Staging
v0.5.1
https://github.com/python/cpython
Raw File
Tip revision: 550e4673be538d98b6ddf5550b3922539cf5c4b2 authored by Victor Stinner on 08 December 2020, 23:32:54 UTC
bpo-32381: Add _PyRun_SimpleFileObject() (GH-23709)
Tip revision: 550e467
test_exceptions.py
# Python test set -- part 5, built-in exceptions

import copy
import gc
import os
import sys
import unittest
import pickle
import weakref
import errno

from test.support import (captured_stderr, check_impl_detail,
                          cpython_only, gc_collect,
                          no_tracing, script_helper,
                          SuppressCrashReport)
from test.support.import_helper import import_module
from test.support.os_helper import TESTFN, unlink
from test.support.warnings_helper import check_warnings
from test import support


class NaiveException(Exception):
    def __init__(self, x):
        self.x = x

class SlottedNaiveException(Exception):
    __slots__ = ('x',)
    def __init__(self, x):
        self.x = x

class BrokenStrException(Exception):
    def __str__(self):
        raise Exception("str() is broken")

# XXX This is not really enough, each *operation* should be tested!

class ExceptionTests(unittest.TestCase):

    def raise_catch(self, exc, excname):
        with self.subTest(exc=exc, excname=excname):
            try:
                raise exc("spam")
            except exc as err:
                buf1 = str(err)
            try:
                raise exc("spam")
            except exc as err:
                buf2 = str(err)
            self.assertEqual(buf1, buf2)
            self.assertEqual(exc.__name__, excname)

    def testRaising(self):
        self.raise_catch(AttributeError, "AttributeError")
        self.assertRaises(AttributeError, getattr, sys, "undefined_attribute")

        self.raise_catch(EOFError, "EOFError")
        fp = open(TESTFN, 'w')
        fp.close()
        fp = open(TESTFN, 'r')
        savestdin = sys.stdin
        try:
            try:
                import marshal
                marshal.loads(b'')
            except EOFError:
                pass
        finally:
            sys.stdin = savestdin
            fp.close()
            unlink(TESTFN)

        self.raise_catch(OSError, "OSError")
        self.assertRaises(OSError, open, 'this file does not exist', 'r')

        self.raise_catch(ImportError, "ImportError")
        self.assertRaises(ImportError, __import__, "undefined_module")

        self.raise_catch(IndexError, "IndexError")
        x = []
        self.assertRaises(IndexError, x.__getitem__, 10)

        self.raise_catch(KeyError, "KeyError")
        x = {}
        self.assertRaises(KeyError, x.__getitem__, 'key')

        self.raise_catch(KeyboardInterrupt, "KeyboardInterrupt")

        self.raise_catch(MemoryError, "MemoryError")

        self.raise_catch(NameError, "NameError")
        try: x = undefined_variable
        except NameError: pass

        self.raise_catch(OverflowError, "OverflowError")
        x = 1
        for dummy in range(128):
            x += x  # this simply shouldn't blow up

        self.raise_catch(RuntimeError, "RuntimeError")
        self.raise_catch(RecursionError, "RecursionError")

        self.raise_catch(SyntaxError, "SyntaxError")
        try: exec('/\n')
        except SyntaxError: pass

        self.raise_catch(IndentationError, "IndentationError")

        self.raise_catch(TabError, "TabError")
        try: compile("try:\n\t1/0\n    \t1/0\nfinally:\n pass\n",
                     '<string>', 'exec')
        except TabError: pass
        else: self.fail("TabError not raised")

        self.raise_catch(SystemError, "SystemError")

        self.raise_catch(SystemExit, "SystemExit")
        self.assertRaises(SystemExit, sys.exit, 0)

        self.raise_catch(TypeError, "TypeError")
        try: [] + ()
        except TypeError: pass

        self.raise_catch(ValueError, "ValueError")
        self.assertRaises(ValueError, chr, 17<<16)

        self.raise_catch(ZeroDivisionError, "ZeroDivisionError")
        try: x = 1/0
        except ZeroDivisionError: pass

        self.raise_catch(Exception, "Exception")
        try: x = 1/0
        except Exception as e: pass

        self.raise_catch(StopAsyncIteration, "StopAsyncIteration")

    def testSyntaxErrorMessage(self):
        # make sure the right exception message is raised for each of
        # these code fragments

        def ckmsg(src, msg):
            with self.subTest(src=src, msg=msg):
                try:
                    compile(src, '<fragment>', 'exec')
                except SyntaxError as e:
                    if e.msg != msg:
                        self.fail("expected %s, got %s" % (msg, e.msg))
                else:
                    self.fail("failed to get expected SyntaxError")

        s = '''if 1:
        try:
            continue
        except:
            pass'''

        ckmsg(s, "'continue' not properly in loop")
        ckmsg("continue\n", "'continue' not properly in loop")

    def testSyntaxErrorMissingParens(self):
        def ckmsg(src, msg, exception=SyntaxError):
            try:
                compile(src, '<fragment>', 'exec')
            except exception as e:
                if e.msg != msg:
                    self.fail("expected %s, got %s" % (msg, e.msg))
            else:
                self.fail("failed to get expected SyntaxError")

        s = '''print "old style"'''
        ckmsg(s, "Missing parentheses in call to 'print'. "
                 "Did you mean print(\"old style\")?")

        s = '''print "old style",'''
        ckmsg(s, "Missing parentheses in call to 'print'. "
                 "Did you mean print(\"old style\", end=\" \")?")

        s = '''exec "old style"'''
        ckmsg(s, "Missing parentheses in call to 'exec'")

