818 lines
		
	
	
		
			31 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			818 lines
		
	
	
		
			31 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Python
		
	
	
	
| """Rewrite assertion AST to produce nice error messages"""
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| 
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| import ast
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| import errno
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| import itertools
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| import imp
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| import marshal
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| import os
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| import re
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| import struct
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| import sys
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| import types
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| 
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| import py
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| from _pytest.assertion import util
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| 
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| 
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| # pytest caches rewritten pycs in __pycache__.
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| if hasattr(imp, "get_tag"):
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|     PYTEST_TAG = imp.get_tag() + "-PYTEST"
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| else:
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|     if hasattr(sys, "pypy_version_info"):
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|         impl = "pypy"
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|     elif sys.platform == "java":
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|         impl = "jython"
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|     else:
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|         impl = "cpython"
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|     ver = sys.version_info
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|     PYTEST_TAG = "%s-%s%s-PYTEST" % (impl, ver[0], ver[1])
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|     del ver, impl
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| 
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| PYC_EXT = ".py" + (__debug__ and "c" or "o")
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| PYC_TAIL = "." + PYTEST_TAG + PYC_EXT
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| 
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| REWRITE_NEWLINES = sys.version_info[:2] != (2, 7) and sys.version_info < (3, 2)
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| ASCII_IS_DEFAULT_ENCODING = sys.version_info[0] < 3
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| 
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| class AssertionRewritingHook(object):
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|     """PEP302 Import hook which rewrites asserts."""
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| 
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|     def __init__(self):
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|         self.session = None
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|         self.modules = {}
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|         self._register_with_pkg_resources()
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| 
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|     def set_session(self, session):
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|         self.fnpats = session.config.getini("python_files")
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|         self.session = session
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| 
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|     def find_module(self, name, path=None):
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|         if self.session is None:
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|             return None
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|         sess = self.session
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|         state = sess.config._assertstate
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|         state.trace("find_module called for: %s" % name)
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|         names = name.rsplit(".", 1)
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|         lastname = names[-1]
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|         pth = None
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|         if path is not None:
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|             # Starting with Python 3.3, path is a _NamespacePath(), which
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|             # causes problems if not converted to list.
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|             path = list(path)
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|             if len(path) == 1:
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|                 pth = path[0]
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|         if pth is None:
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|             try:
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|                 fd, fn, desc = imp.find_module(lastname, path)
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|             except ImportError:
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|                 return None
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|             if fd is not None:
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|                 fd.close()
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|             tp = desc[2]
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|             if tp == imp.PY_COMPILED:
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|                 if hasattr(imp, "source_from_cache"):
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|                     fn = imp.source_from_cache(fn)
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|                 else:
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|                     fn = fn[:-1]
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|             elif tp != imp.PY_SOURCE:
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|                 # Don't know what this is.
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|                 return None
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|         else:
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|             fn = os.path.join(pth, name.rpartition(".")[2] + ".py")
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|         fn_pypath = py.path.local(fn)
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|         # Is this a test file?
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|         if not sess.isinitpath(fn):
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|             # We have to be very careful here because imports in this code can
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|             # trigger a cycle.
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|             self.session = None
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|             try:
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|                 for pat in self.fnpats:
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|                     if fn_pypath.fnmatch(pat):
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|                         state.trace("matched test file %r" % (fn,))
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|                         break
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|                 else:
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|                     return None
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|             finally:
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|                 self.session = sess
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|         else:
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|             state.trace("matched test file (was specified on cmdline): %r" %
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|                         (fn,))
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|         # The requested module looks like a test file, so rewrite it. This is
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|         # the most magical part of the process: load the source, rewrite the
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|         # asserts, and load the rewritten source. We also cache the rewritten
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|         # module code in a special pyc. We must be aware of the possibility of
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|         # concurrent pytest processes rewriting and loading pycs. To avoid
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|         # tricky race conditions, we maintain the following invariant: The
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|         # cached pyc is always a complete, valid pyc. Operations on it must be
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|         # atomic. POSIX's atomic rename comes in handy.
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|         write = not sys.dont_write_bytecode
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|         cache_dir = os.path.join(fn_pypath.dirname, "__pycache__")
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|         if write:
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|             try:
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|                 os.mkdir(cache_dir)
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|             except OSError:
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|                 e = sys.exc_info()[1].errno
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|                 if e == errno.EEXIST:
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|                     # Either the __pycache__ directory already exists (the
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|                     # common case) or it's blocked by a non-dir node. In the
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|                     # latter case, we'll ignore it in _write_pyc.
