symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Lib/test/test_popen2.py
changeset 1 2fb8b9db1c86
--- /dev/null	Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000
+++ b/symbian-qemu-0.9.1-12/python-2.6.1/Lib/test/test_popen2.py	Fri Jul 31 15:01:17 2009 +0100
@@ -0,0 +1,98 @@
+#! /usr/bin/env python
+"""Test script for popen2.py"""
+
+import warnings
+warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", ".*popen2 module is deprecated.*",
+                        DeprecationWarning)
+warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", "os\.popen. is deprecated.*",
+                        DeprecationWarning)
+
+import os
+import sys
+import unittest
+import popen2
+
+from test.test_support import TestSkipped, run_unittest, reap_children
+
+if sys.platform[:4] == 'beos' or sys.platform[:6] == 'atheos':
+    #  Locks get messed up or something.  Generally we're supposed
+    #  to avoid mixing "posix" fork & exec with native threads, and
+    #  they may be right about that after all.
+    raise TestSkipped("popen2() doesn't work on " + sys.platform)
+
+# if we don't have os.popen, check that
+# we have os.fork.  if not, skip the test
+# (by raising an ImportError)
+try:
+    from os import popen
+    del popen
+except ImportError:
+    from os import fork
+    del fork
+
+class Popen2Test(unittest.TestCase):
+    cmd = "cat"
+    if os.name == "nt":
+        cmd = "more"
+    teststr = "ab cd\n"
+    # "more" doesn't act the same way across Windows flavors,
+    # sometimes adding an extra newline at the start or the
+    # end.  So we strip whitespace off both ends for comparison.
+    expected = teststr.strip()
+
+    def setUp(self):
+        popen2._cleanup()
+        # When the test runs, there shouldn't be any open pipes
+        self.assertFalse(popen2._active, "Active pipes when test starts" +
+            repr([c.cmd for c in popen2._active]))
+
+    def tearDown(self):
+        for inst in popen2._active:
+            inst.wait()
+        popen2._cleanup()
+        self.assertFalse(popen2._active, "_active not empty")
+        reap_children()
+
+    def validate_output(self, teststr, expected_out, r, w, e=None):
+        w.write(teststr)
+        w.close()
+        got = r.read()
+        self.assertEquals(expected_out, got.strip(), "wrote %r read %r" %
+                          (teststr, got))
+
+        if e is not None:
+            got = e.read()
+            self.assertFalse(got, "unexpected %r on stderr" % got)
+
+    def test_popen2(self):
+        r, w = popen2.popen2(self.cmd)
+        self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w)
+
+    def test_popen3(self):
+        if os.name == 'posix':
+            r, w, e = popen2.popen3([self.cmd])
+            self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w, e)
+
+        r, w, e = popen2.popen3(self.cmd)
+        self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w, e)
+
+    def test_os_popen2(self):
+        # same test as test_popen2(), but using the os.popen*() API
+        w, r = os.popen2(self.cmd)
+        self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w)
+
+    def test_os_popen3(self):
+        # same test as test_popen3(), but using the os.popen*() API
+        if os.name == 'posix':
+            w, r, e = os.popen3([self.cmd])
+            self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w, e)
+
+        w, r, e = os.popen3(self.cmd)
+        self.validate_output(self.teststr, self.expected, r, w, e)
+
+
+def test_main():
+    run_unittest(Popen2Test)
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+    test_main()