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Jython is an implementation of the high-level, dynamic, object-oriented
language Python written in 100% Pure Java, and seamlessly integrated with
the Java platform. It thus allows you to run Python on any Java platform.
import unittest
from test import test_support
from contextlib import closing
import gc
import pickle
import select
import signal
import subprocess
import traceback
import sys, os, time, errno
if sys.platform in ('os2', 'riscos'):
raise unittest.SkipTest("Can't test signal on %s" % sys.platform)
class HandlerBCalled(Exception):
pass
def exit_subprocess():
"""Use os._exit(0) to exit the current subprocess.
Otherwise, the test catches the SystemExit and continues executing
in parallel with the original test, so you wind up with an
exponential number of tests running concurrently.
"""
os._exit(0)
def ignoring_eintr(__func, *args, **kwargs):
try:
return __func(*args, **kwargs)
except EnvironmentError as e:
if e.errno != errno.EINTR:
raise
return None
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform == "win32", "Not valid on Windows")
class InterProcessSignalTests(unittest.TestCase):
MAX_DURATION = 20 # Entire test should last at most 20 sec.
def setUp(self):
self.using_gc = gc.isenabled()
gc.disable()
def tearDown(self):
if self.using_gc:
gc.enable()
def format_frame(self, frame, limit=None):
return ''.join(traceback.format_stack(frame, limit=limit))
def handlerA(self, signum, frame):
self.a_called = True
if test_support.verbose:
print "handlerA invoked from signal %s at:\n%s" % (
signum, self.format_frame(frame, limit=1))
def handlerB(self, signum, frame):
self.b_called = True
if test_support.verbose:
print "handlerB invoked from signal %s at:\n%s" % (
signum, self.format_frame(frame, limit=1))
raise HandlerBCalled(signum, self.format_frame(frame))
def wait(self, child):
"""Wait for child to finish, ignoring EINTR."""
while True:
try:
child.wait()
return
except OSError as e:
if e.errno != errno.EINTR:
raise
def run_test(self):
# Install handlers. This function runs in a sub-process, so we
# don't worry about re-setting the default handlers.
signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, self.handlerA)
signal.signal(signal.SIGUSR1, self.handlerB)
signal.signal(signal.SIGUSR2, signal.SIG_IGN)
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, signal.default_int_handler)
# Variables the signals will modify:
self.a_called = False
self.b_called = False
# Let the sub-processes know who to send signals to.
pid = os.getpid()
if test_support.verbose:
print "test runner's pid is", pid
child = ignoring_eintr(subprocess.Popen, ['kill', '-HUP', str(pid)])
if child:
self.wait(child)
if not self.a_called:
time.sleep(1) # Give the signal time to be delivered.
self.assertTrue(self.a_called)
self.assertFalse(self.b_called)
self.a_called = False
# Make sure the signal isn't delivered while the previous
# Popen object is being destroyed, because __del__ swallows
# exceptions.
del child
try:
child = subprocess.Popen(['kill', '-USR1', str(pid)])
# This wait should be interrupted by the signal's exception.
self.wait(child)
time.sleep(1) # Give the signal time to be delivered.
self.fail('HandlerBCalled exception not raised')
except HandlerBCalled:
self.assertTrue(self.b_called)
self.assertFalse(self.a_called)
if test_support.verbose:
print "HandlerBCalled exception caught"
child = ignoring_eintr(subprocess.Popen, ['kill', '-USR2', str(pid)])
if child:
self.wait(child) # Nothing should happen.
try:
signal.alarm(1)
# The race condition in pause doesn't matter in this case,
# since alarm is going to raise a KeyboardException, which
# will skip the call.
signal.pause()
# But if another signal arrives before the alarm, pause
# may return early.
time.sleep(1)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
if test_support.verbose:
print "KeyboardInterrupt (the alarm() went off)"
except:
self.fail("Some other exception woke us from pause: %s" %
traceback.format_exc())
else:
self.fail("pause returned of its own accord, and the signal"
" didn't arrive after another second.")