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|                     pass
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|                 elif e in [errno.ENOENT, errno.ENOTDIR]:
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|                     # One of the path components was not a directory, likely
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|                     # because we're in a zip file.
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|                     write = False
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|                 elif e in [errno.EACCES, errno.EROFS]:
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|                     state.trace("read only directory: %r" % fn_pypath.dirname)
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|                     write = False
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|                 else:
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|                     raise
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|         cache_name = fn_pypath.basename[:-3] + PYC_TAIL
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|         pyc = os.path.join(cache_dir, cache_name)
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|         # Notice that even if we're in a read-only directory, I'm going
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|         # to check for a cached pyc. This may not be optimal...
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|         co = _read_pyc(fn_pypath, pyc, state.trace)
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|         if co is None:
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|             state.trace("rewriting %r" % (fn,))
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|             source_stat, co = _rewrite_test(state, fn_pypath)
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|             if co is None:
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|                 # Probably a SyntaxError in the test.
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|                 return None
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|             if write:
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|                 _make_rewritten_pyc(state, source_stat, pyc, co)
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|         else:
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|             state.trace("found cached rewritten pyc for %r" % (fn,))
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|         self.modules[name] = co, pyc
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|         return self
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| 
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|     def load_module(self, name):
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|         # If there is an existing module object named 'fullname' in
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|         # sys.modules, the loader must use that existing module. (Otherwise,
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|         # the reload() builtin will not work correctly.)
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|         if name in sys.modules:
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|             return sys.modules[name]
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| 
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|         co, pyc = self.modules.pop(name)
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|         # I wish I could just call imp.load_compiled here, but __file__ has to
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|         # be set properly. In Python 3.2+, this all would be handled correctly
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|         # by load_compiled.
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|         mod = sys.modules[name] = imp.new_module(name)
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|         try:
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|             mod.__file__ = co.co_filename
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|             # Normally, this attribute is 3.2+.
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|             mod.__cached__ = pyc
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|             mod.__loader__ = self
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|             py.builtin.exec_(co, mod.__dict__)
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|         except:
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|             del sys.modules[name]
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|             raise
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|         return sys.modules[name]
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| 
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| 
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| 
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|     def is_package(self, name):
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|         try:
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|             fd, fn, desc = imp.find_module(name)
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|         except ImportError:
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|             return False
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|         if fd is not None:
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|             fd.close()
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|         tp = desc[2]
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|         return tp == imp.PKG_DIRECTORY
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| 
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|     @classmethod
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|     def _register_with_pkg_resources(cls):
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|         """
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|         Ensure package resources can be loaded from this loader. May be called
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|         multiple times, as the operation is idempotent.
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|         """
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|         try:
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|             import pkg_resources
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|             # access an attribute in case a deferred importer is present
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|             pkg_resources.__name__
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|         except ImportError:
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|             return
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| 
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|         # Since pytest tests are always located in the file system, the
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|         #  DefaultProvider is appropriate.
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|         pkg_resources.register_loader_type(cls, pkg_resources.DefaultProvider)
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| 
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| 
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| def _write_pyc(state, co, source_stat, pyc):
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|     # Technically, we don't have to have the same pyc format as
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|     # (C)Python, since these "pycs" should never be seen by builtin
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|     # import. However, there's little reason deviate, and I hope
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|     # sometime to be able to use imp.load_compiled to load them. (See
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|     # the comment in load_module above.)
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|     try:
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|         fp = open(pyc, "wb")
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|     except IOError:
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|         err = sys.exc_info()[1].errno
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|         state.trace("error writing pyc file at %s: errno=%s" %(pyc, err))
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|         # we ignore any failure to write the cache file
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|         # there are many reasons, permission-denied, __pycache__ being a
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|         # file etc.
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|         return False
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|     try:
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|         fp.write(imp.get_magic())
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|         mtime = int(source_stat.mtime)
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|         size = source_stat.size & 0xFFFFFFFF
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|         fp.write(struct.pack("<ll", mtime, size))
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|         marshal.dump(co, fp)
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|     finally:
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|         fp.close()
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|     return True
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| 
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| RN = "\r\n".encode("utf-8")
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| N = "\n".encode("utf-8")
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| 
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| cookie_re = re.compile(r"^[ \t\f]*#.*coding[:=][ \t]*[-\w.]+")
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| BOM_UTF8 = '\xef\xbb\xbf'
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| 
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| def _rewrite_test(state, fn):
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|     """Try to read and rewrite *fn* and return the code object."""
