
Should be called exactly once by the owner of this object when is no longer needed.
Do not override this method, instead use
addCleanupFunction
.
- addOutcome(outcome, outcomeReason='', printReason=True, abortOnError=False, callRecord=None, override=False)[source]¶
Add a validation outcome (and optionally a reason string) to the validation list.
The method provides the ability to add a validation outcome to the internal data structure storing the list of validation outcomes. Multiple validations may be performed, the current supported validation outcomes of which are described in Assertions and outcomes.
The outcomes are considered to have a precedence order, as defined by the order of the outcomes listed above. Thus a
pysys.constants.BLOCKED
outcome has a higher precedence than apysys.constants.PASSED
outcome. The outcomes are defined inpysys.constants
.This method is thread-safe.
Although this method exists on all subclasses of
pysys.process.user.ProcessUser
, in practice onlypysys.basetest.BaseTest
subclasses actually do anything with the resulting outcome.- Parameters
outcome (pysys.constants.Outcome) – The outcome to add, e.g.
pysys.constants.FAILED
.outcomeReason (str) – A string summarizing the reason for the outcome, for example “Grep on x.log contains ‘ERROR: server failed’”.
printReason (bool) – If True the specified outcomeReason will be printed
abortOnError (bool) – If true abort the test on any error outcome. This should usually be set to False for assertions, or the configured
self.defaultAbortOnError
setting (typically True) for operations that involve waiting.callRecord (list[str]) – An array of strings of the form path:lineno indicating the call stack that lead to this outcome. This will be appended to the log output for better test triage.
override (bool) – Remove any existing test outcomes when adding this one, ensuring that this outcome is the one and only one reported even if an existing outcome has higher precedence.
- abort(outcome, outcomeReason, callRecord=None)[source]¶
Raise an AbortException with the specified outcome and reason.
See also
skipTest
.- Parameters
outcome – The outcome, which will override any existing outcomes previously recorded.
outcomeReason – A string summarizing the reason for the outcome.
- skipTest(outcomeReason, callRecord=None)[source]¶
Raise an AbortException that will set the test outcome to SKIPPED and ensure that the rest of the execute() and validate() methods do not execute.
This is useful when a test should not be executed in the current mode or platform.
- Parameters
outcomeReason – A string summarizing the reason the test is being skipped, for example “Feature X is not supported on Windows”.
- getOutcome()[source]¶
Get the final outcome for this test, based on the precedence order defined in
pysys.constants.OUTCOMES
.To find out whether this test has failed:
if self.getOutcome().isFailure(): ...
- Return pysys.constants.Outcome
The overall outcome. Use
%s
orstr()
to convert to a display name.
- getOutcomeReason()[source]¶
Get the reason string for the current overall outcome (if specified).
- Returns
The overall test outcome reason or ‘’ if not specified
- Return type
string
- getOutcomeLocation()[source]¶
Get the location in the Python source file where this location was added.
New in version 1.6.0.
- Return (str,str)
The absolute filename, and the line number. Returns (None,None) if not known.
- getNextAvailableTCPPort(hosts=['', 'localhost'], socketAddressFamily=AddressFamily.AF_INET)[source]¶
Allocate a free TCP port which can be used for starting a server on this machine.
The port is taken from the pool of available server (non-ephemeral) ports on this machine, and will not be available for use by any other code in the current PySys process until this object’s
cleanup
method is called to return it to the pool of available ports. For advanced options such as port exclusions seepysys.utils.allocport
.To allocate an IPv4 port for use only on this host:
port = self.getNextAvailableTCPPort(hosts=['localhost'])
Changed in version 1.5.1: Added hosts and socketAddressFamily parameters.
- Parameters
hosts (list(Str)) –
A list of the host names or IP addresses to check when establishing that a potential allocated port isn’t already in use by a process outside the PySys framework. By default we check
""
(which corresponds toINADDR_ANY
and depending on the OS means either one or all non-localhost IPv4 addresses) and alsolocalhost
.Many machines have multiple network cards each with its own host IP address, and typically you’ll only be using one of them in your test, most commonly
localhost
. If you do know which host/IP you’ll actually be using, just specify that directly to save time, and avoid needlessly opening remote ports on hosts you’re not using. A list of available host addresses can be found fromsocket.getaddrinfo('', None)
.socketAddressFamily – The socket address family e.g. IPv4 vs IPv6. See Python’s
socket
module for details.
