#! /usr/bin/env python """Test script for the dumbdbm module Original by Roger E. Masse """ import os import unittest import dumbdbm from test import test_support _fname = test_support.TESTFN def _delete_files(): for ext in [".dir", ".dat", ".bak"]: try: os.unlink(_fname + ext) except OSError: pass class DumbDBMTestCase(unittest.TestCase): _dict = {'0': '', 'a': 'Python:', 'b': 'Programming', 'c': 'the', 'd': 'way', 'f': 'Guido', 'g': 'intended' } def __init__(self, *args): unittest.TestCase.__init__(self, *args) def test_dumbdbm_creation(self): f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'c') self.assertEqual(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(0002) f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'c', 0637) f.close() finally: os.umask(old_umask) expected_mode = 0635 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 = 0666 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['a'] = 'b' self.assertEqual(f['a'], 'b') f.close() f.close() def test_dumbdbm_modification(self): self.init_db() f = dumbdbm.open(_fname, 'w') self._dict['g'] = f['g'] = "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_write_read(self): # test for bug #482460 f = dumbdbm.open(_fname) f['1'] = 'hello' f['1'] = 'hello2' f.close() f = dumbdbm.open(_fname) self.assertEqual(f['1'], 'hello2') f.close() 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['1'] = 'hello' f['2'] = 'hello2' f.close() # Mangle the file by adding \r before each newline data = open(_fname + '.dir').read() data = data.replace('\n', '\r\n') open(_fname + '.dir', 'wb').write(data) f = dumbdbm.open(_fname) self.assertEqual(f['1'], 'hello') self.assertEqual(f['2'], '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 = f.keys() keys.sort() dkeys = self._dict.keys() dkeys.sort() 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('abc') * random.randrange(10000) d[k] = v f[k] = v self.assertEqual(f[k], v) f.close() f = dumbdbm.open(_fname) expected = d.items() expected.sort() got = f.items() got.sort() self.assertEqual(expected, got) f.close() def tearDown(self): _delete_files() def setUp(self): _delete_files() def test_main(): try: test_support.run_unittest(DumbDBMTestCase) finally: _delete_files() if __name__ == "__main__": test_main()