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|     try:
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|         stat = fn.stat()
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|         source = fn.read("rb")
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|     except EnvironmentError:
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|         return None, None
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|     if ASCII_IS_DEFAULT_ENCODING:
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|         # ASCII is the default encoding in Python 2. Without a coding
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|         # declaration, Python 2 will complain about any bytes in the file
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|         # outside the ASCII range. Sadly, this behavior does not extend to
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|         # compile() or ast.parse(), which prefer to interpret the bytes as
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|         # latin-1. (At least they properly handle explicit coding cookies.) To
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|         # preserve this error behavior, we could force ast.parse() to use ASCII
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|         # as the encoding by inserting a coding cookie. Unfortunately, that
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|         # messes up line numbers. Thus, we have to check ourselves if anything
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|         # is outside the ASCII range in the case no encoding is explicitly
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|         # declared. For more context, see issue #269. Yay for Python 3 which
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|         # gets this right.
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|         end1 = source.find("\n")
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|         end2 = source.find("\n", end1 + 1)
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|         if (not source.startswith(BOM_UTF8) and
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|             cookie_re.match(source[0:end1]) is None and
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|             cookie_re.match(source[end1 + 1:end2]) is None):
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|             if hasattr(state, "_indecode"):
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|                 # encodings imported us again, so don't rewrite.
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|                 return None, None
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|             state._indecode = True
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|             try:
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|                 try:
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|                     source.decode("ascii")
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|                 except UnicodeDecodeError:
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|                     # Let it fail in real import.
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|                     return None, None
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|             finally:
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|                 del state._indecode
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|     # On Python versions which are not 2.7 and less than or equal to 3.1, the
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|     # parser expects *nix newlines.
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|     if REWRITE_NEWLINES:
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|         source = source.replace(RN, N) + N
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|     try:
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|         tree = ast.parse(source)
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|     except SyntaxError:
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|         # Let this pop up again in the real import.
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|         state.trace("failed to parse: %r" % (fn,))
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|         return None, None
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|     rewrite_asserts(tree)
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|     try:
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|         co = compile(tree, fn.strpath, "exec")
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|     except SyntaxError:
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|         # It's possible that this error is from some bug in the
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|         # assertion rewriting, but I don't know of a fast way to tell.
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|         state.trace("failed to compile: %r" % (fn,))
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|         return None, None
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|     return stat, co
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| 
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| def _make_rewritten_pyc(state, source_stat, pyc, co):
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|     """Try to dump rewritten code to *pyc*."""
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|     if sys.platform.startswith("win"):
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|         # Windows grants exclusive access to open files and doesn't have atomic
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|         # rename, so just write into the final file.
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|         _write_pyc(state, co, source_stat, pyc)
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|     else:
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|         # When not on windows, assume rename is atomic. Dump the code object
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|         # into a file specific to this process and atomically replace it.
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|         proc_pyc = pyc + "." + str(os.getpid())
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|         if _write_pyc(state, co, source_stat, proc_pyc):
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|             os.rename(proc_pyc, pyc)
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| 
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| def _read_pyc(source, pyc, trace=lambda x: None):
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|     """Possibly read a pytest pyc containing rewritten code.
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| 
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|     Return rewritten code if successful or None if not.
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|     """
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|     try:
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|         fp = open(pyc, "rb")
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|     except IOError:
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|         return None
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|     with fp:
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|         try:
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|             mtime = int(source.mtime())
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|             size = source.size()
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|             data = fp.read(12)
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|         except EnvironmentError as e:
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|             trace('_read_pyc(%s): EnvironmentError %s' % (source, e))
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|             return None
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|         # Check for invalid or out of date pyc file.
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|         if (len(data) != 12 or data[:4] != imp.get_magic() or
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|                 struct.unpack("<ll", data[4:]) != (mtime, size)):
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|             trace('_read_pyc(%s): invalid or out of date pyc' % source)
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|             return None
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|         try:
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|             co = marshal.load(fp)
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|         except Exception as e:
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|             trace('_read_pyc(%s): marshal.load error %s' % (source, e))
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|             return None
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|         if not isinstance(co, types.CodeType):
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|             trace('_read_pyc(%s): not a code object' % source)
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|             return None
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|         return co
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| 
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| 
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| def rewrite_asserts(mod):
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|     """Rewrite the assert statements in mod."""
