cpython/Lib/test/test_struct.py
Mark Dickinson 9fe60340d7
gh-112358: Fix Python 3.12 regression with subclassing struct.Struct. (#112424)
Revert commit c8c0afc713 (PR #94532),
which moved `struct.Struct` initialisation from `Struct.__init__` to `Struct.__new__`.
This caused issues with code in the wild that subclasses `struct.Struct`.
2023-11-26 14:29:52 +00:00

955 lines
39 KiB
Python

from collections import abc
import array
import gc
import math
import operator
import unittest
import struct
import sys
import weakref
from test import support
from test.support import import_helper
from test.support.script_helper import assert_python_ok
ISBIGENDIAN = sys.byteorder == "big"
integer_codes = 'b', 'B', 'h', 'H', 'i', 'I', 'l', 'L', 'q', 'Q', 'n', 'N'
byteorders = '', '@', '=', '<', '>', '!'
def iter_integer_formats(byteorders=byteorders):
for code in integer_codes:
for byteorder in byteorders:
if (byteorder not in ('', '@') and code in ('n', 'N')):
continue
yield code, byteorder
def string_reverse(s):
return s[::-1]
def bigendian_to_native(value):
if ISBIGENDIAN:
return value
else:
return string_reverse(value)
class StructTest(unittest.TestCase):
def test_isbigendian(self):
self.assertEqual((struct.pack('=i', 1)[0] == 0), ISBIGENDIAN)
def test_consistence(self):
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, 'Z')
sz = struct.calcsize('i')
self.assertEqual(sz * 3, struct.calcsize('iii'))
fmt = 'cbxxxxxxhhhhiillffd?'
fmt3 = '3c3b18x12h6i6l6f3d3?'
sz = struct.calcsize(fmt)
sz3 = struct.calcsize(fmt3)
self.assertEqual(sz * 3, sz3)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'iii', 3)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'i', 3, 3, 3)
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack, 'i', 'foo')
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack, 'P', 'foo')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'd', b'flap')
s = struct.pack('ii', 1, 2)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'iii', s)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'i', s)
def test_transitiveness(self):
c = b'a'
b = 1
h = 255
i = 65535
l = 65536
f = 3.1415
d = 3.1415
t = True
for prefix in ('', '@', '<', '>', '=', '!'):
for format in ('xcbhilfd?', 'xcBHILfd?'):
format = prefix + format
s = struct.pack(format, c, b, h, i, l, f, d, t)
cp, bp, hp, ip, lp, fp, dp, tp = struct.unpack(format, s)
self.assertEqual(cp, c)
self.assertEqual(bp, b)
self.assertEqual(hp, h)
self.assertEqual(ip, i)
self.assertEqual(lp, l)
self.assertEqual(int(100 * fp), int(100 * f))
self.assertEqual(int(100 * dp), int(100 * d))
self.assertEqual(tp, t)
def test_new_features(self):
# Test some of the new features in detail
# (format, argument, big-endian result, little-endian result, asymmetric)
tests = [
('c', b'a', b'a', b'a', 0),
('xc', b'a', b'\0a', b'\0a', 0),
('cx', b'a', b'a\0', b'a\0', 0),
('s', b'a', b'a', b'a', 0),
('0s', b'helloworld', b'', b'', 1),
('1s', b'helloworld', b'h', b'h', 1),
('9s', b'helloworld', b'helloworl', b'helloworl', 1),
('10s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld', b'helloworld', 0),
('11s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld\0', b'helloworld\0', 1),
('20s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld'+10*b'\0', b'helloworld'+10*b'\0', 1),
('b', 7, b'\7', b'\7', 0),
('b', -7, b'\371', b'\371', 0),
('B', 7, b'\7', b'\7', 0),
('B', 249, b'\371', b'\371', 0),
('h', 700, b'\002\274', b'\274\002', 0),
('h', -700, b'\375D', b'D\375', 0),
('H', 700, b'\002\274', b'\274\002', 0),
('H', 0x10000-700, b'\375D', b'D\375', 0),
('i', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
('i', -70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
('I', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