- grep(path, expr, encoding=None, reFlags=0, mappers=[], **kwargs)[source]¶
Returns the first occurrence of a regular expression in the specified file, or raises an exception if not found.
See also
grepOrNone
andgrepAll
or no-error-on-missing and return-all behaviour.If you want to use a grep to set the outcome of the test, use
pysys.basetest.BaseTest.assertThatGrep
orpysys.basetest.BaseTest.assertGrep
instead. The documentation for assertGrep also provides some helpful examples of regular expressions that could also be used with this method, and tips for escaping in regular expressions.If you have a complex expression with multiple values to extract, you can use
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups in which case a dictionary is returned providing access to the individual elements:authInfoDict = self.grep('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)" in (?P<authSecs>[^ ]+) seconds\.'))
For extracting a single value you can use an unnamed group using
(expr)
syntax, in which case that group is returned:myKey = self.grep('test.txt', r'myKey="(.*)"') # on a file containing 'myKey="foobar"' would return "foobar"
- Parameters
path (str) – file to search (located in the output dir unless an absolute path is specified)
expr (str) –
the regular expression, optionally containing named groups.
Remember to escape regular expression special characters such as
.
,(
,[
,{
and\
if you want them to be treated as literal values. If you have a string with regex backslashes, it’s best to use a ‘raw’ Python string so that you don’t need to double-escape them, e.g.expr=r'function[(]"str", 123[.]4, (\d+), .*[)]'
.encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 1.6.0.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.
- Returns
A str containing the matching expression, or if the expr contains any
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups a dict[str,str] is returned where the keys are the groupNames.
- grepOrNone(path, expr, encoding=None, reFlags=0, mappers=[], **kwargs)[source]¶
Returns the first occurrence of a regular expression in the specified file, or None if not found.
See also
grep
andgrepAll
for error-on-missing and return-all behaviour.If you want to use a grep to set the outcome of the test, use
pysys.basetest.BaseTest.assertThatGrep
orpysys.basetest.BaseTest.assertGrep
instead. The documentation for assertGrep also provides some helpful examples of regular expressions that could also be used with this method, and tips for escaping in regular expressions.If you have a complex expression with multiple values to extract, you can use
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups in which case a dictionary is returned providing access to the individual elements:authInfoDict = self.grepOrNone('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)" in (?P<authSecs>[^ ]+) seconds\.') ) or {'username':'myuser', 'authSecs': '0.0'}
For extracting a single value you can use an unnamed group using
(expr)
syntax, in which case that group is returned:myKey = self.grepOrNone('test.txt', r'myKey="(.*)"') or 'mydefault' # on a file containing 'myKey="foobar"' would return "foobar"
- Parameters
path (str) – file to search (located in the output dir unless an absolute path is specified)
expr (str) –
the regular expression, optionally containing named groups.
Remember to escape regular expression special characters such as
.
,(
,[
,{
and\
if you want them to be treated as literal values. If you have a string with regex backslashes, it’s best to use a ‘raw’ Python string so that you don’t need to double-escape them, e.g.expr=r'function[(]"str", 123[.]4, (\d+), .*[)]'
.encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 1.6.0.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.
- Returns
A str containing the matching expression, None if there are no matches, or if the expr contains any
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups a dict[str,str] is returned where the keys are the groupNames.
- grepAll(path, expr, encoding=None, reFlags=0, mappers=[], **kwargs)[source]¶
Returns a list of all the occurrences of a regular expression in the specified file.
See also
grep
andgrepOrNone
for return-first-only behaviour.If you have a complex expression with multiple values to extract, you can use
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups in which case each item in the returned list is a dictionary is returned providing access to the individual elements:authInfoDictList = self.grepAll('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)" in (?P<authSecs>[^ ]+) seconds\.'))
For extracting a single value you can use an unnamed group using
(expr)
syntax, in which case that group is returned:myKey = self.grepAll('test.txt', r'myKey="(.*)"') # on a file containing 'myKey="foobar"' would return ["foobar"]
- Parameters
path (str) – file to search (located in the output dir unless an absolute path is specified)
expr (str) –
the regular expression, optionally containing named groups.