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|     AssertionRewriter().run(mod)
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| 
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| 
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| def _saferepr(obj):
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|     """Get a safe repr of an object for assertion error messages.
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| 
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|     The assertion formatting (util.format_explanation()) requires
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|     newlines to be escaped since they are a special character for it.
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|     Normally assertion.util.format_explanation() does this but for a
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|     custom repr it is possible to contain one of the special escape
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|     sequences, especially '\n{' and '\n}' are likely to be present in
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|     JSON reprs.
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| 
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|     """
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|     repr = py.io.saferepr(obj)
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|     if py.builtin._istext(repr):
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|         t = py.builtin.text
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|     else:
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|         t = py.builtin.bytes
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|     return repr.replace(t("\n"), t("\\n"))
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| 
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| 
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| from _pytest.assertion.util import format_explanation as _format_explanation # noqa
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| 
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| def _format_assertmsg(obj):
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|     """Format the custom assertion message given.
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| 
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|     For strings this simply replaces newlines with '\n~' so that
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|     util.format_explanation() will preserve them instead of escaping
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|     newlines.  For other objects py.io.saferepr() is used first.
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| 
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|     """
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|     # reprlib appears to have a bug which means that if a string
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|     # contains a newline it gets escaped, however if an object has a
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|     # .__repr__() which contains newlines it does not get escaped.
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|     # However in either case we want to preserve the newline.
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|     if py.builtin._istext(obj) or py.builtin._isbytes(obj):
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|         s = obj
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|         is_repr = False
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|     else:
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|         s = py.io.saferepr(obj)
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|         is_repr = True
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|     if py.builtin._istext(s):
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|         t = py.builtin.text
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|     else:
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|         t = py.builtin.bytes
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|     s = s.replace(t("\n"), t("\n~")).replace(t("%"), t("%%"))
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|     if is_repr:
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|         s = s.replace(t("\\n"), t("\n~"))
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|     return s
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| 
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| def _should_repr_global_name(obj):
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|     return not hasattr(obj, "__name__") and not py.builtin.callable(obj)
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| 
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| def _format_boolop(explanations, is_or):
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|     explanation = "(" + (is_or and " or " or " and ").join(explanations) + ")"
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|     if py.builtin._istext(explanation):
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|         t = py.builtin.text
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|     else:
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|         t = py.builtin.bytes
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|     return explanation.replace(t('%'), t('%%'))
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| 
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| def _call_reprcompare(ops, results, expls, each_obj):
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|     for i, res, expl in zip(range(len(ops)), results, expls):
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|         try:
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|             done = not res
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|         except Exception:
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|             done = True
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|         if done:
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|             break
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|     if util._reprcompare is not None:
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|         custom = util._reprcompare(ops[i], each_obj[i], each_obj[i + 1])
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|         if custom is not None:
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|             return custom
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|     return expl
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| 
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| 
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| unary_map = {
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|     ast.Not: "not %s",
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|     ast.Invert: "~%s",
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|     ast.USub: "-%s",
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|     ast.UAdd: "+%s"
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| }
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| 
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| binop_map = {
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|     ast.BitOr: "|",
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|     ast.BitXor: "^",
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|     ast.BitAnd: "&",
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|     ast.LShift: "<<",
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|     ast.RShift: ">>",
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|     ast.Add: "+",
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|     ast.Sub: "-",
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|     ast.Mult: "*",
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|     ast.Div: "/",
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|     ast.FloorDiv: "//",
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|     ast.Mod: "%%", # escaped for string formatting
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|     ast.Eq: "==",
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|     ast.NotEq: "!=",
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|     ast.Lt: "<",
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|     ast.LtE: "<=",
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|     ast.Gt: ">",
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|     ast.GtE: ">=",
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|     ast.Pow: "**",
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|     ast.Is: "is",
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|     ast.IsNot: "is not",
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|     ast.In: "in",
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|     ast.NotIn: "not in"
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| }
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| 
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| 
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| def set_location(node, lineno, col_offset):
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|     """Set node location information recursively."""
 | |
|     def _fix(node, lineno, col_offset):
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|         if "lineno" in node._attributes:
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|             node.lineno = lineno
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|         if "col_offset" in node._attributes:
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|             node.col_offset = col_offset
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|         for child in ast.iter_child_nodes(node):
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|             _fix(child, lineno, col_offset)
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|     _fix(node, lineno, col_offset)
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|     return node
 | |
| 
 | |
| 
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| class AssertionRewriter(ast.NodeVisitor):
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|     """Assertion rewriting implementation.
