summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/indra/llmessage
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorNat Goodspeed <nat@lindenlab.com>2011-07-07 22:21:59 -0400
committerNat Goodspeed <nat@lindenlab.com>2011-07-07 22:21:59 -0400
commit43616131dc5e27bb49b849ed597a98772c5bbb95 (patch)
tree073d871aeaeb176e9d90aabc00f29d343d92b5b8 /indra/llmessage
parent66dcc72870b19c6ada65a643ca33c779c9c9989b (diff)
CHOP-661: Fix HTTPServer usage to turn off allow_reuse_address.
Turns out that BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer turns on that flag by default, which causes freeport() to fail (on Windows only?), happily instantiating multiple servers on the same port. Change known instances, fix freeport() docstring to highlight the issue. Add freeport() unit tests to verify expected behavior.
Diffstat (limited to 'indra/llmessage')
-rw-r--r--indra/llmessage/tests/test_llsdmessage_peer.py9
-rw-r--r--indra/llmessage/tests/testrunner.py100
2 files changed, 105 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/indra/llmessage/tests/test_llsdmessage_peer.py b/indra/llmessage/tests/test_llsdmessage_peer.py
index 9886d49ccc..22edd9dad8 100644
--- a/indra/llmessage/tests/test_llsdmessage_peer.py
+++ b/indra/llmessage/tests/test_llsdmessage_peer.py
@@ -124,14 +124,19 @@ class TestHTTPRequestHandler(BaseHTTPRequestHandler):
# Suppress error output as well
pass
+class Server(HTTPServer):
+ # This pernicious flag is on by default in HTTPServer. But proper
+ # operation of freeport() absolutely depends on it being off.
+ allow_reuse_address = False
+
if __name__ == "__main__":
- # Instantiate an HTTPServer(TestHTTPRequestHandler) on the first free port
+ # Instantiate a Server(TestHTTPRequestHandler) on the first free port
# in the specified port range. Doing this inline is better than in a
# daemon thread: if it blows up here, we'll get a traceback. If it blew up
# in some other thread, the traceback would get eaten and we'd run the
# subject test program anyway.
httpd, port = freeport(xrange(8000, 8020),
- lambda port: HTTPServer(('127.0.0.1', port), TestHTTPRequestHandler))
+ lambda port: Server(('127.0.0.1', port), TestHTTPRequestHandler))
# Pass the selected port number to the subject test program via the
# environment. We don't want to impose requirements on the test program's
# command-line parsing -- and anyway, for C++ integration tests, that's
diff --git a/indra/llmessage/tests/testrunner.py b/indra/llmessage/tests/testrunner.py
index f329ec2a0e..f2c841532a 100644
--- a/indra/llmessage/tests/testrunner.py
+++ b/indra/llmessage/tests/testrunner.py
@@ -27,6 +27,8 @@ Linden Research, Inc., 945 Battery Street, San Francisco, CA 94111 USA
$/LicenseInfo$
"""
+from __future__ import with_statement
+
import os
import sys
import re
@@ -79,9 +81,14 @@ def freeport(portlist, expr):
Example:
+ class Server(HTTPServer):
+ # If you use BaseHTTPServer.HTTPServer, turning off this flag is
+ # essential for proper operation of freeport()!
+ allow_reuse_address = False
+ # ...
server, port = freeport(xrange(8000, 8010),
- lambda port: HTTPServer(("localhost", port),
- MyRequestHandler))
+ lambda port: Server(("localhost", port),
+ MyRequestHandler))
# pass 'port' to client code
# call server.serve_forever()
"""
@@ -164,3 +171,92 @@ def run(*args, **kwds):
rc = os.spawnv(os.P_WAIT, args[0], args)
debug("%s returned %s", args[0], rc)
return rc
+
+# ****************************************************************************
+# test code -- manual at this point, see SWAT-564
+# ****************************************************************************
+def test_freeport():
+ # ------------------------------- Helpers --------------------------------
+ from contextlib import contextmanager
+ # helper Context Manager for expecting an exception
+ # with exc(SomeError):
+ # raise SomeError()
+ # raises AssertionError otherwise.
+ @contextmanager
+ def exc(exception_class, *args):
+ try:
+ yield
+ except exception_class, err:
+ for i, expected_arg in enumerate(args):
+ assert expected_arg == err.args[i], \
+ "Raised %s, but args[%s] is %r instead of %r" % \
+ (err.__class__.__name__, i, err.args[i], expected_arg)
+ print "Caught expected exception %s(%s)" % \
+ (err.__class__.__name__, ', '.join(repr(arg) for arg in err.args))
+ else:
+ assert False, "Failed to raise " + exception_class.__class__.__name__
+
+ # helper to raise specified exception
+ def raiser(exception):
+ raise exception
+
+ # the usual
+ def assert_equals(a, b):
+ assert a == b, "%r != %r" % (a, b)
+
+ # ------------------------ Sanity check the above ------------------------
+ class SomeError(Exception): pass
+ # Without extra args, accept any err.args value
+ with exc(SomeError):
+ raiser(SomeError("abc"))
+ # With extra args, accept only the specified value
+ with exc(SomeError, "abc"):
+ raiser(SomeError("abc"))
+ with exc(AssertionError):
+ with exc(SomeError, "abc"):
+ raiser(SomeError("def"))
+ with exc(AssertionError):
+ with exc(socket.error, errno.EADDRINUSE):
+ raiser(socket.error(errno.ECONNREFUSED, 'Connection refused'))
+
+ # ----------- freeport() without engaging socket functionality -----------
+ # If portlist is empty, freeport() raises StopIteration.
+ with exc(StopIteration):
+ freeport([], None)
+
+ assert_equals(freeport([17], str), ("17", 17))
+
+ # This is the magic exception that should prompt us to retry
+ inuse = socket.error(errno.EADDRINUSE, 'Address already in use')
+ # Get the iterator to our ports list so we can check later if we've used all
+ ports = iter(xrange(5))
+ with exc(socket.error, errno.EADDRINUSE):
+ freeport(ports, lambda port: raiser(inuse))
+ # did we entirely exhaust 'ports'?
+ with exc(StopIteration):
+ ports.next()
+
+ ports = iter(xrange(2))
+ # Any exception but EADDRINUSE should quit immediately
+ with exc(SomeError):
+ freeport(ports, lambda port: raiser(SomeError()))
+ assert_equals(ports.next(), 1)
+
+ # ----------- freeport() with platform-dependent socket stuff ------------
+ # This is what we should've had unit tests to begin with (see CHOP-661).
+ def newbind(port):
+ sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
+ sock.bind(('127.0.0.1', port))
+ return sock
+
+ bound0, port0 = freeport(xrange(7777, 7780), newbind)
+ assert_equals(port0, 7777)
+ bound1, port1 = freeport(xrange(7777, 7780), newbind)
+ assert_equals(port1, 7778)
+ bound2, port2 = freeport(xrange(7777, 7780), newbind)
+ assert_equals(port2, 7779)
+ with exc(socket.error, errno.EADDRINUSE):
+ bound3, port3 = freeport(xrange(7777, 7780), newbind)
+
+if __name__ == "__main__":
+ test_freeport()