Remember to escape regular expression special characters such as
.
,(
,[
,{
and\
if you want them to be treated as literal values. If you have a string with regex backslashes, it’s best to use a ‘raw’ Python string so that you don’t need to double-escape them, e.g.expr=r'function[(]"str", 123[.]4, (\d+), .*[)]'
.encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 1.6.0.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.
- Returns
A list where each item is a str containing the matching expression, or if the expr contains any
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups each item is a dict[str,str] where the keys are the groupNames.
- getExprFromFile(path, expr, groups=[1], returnAll=False, returnNoneIfMissing=False, encoding=None, reFlags=0, mappers=[])[source]¶
Searches for a regular expression in the specified file, and returns it.
Use of this function is discouraged - consider using
grep
/grepOrNone
/grepAll
instead.If the regex contains unnamed groups using
(expr)
syntax, the specified group is returned. If the expression is not found, an exception is raised, unless returnAll=True or returnNoneIfMissing=True. For example:myKey = self.getExprFromFile('test.txt', r'myKey="(.*)"') # on a file containing 'myKey="foobar"' would return "foobar" err = self.getExprFromFile('test.txt', r'ERROR .*') # on a file containing 'ERROR It went wrong' would return "that entire string"
If you have a complex expression with multiple values to extract, it is usually clearer to use
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups rather than unnamed groups referenced by index. This produces a dictionary:authInfo = self.getExprFromFile('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)" in (?P<authSecs>[^ ]+) seconds\.')) allAuthList = self.getExprFromFile('myserver.log', expr=r'Successfully authenticated user "(?P<username>[^"]*)" in (?P<authSecs>[^ ]+) seconds\.', returnAll=True))
See also
pysys.basetest.BaseTest.assertThatGrep
which should be used when instead of just finding out what’s in the file you want to assert that a specific expression is matched. The documentation for assertGrep also provides some helpful examples of regular expressions that could also be applied to this method, and tips for dealing with escaping in regular expressions.Changed in version 1.6.0: Support for named groups was added in 1.6.0.
- Parameters
path (str) – file to search (located in the output dir unless an absolute path is specified)
expr (str) –
the regular expression, optionally containing the regex group operator
(...)
Remember to escape regular expression special characters such as
.
,(
,[
,{
and\
if you want them to be treated as literal values. If you have a string with regex backslashes, it’s best to use a ‘raw’ Python string so that you don’t need to double-escape them, e.g.expr=r'function[(]"str", 123[.]4, (\d+), .*[)]'
.groups (List[int]) – which numeric regex group numbers (as indicated by brackets in the regex) should be returned; default is
[1]
meaning the first group. If more than one group is specified, the result will be a tuple of group values, otherwise the result will be the value of the group at the specified index as a str. This parameter is ignored if the regular expression contains any(?P<groupName>...)
named groups.returnAll (bool) – returns a list containing all matching lines if True, the first matching line otherwise.
returnNoneIfMissing (bool) – True to return None instead of raising an exception if the regex is not found in the file (not needed when returnAll is used).
encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 1.6.0.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.
- Returns
For a regular expression with one unnamed group, the match value is a str; if there are multiple unnamed numeric groups it is List[str] (with values corresponding to the groups= argument); if it contains any
(?P<groupName>...)
named groups a dict[str,str] is returned where the keys are the groupNames.If returnAll=True, the return value is a list of all the match values, with types as above.
- logFileContents(path, includes=None, excludes=None, maxLines=20, tail=False, encoding=None, logFunction=None, reFlags=0, stripWhitespace=True, mappers=[], color=True)[source]¶
Logs some or all of the lines from the specified file.
If the file does not exist or cannot be opened, does nothing. The method is useful for providing key diagnostic information (e.g. error messages from tools executed by the test) directly in run.log, or to make test failures easier to triage quickly.
- Parameters
path (str) – May be an absolute, or relative to the test output directory.
includes (list[str]) – Optional list of regex strings. If specified, only matches of these regexes will be logged.
excludes (list[str]) –
Optional list of regex strings. If specified, no line containing these will be logged.