        # should not apply to subclasses, see issue #31161
        s = '''if True:\nprint "No indent"'''
        ckmsg(s, "expected an indented block", IndentationError)

        s = '''if True:\n        print()\n\texec "mixed tabs and spaces"'''
        ckmsg(s, "inconsistent use of tabs and spaces in indentation", TabError)

    def check(self, src, lineno, offset, encoding='utf-8'):
        with self.subTest(source=src, lineno=lineno, offset=offset):
            with self.assertRaises(SyntaxError) as cm:
                compile(src, '<fragment>', 'exec')
            self.assertEqual(cm.exception.lineno, lineno)
            self.assertEqual(cm.exception.offset, offset)
            if cm.exception.text is not None:
                if not isinstance(src, str):
                    src = src.decode(encoding, 'replace')
                line = src.split('\n')[lineno-1]
                self.assertIn(line, cm.exception.text)

    def testSyntaxErrorOffset(self):
        check = self.check
        check('def fact(x):\n\treturn x!\n', 2, 10)
        check('1 +\n', 1, 4)
        check('def spam():\n  print(1)\n print(2)', 3, 10)
        check('Python = "Python" +', 1, 20)
        check('Python = "\u1e54\xfd\u0163\u0125\xf2\xf1" +', 1, 20)
        check(b'# -*- coding: cp1251 -*-\nPython = "\xcf\xb3\xf2\xee\xed" +',
              2, 19, encoding='cp1251')
        check(b'Python = "\xcf\xb3\xf2\xee\xed" +', 1, 18)
        check('x = "a', 1, 7)
        check('lambda x: x = 2', 1, 1)
        check('f{a + b + c}', 1, 2)

        # Errors thrown by compile.c
        check('class foo:return 1', 1, 11)
        check('def f():\n  continue', 2, 3)
        check('def f():\n  break', 2, 3)
        check('try:\n  pass\nexcept:\n  pass\nexcept ValueError:\n  pass', 2, 3)

        # Errors thrown by tokenizer.c
        check('(0x+1)', 1, 3)
        check('x = 0xI', 1, 6)
        check('0010 + 2', 1, 4)
        check('x = 32e-+4', 1, 8)
        check('x = 0o9', 1, 6)
        check('\u03b1 = 0xI', 1, 6)
        check(b'\xce\xb1 = 0xI', 1, 6)
        check(b'# -*- coding: iso8859-7 -*-\n\xe1 = 0xI', 2, 6,
              encoding='iso8859-7')
        check(b"""if 1:
            def foo():
                '''

            def bar():
                pass

            def baz():
                '''quux'''
            """, 9, 20)
        check("pass\npass\npass\n(1+)\npass\npass\npass", 4, 4)
        check("(1+)", 1, 4)

        # Errors thrown by symtable.c
        check('x = [(yield i) for i in range(3)]', 1, 5)
        check('def f():\n  from _ import *', 1, 1)
        check('def f(x, x):\n  pass', 1, 1)
        check('def f(x):\n  nonlocal x', 2, 3)
        check('def f(x):\n  x = 1\n  global x', 3, 3)
        check('nonlocal x', 1, 1)
        check('def f():\n  global x\n  nonlocal x', 2, 3)

        # Errors thrown by future.c
        check('from __future__ import doesnt_exist', 1, 1)
        check('from __future__ import braces', 1, 1)
        check('x=1\nfrom __future__ import division', 2, 1)
        check('foo(1=2)', 1, 5)
        check('def f():\n  x, y: int', 2, 3)
        check('[*x for x in xs]', 1, 2)
        check('foo(x for x in range(10), 100)', 1, 5)
        check('for 1 in []: pass', 1, 5)
        check('(yield i) = 2', 1, 2)
        check('def f(*):\n  pass', 1, 8)

    @cpython_only
    def testSettingException(self):
        # test that setting an exception at the C level works even if the
        # exception object can't be constructed.

        class BadException(Exception):
            def __init__(self_):
                raise RuntimeError("can't instantiate BadException")

        class InvalidException:
            pass

        def test_capi1():
            import _testcapi
            try:
                _testcapi.raise_exception(BadException, 1)
            except TypeError as err:
                exc, err, tb = sys.exc_info()
                co = tb.tb_frame.f_code
                self.assertEqual(co.co_name, "test_capi1")
                self.assertTrue(co.co_filename.endswith('test_exceptions.py'))
            else:
                self.fail("Expected exception")

        def test_capi2():
            import _testcapi
            try:
                _testcapi.raise_exception(BadException, 0)
            except RuntimeError as err:
                exc, err, tb = sys.exc_info()
                co = tb.tb_frame.f_code
                self.assertEqual(co.co_name, "__init__")
                self.assertTrue(co.co_filename.endswith('test_exceptions.py'))
                co2 = tb.tb_frame.f_back.f_code
                self.assertEqual(co2.co_name, "test_capi2")
            else:
                self.fail("Expected exception")

        def test_capi3():
            import _testcapi
            self.assertRaises(SystemError, _testcapi.raise_exception,
                              InvalidException, 1)

        if not sys.platform.startswith('java'):
            test_capi1()
            test_capi2()
            test_capi3()