('I', 0x100000000-70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
('l', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
('l', -70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
('L', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
('L', 0x100000000-70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
('f', 2.0, b'@\000\000\000', b'\000\000\000@', 0),
('d', 2.0, b'@\000\000\000\000\000\000\000',
b'\000\000\000\000\000\000\000@', 0),
('f', -2.0, b'\300\000\000\000', b'\000\000\000\300', 0),
('d', -2.0, b'\300\000\000\000\000\000\000\000',
b'\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\300', 0),
('?', 0, b'\0', b'\0', 0),
('?', 3, b'\1', b'\1', 1),
('?', True, b'\1', b'\1', 0),
('?', [], b'\0', b'\0', 1),
('?', (1,), b'\1', b'\1', 1),
]
for fmt, arg, big, lil, asy in tests:
for (xfmt, exp) in [('>'+fmt, big), ('!'+fmt, big), ('<'+fmt, lil),
('='+fmt, ISBIGENDIAN and big or lil)]:
res = struct.pack(xfmt, arg)
self.assertEqual(res, exp)
self.assertEqual(struct.calcsize(xfmt), len(res))
rev = struct.unpack(xfmt, res)[0]
if rev != arg:
self.assertTrue(asy)
def test_calcsize(self):
expected_size = {
'b': 1, 'B': 1,
'h': 2, 'H': 2,
'i': 4, 'I': 4,
'l': 4, 'L': 4,
'q': 8, 'Q': 8,
}
# standard integer sizes
for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats(('=', '<', '>', '!')):
format = byteorder+code
size = struct.calcsize(format)
self.assertEqual(size, expected_size[code])
# native integer sizes
native_pairs = 'bB', 'hH', 'iI', 'lL', 'nN', 'qQ'
for format_pair in native_pairs:
for byteorder in '', '@':
signed_size = struct.calcsize(byteorder + format_pair[0])
unsigned_size = struct.calcsize(byteorder + format_pair[1])
self.assertEqual(signed_size, unsigned_size)
# bounds for native integer sizes
self.assertEqual(struct.calcsize('b'), 1)
self.assertLessEqual(2, struct.calcsize('h'))
self.assertLessEqual(4, struct.calcsize('l'))
self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('h'), struct.calcsize('i'))
self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('i'), struct.calcsize('l'))
self.assertLessEqual(8, struct.calcsize('q'))
self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('l'), struct.calcsize('q'))
self.assertGreaterEqual(struct.calcsize('n'), struct.calcsize('i'))
self.assertGreaterEqual(struct.calcsize('n'), struct.calcsize('P'))
def test_integers(self):
# Integer tests (bBhHiIlLqQnN).
import binascii
class IntTester(unittest.TestCase):
def __init__(self, format):
super(IntTester, self).__init__(methodName='test_one')
self.format = format
self.code = format[-1]
self.byteorder = format[:-1]
if not self.byteorder in byteorders:
raise ValueError("unrecognized packing byteorder: %s" %
self.byteorder)
self.bytesize = struct.calcsize(format)
self.bitsize = self.bytesize * 8
if self.code in tuple('bhilqn'):
self.signed = True
self.min_value = -(2**(self.bitsize-1))
self.max_value = 2**(self.bitsize-1) - 1
elif self.code in tuple('BHILQN'):
self.signed = False
self.min_value = 0
self.max_value = 2**self.bitsize - 1
else:
raise ValueError("unrecognized format code: %s" %
self.code)
def test_one(self, x, pack=struct.pack,
unpack=struct.unpack,
unhexlify=binascii.unhexlify):
format = self.format
if self.min_value <= x <= self.max_value:
expected = x
if self.signed and x < 0:
expected += 1 << self.bitsize
self.assertGreaterEqual(expected, 0)
expected = '%x' % expected
if len(expected) & 1:
expected = "0" + expected
expected = expected.encode('ascii')
expected = unhexlify(expected)
expected = (b"\x00" * (self.bytesize - len(expected)) +
expected)
if (self.byteorder == '<' or
self.byteorder in ('', '@', '=') and not ISBIGENDIAN):
expected = string_reverse(expected)
self.assertEqual(len(expected), self.bytesize)