The variable
self.logFileContentsDefaultExcludes
(=[]
by default) is used when this method is called with the default argument ofexcludes=None
, and can be used to provide a global set of default exclusion lines shared by all your tests, which is particularly useful if some processes always log some unimportant text to stderr (or stdout) that would be distracting to log out.Added in PySys 1.6.0.
mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be used to pre-process each line from the file (returning None if the line is to be filtered out). This provides a very powerful capability for filtering the file, for example
pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
provides the ability to filter in/out sections of a file.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
Added in PySys 2.0.
maxLines (int) – Upper limit on the number of lines from the file that will be logged. Set to zero for unlimited
tail (bool) – Prints the _last_ ‘maxLines’ in the file rather than the first ‘maxLines’.
encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.logFunction (Callable[[line],None]) –
The function that will be used to log individual lines from the file. Usually this is
self.log.info(u' %s', line, extra=BaseLogFormatter.tag(LOG_FILE_CONTENTS))
but a custom implementation can be provided, for example to provide a different color usingpysys.utils.logutils.BaseLogFormatter.tag
.Added in PySys 1.5.1.
reFlags (int) –
Zero or more flags controlling how the behaviour of regular expression matching, combined together using the
|
operator, for examplereFlags=re.VERBOSE | re.IGNORECASE
.For details see the
re
module in the Python standard library. Note thatre.MULTILINE
cannot be used because expressions are matched against one line at a time. Added in PySys 1.5.1.stripWhitespace (bool) – By default blank lines are removed; set this to False to disable that behaviour. Added in PySys 2.0.
color (bool) – By default logged lines are colored blue to distinguish from the rest of the log contents. Set this to False to disable coloring. Added in PySys 2.1.
- Returns
True if anything was logged, False if not.
- mkdir(path)[source]¶
Create a directory, with recursive creation of any parent directories.
This function does nothing (does not raise an except) if the directory already exists.
- Parameters
path – The path to be created. This can be an absolute path or relative to the testcase output directory.
- Returns
the absolute path of the new directory, to facilitate fluent-style method calling.
- deleteDir(path, **kwargs)[source]¶
Recursively delete the specified directory.
Does nothing if it does not exist. Raises an exception if the deletion fails.
- Parameters
path – The path to be deleted. This can be an absolute path or relative to the testcase output directory.
kwargs – Any additional arguments such as
retries
andignore_errors
are passed topysys.utils.fileutils.deletedir()
.
- deleteFile(path, **kwargs)[source]¶
Delete the specified file, with optional retries and ignoring of errors.
Does nothing if it does not exist. Raises an exception if the deletion fails.
- Parameters
path – The path to be deleted. This can be an absolute path or relative to the testcase output directory.
kwargs – Any additional arguments such as
retries
andignore_errors
are passed topysys.utils.fileutils.deletefile()
.
- getDefaultFileEncoding(file, **xargs)[source]¶
Specifies what encoding should be used to read or write the specified text file.
This method is used to select the appropriate encoding whenever PySys needs to open a file, for example to wait for a signal, for a file-based assertion, or to write a file with replacements. Many methods allow the encoding to be overridden for just that call, but getDefaultFileEncoding exists to allow global defaults to be specified based on the filename.
For example, this method could be overridden to specify that utf-8 encoding is to be used for opening filenames ending in .xml, .json and .yaml.
The default implementation of this method uses pysysproject.xml configuration rules such as:
<default-file-encoding pattern="*.xml" encoding="utf-8"/>
A return value of None indicates default behaviour, which is to use the default OS encoding, as specified by
pysys.constants.PREFERRED_ENCODING
.- Parameters
file – The filename to be read or written. This may be an absolute path or a relative path.
xargs – Ensure that an
**xargs
argument is specified so that additional information can be passed to this method in future releases.
- Returns
The encoding to use for this file, or None if default behaviour is to be used. For example,
utf-8
or (for UTF-8 with a Byte Order Mark),utf-8-sig
.
- static compareVersions(v1, v2)[source]¶
Compares two alphanumeric dotted version strings to see which is more recent.