# Issue 3864. Unknown if this affects earlier versions of freebsd also.
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform=='freebsd6',
'inter process signals not reliable (do not mix well with threading) '
'on freebsd6')
def test_main(self):
# This function spawns a child process to insulate the main
# test-running process from all the signals. It then
# communicates with that child process over a pipe and
# re-raises information about any exceptions the child
# raises. The real work happens in self.run_test().
os_done_r, os_done_w = os.pipe()
with closing(os.fdopen(os_done_r)) as done_r, \
closing(os.fdopen(os_done_w, 'w')) as done_w:
child = os.fork()
if child == 0:
# In the child process; run the test and report results
# through the pipe.
try:
done_r.close()
# Have to close done_w again here because
# exit_subprocess() will skip the enclosing with block.
with closing(done_w):
try:
self.run_test()
except:
pickle.dump(traceback.format_exc(), done_w)
else:
pickle.dump(None, done_w)
except:
print 'Uh oh, raised from pickle.'
traceback.print_exc()
finally:
exit_subprocess()
done_w.close()
# Block for up to MAX_DURATION seconds for the test to finish.
r, w, x = select.select([done_r], [], [], self.MAX_DURATION)
if done_r in r:
tb = pickle.load(done_r)
if tb:
self.fail(tb)
else:
os.kill(child, signal.SIGKILL)
self.fail('Test deadlocked after %d seconds.' %
self.MAX_DURATION)
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform == "win32", "Not valid on Windows")
class BasicSignalTests(unittest.TestCase):
def trivial_signal_handler(self, *args):
pass
def test_out_of_range_signal_number_raises_error(self):
self.assertRaises(ValueError, signal.getsignal, 4242)
self.assertRaises(ValueError, signal.signal, 4242,
self.trivial_signal_handler)
def test_setting_signal_handler_to_none_raises_error(self):
self.assertRaises(TypeError, signal.signal,
signal.SIGUSR1, None)
def test_getsignal(self):
hup = signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, self.trivial_signal_handler)
self.assertEqual(signal.getsignal(signal.SIGHUP),
self.trivial_signal_handler)
signal.signal(signal.SIGHUP, hup)
self.assertEqual(signal.getsignal(signal.SIGHUP), hup)
@unittest.skipUnless(sys.platform == "win32", "Windows specific")
class WindowsSignalTests(unittest.TestCase):
def test_issue9324(self):
# Updated for issue #10003, adding SIGBREAK
handler = lambda x, y: None
for sig in (signal.SIGABRT, signal.SIGBREAK, signal.SIGFPE,
signal.SIGILL, signal.SIGINT, signal.SIGSEGV,
signal.SIGTERM):
# Set and then reset a handler for signals that work on windows
signal.signal(sig, signal.signal(sig, handler))
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
signal.signal(-1, handler)
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
signal.signal(7, handler)
class WakeupFDTests(unittest.TestCase):
def test_invalid_fd(self):
fd = test_support.make_bad_fd()
self.assertRaises(ValueError, signal.set_wakeup_fd, fd)
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform == "win32", "Not valid on Windows")
class WakeupSignalTests(unittest.TestCase):
TIMEOUT_FULL = 10
TIMEOUT_HALF = 5
def test_wakeup_fd_early(self):
import select
signal.alarm(1)
before_time = time.time()
# We attempt to get a signal during the sleep,
# before select is called
time.sleep(self.TIMEOUT_FULL)
mid_time = time.time()
self.assertTrue(mid_time - before_time < self.TIMEOUT_HALF)
select.select([self.read], [], [], self.TIMEOUT_FULL)
after_time = time.time()
self.assertTrue(after_time - mid_time < self.TIMEOUT_HALF)
def test_wakeup_fd_during(self):
import select
signal.alarm(1)
before_time = time.time()
# We attempt to get a signal during the select call
self.assertRaises(select.error, select.select,
[self.read], [], [], self.TIMEOUT_FULL)
after_time = time.time()
self.assertTrue(after_time - before_time < self.TIMEOUT_HALF)
def setUp(self):
import fcntl
self.alrm = signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, lambda x,y:None)
self.read, self.write = os.pipe()
flags = fcntl.fcntl(self.write, fcntl.F_GETFL, 0)
flags = flags | os.O_NONBLOCK
fcntl.fcntl(self.write, fcntl.F_SETFL, flags)
self.old_wakeup = signal.set_wakeup_fd(self.write)
def tearDown(self):
signal.set_wakeup_fd(self.old_wakeup)
os.close(self.read)
os.close(self.write)
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, self.alrm)
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform == "win32", "Not valid on Windows")
class SiginterruptTest(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
"""Install a no-op signal handler that can be set to allow
interrupts or not, and arrange for the original signal handler to be
re-installed when the test is finished.