    def test_WindowsError(self):
        try:
            WindowsError
        except NameError:
            pass
        else:
            self.assertIs(WindowsError, OSError)
            self.assertEqual(str(OSError(1001)), "1001")
            self.assertEqual(str(OSError(1001, "message")),
                             "[Errno 1001] message")
            # POSIX errno (9 aka EBADF) is untranslated
            w = OSError(9, 'foo', 'bar')
            self.assertEqual(w.errno, 9)
            self.assertEqual(w.winerror, None)
            self.assertEqual(str(w), "[Errno 9] foo: 'bar'")
            # ERROR_PATH_NOT_FOUND (win error 3) becomes ENOENT (2)
            w = OSError(0, 'foo', 'bar', 3)
            self.assertEqual(w.errno, 2)
            self.assertEqual(w.winerror, 3)
            self.assertEqual(w.strerror, 'foo')
            self.assertEqual(w.filename, 'bar')
            self.assertEqual(w.filename2, None)
            self.assertEqual(str(w), "[WinError 3] foo: 'bar'")
            # Unknown win error becomes EINVAL (22)
            w = OSError(0, 'foo', None, 1001)
            self.assertEqual(w.errno, 22)
            self.assertEqual(w.winerror, 1001)
            self.assertEqual(w.strerror, 'foo')
            self.assertEqual(w.filename, None)
            self.assertEqual(w.filename2, None)
            self.assertEqual(str(w), "[WinError 1001] foo")
            # Non-numeric "errno"
            w = OSError('bar', 'foo')
            self.assertEqual(w.errno, 'bar')
            self.assertEqual(w.winerror, None)
            self.assertEqual(w.strerror, 'foo')
            self.assertEqual(w.filename, None)
            self.assertEqual(w.filename2, None)

    @unittest.skipUnless(sys.platform == 'win32',
                         'test specific to Windows')
    def test_windows_message(self):
        """Should fill in unknown error code in Windows error message"""
        ctypes = import_module('ctypes')
        # this error code has no message, Python formats it as hexadecimal
        code = 3765269347
        with self.assertRaisesRegex(OSError, 'Windows Error 0x%x' % code):
            ctypes.pythonapi.PyErr_SetFromWindowsErr(code)

    def testAttributes(self):
        # test that exception attributes are happy

        exceptionList = [
            (BaseException, (), {'args' : ()}),
            (BaseException, (1, ), {'args' : (1,)}),
            (BaseException, ('foo',),
                {'args' : ('foo',)}),
            (BaseException, ('foo', 1),
                {'args' : ('foo', 1)}),
            (SystemExit, ('foo',),
                {'args' : ('foo',), 'code' : 'foo'}),
            (OSError, ('foo',),
                {'args' : ('foo',), 'filename' : None, 'filename2' : None,
                 'errno' : None, 'strerror' : None}),
            (OSError, ('foo', 'bar'),
                {'args' : ('foo', 'bar'),
                 'filename' : None, 'filename2' : None,
                 'errno' : 'foo', 'strerror' : 'bar'}),
            (OSError, ('foo', 'bar', 'baz'),
                {'args' : ('foo', 'bar'),
                 'filename' : 'baz', 'filename2' : None,
                 'errno' : 'foo', 'strerror' : 'bar'}),
            (OSError, ('foo', 'bar', 'baz', None, 'quux'),
                {'args' : ('foo', 'bar'), 'filename' : 'baz', 'filename2': 'quux'}),
            (OSError, ('errnoStr', 'strErrorStr', 'filenameStr'),
                {'args' : ('errnoStr', 'strErrorStr'),
                 'strerror' : 'strErrorStr', 'errno' : 'errnoStr',
                 'filename' : 'filenameStr'}),
            (OSError, (1, 'strErrorStr', 'filenameStr'),
                {'args' : (1, 'strErrorStr'), 'errno' : 1,
                 'strerror' : 'strErrorStr',
                 'filename' : 'filenameStr', 'filename2' : None}),
            (SyntaxError, (), {'msg' : None, 'text' : None,
                'filename' : None, 'lineno' : None, 'offset' : None,
                'print_file_and_line' : None}),
            (SyntaxError, ('msgStr',),
                {'args' : ('msgStr',), 'text' : None,
                 'print_file_and_line' : None, 'msg' : 'msgStr',
                 'filename' : None, 'lineno' : None, 'offset' : None}),
            (SyntaxError, ('msgStr', ('filenameStr', 'linenoStr', 'offsetStr',
                           'textStr')),
                {'offset' : 'offsetStr', 'text' : 'textStr',
                 'args' : ('msgStr', ('filenameStr', 'linenoStr',
                                      'offsetStr', 'textStr')),
                 'print_file_and_line' : None, 'msg' : 'msgStr',
                 'filename' : 'filenameStr', 'lineno' : 'linenoStr'}),
            (SyntaxError, ('msgStr', 'filenameStr', 'linenoStr', 'offsetStr',
                           'textStr', 'print_file_and_lineStr'),
                {'text' : None,
                 'args' : ('msgStr', 'filenameStr', 'linenoStr', 'offsetStr',
                           'textStr', 'print_file_and_lineStr'),
                 'print_file_and_line' : None, 'msg' : 'msgStr',
                 'filename' : None, 'lineno' : None, 'offset' : None}),
            (UnicodeError, (), {'args' : (),}),
            (UnicodeEncodeError, ('ascii', 'a', 0, 1,
                                  'ordinal not in range'),
                {'args' : ('ascii', 'a', 0, 1,
                                           'ordinal not in range'),
                 'encoding' : 'ascii', 'object' : 'a',
                 'start' : 0, 'reason' : 'ordinal not in range'}),
            (UnicodeDecodeError, ('ascii', bytearray(b'\xff'), 0, 1,
                                  'ordinal not in range'),
                {'args' : ('ascii', bytearray(b'\xff'), 0, 1,
                                           'ordinal not in range'),
                 'encoding' : 'ascii', 'object' : b'\xff',
                 'start' : 0, 'reason' : 'ordinal not in range'}),
            (UnicodeDecodeError, ('ascii', b'\xff', 0, 1,
                                  'ordinal not in range'),
                {'args' : ('ascii', b'\xff', 0, 1,
                                           'ordinal not in range'),
                 'encoding' : 'ascii', 'object' : b'\xff',
                 'start' : 0, 'reason' : 'ordinal not in range'}),
            (UnicodeTranslateError, ("\u3042", 0, 1, "ouch"),
                {'args' : ('\u3042', 0, 1, 'ouch'),
                 'object' : '\u3042', 'reason' : 'ouch',
                 'start' : 0, 'end' : 1}),
            (NaiveException, ('foo',),
                {'args': ('foo',), 'x': 'foo'}),
            (SlottedNaiveException, ('foo',),
                {'args': ('foo',), 'x': 'foo'}),
        ]
        try:
            # More tests are in test_WindowsError
            exceptionList.append(
                (WindowsError, (1, 'strErrorStr', 'filenameStr'),
                    {'args' : (1, 'strErrorStr'),
                     'strerror' : 'strErrorStr', 'winerror' : None,
                     'errno' : 1,
                     'filename' : 'filenameStr', 'filename2' : None})
            )
        except NameError:
            pass