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| 
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|     The main entrypoint is to call .run() with an ast.Module instance,
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|     this will then find all the assert statements and re-write them to
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|     provide intermediate values and a detailed assertion error.  See
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|     http://pybites.blogspot.be/2011/07/behind-scenes-of-pytests-new-assertion.html
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|     for an overview of how this works.
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| 
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|     The entry point here is .run() which will iterate over all the
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|     statements in an ast.Module and for each ast.Assert statement it
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|     finds call .visit() with it.  Then .visit_Assert() takes over and
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|     is responsible for creating new ast statements to replace the
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|     original assert statement: it re-writes the test of an assertion
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|     to provide intermediate values and replace it with an if statement
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|     which raises an assertion error with a detailed explanation in
 | |
|     case the expression is false.
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| 
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|     For this .visit_Assert() uses the visitor pattern to visit all the
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|     AST nodes of the ast.Assert.test field, each visit call returning
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|     an AST node and the corresponding explanation string.  During this
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|     state is kept in several instance attributes:
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| 
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|     :statements: All the AST statements which will replace the assert
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|        statement.
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| 
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|     :variables: This is populated by .variable() with each variable
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|        used by the statements so that they can all be set to None at
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|        the end of the statements.
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| 
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|     :variable_counter: Counter to create new unique variables needed
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|        by statements.  Variables are created using .variable() and
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|        have the form of "@py_assert0".
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| 
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|     :on_failure: The AST statements which will be executed if the
 | |
|        assertion test fails.  This is the code which will construct
 | |
|        the failure message and raises the AssertionError.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     :explanation_specifiers: A dict filled by .explanation_param()
 | |
|        with %-formatting placeholders and their corresponding
 | |
|        expressions to use in the building of an assertion message.
 | |
|        This is used by .pop_format_context() to build a message.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     :stack: A stack of the explanation_specifiers dicts maintained by
 | |
|        .push_format_context() and .pop_format_context() which allows
 | |
|        to build another %-formatted string while already building one.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     This state is reset on every new assert statement visited and used
 | |
|     by the other visitors.
 | |
| 
 | |
|     """
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def run(self, mod):
 | |
|         """Find all assert statements in *mod* and rewrite them."""
 | |
|         if not mod.body:
 | |
|             # Nothing to do.
 | |
|             return
 | |
|         # Insert some special imports at the top of the module but after any
 | |
|         # docstrings and __future__ imports.
 | |
|         aliases = [ast.alias(py.builtin.builtins.__name__, "@py_builtins"),
 | |
|                    ast.alias("_pytest.assertion.rewrite", "@pytest_ar")]
 | |
|         expect_docstring = True
 | |
|         pos = 0
 | |
|         lineno = 0
 | |
|         for item in mod.body:
 | |
|             if (expect_docstring and isinstance(item, ast.Expr) and
 | |
|                     isinstance(item.value, ast.Str)):
 | |
|                 doc = item.value.s
 | |
|                 if "PYTEST_DONT_REWRITE" in doc:
 | |
|                     # The module has disabled assertion rewriting.
 | |
|                     return
 | |
|                 lineno += len(doc) - 1
 | |
|                 expect_docstring = False
 | |
|             elif (not isinstance(item, ast.ImportFrom) or item.level > 0 or
 | |
|                   item.module != "__future__"):
 | |
|                 lineno = item.lineno
 | |
|                 break
 | |
|             pos += 1
 | |
|         imports = [ast.Import([alias], lineno=lineno, col_offset=0)
 | |
|                    for alias in aliases]
 | |
|         mod.body[pos:pos] = imports
 | |
|         # Collect asserts.
 | |
|         nodes = [mod]
 | |
|         while nodes:
 | |
|             node = nodes.pop()
 | |
|             for name, field in ast.iter_fields(node):
 | |
|                 if isinstance(field, list):
 | |
|                     new = []
 | |
|                     for i, child in enumerate(field):
 | |
|                         if isinstance(child, ast.Assert):
 | |
|                             # Transform assert.
