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author | Damien George <damien.p.george@gmail.com> | 2015-08-14 12:24:11 +0100 |
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committer | Damien George <damien.p.george@gmail.com> | 2015-08-17 12:51:26 +0100 |
commit | 65dc960e3b22a8426e369607e47c19b380ce30ea (patch) | |
tree | 5e55ec2861df54e14fdb0eac1d030b34f684743b /tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py | |
parent | 0e978349a5e7696aa44a0faf5d046081a0616ca5 (diff) | |
download | micropython-65dc960e3b22a8426e369607e47c19b380ce30ea.tar.gz micropython-65dc960e3b22a8426e369607e47c19b380ce30ea.zip |
unix-cpy: Remove unix-cpy. It's no longer needed.
unix-cpy was originally written to get semantic equivalent with CPython
without writing functional tests. When writing the initial
implementation of uPy it was a long way between lexer and functional
tests, so the half-way test was to make sure that the bytecode was
correct. The idea was that if the uPy bytecode matched CPython 1-1 then
uPy would be proper Python if the bytecodes acted correctly. And having
matching bytecode meant that it was less likely to miss some deep
subtlety in the Python semantics that would require an architectural
change later on.
But that is all history and it no longer makes sense to retain the
ability to output CPython bytecode, because:
1. It outputs CPython 3.3 compatible bytecode. CPython's bytecode
changes from version to version, and seems to have changed quite a bit
in 3.5. There's no point in changing the bytecode output to match
CPython anymore.
2. uPy and CPy do different optimisations to the bytecode which makes it
harder to match.
3. The bytecode tests are not run. They were never part of Travis and
are not run locally anymore.
4. The EMIT_CPYTHON option needs a lot of extra source code which adds
heaps of noise, especially in compile.c.
5. Now that there is an extensive test suite (which tests functionality)
there is no need to match the bytecode. Some very subtle behaviour is
tested with the test suite and passing these tests is a much better
way to stay Python-language compliant, rather than trying to match
CPy bytecode.
Diffstat (limited to 'tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py')
-rw-r--r-- | tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py | 302 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 302 deletions
diff --git a/tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py b/tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py deleted file mode 100644 index 9020aab701..0000000000 --- a/tests/bytecode/pylib-tests/code.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,302 +0,0 @@ -"""Utilities needed to emulate Python's interactive interpreter. - -""" - -# Inspired by similar code by Jeff Epler and Fredrik Lundh. - - -import sys -import traceback -from codeop import CommandCompiler, compile_command - -__all__ = ["InteractiveInterpreter", "InteractiveConsole", "interact", - "compile_command"] - -class InteractiveInterpreter: - """Base class for InteractiveConsole. - - This class deals with parsing and interpreter state (the user's - namespace); it doesn't deal with input buffering or prompting or - input file naming (the filename is always passed in explicitly). - - """ - - def __init__(self, locals=None): - """Constructor. - - The optional 'locals' argument specifies the dictionary in - which code will be executed; it defaults to a newly created - dictionary with key "__name__" set to "__console__" and key - "__doc__" set to None. - - """ - if locals is None: - locals = {"__name__": "__console__", "__doc__": None} - self.locals = locals - self.compile = CommandCompiler() - - def runsource(self, source, filename="<input>", symbol="single"): - """Compile and run some source in the interpreter. - - Arguments are as for compile_command(). - - One several things can happen: - - 1) The input is incorrect; compile_command() raised an - exception (SyntaxError or OverflowError). A syntax traceback - will be printed by calling the showsyntaxerror() method. - - 2) The input is incomplete, and more input is required; - compile_command() returned None. Nothing happens. - - 3) The input is complete; compile_command() returned a code - object. The code is executed by calling self.runcode() (which - also handles run-time exceptions, except for SystemExit). - - The return value is True in case 2, False in the other cases (unless - an exception is raised). The return value can be used to - decide whether to use sys.ps1 or sys.ps2 to prompt the next - line. - - """ - try: - code = self.compile(source, filename, symbol) - except (OverflowError, SyntaxError, ValueError): - # Case 1 - self.showsyntaxerror(filename) - return False - - if code is None: - # Case 2 - return True - - # Case 3 - self.runcode(code) - return False - - def runcode(self, code): - """Execute a code object. - - When an exception occurs, self.showtraceback() is called to - display a traceback. All exceptions are caught except - SystemExit, which is reraised. - - A note about KeyboardInterrupt: this exception may occur - elsewhere in this code, and may not always be caught. The - caller should be prepared to deal with it. - - """ - try: - exec(code, self.locals) - except SystemExit: - raise - except: - self.showtraceback() - - def showsyntaxerror(self, filename=None): - """Display the syntax error that just occurred. - - This doesn't display a stack trace because there isn't one. - - If a filename is given, it is stuffed in the exception instead - of what was there before (because Python's parser always uses - "<string>" when reading from a string). - - The output is written by self.write(), below. - - """ - type, value, tb = sys.exc_info() - sys.last_type = type - sys.last_value = value - sys.last_traceback = tb - if filename and type is SyntaxError: - # Work hard to stuff the correct filename in the exception - try: - msg, (dummy_filename, lineno, offset, line) = value.args - except ValueError: - # Not the format we expect; leave it alone - pass - else: - # Stuff in the right filename - value = SyntaxError(msg, (filename, lineno, offset, line)) - sys.last_value = value - if sys.excepthook is sys.