        for exc, args, expected in exceptionList:
            try:
                e = exc(*args)
            except:
                print("\nexc=%r, args=%r" % (exc, args), file=sys.stderr)
                raise
            else:
                # Verify module name
                if not type(e).__name__.endswith('NaiveException'):
                    self.assertEqual(type(e).__module__, 'builtins')
                # Verify no ref leaks in Exc_str()
                s = str(e)
                for checkArgName in expected:
                    value = getattr(e, checkArgName)
                    self.assertEqual(repr(value),
                                     repr(expected[checkArgName]),
                                     '%r.%s == %r, expected %r' % (
                                     e, checkArgName,
                                     value, expected[checkArgName]))

                # test for pickling support
                for p in [pickle]:
                    for protocol in range(p.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL + 1):
                        s = p.dumps(e, protocol)
                        new = p.loads(s)
                        for checkArgName in expected:
                            got = repr(getattr(new, checkArgName))
                            want = repr(expected[checkArgName])
                            self.assertEqual(got, want,
                                             'pickled "%r", attribute "%s' %
                                             (e, checkArgName))

    def testWithTraceback(self):
        try:
            raise IndexError(4)
        except:
            tb = sys.exc_info()[2]

        e = BaseException().with_traceback(tb)
        self.assertIsInstance(e, BaseException)
        self.assertEqual(e.__traceback__, tb)

        e = IndexError(5).with_traceback(tb)
        self.assertIsInstance(e, IndexError)
        self.assertEqual(e.__traceback__, tb)

        class MyException(Exception):
            pass

        e = MyException().with_traceback(tb)
        self.assertIsInstance(e, MyException)
        self.assertEqual(e.__traceback__, tb)

    def testInvalidTraceback(self):
        try:
            Exception().__traceback__ = 5
        except TypeError as e:
            self.assertIn("__traceback__ must be a traceback", str(e))
        else:
            self.fail("No exception raised")

    def testInvalidAttrs(self):
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, setattr, Exception(), '__cause__', 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, delattr, Exception(), '__cause__')
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, setattr, Exception(), '__context__', 1)
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, delattr, Exception(), '__context__')

    def testNoneClearsTracebackAttr(self):
        try:
            raise IndexError(4)
        except:
            tb = sys.exc_info()[2]

        e = Exception()
        e.__traceback__ = tb
        e.__traceback__ = None
        self.assertEqual(e.__traceback__, None)

    def testChainingAttrs(self):
        e = Exception()
        self.assertIsNone(e.__context__)
        self.assertIsNone(e.__cause__)

        e = TypeError()
        self.assertIsNone(e.__context__)
        self.assertIsNone(e.__cause__)

        class MyException(OSError):
            pass

        e = MyException()
        self.assertIsNone(e.__context__)
        self.assertIsNone(e.__cause__)

    def testChainingDescriptors(self):
        try:
            raise Exception()
        except Exception as exc:
            e = exc

        self.assertIsNone(e.__context__)
        self.assertIsNone(e.__cause__)
        self.assertFalse(e.__suppress_context__)

        e.__context__ = NameError()
        e.__cause__ = None
        self.assertIsInstance(e.__context__, NameError)
        self.assertIsNone(e.__cause__)
        self.assertTrue(e.__suppress_context__)
        e.__suppress_context__ = False
        self.assertFalse(e.__suppress_context__)

    def testKeywordArgs(self):
        # test that builtin exception don't take keyword args,
        # but user-defined subclasses can if they want
        self.assertRaises(TypeError, BaseException, a=1)

        class DerivedException(BaseException):
            def __init__(self, fancy_arg):
                BaseException.__init__(self)
                self.fancy_arg = fancy_arg

        x = DerivedException(fancy_arg=42)
        self.assertEqual(x.fancy_arg, 42)

    @no_tracing
    def testInfiniteRecursion(self):
        def f():
            return f()
        self.assertRaises(RecursionError, f)

        def g():
            try:
                return g()
            except ValueError:
                return -1
        self.assertRaises(RecursionError, g)

    def test_str(self):
        # Make sure both instances and classes have a str representation.
        self.assertTrue(str(Exception))
        self.assertTrue(str(Exception('a')))
        self.assertTrue(str(Exception('a', 'b')))

    def testExceptionCleanupNames(self):
        # Make sure the local variable bound to the exception instance by
        # an "except" statement is only visible inside the except block.
        try:
            raise Exception()
        except Exception as e:
            self.assertTrue(e)
            del e
        self.assertNotIn('e', locals())

    def testExceptionCleanupState(self):
        # Make sure exception state is cleaned up as soon as the except
        # block is left. See #2507

        class MyException(Exception):
            def __init__(self, obj):
                self.obj = obj
        class MyObj:
            pass

        def inner_raising_func():
            # Create some references in exception value and traceback
            local_ref = obj
            raise MyException(obj)