"""
self.signum = signal.SIGUSR1
oldhandler = signal.signal(self.signum, lambda x,y: None)
self.addCleanup(signal.signal, self.signum, oldhandler)
def readpipe_interrupted(self):
"""Perform a read during which a signal will arrive. Return True if the
read is interrupted by the signal and raises an exception. Return False
if it returns normally.
"""
# Create a pipe that can be used for the read. Also clean it up
# when the test is over, since nothing else will (but see below for
# the write end).
r, w = os.pipe()
self.addCleanup(os.close, r)
# Create another process which can send a signal to this one to try
# to interrupt the read.
ppid = os.getpid()
pid = os.fork()
if pid == 0:
# Child code: sleep to give the parent enough time to enter the
# read() call (there's a race here, but it's really tricky to
# eliminate it); then signal the parent process. Also, sleep
# again to make it likely that the signal is delivered to the
# parent process before the child exits. If the child exits
# first, the write end of the pipe will be closed and the test
# is invalid.
try:
time.sleep(0.2)
os.kill(ppid, self.signum)
time.sleep(0.2)
finally:
# No matter what, just exit as fast as possible now.
exit_subprocess()
else:
# Parent code.
# Make sure the child is eventually reaped, else it'll be a
# zombie for the rest of the test suite run.
self.addCleanup(os.waitpid, pid, 0)
# Close the write end of the pipe. The child has a copy, so
# it's not really closed until the child exits. We need it to
# close when the child exits so that in the non-interrupt case
# the read eventually completes, otherwise we could just close
# it *after* the test.
os.close(w)
# Try the read and report whether it is interrupted or not to
# the caller.
try:
d = os.read(r, 1)
return False
except OSError, err:
if err.errno != errno.EINTR:
raise
return True
def test_without_siginterrupt(self):
"""If a signal handler is installed and siginterrupt is not called
at all, when that signal arrives, it interrupts a syscall that's in
progress.
"""
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertTrue(i)
# Arrival of the signal shouldn't have changed anything.
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertTrue(i)
def test_siginterrupt_on(self):
"""If a signal handler is installed and siginterrupt is called with
a true value for the second argument, when that signal arrives, it
interrupts a syscall that's in progress.
"""
signal.siginterrupt(self.signum, 1)
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertTrue(i)
# Arrival of the signal shouldn't have changed anything.
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertTrue(i)
def test_siginterrupt_off(self):
"""If a signal handler is installed and siginterrupt is called with
a false value for the second argument, when that signal arrives, it
does not interrupt a syscall that's in progress.
