cpython/Lib/test/test_dbm_dumb.py
Brett Cannon 7317c1ef7a dbm.gnu and dbm.ndbm accept both strings and bytes as keys and values. For the
former they are converted to bytes before being written to the DB.

Closes issue 3799. Reviewed by Skip Montanaro.
2008-11-25 19:19:17 +00:00

204 lines
5.6 KiB
Python

#! /usr/bin/env python
"""Test script for the dumbdbm module
Original by Roger E. Masse
"""
import io
import os
import unittest
import dbm.dumb as dumbdbm
from test import support
_fname = support.TESTFN
def _delete_files():
for ext in [".dir", ".dat", ".bak"]:
try:
os.unlink(_fname + ext)
except OSError:
pass
class DumbDBMTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
_dict = {b'0': b'',
b'a': b'Python:',
b'b': b'Programming',
b'c': b'the',
b'd': b'way',
b'f': b'Guido',
b'g': b'intended',
'\u00fc'.encode('utf-8') : b'!',
}
def __init__(self, *args):
unittest.TestCase.__init__(self, *args)
def test_dumbdbm_creation(self):
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'c')
self.assertEqual(list(f.keys()), [])
for key in self._dict:
f[key] = self._dict[key]
self.read_helper(f)
f.close()
def test_dumbdbm_creation_mode(self):
# On platforms without chmod, don't do anything.
if not (hasattr(os, 'chmod') and hasattr(os, 'umask')):
return
try:
old_umask = os.umask(0o002)
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'c', 0o637)
f.close()
finally:
os.umask(old_umask)
expected_mode = 0o635
if os.name != 'posix':
# Windows only supports setting the read-only attribute.
# This shouldn't fail, but doesn't work like Unix either.
expected_mode = 0o666
import stat
st = os.stat(_fname + '.dat')
self.assertEqual(stat.S_IMODE(st.st_mode), expected_mode)
st = os.stat(_fname + '.dir')
self.assertEqual(stat.S_IMODE(st.st_mode), expected_mode)
def test_close_twice(self):
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
f[b'a'] = b'b'
self.assertEqual(f[b'a'], b'b')
f.close()
f.close()
def test_dumbdbm_modification(self):
self.init_db()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'w')
self._dict[b'g'] = f[b'g'] = b"indented"
self.read_helper(f)
f.close()
def test_dumbdbm_read(self):
self.init_db()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'r')
self.read_helper(f)
f.close()
def test_dumbdbm_keys(self):
self.init_db()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
keys = self.keys_helper(f)
f.close()
def test_write_contains(self):
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
f[b'1'] = b'hello'
self.assertTrue(b'1' in f)
f.close()
def test_write_write_read(self):
# test for bug #482460
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
f[b'1'] = b'hello'
f[b'1'] = b'hello2'
f.close()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
self.assertEqual(f[b'1'], b'hello2')
f.close()
def test_str_read(self):
self.init_db()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'r')
self.assertEqual(f['\u00fc'], self._dict['\u00fc'.encode('utf-8')])
def test_str_write_contains(self):
self.init_db()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
f['\u00fc'] = b'!'
f['1'] = 'a'
f.close()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'r')
self.assert_('\u00fc' in f)
self.assertEqual(f['\u00fc'.encode('utf-8')],
self._dict['\u00fc'.encode('utf-8')])
self.assertEqual(f[b'1'], b'a')
def test_line_endings(self):
# test for bug #1172763: dumbdbm would die if the line endings
# weren't what was expected.
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
f[b'1'] = b'hello'
f[b'2'] = b'hello2'
f.close()
# Mangle the file by changing the line separator to Windows or Unix
data = io.open(_fname + '.dir', 'rb').read()
if os.linesep == '\n':
data = data.replace(b'\n', b'\r\n')
else:
data = data.replace(b'\r\n', b'\n')
io.open(_fname + '.dir', 'wb').write(data)
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
self.assertEqual(f[b'1'], b'hello')
self.assertEqual(f[b'2'], b'hello2')
def read_helper(self, f):
keys = self.keys_helper(f)
for key in self._dict:
self.assertEqual(self._dict[key], f[key])
def init_db(self):
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'w')
for k in self._dict:
f[k] = self._dict[k]
f.close()
def keys_helper(self, f):
keys = sorted(f.keys())
dkeys = sorted(self._dict.keys())
self.assertEqual(keys, dkeys)
return keys
# Perform randomized operations. This doesn't make assumptions about
# what *might* fail.
def test_random(self):
import random
d = {} # mirror the database
for dummy in range(5):
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
for dummy in range(100):
k = random.choice('abcdefghijklm')
if random.random() < 0.2:
if k in d:
del d[k]
del f[k]
else:
v = random.choice((b'a', b'b', b'c')) * random.randrange(10000)
d[k] = v
f[k] = v
self.assertEqual(f[k], v)
f.close()
f = dumbdbm.open(_fname)
expected = sorted((k.encode("latin-1"), v) for k, v in d.items())
got = sorted(f.items())
self.assertEqual(expected, got)
f.close()
def tearDown(self):
_delete_files()
def setUp(self):
_delete_files()
def test_main():
try:
support.run_unittest(DumbDBMTestCase)
finally:
_delete_files()
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_main()