        # Qualified "except" with "as"
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        try:
            inner_raising_func()
        except MyException as e:
            pass
        obj = None
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # Qualified "except" without "as"
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        try:
            inner_raising_func()
        except MyException:
            pass
        obj = None
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # Bare "except"
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        try:
            inner_raising_func()
        except:
            pass
        obj = None
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # "except" with premature block leave
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        for i in [0]:
            try:
                inner_raising_func()
            except:
                break
        obj = None
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # "except" block raising another exception
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        try:
            try:
                inner_raising_func()
            except:
                raise KeyError
        except KeyError as e:
            # We want to test that the except block above got rid of
            # the exception raised in inner_raising_func(), but it
            # also ends up in the __context__ of the KeyError, so we
            # must clear the latter manually for our test to succeed.
            e.__context__ = None
            obj = None
            obj = wr()
            # guarantee no ref cycles on CPython (don't gc_collect)
            if check_impl_detail(cpython=False):
                gc_collect()
            self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # Some complicated construct
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        try:
            inner_raising_func()
        except MyException:
            try:
                try:
                    raise
                finally:
                    raise
            except MyException:
                pass
        obj = None
        if check_impl_detail(cpython=False):
            gc_collect()
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

        # Inside an exception-silencing "with" block
        class Context:
            def __enter__(self):
                return self
            def __exit__ (self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb):
                return True
        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        with Context():
            inner_raising_func()
        obj = None
        if check_impl_detail(cpython=False):
            gc_collect()
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

    def test_exception_target_in_nested_scope(self):
        # issue 4617: This used to raise a SyntaxError
        # "can not delete variable 'e' referenced in nested scope"
        def print_error():
            e
        try:
            something
        except Exception as e:
            print_error()
            # implicit "del e" here

    def test_generator_leaking(self):
        # Test that generator exception state doesn't leak into the calling
        # frame
        def yield_raise():
            try:
                raise KeyError("caught")
            except KeyError:
                yield sys.exc_info()[0]
                yield sys.exc_info()[0]
            yield sys.exc_info()[0]
        g = yield_raise()
        self.assertEqual(next(g), KeyError)
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info()[0], None)
        self.assertEqual(next(g), KeyError)
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info()[0], None)
        self.assertEqual(next(g), None)

        # Same test, but inside an exception handler
        try:
            raise TypeError("foo")
        except TypeError:
            g = yield_raise()
            self.assertEqual(next(g), KeyError)
            self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info()[0], TypeError)
            self.assertEqual(next(g), KeyError)
            self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info()[0], TypeError)
            self.assertEqual(next(g), TypeError)
            del g
            self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info()[0], TypeError)

    def test_generator_leaking2(self):
        # See issue 12475.
        def g():
            yield
        try:
            raise RuntimeError
        except RuntimeError:
            it = g()
            next(it)
        try:
            next(it)
        except StopIteration:
            pass
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))

    def test_generator_leaking3(self):
        # See issue #23353.  When gen.throw() is called, the caller's
        # exception state should be save and restored.
        def g():
            try:
                yield
            except ZeroDivisionError:
                yield sys.exc_info()[1]
        it = g()
        next(it)
        try:
            1/0
        except ZeroDivisionError as e:
            self.assertIs(sys.exc_info()[1], e)
            gen_exc = it.throw(e)
            self.assertIs(sys.exc_info()[1], e)
            self.assertIs(gen_exc, e)
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))

    def test_generator_leaking4(self):
        # See issue #23353.  When an exception is raised by a generator,
        # the caller's exception state should still be restored.
        def g():
            try:
                1/0
            except ZeroDivisionError:
                yield sys.exc_info()[0]
                raise
        it = g()
        try:
            raise TypeError
        except TypeError:
            # The caller's exception state (TypeError) is temporarily
            # saved in the generator.
            tp = next(it)
        self.assertIs(tp, ZeroDivisionError)
        try:
            next(it)
            # We can't check it immediately, but while next() returns
            # with an exception, it shouldn't have restored the old
            # exception state (TypeError).
        except ZeroDivisionError as e:
            self.assertIs(sys.exc_info()[1], e)
        # We used to find TypeError here.
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))

    def test_generator_doesnt_retain_old_exc(self):
        def g():
            self.assertIsInstance(sys.exc_info()[1], RuntimeError)
            yield
            self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))
        it = g()
        try:
            raise RuntimeError
        except RuntimeError:
            next(it)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)

    def test_generator_finalizing_and_exc_info(self):
        # See #7173
        def simple_gen():
            yield 1
        def run_gen():
            gen = simple_gen()
            try:
                raise RuntimeError
            except RuntimeError:
                return next(gen)
        run_gen()
        gc_collect()
        self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))

    def _check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(self, testfunc):
        # Issue #12791: exception state is cleaned up as soon as a generator
        # is closed (reference cycles are broken).
        class MyException(Exception):
            def __init__(self, obj):
                self.obj = obj
        class MyObj:
            pass

        def raising_gen():
            try:
                raise MyException(obj)
            except MyException:
                yield

        obj = MyObj()
        wr = weakref.ref(obj)
        g = raising_gen()
        next(g)
        testfunc(g)
        g = obj = None
        obj = wr()
        self.assertIsNone(obj)

    def test_generator_throw_cleanup_exc_state(self):
        def do_throw(g):
            try:
                g.throw(RuntimeError())
            except RuntimeError:
                pass
        self._check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(do_throw)

    def test_generator_close_cleanup_exc_state(self):
        def do_close(g):
            g.close()
        self._check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(do_close)

    def test_generator_del_cleanup_exc_state(self):
        def do_del(g):
            g = None
        self._check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(do_del)

    def test_generator_next_cleanup_exc_state(self):
        def do_next(g):
            try:
                next(g)
            except StopIteration:
                pass
            else:
                self.fail("should have raised StopIteration")
        self._check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(do_next)

    def test_generator_send_cleanup_exc_state(self):
        def do_send(g):
            try:
                g.send(None)
            except StopIteration:
                pass
            else:
                self.fail("should have raised StopIteration")
        self._check_generator_cleanup_exc_state(do_send)

    def test_3114(self):
        # Bug #3114: in its destructor, MyObject retrieves a pointer to
        # obsolete and/or deallocated objects.
        class MyObject:
            def __del__(self):
                nonlocal e
                e = sys.exc_info()
        e = ()
        try:
            raise Exception(MyObject())
        except:
            pass
        self.assertEqual(e, (None, None, None))

    def test_unicode_change_attributes(self):
        # See issue 7309. This was a crasher.