 | |
|                             new.extend(self.visit(child))
 | |
|                         else:
 | |
|                             new.append(child)
 | |
|                             if isinstance(child, ast.AST):
 | |
|                                 nodes.append(child)
 | |
|                     setattr(node, name, new)
 | |
|                 elif (isinstance(field, ast.AST) and
 | |
|                       # Don't recurse into expressions as they can't contain
 | |
|                       # asserts.
 | |
|                       not isinstance(field, ast.expr)):
 | |
|                     nodes.append(field)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def variable(self):
 | |
|         """Get a new variable."""
 | |
|         # Use a character invalid in python identifiers to avoid clashing.
 | |
|         name = "@py_assert" + str(next(self.variable_counter))
 | |
|         self.variables.append(name)
 | |
|         return name
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def assign(self, expr):
 | |
|         """Give *expr* a name."""
 | |
|         name = self.variable()
 | |
|         self.statements.append(ast.Assign([ast.Name(name, ast.Store())], expr))
 | |
|         return ast.Name(name, ast.Load())
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def display(self, expr):
 | |
|         """Call py.io.saferepr on the expression."""
 | |
|         return self.helper("saferepr", expr)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def helper(self, name, *args):
 | |
|         """Call a helper in this module."""
 | |
|         py_name = ast.Name("@pytest_ar", ast.Load())
 | |
|         attr = ast.Attribute(py_name, "_" + name, ast.Load())
 | |
|         return ast.Call(attr, list(args), [], None, None)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def builtin(self, name):
 | |
|         """Return the builtin called *name*."""
 | |
|         builtin_name = ast.Name("@py_builtins", ast.Load())
 | |
|         return ast.Attribute(builtin_name, name, ast.Load())
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def explanation_param(self, expr):
 | |
|         """Return a new named %-formatting placeholder for expr.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         This creates a %-formatting placeholder for expr in the
 | |
|         current formatting context, e.g. ``%(py0)s``.  The placeholder
 | |
|         and expr are placed in the current format context so that it
 | |
|         can be used on the next call to .pop_format_context().
 | |
| 
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         specifier = "py" + str(next(self.variable_counter))
 | |
|         self.explanation_specifiers[specifier] = expr
 | |
|         return "%(" + specifier + ")s"
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def push_format_context(self):
 | |
|         """Create a new formatting context.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         The format context is used for when an explanation wants to
 | |
|         have a variable value formatted in the assertion message.  In
 | |
|         this case the value required can be added using
 | |
|         .explanation_param().  Finally .pop_format_context() is used
 | |
|         to format a string of %-formatted values as added by
 | |
|         .explanation_param().
 | |
| 
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         self.explanation_specifiers = {}
 | |
|         self.stack.append(self.explanation_specifiers)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def pop_format_context(self, expl_expr):
 | |
|         """Format the %-formatted string with current format context.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         The expl_expr should be an ast.Str instance constructed from
 | |
|         the %-placeholders created by .explanation_param().  This will
 | |
|         add the required code to format said string to .on_failure and
 | |
|         return the ast.Name instance of the formatted string.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         current = self.stack.pop()
 | |
|         if self.stack:
 | |
|             self.explanation_specifiers = self.stack[-1]
 | |
|         keys = [ast.Str(key) for key in current.keys()]
 | |
|         format_dict = ast.Dict(keys, list(current.values()))
 | |
|         form = ast.BinOp(expl_expr, ast.Mod(), format_dict)
 | |
|         name = "@py_format" + str(next(self.variable_counter))
 | |
|         self.on_failure.append(ast.Assign([ast.Name(name, ast.Store())], form))
 | |
|         return ast.Name(name, ast.Load())
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def generic_visit(self, node):
 | |
|         """Handle expressions we don't have custom code for."""
 | |
|         assert isinstance(node, ast.expr)
 | |
|         res = self.assign(node)
 | |
|         return res, self.explanation_param(self.display(res))
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_Assert(self, assert_):
 | |
|         """Return the AST statements to replace the ast.Assert instance.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         This re-writes the test of an assertion to provide
 | |
|         intermediate values and replace it with an if statement which
 | |
|         raises an assertion error with a detailed explanation in case
 | |
|         the expression is false.
 | |
| 
 | |
|         """
 | |
|         self.statements = []
 | |
|         self.variables = []
 | |
|         self.variable_counter = itertools.count()
 | |
|         self.stack = []
 | |
|         self.on_failure = []
 | |
|         self.push_format_context()
 | |
|         # Rewrite assert into a bunch of statements.