# Pack work?
got = pack(format, x)
self.assertEqual(got, expected)
# Unpack work?
retrieved = unpack(format, got)[0]
self.assertEqual(x, retrieved)
# Adding any byte should cause a "too big" error.
self.assertRaises((struct.error, TypeError), unpack, format,
b'\x01' + got)
else:
# x is out of range -- verify pack realizes that.
self.assertRaises((OverflowError, ValueError, struct.error),
pack, format, x)
def run(self):
from random import randrange
# Create all interesting powers of 2.
values = []
for exp in range(self.bitsize + 3):
values.append(1 << exp)
# Add some random values.
for i in range(self.bitsize):
val = 0
for j in range(self.bytesize):
val = (val << 8) | randrange(256)
values.append(val)
# Values absorbed from other tests
values.extend([300, 700000, sys.maxsize*4])
# Try all those, and their negations, and +-1 from
# them. Note that this tests all power-of-2
# boundaries in range, and a few out of range, plus
# +-(2**n +- 1).
for base in values:
for val in -base, base:
for incr in -1, 0, 1:
x = val + incr
self.test_one(x)
# Some error cases.
class NotAnInt:
def __int__(self):
return 42
# Objects with an '__index__' method should be allowed
# to pack as integers. That is assuming the implemented
# '__index__' method returns an 'int'.
class Indexable(object):
def __init__(self, value):
self._value = value
def __index__(self):
return self._value
# If the '__index__' method raises a type error, then
# '__int__' should be used with a deprecation warning.
class BadIndex(object):
def __index__(self):
raise TypeError
def __int__(self):
return 42
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
"a string")
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
randrange)
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
3+42j)
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
NotAnInt())
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
BadIndex())
# Check for legitimate values from '__index__'.
for obj in (Indexable(0), Indexable(10), Indexable(17),
Indexable(42), Indexable(100), Indexable(127)):
try:
struct.pack(format, obj)
except:
self.fail("integer code pack failed on object "
"with '__index__' method")
# Check for bogus values from '__index__'.
for obj in (Indexable(b'a'), Indexable('b'), Indexable(None),
Indexable({'a': 1}), Indexable([1, 2, 3])):
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
struct.pack, self.format,
obj)
for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats():
format = byteorder+code
t = IntTester(format)
t.run()
def test_nN_code(self):
# n and N don't exist in standard sizes
def assertStructError(func, *args, **kwargs):
with self.assertRaises(struct.error) as cm:
func(*args, **kwargs)
self.assertIn("bad char in struct format", str(cm.exception))
for code in 'nN':
for byteorder in ('=', '<', '>', '!'):
format = byteorder+code
assertStructError(struct.calcsize, format)
assertStructError(struct.pack, format, 0)
assertStructError(struct.unpack, format, b"")
def test_p_code(self):
# Test p ("Pascal string") code.
for code, input, expected, expectedback in [
('p', b'abc', b'\x00', b''),
('1p', b'abc', b'\x00', b''),
('2p', b'abc', b'\x01a', b'a'),
('3p', b'abc', b'\x02ab', b'ab'),
('4p', b'abc', b'\x03abc', b'abc'),
('5p', b'abc', b'\x03abc\x00', b'abc'),
('6p', b'abc', b'\x03abc\x00\x00', b'abc'),
('1000p', b'x'*1000, b'\xff' + b'x'*999, b'x'*255)]:
got = struct.pack(code, input)
self.assertEqual(got, expected)
(got,) = struct.unpack(code, got)
self.assertEqual(got, expectedback)
def test_705836(self):
# SF bug 705836. "<f" and ">f" had a severe rounding bug, where a carry
# from the low-order discarded bits could propagate into the exponent
# field, causing the result to be wrong by a factor of 2.
for base in range(1, 33):