        u = UnicodeEncodeError('baz', 'xxxxx', 1, 5, 'foo')
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't encode characters in position 1-4: foo")
        u.end = 2
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't encode character '\\x78' in position 1: foo")
        u.end = 5
        u.reason = 0x345345345345345345
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't encode characters in position 1-4: 965230951443685724997")
        u.encoding = 4000
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'4000' codec can't encode characters in position 1-4: 965230951443685724997")
        u.start = 1000
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'4000' codec can't encode characters in position 1000-4: 965230951443685724997")

        u = UnicodeDecodeError('baz', b'xxxxx', 1, 5, 'foo')
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't decode bytes in position 1-4: foo")
        u.end = 2
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't decode byte 0x78 in position 1: foo")
        u.end = 5
        u.reason = 0x345345345345345345
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'baz' codec can't decode bytes in position 1-4: 965230951443685724997")
        u.encoding = 4000
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'4000' codec can't decode bytes in position 1-4: 965230951443685724997")
        u.start = 1000
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "'4000' codec can't decode bytes in position 1000-4: 965230951443685724997")

        u = UnicodeTranslateError('xxxx', 1, 5, 'foo')
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "can't translate characters in position 1-4: foo")
        u.end = 2
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "can't translate character '\\x78' in position 1: foo")
        u.end = 5
        u.reason = 0x345345345345345345
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "can't translate characters in position 1-4: 965230951443685724997")
        u.start = 1000
        self.assertEqual(str(u), "can't translate characters in position 1000-4: 965230951443685724997")

    def test_unicode_errors_no_object(self):
        # See issue #21134.
        klasses = UnicodeEncodeError, UnicodeDecodeError, UnicodeTranslateError
        for klass in klasses:
            self.assertEqual(str(klass.__new__(klass)), "")

    @no_tracing
    def test_badisinstance(self):
        # Bug #2542: if issubclass(e, MyException) raises an exception,
        # it should be ignored
        class Meta(type):
            def __subclasscheck__(cls, subclass):
                raise ValueError()
        class MyException(Exception, metaclass=Meta):
            pass

        with captured_stderr() as stderr:
            try:
                raise KeyError()
            except MyException as e:
                self.fail("exception should not be a MyException")
            except KeyError:
                pass
            except:
                self.fail("Should have raised KeyError")
            else:
                self.fail("Should have raised KeyError")

        def g():
            try:
                return g()
            except RecursionError:
                return sys.exc_info()
        e, v, tb = g()
        self.assertIsInstance(v, RecursionError, type(v))
        self.assertIn("maximum recursion depth exceeded", str(v))

    @cpython_only
    def test_recursion_normalizing_exception(self):
        # Issue #22898.
        # Test that a RecursionError is raised when tstate->recursion_depth is
        # equal to recursion_limit in PyErr_NormalizeException() and check
        # that a ResourceWarning is printed.
        # Prior to #22898, the recursivity of PyErr_NormalizeException() was
        # controlled by tstate->recursion_depth and a PyExc_RecursionErrorInst
        # singleton was being used in that case, that held traceback data and
        # locals indefinitely and would cause a segfault in _PyExc_Fini() upon
        # finalization of these locals.
        code = """if 1:
            import sys
            from _testinternalcapi import get_recursion_depth

            class MyException(Exception): pass

            def setrecursionlimit(depth):
                while 1:
                    try:
                        sys.setrecursionlimit(depth)
                        return depth
                    except RecursionError:
                        # sys.setrecursionlimit() raises a RecursionError if
                        # the new recursion limit is too low (issue #25274).
                        depth += 1

            def recurse(cnt):
                cnt -= 1
                if cnt:
                    recurse(cnt)
                else:
                    generator.throw(MyException)

            def gen():
                f = open(%a, mode='rb', buffering=0)
                yield

            generator = gen()
            next(generator)
            recursionlimit = sys.getrecursionlimit()
            depth = get_recursion_depth()
            try:
                # Upon the last recursive invocation of recurse(),
                # tstate->recursion_depth is equal to (recursion_limit - 1)
                # and is equal to recursion_limit when _gen_throw() calls
                # PyErr_NormalizeException().
                recurse(setrecursionlimit(depth + 2) - depth)
            finally:
                sys.setrecursionlimit(recursionlimit)
                print('Done.')
        """ % __file__
        rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure("-Wd", "-c", code)
        # Check that the program does not fail with SIGABRT.
        self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
        self.assertIn(b'RecursionError', err)
        self.assertIn(b'ResourceWarning', err)
        self.assertIn(b'Done.', out)

    @cpython_only
    def test_recursion_normalizing_infinite_exception(self):
        # Issue #30697. Test that a RecursionError is raised when
        # PyErr_NormalizeException() maximum recursion depth has been
        # exceeded.
        code = """if 1:
            import _testcapi
            try:
                raise _testcapi.RecursingInfinitelyError
            finally:
                print('Done.')
        """
        rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure("-c", code)
        self.assertEqual(rc, 1)
        self.assertIn(b'RecursionError: maximum recursion depth exceeded '
                      b'while normalizing an exception', err)
        self.assertIn(b'Done.', out)


    def test_recursion_in_except_handler(self):

        def set_relative_recursion_limit(n):
            depth = 1
            while True:
                try:
                    sys.setrecursionlimit(depth)
                except RecursionError:
                    depth += 1
                else:
                    break
            sys.setrecursionlimit(depth+n)

        def recurse_in_except():
            try:
                1/0
            except:
                recurse_in_except()

        def recurse_after_except():
            try:
                1/0
            except:
                pass
            recurse_after_except()

        def recurse_in_body_and_except():
            try:
                recurse_in_body_and_except()
            except:
                recurse_in_body_and_except()

        recursionlimit = sys.getrecursionlimit()
        try:
            set_relative_recursion_limit(10)
            for func in (recurse_in_except, recurse_after_except, recurse_in_body_and_except):
                with self.subTest(func=func):
                    try:
                        func()
                    except RecursionError:
                        pass
                    else:
                        self.fail("Should have raised a RecursionError")
        finally:
            sys.setrecursionlimit(recursionlimit)