Example usage:
if self.compareVersions(thisversion, '1.2.alpha-3') > 0: ... # thisversion is newer than 1.2.alpha-3
The comparison algorithm ignores case, and normalizes separators ./-/_ so that
'1.alpha2'=='1Alpha2'
. Any string components are compared lexicographically with other strings, and compared to numbers strings are always considered greater.>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('10-alpha5.dev10', '10alpha-5-dEv_10') == 0 # normalization of case and separators True
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions(b'1....alpha.2', u'1Alpha2') == 0 # ascii byte and unicode strings both supported True
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1.2.0', '1.2') 0
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1.02', '1.2') 0
>>> ProcessUser().compareVersions('1.2.3', '1.2') > 0 True
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1.2', '1.2.3') -1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('10.2', '1.2') 1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1.2.text', '1.2.0') # letters are > numbers 1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1.2.text', '1.2') # letters are > numbers 1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('10.2alpha1', '10.2alpha') 1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('10.2dev', '10.2alpha') # letters are compared lexicographically 1
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('', '') 0
>>> ProcessUser.compareVersions('1', '') 1
- Parameters
v1 – A string containing a version number, with any number of components.
v2 – A string containing a version number, with any number of components.
- Returns
an integer > 0 if v1>v2, an integer < 0 if v1<v2, or 0 if they are semantically the same.
- write_text(file, text, encoding=None)[source]¶
Writes the specified characters to a file in the output directory.
- Parameters
file – The path of the file to write, either an absolute path or relative to the
self.output
directory.text –
The string to write to the file, with
\n
for newlines (do not useos.linesep
as the file will be opened in text mode so platform line separators will be added automatically).This must be a character string.
encoding – The encoding to use to open the file. The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.
- Return str
Return the absolute path of the generated file.
- disableLogging()[source]¶
Temporarily stops logging for the current thread.
For example:
with self.disableLogging(): self.startProcess(...)
Note that this method will do nothing if the log level if pysys is run with
-vDEBUG
or-vdisabledLogging=DEBUG
.New in version 1.6.0.
- unpackArchive(archive, dest=None, autoCleanup=True)[source]¶
Unpacks the specified file(s) from an archive to a directory. Supports archive format such as zip/tar.gz/gz/tar.xz/xz.
It is a good idea to store large textual Input/ assets (such as log files, which usually compress very well) as compressed archives to reduce disk space in your version control system.
By default this method will automatically delete the extracted file/dir during test cleanup so it doesn’t sit around on disk (or in CI uploaded failure archives) consuming space; if the file/dir is mutated by the test you may wish to disable this so you can manually inspect them by setting
autoCleanup=False
.For example:
unpacked = self.unpackArchive('mybigfile.log.xz') # do something with "unpacked"...
Note that
.xz
(for single files) and.tar.xz
(for multiple files) are recommended for optimal compression, and these (and.gz
) are significantly better than zip, which performs poorly when compressing multiple similar text files into one archive. Don’t use more than one single archive per testcase (if possible) to ensure you benefit from similarities between the various files.Files are decompressed in binary mode, so if you require platform-native line endings you should use
copy
to post-process them after decompressing.- Parameters
archive (str) – The path of the archive to unpack, by default from the test input directory. Alternatively you could provide an absolute path using
self.project.testRootDir
or similar if an archive is shared across multiple test cases.dest (str) – The directory in which the contents of the archive will be written; by default this is the test output directory for archive types that are always single-file, and a subdirectory named after the archive if not. This dir will be created if needed.
autoCleanup (bool) – Automatically deletes the unpackaged file/directory during test cleanup to save disk space (even if the test fails).
- Returns
The full path to the decompressed file or directory.
- copy(src, dest, mappers=[], encoding=None, symlinks=False, ignoreIf=None, skipMappersIf=None, overwrite=None)[source]¶
Copy a directory or a single text or binary file, optionally tranforming the contents by filtering each line through a list of mapping functions.
If any
pysys.mappers
are provided, the file is copied in text mode and each mapper is given the chance to modify or omit each line, or even reorder the lines of the file. If no mappers are provided, the file is copied in binary mode.For example:
self.copy('output-raw.txt', 'output-processed.txt', encoding='utf-8', mappers=[ lambda line: None if ('Timestamp: ' in line) else line, lambda line: line.replace('foo', 'bar'), pysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween('Error message .*:', stopBefore='^$'), pysys.mappers.RegexReplace(pysys.mappers.RegexReplace.DATETIME_REGEX, '<timestamp>'), ])
In addition to the file contents the attributes such as modification time and executable permission will be copied where possible.