# smaller <- largest representable float less than base.
delta = 0.5
while base - delta / 2.0 != base:
delta /= 2.0
smaller = base - delta
# Packing this rounds away a solid string of trailing 1 bits.
packed = struct.pack("<f", smaller)
unpacked = struct.unpack("<f", packed)[0]
# This failed at base = 2, 4, and 32, with unpacked = 1, 2, and
# 16, respectively.
self.assertEqual(base, unpacked)
bigpacked = struct.pack(">f", smaller)
self.assertEqual(bigpacked, string_reverse(packed))
unpacked = struct.unpack(">f", bigpacked)[0]
self.assertEqual(base, unpacked)
# Largest finite IEEE single.
big = (1 << 24) - 1
big = math.ldexp(big, 127 - 23)
packed = struct.pack(">f", big)
unpacked = struct.unpack(">f", packed)[0]
self.assertEqual(big, unpacked)
# The same, but tack on a 1 bit so it rounds up to infinity.
big = (1 << 25) - 1
big = math.ldexp(big, 127 - 24)
self.assertRaises(OverflowError, struct.pack, ">f", big)
def test_1530559(self):
for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats():
format = byteorder + code
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, format, 1.0)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, format, 1.5)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'P', 1.0)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'P', 1.5)
def test_unpack_from(self):
test_string = b'abcd01234'
fmt = '4s'
s = struct.Struct(fmt)
for cls in (bytes, bytearray):
data = cls(test_string)
self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data), (b'abcd',))
self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, 2), (b'cd01',))
self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, 4), (b'0123',))
for i in range(6):
self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, i), (data[i:i+4],))
for i in range(6, len(test_string) + 1):
self.assertRaises(struct.error, s.unpack_from, data, i)
for cls in (bytes, bytearray):
data = cls(test_string)
self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data), (b'abcd',))
self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, 2), (b'cd01',))
self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, 4), (b'0123',))
for i in range(6):
self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, i), (data[i:i+4],))
for i in range(6, len(test_string) + 1):
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, fmt, data, i)
# keyword arguments
self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(buffer=test_string, offset=2),
(b'cd01',))
def test_pack_into(self):
test_string = b'Reykjavik rocks, eow!'
writable_buf = array.array('b', b' '*100)
fmt = '21s'
s = struct.Struct(fmt)
# Test without offset
s.pack_into(writable_buf, 0, test_string)
from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)]
self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string)
# Test with offset.
s.pack_into(writable_buf, 10, test_string)
from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)+10]
self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string[:10] + test_string)
# Go beyond boundaries.
small_buf = array.array('b', b' '*10)
self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), s.pack_into, small_buf, 0,
test_string)
self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), s.pack_into, small_buf, 2,
test_string)
# Test bogus offset (issue 3694)
sb = small_buf
self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack_into, b'', sb,
None)
def test_pack_into_fn(self):
test_string = b'Reykjavik rocks, eow!'
writable_buf = array.array('b', b' '*100)
fmt = '21s'
pack_into = lambda *args: struct.pack_into(fmt, *args)
# Test without offset.
pack_into(writable_buf, 0, test_string)
from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)]
self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string)
# Test with offset.
pack_into(writable_buf, 10, test_string)
from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)+10]
self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string[:10] + test_string)
# Go beyond boundaries.
small_buf = array.array('b', b' '*10)
self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), pack_into, small_buf, 0,
test_string)
self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), pack_into, small_buf, 2,
test_string)
def test_unpack_with_buffer(self):
# SF bug 1563759: struct.unpack doesn't support buffer protocol objects
data1 = array.array('B', b'\x12\x34\x56\x78')
data2 = memoryview(b'\x12\x34\x56\x78') # XXX b'......XXXX......', 6, 4
for data in [data1, data2]:
value, = struct.unpack('>I', data)
self.assertEqual(value, 0x12345678)
def test_bool(self):
class ExplodingBool(object):
def __bool__(self):
raise OSError
for prefix in tuple("<>!=")+('',):
false = (), [], [], '', 0
true = [1], 'test', 5, -1, 0xffffffff+1, 0xffffffff/2
falseFormat = prefix + '?' * len(false)
packedFalse = struct.pack(falseFormat, *false)
unpackedFalse = struct.unpack(falseFormat, packedFalse)
trueFormat = prefix + '?' * len(true)
packedTrue = struct.pack(trueFormat, *true)
unpackedTrue = struct.unpack(trueFormat, packedTrue)
self.assertEqual(len(true), len(unpackedTrue))
self.assertEqual(len(false), len(unpackedFalse))
for t in unpackedFalse:
self.assertFalse(t)
for t in unpackedTrue:
self.assertTrue(t)
packed = struct.pack(prefix+'?', 1)
self.assertEqual(len(packed), struct.calcsize(prefix+'?'))