"""
signal.siginterrupt(self.signum, 0)
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertFalse(i)
# Arrival of the signal shouldn't have changed anything.
i = self.readpipe_interrupted()
self.assertFalse(i)
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform == "win32", "Not valid on Windows")
class ItimerTest(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.hndl_called = False
self.hndl_count = 0
self.itimer = None
self.old_alarm = signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, self.sig_alrm)
def tearDown(self):
signal.signal(signal.SIGALRM, self.old_alarm)
if self.itimer is not None: # test_itimer_exc doesn't change this attr
# just ensure that itimer is stopped
signal.setitimer(self.itimer, 0)
def sig_alrm(self, *args):
self.hndl_called = True
if test_support.verbose:
print("SIGALRM handler invoked", args)
def sig_vtalrm(self, *args):
self.hndl_called = True
if self.hndl_count > 3:
# it shouldn't be here, because it should have been disabled.
raise signal.ItimerError("setitimer didn't disable ITIMER_VIRTUAL "
"timer.")
elif self.hndl_count == 3:
# disable ITIMER_VIRTUAL, this function shouldn't be called anymore
signal.setitimer(signal.ITIMER_VIRTUAL, 0)
if test_support.verbose:
print("last SIGVTALRM handler call")
self.hndl_count += 1
if test_support.verbose:
print("SIGVTALRM handler invoked", args)
def sig_prof(self, *args):
self.hndl_called = True
signal.setitimer(signal.ITIMER_PROF, 0)
if test_support.verbose:
print("SIGPROF handler invoked", args)
def test_itimer_exc(self):
# XXX I'm assuming -1 is an invalid itimer, but maybe some platform
# defines it ?
self.assertRaises(signal.ItimerError, signal.setitimer, -1, 0)
# Negative times are treated as zero on some platforms.
if 0:
self.assertRaises(signal.ItimerError,
signal.setitimer, signal.ITIMER_REAL, -1)
def test_itimer_real(self):
self.itimer = signal.ITIMER_REAL
signal.setitimer(self.itimer, 1.0)
if test_support.verbose:
print("\ncall pause()...")
signal.pause()
self.assertEqual(self.hndl_called, True)
# Issue 3864. Unknown if this affects earlier versions of freebsd also.
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform in ('freebsd6', 'netbsd5'),
'itimer not reliable (does not mix well with threading) on some BSDs.')
def test_itimer_virtual(self):
self.itimer = signal.ITIMER_VIRTUAL
signal.signal(signal.SIGVTALRM, self.sig_vtalrm)
signal.setitimer(self.itimer, 0.3, 0.2)
start_time = time.time()
while time.time() - start_time < 60.0:
# use up some virtual time by doing real work
_ = pow(12345, 67890, 10000019)
if signal.getitimer(self.itimer) == (0.0, 0.0):
break # sig_vtalrm handler stopped this itimer
else: # Issue 8424
self.skipTest("timeout: likely cause: machine too slow or load too "
"high")
# virtual itimer should be (0.0, 0.0) now
self.assertEqual(signal.getitimer(self.itimer), (0.0, 0.0))
# and the handler should have been called
self.assertEqual(self.hndl_called, True)
# Issue 3864. Unknown if this affects earlier versions of freebsd also.
@unittest.skipIf(sys.platform=='freebsd6',
'itimer not reliable (does not mix well with threading) on freebsd6')
def test_itimer_prof(self):
self.itimer = signal.ITIMER_PROF
signal.signal(signal.SIGPROF, self.sig_prof)
signal.setitimer(self.itimer, 0.2, 0.2)
start_time = time.time()
while time.time() - start_time < 60.0:
# do some work
_ = pow(12345, 67890, 10000019)
if signal.getitimer(self.itimer) == (0.0, 0.0):
break # sig_prof handler stopped this itimer
else: # Issue 8424
self.skipTest("timeout: likely cause: machine too slow or load too "
"high")
# profiling itimer should be (0.0, 0.0) now
self.assertEqual(signal.getitimer(self.itimer), (0.0, 0.0))
# and the handler should have been called
self.assertEqual(self.hndl_called, True)
def test_main():
test_support.run_unittest(BasicSignalTests, InterProcessSignalTests,
WakeupFDTests, WakeupSignalTests,
SiginterruptTest, ItimerTest,
WindowsSignalTests)
if __name__ == "__main__":
test_main()