    @cpython_only
    def test_recursion_normalizing_with_no_memory(self):
        # Issue #30697. Test that in the abort that occurs when there is no
        # memory left and the size of the Python frames stack is greater than
        # the size of the list of preallocated MemoryError instances, the
        # Fatal Python error message mentions MemoryError.
        code = """if 1:
            import _testcapi
            class C(): pass
            def recurse(cnt):
                cnt -= 1
                if cnt:
                    recurse(cnt)
                else:
                    _testcapi.set_nomemory(0)
                    C()
            recurse(16)
        """
        with SuppressCrashReport():
            rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure("-c", code)
            self.assertIn(b'Fatal Python error: _PyErr_NormalizeException: '
                          b'Cannot recover from MemoryErrors while '
                          b'normalizing exceptions.', err)

    @cpython_only
    def test_MemoryError(self):
        # PyErr_NoMemory always raises the same exception instance.
        # Check that the traceback is not doubled.
        import traceback
        from _testcapi import raise_memoryerror
        def raiseMemError():
            try:
                raise_memoryerror()
            except MemoryError as e:
                tb = e.__traceback__
            else:
                self.fail("Should have raised a MemoryError")
            return traceback.format_tb(tb)

        tb1 = raiseMemError()
        tb2 = raiseMemError()
        self.assertEqual(tb1, tb2)

    @cpython_only
    def test_exception_with_doc(self):
        import _testcapi
        doc2 = "This is a test docstring."
        doc4 = "This is another test docstring."

        self.assertRaises(SystemError, _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc,
                          "error1")

        # test basic usage of PyErr_NewException
        error1 = _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc("_testcapi.error1")
        self.assertIs(type(error1), type)
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(error1, Exception))
        self.assertIsNone(error1.__doc__)

        # test with given docstring
        error2 = _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc("_testcapi.error2", doc2)
        self.assertEqual(error2.__doc__, doc2)

        # test with explicit base (without docstring)
        error3 = _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc("_testcapi.error3",
                                                   base=error2)
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(error3, error2))

        # test with explicit base tuple
        class C(object):
            pass
        error4 = _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc("_testcapi.error4", doc4,
                                                   (error3, C))
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(error4, error3))
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(error4, C))
        self.assertEqual(error4.__doc__, doc4)

        # test with explicit dictionary
        error5 = _testcapi.make_exception_with_doc("_testcapi.error5", "",
                                                   error4, {'a': 1})
        self.assertTrue(issubclass(error5, error4))
        self.assertEqual(error5.a, 1)
        self.assertEqual(error5.__doc__, "")

    @cpython_only
    def test_memory_error_cleanup(self):
        # Issue #5437: preallocated MemoryError instances should not keep
        # traceback objects alive.
        from _testcapi import raise_memoryerror
        class C:
            pass
        wr = None
        def inner():
            nonlocal wr
            c = C()
            wr = weakref.ref(c)
            raise_memoryerror()
        # We cannot use assertRaises since it manually deletes the traceback
        try:
            inner()
        except MemoryError as e:
            self.assertNotEqual(wr(), None)
        else:
            self.fail("MemoryError not raised")
        self.assertEqual(wr(), None)

    @no_tracing
    def test_recursion_error_cleanup(self):
        # Same test as above, but with "recursion exceeded" errors
        class C:
            pass
        wr = None
        def inner():
            nonlocal wr
            c = C()
            wr = weakref.ref(c)
            inner()
        # We cannot use assertRaises since it manually deletes the traceback
        try:
            inner()
        except RecursionError as e:
            self.assertNotEqual(wr(), None)
        else:
            self.fail("RecursionError not raised")
        self.assertEqual(wr(), None)

    def test_errno_ENOTDIR(self):
        # Issue #12802: "not a directory" errors are ENOTDIR even on Windows
        with self.assertRaises(OSError) as cm:
            os.listdir(__file__)
        self.assertEqual(cm.exception.errno, errno.ENOTDIR, cm.exception)

    def test_unraisable(self):
        # Issue #22836: PyErr_WriteUnraisable() should give sensible reports
        class BrokenDel:
            def __del__(self):
                exc = ValueError("del is broken")
                # The following line is included in the traceback report:
                raise exc

        obj = BrokenDel()
        with support.catch_unraisable_exception() as cm:
            del obj

            self.assertEqual(cm.unraisable.object, BrokenDel.__del__)
            self.assertIsNotNone(cm.unraisable.exc_traceback)

    def test_unhandled(self):
        # Check for sensible reporting of unhandled exceptions
        for exc_type in (ValueError, BrokenStrException):
            with self.subTest(exc_type):
                try:
                    exc = exc_type("test message")
                    # The following line is included in the traceback report:
                    raise exc
                except exc_type:
                    with captured_stderr() as stderr:
                        sys.__excepthook__(*sys.exc_info())
                report = stderr.getvalue()
                self.assertIn("test_exceptions.py", report)
                self.assertIn("raise exc", report)
                self.assertIn(exc_type.__name__, report)
                if exc_type is BrokenStrException:
                    self.assertIn("<exception str() failed>", report)
                else:
                    self.assertIn("test message", report)
                self.assertTrue(report.endswith("\n"))