if len(packed) != 1:
self.assertFalse(prefix, msg='encoded bool is not one byte: %r'
%packed)
try:
struct.pack(prefix + '?', ExplodingBool())
except OSError:
pass
else:
self.fail("Expected OSError: struct.pack(%r, "
"ExplodingBool())" % (prefix + '?'))
for c in [b'\x01', b'\x7f', b'\xff', b'\x0f', b'\xf0']:
self.assertTrue(struct.unpack('>?', c)[0])
def test_count_overflow(self):
hugecount = '{}b'.format(sys.maxsize+1)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, hugecount)
hugecount2 = '{}b{}H'.format(sys.maxsize//2, sys.maxsize//2)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, hugecount2)
def test_trailing_counter(self):
store = array.array('b', b' '*100)
# format lists containing only count spec should result in an error
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, '12345')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, '12345', b'')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, '12345', store, 0)
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, '12345', store, 0)
# Format lists with trailing count spec should result in an error
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'c12345', 'x')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'c12345', b'x')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, 'c12345', store, 0,
'x')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, 'c12345', store,
0)
# Mixed format tests
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, '14s42', 'spam and eggs')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, '14s42',
b'spam and eggs')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, '14s42', store, 0,
'spam and eggs')
self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, '14s42', store, 0)
def test_Struct_reinitialization(self):
# Issue 9422: there was a memory leak when reinitializing a
# Struct instance. This test can be used to detect the leak
# when running with regrtest -L.
s = struct.Struct('i')
s.__init__('ii')
def check_sizeof(self, format_str, number_of_codes):
# The size of 'PyStructObject'
totalsize = support.calcobjsize('2n3P')
# The size taken up by the 'formatcode' dynamic array
totalsize += struct.calcsize('P3n0P') * (number_of_codes + 1)
support.check_sizeof(self, struct.Struct(format_str), totalsize)
@support.cpython_only
def test__sizeof__(self):
for code in integer_codes:
self.check_sizeof(code, 1)
self.check_sizeof('BHILfdspP', 9)
self.check_sizeof('B' * 1234, 1234)
self.check_sizeof('fd', 2)
self.check_sizeof('xxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 0)
self.check_sizeof('100H', 1)
self.check_sizeof('187s', 1)
self.check_sizeof('20p', 1)
self.check_sizeof('0s', 1)
self.check_sizeof('0c', 0)
def test_boundary_error_message(self):
regex1 = (
r'pack_into requires a buffer of at least 6 '
r'bytes for packing 1 bytes at offset 5 '
r'\(actual buffer size is 1\)'
)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, regex1):
struct.pack_into('b', bytearray(1), 5, 1)
regex2 = (
r'unpack_from requires a buffer of at least 6 '
r'bytes for unpacking 1 bytes at offset 5 '
r'\(actual buffer size is 1\)'
)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, regex2):
struct.unpack_from('b', bytearray(1), 5)
def test_boundary_error_message_with_negative_offset(self):
byte_list = bytearray(10)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(
struct.error,
r'no space to pack 4 bytes at offset -2'):
struct.pack_into('<I', byte_list, -2, 123)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(
struct.error,
'offset -11 out of range for 10-byte buffer'):
struct.pack_into('<B', byte_list, -11, 123)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(
struct.error,
r'not enough data to unpack 4 bytes at offset -2'):
struct.unpack_from('<I', byte_list, -2)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(
struct.error,
"offset -11 out of range for 10-byte buffer"):
struct.unpack_from('<B', byte_list, -11)
def test_boundary_error_message_with_large_offset(self):
# Test overflows cause by large offset and value size (issue 30245)
regex1 = (
r'pack_into requires a buffer of at least ' + str(sys.maxsize + 4) +
r' bytes for packing 4 bytes at offset ' + str(sys.maxsize) +
r' \(actual buffer size is 10\)'
)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, regex1):
struct.pack_into('<I', bytearray(10), sys.maxsize, 1)
regex2 = (
r'unpack_from requires a buffer of at least ' + str(sys.maxsize + 4) +
r' bytes for unpacking 4 bytes at offset ' + str(sys.maxsize) +
r' \(actual buffer size is 10\)'
)
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, regex2):
struct.unpack_from('<I', bytearray(10), sys.maxsize)
def test_issue29802(self):
