cpython/Lib/test/test_winreg.py
Guido van Rossum 291481b4db Reduce the size of Big String and Big Binary tests to 2**14 (minus one
for Big String).  This should make the tests pass on Win98SE.  Note
that the docs only promise lengths up to 2048.  Unfortunately this no
longer tests for the segfault I was seeing earlier, but I'm confident
I've nailed that one. :-)  Fixes SF 852281.  Will backport to 2.3.
2003-12-03 15:24:02 +00:00

154 lines
5.6 KiB
Python

# Test the windows specific win32reg module.
# Only win32reg functions not hit here: FlushKey, LoadKey and SaveKey
from _winreg import *
import os, sys
from test.test_support import verify, have_unicode
test_key_name = "SOFTWARE\\Python Registry Test Key - Delete Me"
test_data = [
("Int Value", 45, REG_DWORD),
("String Val", "A string value", REG_SZ),
("StringExpand", "The path is %path%", REG_EXPAND_SZ),
("Multi-string", ["Lots", "of", "string", "values"], REG_MULTI_SZ),
("Raw Data", ("binary"+chr(0)+"data"), REG_BINARY),
("Big String", "x"*(2**14-1), REG_SZ),
("Big Binary", "x"*(2**14), REG_BINARY),
]
if have_unicode:
test_data+=[
(unicode("Unicode Val"), unicode("A Unicode value"), REG_SZ,),
("UnicodeExpand", unicode("The path is %path%"), REG_EXPAND_SZ),
("Multi-unicode", [unicode("Lots"), unicode("of"), unicode("unicode"), unicode("values")], REG_MULTI_SZ),
("Multi-mixed", [unicode("Unicode"), unicode("and"), "string", "values"],REG_MULTI_SZ),
]
def WriteTestData(root_key):
# Set the default value for this key.
SetValue(root_key, test_key_name, REG_SZ, "Default value")
key = CreateKey(root_key, test_key_name)
# Create a sub-key
sub_key = CreateKey(key, "sub_key")
# Give the sub-key some named values
for value_name, value_data, value_type in test_data:
SetValueEx(sub_key, value_name, 0, value_type, value_data)
# Check we wrote as many items as we thought.
nkeys, nvalues, since_mod = QueryInfoKey(key)
verify(nkeys==1, "Not the correct number of sub keys")
verify(nvalues==1, "Not the correct number of values")
nkeys, nvalues, since_mod = QueryInfoKey(sub_key)
verify(nkeys==0, "Not the correct number of sub keys")
verify(nvalues==len(test_data), "Not the correct number of values")
# Close this key this way...
# (but before we do, copy the key as an integer - this allows
# us to test that the key really gets closed).
int_sub_key = int(sub_key)
CloseKey(sub_key)
try:
QueryInfoKey(int_sub_key)
raise RuntimeError, "It appears the CloseKey() function does not close the actual key!"
except EnvironmentError:
pass
# ... and close that key that way :-)
int_key = int(key)
key.Close()
try:
QueryInfoKey(int_key)
raise RuntimeError, "It appears the key.Close() function does not close the actual key!"
except EnvironmentError:
pass
def ReadTestData(root_key):
# Check we can get default value for this key.
val = QueryValue(root_key, test_key_name)
verify(val=="Default value", "Registry didn't give back the correct value")
key = OpenKey(root_key, test_key_name)
# Read the sub-keys
sub_key = OpenKey(key, "sub_key")
# Check I can enumerate over the values.
index = 0
while 1:
try:
data = EnumValue(sub_key, index)
except EnvironmentError:
break
verify(data in test_data, "Didn't read back the correct test data")
index = index + 1
verify(index==len(test_data), "Didn't read the correct number of items")
# Check I can directly access each item
for value_name, value_data, value_type in test_data:
read_val, read_typ = QueryValueEx(sub_key, value_name)
verify(read_val==value_data and read_typ == value_type, \
"Could not directly read the value" )
sub_key.Close()
# Enumerate our main key.
read_val = EnumKey(key, 0)
verify(read_val == "sub_key", "Read subkey value wrong")
try:
EnumKey(key, 1)
verify(0, "Was able to get a second key when I only have one!")
except EnvironmentError:
pass
key.Close()
def DeleteTestData(root_key):
key = OpenKey(root_key, test_key_name, 0, KEY_ALL_ACCESS)
sub_key = OpenKey(key, "sub_key", 0, KEY_ALL_ACCESS)
# It is not necessary to delete the values before deleting
# the key (although subkeys must not exist). We delete them
# manually just to prove we can :-)
for value_name, value_data, value_type in test_data:
DeleteValue(sub_key, value_name)
nkeys, nvalues, since_mod = QueryInfoKey(sub_key)
verify(nkeys==0 and nvalues==0, "subkey not empty before delete")
sub_key.Close()
DeleteKey(key, "sub_key")
try:
# Shouldnt be able to delete it twice!
DeleteKey(key, "sub_key")
verify(0, "Deleting the key twice succeeded")
except EnvironmentError:
pass
key.Close()
DeleteKey(root_key, test_key_name)
# Opening should now fail!
try:
key = OpenKey(root_key, test_key_name)
verify(0, "Could open the non-existent key")
except WindowsError: # Use this error name this time
pass
def TestAll(root_key):
WriteTestData(root_key)
ReadTestData(root_key)
DeleteTestData(root_key)
# Test on my local machine.
TestAll(HKEY_CURRENT_USER)
print "Local registry tests worked"
try:
remote_name = sys.argv[sys.argv.index("--remote")+1]
except (IndexError, ValueError):
remote_name = None
if remote_name is not None:
try:
remote_key = ConnectRegistry(remote_name, HKEY_CURRENT_USER)
except EnvironmentError, exc:
print "Could not connect to the remote machine -", exc.strerror
remote_key = None
if remote_key is not None:
TestAll(remote_key)
print "Remote registry tests worked"
else:
print "Remote registry calls can be tested using",
print "'test_winreg.py --remote \\\\machine_name'"