//! Useful tips for writing tests: //! - Tests are run in parallel; There's still a race condition in test_owned with some other test //! - You need to use flush=True to get any output from print /// Removes indentation from multiline strings in pyrun commands #[allow(unused)] // macro scoping is fooling the compiler pub fn indoc(commands: &str) -> String { let indent; if let Some(second) = commands.lines().nth(1) { indent = second .chars() .take_while(char::is_ascii_whitespace) .collect::(); } else { indent = "".to_string(); } commands .trim_end() .replace(&("\n".to_string() + &indent), "\n") + "\n" } #[macro_export] macro_rules! py_run { ($py:expr, $val:expr, $code:expr) => {{ use pyo3::types::IntoPyDict; let d = [(stringify!($val), &$val)].into_py_dict($py); $py.run(&common::indoc($code), None, Some(d)) .map_err(|e| { e.print($py); // So when this c api function the last line called printed the error to stderr, // the output is only written into a buffer which is never flushed because we // panic before flushing. This is where this hack comes into place $py.run("import sys; sys.stderr.flush()", None, None) .unwrap(); }) .expect(&common::indoc($code)) }}; } #[macro_export] macro_rules! py_assert { ($py:expr, $val:ident, $assertion:expr) => { py_run!($py, $val, concat!("assert ", $assertion)) }; } #[macro_export] macro_rules! py_expect_exception { ($py:expr, $val:ident, $code:expr, $err:ident) => {{ use pyo3::types::IntoPyDict; let d = [(stringify!($val), &$val)].into_py_dict($py); let res = $py.run($code, None, Some(d)); let err = res.unwrap_err(); if !err.matches($py, $py.get_type::()) { panic!(format!("Expected {} but got {:?}", stringify!($err), err)) } }}; }