# When the second argument of struct.unpack() was of wrong type
# the Struct object was decrefed twice and the reference to
# deallocated object was left in a cache.
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
struct.unpack('b', 0)
# Shouldn't crash.
self.assertEqual(struct.unpack('b', b'a'), (b'a'[0],))
def test_format_attr(self):
s = struct.Struct('=i2H')
self.assertEqual(s.format, '=i2H')
# use a bytes string
s2 = struct.Struct(s.format.encode())
self.assertEqual(s2.format, s.format)
def test_struct_cleans_up_at_runtime_shutdown(self):
code = """if 1:
import struct
class C:
def __init__(self):
self.pack = struct.pack
def __del__(self):
self.pack('I', -42)
struct.x = C()
"""
rc, stdout, stderr = assert_python_ok("-c", code)
self.assertEqual(rc, 0)
self.assertEqual(stdout.rstrip(), b"")
self.assertIn(b"Exception ignored in:", stderr)
self.assertIn(b"C.__del__", stderr)
def test__struct_reference_cycle_cleaned_up(self):
# Regression test for python/cpython#94207.
# When we create a new struct module, trigger use of its cache,
# and then delete it ...
_struct_module = import_helper.import_fresh_module("_struct")
module_ref = weakref.ref(_struct_module)
_struct_module.calcsize("b")
del _struct_module
# Then the module should have been garbage collected.
gc.collect()
self.assertIsNone(
module_ref(), "_struct module was not garbage collected")
@support.cpython_only
def test__struct_types_immutable(self):
# See https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/94254
Struct = struct.Struct
unpack_iterator = type(struct.iter_unpack("b", b'x'))
for cls in (Struct, unpack_iterator):
with self.subTest(cls=cls):
with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
cls.x = 1
def test_issue35714(self):
# Embedded null characters should not be allowed in format strings.
for s in '\0', '2\0i', b'\0':
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error,
'embedded null character'):
struct.calcsize(s)
@support.cpython_only
def test_issue98248(self):
def test_error_msg(prefix, int_type, is_unsigned):
fmt_str = prefix + int_type
size = struct.calcsize(fmt_str)
if is_unsigned:
max_ = 2 ** (size * 8) - 1
min_ = 0
else:
max_ = 2 ** (size * 8 - 1) - 1
min_ = -2 ** (size * 8 - 1)
error_msg = f"'{int_type}' format requires {min_} <= number <= {max_}"
for number in [int(-1e50), min_ - 1, max_ + 1, int(1e50)]:
with self.subTest(format_str=fmt_str, number=number):
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, error_msg):
struct.pack(fmt_str, number)
error_msg = "required argument is not an integer"
not_number = ""
with self.subTest(format_str=fmt_str, number=not_number):
with self.assertRaisesRegex(struct.error, error_msg):
struct.pack(fmt_str, not_number)
for prefix in '@=<>':
for int_type in 'BHILQ':
test_error_msg(prefix, int_type, True)
for int_type in 'bhilq':
test_error_msg(prefix, int_type, False)
int_type = 'N'
test_error_msg('@', int_type, True)
int_type = 'n'
test_error_msg('@', int_type, False)
@support.cpython_only
def test_issue98248_error_propagation(self):
class Div0:
def __index__(self):
1 / 0
def test_error_propagation(fmt_str):
with self.subTest(format_str=fmt_str, exception="ZeroDivisionError"):
with self.assertRaises(ZeroDivisionError):
struct.pack(fmt_str, Div0())
for prefix in '@=<>':
for int_type in 'BHILQbhilq':
test_error_propagation(prefix + int_type)
test_error_propagation('N')
test_error_propagation('n')
def test_struct_subclass_instantiation(self):
# Regression test for https://github.com/python/cpython/issues/112358
class MyStruct(struct.Struct):
def __init__(self):
super().__init__('>h')
my_struct = MyStruct()
self.assertEqual(my_struct.pack(12345), b'\x30\x39')
def test_repr(self):
s = struct.Struct('=i2H')
self.assertEqual(repr(s), f'Struct({s.format!r})')
class UnpackIteratorTest(unittest.TestCase):
"""
Tests for iterative unpacking (struct.Struct.iter_unpack).