 | |
|         top_condition, explanation = self.visit(assert_.test)
 | |
|         # Create failure message.
 | |
|         body = self.on_failure
 | |
|         negation = ast.UnaryOp(ast.Not(), top_condition)
 | |
|         self.statements.append(ast.If(negation, body, []))
 | |
|         if assert_.msg:
 | |
|             assertmsg = self.helper('format_assertmsg', assert_.msg)
 | |
|             explanation = "\n>assert " + explanation
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             assertmsg = ast.Str("")
 | |
|             explanation = "assert " + explanation
 | |
|         template = ast.BinOp(assertmsg, ast.Add(), ast.Str(explanation))
 | |
|         msg = self.pop_format_context(template)
 | |
|         fmt = self.helper("format_explanation", msg)
 | |
|         err_name = ast.Name("AssertionError", ast.Load())
 | |
|         exc = ast.Call(err_name, [fmt], [], None, None)
 | |
|         if sys.version_info[0] >= 3:
 | |
|             raise_ = ast.Raise(exc, None)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             raise_ = ast.Raise(exc, None, None)
 | |
|         body.append(raise_)
 | |
|         # Clear temporary variables by setting them to None.
 | |
|         if self.variables:
 | |
|             variables = [ast.Name(name, ast.Store())
 | |
|                          for name in self.variables]
 | |
|             clear = ast.Assign(variables, ast.Name("None", ast.Load()))
 | |
|             self.statements.append(clear)
 | |
|         # Fix line numbers.
 | |
|         for stmt in self.statements:
 | |
|             set_location(stmt, assert_.lineno, assert_.col_offset)
 | |
|         return self.statements
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_Name(self, name):
 | |
|         # Display the repr of the name if it's a local variable or
 | |
|         # _should_repr_global_name() thinks it's acceptable.
 | |
|         locs = ast.Call(self.builtin("locals"), [], [], None, None)
 | |
|         inlocs = ast.Compare(ast.Str(name.id), [ast.In()], [locs])
 | |
|         dorepr = self.helper("should_repr_global_name", name)
 | |
|         test = ast.BoolOp(ast.Or(), [inlocs, dorepr])
 | |
|         expr = ast.IfExp(test, self.display(name), ast.Str(name.id))
 | |
|         return name, self.explanation_param(expr)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_BoolOp(self, boolop):
 | |
|         res_var = self.variable()
 | |
|         expl_list = self.assign(ast.List([], ast.Load()))
 | |
|         app = ast.Attribute(expl_list, "append", ast.Load())
 | |
|         is_or = int(isinstance(boolop.op, ast.Or))
 | |
|         body = save = self.statements
 | |
|         fail_save = self.on_failure
 | |
|         levels = len(boolop.values) - 1
 | |
|         self.push_format_context()
 | |
|         # Process each operand, short-circuting if needed.
 | |
|         for i, v in enumerate(boolop.values):
 | |
|             if i:
 | |
|                 fail_inner = []
 | |
|                 # cond is set in a prior loop iteration below
 | |
|                 self.on_failure.append(ast.If(cond, fail_inner, [])) # noqa
 | |
|                 self.on_failure = fail_inner
 | |
|             self.push_format_context()
 | |
|             res, expl = self.visit(v)
 | |
|             body.append(ast.Assign([ast.Name(res_var, ast.Store())], res))
 | |
|             expl_format = self.pop_format_context(ast.Str(expl))
 | |
|             call = ast.Call(app, [expl_format], [], None, None)
 | |
|             self.on_failure.append(ast.Expr(call))
 | |
|             if i < levels:
 | |
|                 cond = res
 | |
|                 if is_or:
 | |
|                     cond = ast.UnaryOp(ast.Not(), cond)
 | |
|                 inner = []
 | |
|                 self.statements.append(ast.If(cond, inner, []))
 | |
|                 self.statements = body = inner
 | |
|         self.statements = save
 | |
|         self.on_failure = fail_save
 | |
|         expl_template = self.helper("format_boolop", expl_list, ast.Num(is_or))
 | |
|         expl = self.pop_format_context(expl_template)
 | |
|         return ast.Name(res_var, ast.Load()), self.explanation_param(expl)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_UnaryOp(self, unary):
 | |
|         pattern = unary_map[unary.op.__class__]
