This prevents tests from failing when run from a Python installed in a
read-only directory. The code is a bit uglier; shutil.copytree calls
copystat on directories behind our back, so I had to add an os.walk
with os.chmod (*and* os.path.join!) calls. shutil, I am disappoint.
This changeset is dedicated to the hundreds of neurons that were lost
while I was debugging this on an otherwise fine afternoon.
The changed behavior of sdist in 3.1 broke packaging for projects that
wanted to use a manually-maintained MANIFEST file (instead of having a
MANIFEST.in template and letting distutils generate the MANIFEST).
The fixes that were committed for #8688 (76643c286b9f by Tarek and
d54da9248ed9 by me) did not fix all issues exposed in the bug report,
and also added one problem: the MANIFEST file format gained comments,
but the read_manifest method was not updated to handle (i.e. ignore)
them. This changeset should fix everything; the tests have been
expanded and I successfully tested the 2.7 version with Mercurial, which
suffered from this regression.
I have grouped the versionchanged directives for these bugs in one place
and added micro version numbers to help users know the quirks of the
exact version they’re using.
Initial report, thorough diagnosis and patch by John Dennis, further
work on the patch by Stephen Thorne, and a few edits and additions by
me.
with the `-m` (or `--match`) option. This works with all test cases
using the unittest module. This is useful with long test suites
such as test_io or test_subprocess.
with the `-m` (or `--match`) option. This works with all test cases
using the unittest module. This is useful with long test suites
such as test_io or test_subprocess.
The public names (Thread, Condition, etc.) used to be factory functions
returning instances of hidden classes (_Thread, _Condition, etc.),
because (if Guido recalls correctly) this code pre-dates the ability to
subclass extension types.
It is now possible to inherit from Thread and other classes, without
having to import the private underscored names like multiprocessing did.
A doc update will follow: a patch is under discussion on the issue.
This function used to live as pipes.quote, where it was undocumented but
used anyway. (An alias still exists for backward compatibility.) The
tests have been moved as is, but the code of the function was changed to
use a regex instead of a loop with string comparisons (at Ian Bicking’s
suggestion). I’m terrible at regexes, so any feedback is welcome.