"""
def test_construct(self):
def _check_iterator(it):
self.assertIsInstance(it, abc.Iterator)
self.assertIsInstance(it, abc.Iterable)
s = struct.Struct('>ibcp')
it = s.iter_unpack(b"")
_check_iterator(it)
it = s.iter_unpack(b"1234567")
_check_iterator(it)
# Wrong bytes length
with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
s.iter_unpack(b"123456")
with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
s.iter_unpack(b"12345678")
# Zero-length struct
s = struct.Struct('>')
with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
s.iter_unpack(b"")
with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
s.iter_unpack(b"12")
def test_uninstantiable(self):
iter_unpack_type = type(struct.Struct(">ibcp").iter_unpack(b""))
self.assertRaises(TypeError, iter_unpack_type)
def test_iterate(self):
s = struct.Struct('>IB')
b = bytes(range(1, 16))
it = s.iter_unpack(b)
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x0b0c0d0e, 15))
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
def test_arbitrary_buffer(self):
s = struct.Struct('>IB')
b = bytes(range(1, 11))
it = s.iter_unpack(memoryview(b))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
def test_length_hint(self):
lh = operator.length_hint
s = struct.Struct('>IB')
b = bytes(range(1, 16))
it = s.iter_unpack(b)
self.assertEqual(lh(it), 3)
next(it)
self.assertEqual(lh(it), 2)
next(it)
self.assertEqual(lh(it), 1)
next(it)
self.assertEqual(lh(it), 0)
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
self.assertEqual(lh(it), 0)
def test_module_func(self):
# Sanity check for the global struct.iter_unpack()
it = struct.iter_unpack('>IB', bytes(range(1, 11)))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
def test_half_float(self):
# Little-endian examples from:
# http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Half_precision_floating-point_format
format_bits_float__cleanRoundtrip_list = [
(b'\x00\x3c', 1.0),
(b'\x00\xc0', -2.0),
(b'\xff\x7b', 65504.0), # (max half precision)
(b'\x00\x04', 2**-14), # ~= 6.10352 * 10**-5 (min pos normal)
(b'\x01\x00', 2**-24), # ~= 5.96046 * 10**-8 (min pos subnormal)
(b'\x00\x00', 0.0),
(b'\x00\x80', -0.0),
(b'\x00\x7c', float('+inf')),
(b'\x00\xfc', float('-inf')),
(b'\x55\x35', 0.333251953125), # ~= 1/3
]
for le_bits, f in format_bits_float__cleanRoundtrip_list:
be_bits = le_bits[::-1]
self.assertEqual(f, struct.unpack('<e', le_bits)[0])
self.assertEqual(le_bits, struct.pack('<e', f))
self.assertEqual(f, struct.unpack('>e', be_bits)[0])
self.assertEqual(be_bits, struct.pack('>e', f))
if sys.byteorder == 'little':
self.assertEqual(f, struct.unpack('e', le_bits)[0])
self.assertEqual(le_bits, struct.pack('e', f))
else:
self.assertEqual(f, struct.unpack('e', be_bits)[0])
self.assertEqual(be_bits, struct.pack('e', f))
# Check for NaN handling:
format_bits__nan_list = [
('<e', b'\x01\xfc'),
('<e', b'\x00\xfe'),
('<e', b'\xff\xff'),
('<e', b'\x01\x7c'),
('<e', b'\x00\x7e'),
('<e', b'\xff\x7f'),
]
for formatcode, bits in format_bits__nan_list:
self.assertTrue(math.isnan(struct.unpack('<e', bits)[0]))
self.assertTrue(math.isnan(struct.unpack('>e', bits[::-1])[0]))