This function is useful for creating a modified version of an output file that’s more suitable for later validation steps such as diff-ing, and also for copying required files from the input to the output directory.
It can also be used for copying a whole directory, similar to
shutil.copytree
but with the advantages of support for long paths on Windows, better error safety, and that relative paths are evaluated relative to the self.output directory (which is both convenient, and safer than shutil’s evaluation relative to the current working directory).For example:
self.copy('src.txt', 'dest.txt') # copies to outputdir/dest.txt self.copy('src.txt', self.output) # copies to outputdir/src.txt, since self.output is an existing directory self.copy('src.txt', 'foo/') # copies to outputdir/foo/src.txt since destination ends with a slash self.copy('srcdirname', 'foo/') # copies to outputdir/foo/srcdirname since destination ends with a slash
For more information about pre-defined mappers, see
pysys.mappers
. Custom mappers can be specified as simple functions or lambdas, however for advanced use cases you can additionally providemapper.fileStarted([self,] srcPath, destPath, srcFile, destFile)
and/ormapper.fileFinished(...)
methods to allow stateful operations, or to perform extra read/write operations before lines are read/written. For example:class CustomLineMapper(object): def fileStarted(self, srcPath, destPath, srcFile, destFile): self.src = os.path.basename(srcPath) def __call__(self, line): return '"'+self.src+'": '+line def fileFinished(self, srcPath, destPath, srcFile, destFile): destFile.write('\n' + 'footer added by CustomLineMapper') self.copy('src.txt', 'dest.txt', mappers=[CustomLineMapper()])
Changed in version 1.6.0: Ability to copy directories was added, along with the
overwrite=
,symlinks=
,ignoreIf=
andskipMappersIf=
arguments.- Parameters
src (str) – The source filename or directory, which can be an absolute path, or a path relative to the
self.output
directory. Usesrc=self.input+'/myfile'
if you wish to copy a file from the test input directory.dest (str) –
The destination file or directory name, which can be an absolute path, or a path relative to the
self.output
directory. Destination file(s) are overwritten if the dest already exists.The dest and src can be the same for file copies (but not directory copies).
As a convenience to avoid repeating the same text in the src and destination, if the dest ends with a slash, or the src is a file and the dest is an existing directory, the dest is taken as a parent directory into which the src will be copied in retaining its current name.
It is best to avoid copies where the src dir already contains the dest (which would be recursive) such as copying the test dir (possibly configured as
self.input
) to destinationself.output
, however if this is attempted PySys will log a warning and copy everything else except the recursive part.overwrite (bool) – If True, source files will be allowed to overwrite destination files, if False an exception will be raised if a destination file already exists. By default overwrite=None which means it’s enabled for single file copy() but disabled for directory copies.
mappers (List[callable[str]->str]) –
A list of filter functions that will be applied, in order, to map each line from source to destination. Each function accepts a string for the current line as input and returns either a string to write or None if the line is to be omitted. Any
None
items in the mappers list will be ignored. Mappers must always preserve the final\n
of each line (if present).See
pysys.mappers
for some useful predefined mappers such aspysys.mappers.IncludeLinesBetween
,pysys.mappers.RegexReplace
andpysys.mappers.SortLines
.If present the
mapper.fileStarted(...)
and/ormapper.fileFinished(...)
methods will be called on each mapper in the list at the start and end of each file; see above for an example.Do not share mapper instances across multiple tests or threads as this can cause race conditions.
encoding (str) – The encoding to use to open the file (only used if mappers are provided; if not, it is opened in binary mode). The default value is None which indicates that the decision will be delegated to the
getDefaultFileEncoding()
method.symlinks (bool) – Set to True if symbolic links in the source tree should be represented as symbolic links in the destination (rather than just being copied).
ignoreIf (callable[str]->bool) – A callable that accepts a source path and returns True if this file/directory should be omitted from a directory copy. For example:
ignoreIf=lambda src: src.endswith(('.tmp', '.log')))
skipMappersIf (callable[str]->bool) – A callable that accepts a source path and returns True if this file should be copied in binary mode (as if no mappers had been specified). For example:
skipMappersIf=lambda src: not src.endswith(('.xml', '.properties')))
- Return str
the absolute path of the destination file.