__excepthook__: - lines = traceback.format_exception_only(type, value) - self.write(''.join(lines)) - else: - # If someone has set sys.excepthook, we let that take precedence - # over self.write - sys.excepthook(type, value, tb) - - def showtraceback(self): - """Display the exception that just occurred. - - We remove the first stack item because it is our own code. - - The output is written by self.write(), below. - - """ - try: - type, value, tb = sys.exc_info() - sys.last_type = type - sys.last_value = value - sys.last_traceback = tb - tblist = traceback.extract_tb(tb) - del tblist[:1] - lines = traceback.format_list(tblist) - if lines: - lines.insert(0, "Traceback (most recent call last):\n") - lines.extend(traceback.format_exception_only(type, value)) - finally: - tblist = tb = None - if sys.excepthook is sys.__excepthook__: - self.write(''.join(lines)) - else: - # If someone has set sys.excepthook, we let that take precedence - # over self.write - sys.excepthook(type, value, tb) - - def write(self, data): - """Write a string. - - The base implementation writes to sys.stderr; a subclass may - replace this with a different implementation. - - """ - sys.stderr.write(data) - - -class InteractiveConsole(InteractiveInterpreter): - """Closely emulate the behavior of the interactive Python interpreter. - - This class builds on InteractiveInterpreter and adds prompting - using the familiar sys.ps1 and sys.ps2, and input buffering. - - """ - - def __init__(self, locals=None, filename="<console>"): - """Constructor. - - The optional locals argument will be passed to the - InteractiveInterpreter base class. - - The optional filename argument should specify the (file)name - of the input stream; it will show up in tracebacks. - - """ - InteractiveInterpreter.__init__(self, locals) - self.filename = filename - self.resetbuffer() - - def resetbuffer(self): - """Reset the input buffer.""" - self.buffer = [] - - def interact(self, banner=None): - """Closely emulate the interactive Python console. - - The optional banner argument specifies the banner to print - before the first interaction; by default it prints a banner - similar to the one printed by the real Python interpreter, - followed by the current class name in parentheses (so as not - to confuse this with the real interpreter -- since it's so - close!). - - """ - try: - sys.ps1 - except AttributeError: - sys.ps1 = ">>> " - try: - sys.ps2 - except AttributeError: - sys.ps2 = "... " - cprt = 'Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.' - if banner is None: - self.write("Python %s on %s\n%s\n(%s)\n" % - (sys.version, sys.platform, cprt, - self.__class__.__name__)) - else: - self.write("%s\n" % str(banner)) - more = 0 - while 1: - try: - if more: - prompt = sys.ps2 - else: - prompt = sys.ps1 - try: - line = self.raw_input(prompt) - except EOFError: - self.write("\n") - break - else: - more = self.push(line) - except KeyboardInterrupt: - self.write("\nKeyboardInterrupt\n") - self.resetbuffer() - more = 0 - - def push(self, line): - """Push a line to the interpreter. - - The line should not have a trailing newline; it may have - internal newlines. The line is appended to a buffer and the - interpreter's runsource() method is called with the - concatenated contents of the buffer as source. If this - indicates that the command was executed or invalid, the buffer - is reset; otherwise, the command is incomplete, and the buffer - is left as it was after the line was appended. The return - value is 1 if more input is required, 0 if the line was dealt - with in some way (this is the same as runsource()). - - """ - self.buffer.append(line) - source = "\n".join(self.buffer) - more = self.runsource(source, self.filename) - if not more: - self.resetbuffer() - return more - - def raw_input(self, prompt=""): - """Write a prompt and read a line. - - The returned line does not include the trailing newline. - When the user enters the EOF key sequence, EOFError is raised. - - The base implementation uses the built-in function - input(); a subclass may replace this with a different - implementation. - - """ - return input(prompt) - - - -def interact(banner=None, readfunc=None, local=None): - """Closely emulate the interactive Python interpreter. - - This is a backwards compatible interface to the InteractiveConsole - class. When readfunc is not specified, it attempts to import the - readline module to enable GNU readline if it is available. - - Arguments (all optional, all default to None): - - banner -- passed to InteractiveConsole.interact() - readfunc -- if not None, replaces InteractiveConsole.raw_input() - local -- passed to InteractiveInterpreter.__init__() - - """ - console = InteractiveConsole(local) - if readfunc is not None: - console.raw_input = readfunc - else: - try: - import readline - except ImportError: - pass - console.interact(banner) - - -if __name__ == "__main__": - interact() |