# Check that packing produces a bit pattern representing a quiet NaN:
# all exponent bits and the msb of the fraction should all be 1.
packed = struct.pack('<e', math.nan)
self.assertEqual(packed[1] & 0x7e, 0x7e)
packed = struct.pack('<e', -math.nan)
self.assertEqual(packed[1] & 0x7e, 0x7e)
# Checks for round-to-even behavior
format_bits_float__rounding_list = [
('>e', b'\x00\x01', 2.0**-25 + 2.0**-35), # Rounds to minimum subnormal
('>e', b'\x00\x00', 2.0**-25), # Underflows to zero (nearest even mode)
('>e', b'\x00\x00', 2.0**-26), # Underflows to zero
('>e', b'\x03\xff', 2.0**-14 - 2.0**-24), # Largest subnormal.
('>e', b'\x03\xff', 2.0**-14 - 2.0**-25 - 2.0**-65),
('>e', b'\x04\x00', 2.0**-14 - 2.0**-25),
('>e', b'\x04\x00', 2.0**-14), # Smallest normal.
('>e', b'\x3c\x01', 1.0+2.0**-11 + 2.0**-16), # rounds to 1.0+2**(-10)
('>e', b'\x3c\x00', 1.0+2.0**-11), # rounds to 1.0 (nearest even mode)
('>e', b'\x3c\x00', 1.0+2.0**-12), # rounds to 1.0
('>e', b'\x7b\xff', 65504), # largest normal
('>e', b'\x7b\xff', 65519), # rounds to 65504
('>e', b'\x80\x01', -2.0**-25 - 2.0**-35), # Rounds to minimum subnormal
('>e', b'\x80\x00', -2.0**-25), # Underflows to zero (nearest even mode)
('>e', b'\x80\x00', -2.0**-26), # Underflows to zero
('>e', b'\xbc\x01', -1.0-2.0**-11 - 2.0**-16), # rounds to 1.0+2**(-10)
('>e', b'\xbc\x00', -1.0-2.0**-11), # rounds to 1.0 (nearest even mode)
('>e', b'\xbc\x00', -1.0-2.0**-12), # rounds to 1.0
('>e', b'\xfb\xff', -65519), # rounds to 65504
]
for formatcode, bits, f in format_bits_float__rounding_list:
self.assertEqual(bits, struct.pack(formatcode, f))
# This overflows, and so raises an error
format_bits_float__roundingError_list = [
# Values that round to infinity.
('>e', 65520.0),
('>e', 65536.0),
('>e', 1e300),
('>e', -65520.0),
('>e', -65536.0),
('>e', -1e300),
('<e', 65520.0),
('<e', 65536.0),
('<e', 1e300),
('<e', -65520.0),
('<e', -65536.0),
('<e', -1e300),
]
for formatcode, f in format_bits_float__roundingError_list:
self.assertRaises(OverflowError, struct.pack, formatcode, f)
# Double rounding
format_bits_float__doubleRoundingError_list = [
('>e', b'\x67\xff', 0x1ffdffffff * 2**-26), # should be 2047, if double-rounded 64>32>16, becomes 2048
]
for formatcode, bits, f in format_bits_float__doubleRoundingError_list:
self.assertEqual(bits, struct.pack(formatcode, f))
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()