 | |
|         operand_res, operand_expl = self.visit(unary.operand)
 | |
|         res = self.assign(ast.UnaryOp(unary.op, operand_res))
 | |
|         return res, pattern % (operand_expl,)
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_BinOp(self, binop):
 | |
|         symbol = binop_map[binop.op.__class__]
 | |
|         left_expr, left_expl = self.visit(binop.left)
 | |
|         right_expr, right_expl = self.visit(binop.right)
 | |
|         explanation = "(%s %s %s)" % (left_expl, symbol, right_expl)
 | |
|         res = self.assign(ast.BinOp(left_expr, binop.op, right_expr))
 | |
|         return res, explanation
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_Call(self, call):
 | |
|         new_func, func_expl = self.visit(call.func)
 | |
|         arg_expls = []
 | |
|         new_args = []
 | |
|         new_kwargs = []
 | |
|         new_star = new_kwarg = None
 | |
|         for arg in call.args:
 | |
|             res, expl = self.visit(arg)
 | |
|             new_args.append(res)
 | |
|             arg_expls.append(expl)
 | |
|         for keyword in call.keywords:
 | |
|             res, expl = self.visit(keyword.value)
 | |
|             new_kwargs.append(ast.keyword(keyword.arg, res))
 | |
|             arg_expls.append(keyword.arg + "=" + expl)
 | |
|         if call.starargs:
 | |
|             new_star, expl = self.visit(call.starargs)
 | |
|             arg_expls.append("*" + expl)
 | |
|         if call.kwargs:
 | |
|             new_kwarg, expl = self.visit(call.kwargs)
 | |
|             arg_expls.append("**" + expl)
 | |
|         expl = "%s(%s)" % (func_expl, ', '.join(arg_expls))
 | |
|         new_call = ast.Call(new_func, new_args, new_kwargs,
 | |
|                             new_star, new_kwarg)
 | |
|         res = self.assign(new_call)
 | |
|         res_expl = self.explanation_param(self.display(res))
 | |
|         outer_expl = "%s\n{%s = %s\n}" % (res_expl, res_expl, expl)
 | |
|         return res, outer_expl
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_Attribute(self, attr):
 | |
|         if not isinstance(attr.ctx, ast.Load):
 | |
|             return self.generic_visit(attr)
 | |
|         value, value_expl = self.visit(attr.value)
 | |
|         res = self.assign(ast.Attribute(value, attr.attr, ast.Load()))
 | |
|         res_expl = self.explanation_param(self.display(res))
 | |
|         pat = "%s\n{%s = %s.%s\n}"
 | |
|         expl = pat % (res_expl, res_expl, value_expl, attr.attr)
 | |
|         return res, expl
 | |
| 
 | |
|     def visit_Compare(self, comp):
 | |
|         self.push_format_context()
 | |
|         left_res, left_expl = self.visit(comp.left)
 | |
|         res_variables = [self.variable() for i in range(len(comp.ops))]
 | |
|         load_names = [ast.Name(v, ast.Load()) for v in res_variables]
 | |
|         store_names = [ast.Name(v, ast.Store()) for v in res_variables]
 | |
|         it = zip(range(len(comp.ops)), comp.ops, comp.comparators)
 | |
|         expls = []
 | |
|         syms = []
 | |
|         results = [left_res]
 | |
|         for i, op, next_operand in it:
 | |
|             next_res, next_expl = self.visit(next_operand)
 | |
|             results.append(next_res)
 | |
|             sym = binop_map[op.__class__]
 | |
|             syms.append(ast.Str(sym))
 | |
|             expl = "%s %s %s" % (left_expl, sym, next_expl)
 | |
|             expls.append(ast.Str(expl))
 | |
|             res_expr = ast.Compare(left_res, [op], [next_res])
 | |
|             self.statements.append(ast.Assign([store_names[i]], res_expr))
 | |
|             left_res, left_expl = next_res, next_expl
 | |
|         # Use pytest.assertion.util._reprcompare if that's available.
 | |
|         expl_call = self.helper("call_reprcompare",
 | |
|                                 ast.Tuple(syms, ast.Load()),
 | |
|                                 ast.Tuple(load_names, ast.Load()),
 | |
|                                 ast.Tuple(expls, ast.Load()),
 | |
|                                 ast.Tuple(results, ast.Load()))
 | |
|         if len(comp.ops) > 1:
 | |
|             res = ast.BoolOp(ast.And(), load_names)
 | |
|         else:
 | |
|             res = load_names[0]
 | |
|         return res, self.explanation_param(self.pop_format_context(expl_call))
 |