    @cpython_only
    def test_memory_error_in_PyErr_PrintEx(self):
        code = """if 1:
            import _testcapi
            class C(): pass
            _testcapi.set_nomemory(0, %d)
            C()
        """

        # Issue #30817: Abort in PyErr_PrintEx() when no memory.
        # Span a large range of tests as the CPython code always evolves with
        # changes that add or remove memory allocations.
        for i in range(1, 20):
            rc, out, err = script_helper.assert_python_failure("-c", code % i)
            self.assertIn(rc, (1, 120))
            self.assertIn(b'MemoryError', err)

    def test_yield_in_nested_try_excepts(self):
        #Issue #25612
        class MainError(Exception):
            pass

        class SubError(Exception):
            pass

        def main():
            try:
                raise MainError()
            except MainError:
                try:
                    yield
                except SubError:
                    pass
                raise

        coro = main()
        coro.send(None)
        with self.assertRaises(MainError):
            coro.throw(SubError())

    def test_generator_doesnt_retain_old_exc2(self):
        #Issue 28884#msg282532
        def g():
            try:
                raise ValueError
            except ValueError:
                yield 1
            self.assertEqual(sys.exc_info(), (None, None, None))
            yield 2

        gen = g()

        try:
            raise IndexError
        except IndexError:
            self.assertEqual(next(gen), 1)
        self.assertEqual(next(gen), 2)

    def test_raise_in_generator(self):
        #Issue 25612#msg304117
        def g():
            yield 1
            raise
            yield 2

        with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
            i = g()
            try:
                1/0
            except:
                next(i)
                next(i)

    @unittest.skipUnless(__debug__, "Won't work if __debug__ is False")
    def test_assert_shadowing(self):
        # Shadowing AssertionError would cause the assert statement to
        # misbehave.
        global AssertionError
        AssertionError = TypeError
        try:
            assert False, 'hello'
        except BaseException as e:
            del AssertionError
            self.assertIsInstance(e, AssertionError)
            self.assertEqual(str(e), 'hello')
        else:
            del AssertionError
            self.fail('Expected exception')

    def test_memory_error_subclasses(self):
        # bpo-41654: MemoryError instances use a freelist of objects that are
        # linked using the 'dict' attribute when they are inactive/dead.
        # Subclasses of MemoryError should not participate in the freelist
        # schema. This test creates a MemoryError object and keeps it alive
        # (therefore advancing the freelist) and then it creates and destroys a
        # subclass object. Finally, it checks that creating a new MemoryError
        # succeeds, proving that the freelist is not corrupted.

        class TestException(MemoryError):
            pass

        try:
            raise MemoryError
        except MemoryError as exc:
            inst = exc

        try:
            raise TestException
        except Exception:
            pass

        for _ in range(10):
            try:
                raise MemoryError
            except MemoryError as exc:
                pass

            gc_collect()


class ImportErrorTests(unittest.TestCase):

    def test_attributes(self):
        # Setting 'name' and 'path' should not be a problem.
        exc = ImportError('test')
        self.assertIsNone(exc.name)
        self.assertIsNone(exc.path)

        exc = ImportError('test', name='somemodule')
        self.assertEqual(exc.name, 'somemodule')
        self.assertIsNone(exc.path)

        exc = ImportError('test', path='somepath')
        self.assertEqual(exc.path, 'somepath')
        self.assertIsNone(exc.name)

        exc = ImportError('test', path='somepath', name='somename')
        self.assertEqual(exc.name, 'somename')
        self.assertEqual(exc.path, 'somepath')

        msg = "'invalid' is an invalid keyword argument for ImportError"
        with self.assertRaisesRegex(TypeError, msg):
            ImportError('test', invalid='keyword')

        with self.assertRaisesRegex(TypeError, msg):
            ImportError('test', name='name', invalid='keyword')

        with self.assertRaisesRegex(TypeError, msg):
            ImportError('test', path='path', invalid='keyword')

        with self.assertRaisesRegex(TypeError, msg):
            ImportError(invalid='keyword')

        with self.assertRaisesRegex(TypeError, msg):
            ImportError('test', invalid='keyword', another=True)

    def test_reset_attributes(self):
        exc = ImportError('test', name='name', path='path')
        self.assertEqual(exc.args, ('test',))
        self.assertEqual(exc.msg, 'test')
        self.assertEqual(exc.name, 'name')
        self.assertEqual(exc.path, 'path')

        # Reset not specified attributes
        exc.__init__()
        self.assertEqual(exc.args, ())
        self.assertEqual(exc.msg, None)
        self.assertEqual(exc.name, None)
        self.assertEqual(exc.path, None)

    def test_non_str_argument(self):
        # Issue #15778
        with check_warnings(('', BytesWarning), quiet=True):
            arg = b'abc'
            exc = ImportError(arg)
            self.assertEqual(str(arg), str(exc))

    def test_copy_pickle(self):
        for kwargs in (dict(),
                       dict(name='somename'),
                       dict(path='somepath'),
                       dict(name='somename', path='somepath')):
            orig = ImportError('test', **kwargs)
            for proto in range(pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL + 1):
                exc = pickle.loads(pickle.dumps(orig, proto))
                self.assertEqual(exc.args, ('test',))
                self.assertEqual(exc.msg, 'test')
                self.assertEqual(exc.name, orig.name)
                self.assertEqual(exc.path, orig.path)
            for c in copy.copy, copy.deepcopy:
                exc = c(orig)
                self.assertEqual(exc.args, ('test',))
                self.assertEqual(exc.msg, 'test')
                self.assertEqual(exc.name, orig.name)
                self.assertEqual(exc.path, orig.path)


if __name__ == '__main__':
    unittest.main()
back to top