oslo.versionedobjects/oslo_versionedobjects/tests/obj_fixtures.py
Hervé Beraud b7cf243fb9 Stop to use the __future__ module.
The __future__ module [1] was used in this context to ensure compatibility
between python 2 and python 3.

We previously dropped the support of python 2.7 [2] and now we only support
python 3 so we don't need to continue to use this module and the imports
listed below.

Imports commonly used and their related PEPs:
- `division` is related to PEP 238 [3]
- `print_function` is related to PEP 3105 [4]
- `unicode_literals` is related to PEP 3112 [5]
- `with_statement` is related to PEP 343 [6]
- `absolute_import` is related to PEP 328 [7]

[1] https://docs.python.org/3/library/__future__.html
[2] https://governance.openstack.org/tc/goals/selected/ussuri/drop-py27.html
[3] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0238
[4] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3105
[5] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-3112
[6] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0343
[7] https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328

Change-Id: Ifd5fabb3e5f56b61b056d8a90e5b64406b9d29eb
2020-06-02 20:41:50 +02:00

189 lines
6.3 KiB
Python

# Copyright 2010 United States Government as represented by the
# Administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.
# All Rights Reserved.
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may
# not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain
# a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT
# WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the
# License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations
# under the License.
"""Fixtures for VersionedObject tests."""
import gettext
import logging
import os
import warnings
import fixtures
from oslo_config import cfg
_TRUE_VALUES = ('True', 'true', '1', 'yes')
CONF = cfg.CONF
DB_SCHEMA = ""
class TranslationFixture(fixtures.Fixture):
"""Use gettext NullTranslation objects in tests."""
def setUp(self):
super(TranslationFixture, self).setUp()
nulltrans = gettext.NullTranslations()
gettext_fixture = fixtures.MonkeyPatch('gettext.translation',
lambda *x, **y: nulltrans)
self.gettext_patcher = self.useFixture(gettext_fixture)
class NullHandler(logging.Handler):
"""custom default NullHandler to attempt to format the record.
Used in conjunction with
log_fixture.get_logging_handle_error_fixture to detect formatting errors in
debug level logs without saving the logs.
"""
def handle(self, record):
self.format(record)
def emit(self, record):
pass
def createLock(self):
self.lock = None
class StandardLogging(fixtures.Fixture):
"""Setup Logging redirection for tests.
There are a number of things we want to handle with logging in tests:
* Redirect the logging to somewhere that we can test or dump it later.
* Ensure that as many DEBUG messages as possible are actually
executed, to ensure they are actually syntactically valid (they
often have not been).
* Ensure that we create useful output for tests that doesn't
overwhelm the testing system (which means we can't capture the
100 MB of debug logging on every run).
To do this we create a logger fixture at the root level, which
defaults to INFO and create a Null Logger at DEBUG which lets
us execute log messages at DEBUG but not keep the output.
To support local debugging OS_DEBUG=True can be set in the
environment, which will print out the full debug logging.
There are also a set of overrides for particularly verbose
modules to be even less than INFO.
"""
def setUp(self):
super(StandardLogging, self).setUp()
# set root logger to debug
root = logging.getLogger()
root.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
# supports collecting debug level for local runs
if os.environ.get('OS_DEBUG') in _TRUE_VALUES:
level = logging.DEBUG
else:
level = logging.INFO
# Collect logs
fs = '%(asctime)s %(levelname)s [%(name)s] %(message)s'
self.logger = self.useFixture(
fixtures.FakeLogger(format=fs, level=None))
# TODO(sdague): why can't we send level through the fake
# logger? Tests prove that it breaks, but it's worth getting
# to the bottom of.
root.handlers[0].setLevel(level)
if level > logging.DEBUG:
# Just attempt to format debug level logs, but don't save them
handler = NullHandler()
self.useFixture(fixtures.LogHandler(handler, nuke_handlers=False))
handler.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
class OutputStreamCapture(fixtures.Fixture):
"""Capture output streams during tests.
This fixture captures errant printing to stderr / stdout during
the tests and lets us see those streams at the end of the test
runs instead. Useful to see what was happening during failed
tests.
"""
def setUp(self):
super(OutputStreamCapture, self).setUp()
if os.environ.get('OS_STDOUT_CAPTURE') in _TRUE_VALUES:
self.out = self.useFixture(fixtures.StringStream('stdout'))
self.useFixture(
fixtures.MonkeyPatch('sys.stdout', self.out.stream))
if os.environ.get('OS_STDERR_CAPTURE') in _TRUE_VALUES:
self.err = self.useFixture(fixtures.StringStream('stderr'))
self.useFixture(
fixtures.MonkeyPatch('sys.stderr', self.err.stream))
@property
def stderr(self):
return self.err._details["stderr"].as_text()
@property
def stdout(self):
return self.out._details["stdout"].as_text()
class Timeout(fixtures.Fixture):
"""Setup per test timeouts.
In order to avoid test deadlocks we support setting up a test
timeout parameter read from the environment. In almost all
cases where the timeout is reached this means a deadlock.
A class level TIMEOUT_SCALING_FACTOR also exists, which allows
extremely long tests to specify they need more time.
"""
def __init__(self, timeout, scaling=1):
super(Timeout, self).__init__()
try:
self.test_timeout = int(timeout)
except ValueError:
# If timeout value is invalid do not set a timeout.
self.test_timeout = 0
if scaling >= 1:
self.test_timeout *= scaling
else:
raise ValueError('scaling value must be >= 1')
def setUp(self):
super(Timeout, self).setUp()
if self.test_timeout > 0:
self.useFixture(fixtures.Timeout(self.test_timeout, gentle=True))
class WarningsFixture(fixtures.Fixture):
"""Filters out warnings during test runs."""
def setUp(self):
super(WarningsFixture, self).setUp()
# NOTE(sdague): Make deprecation warnings only happen once. Otherwise
# this gets kind of crazy given the way that upstream python libs use
# this.
warnings.simplefilter("once", DeprecationWarning)
warnings.filterwarnings('ignore',
message='With-statements now directly support'
' multiple context managers')
self.addCleanup(warnings.resetwarnings)