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gristlabs_grist-core/sandbox/grist/testutil.py

138 lines
4.9 KiB

import json
import math
import os
import re
import six
import actions
def table_data_from_rows(table_id, col_names, rows):
"""
Returns a TableData object built from a table_id, a list of column names, and corresponding
row-oriented data.
"""
column_values = {}
for i, col in enumerate(col_names):
# Strip leading @ from column headers
column_values[col.lstrip('@')] = [row[i] for row in rows]
return actions.TableData(table_id, column_values.pop('id'), column_values)
def parse_testscript(script_path=None):
"""
Parses JSON spec for test cases, and returns a tuple of (samples, test_cases). Lines starting
with '//' are comments and are skipped.
Samples are objects with keys "SCHEMA" and "DATA", each a dictionary mapping table name to
actions.TableData object. "SCHEMA" contains "_grist_Tables" and "_grist_Tables_column" tables.
Test cases are a list of objects with "TEST_CASE" and "BODY", and the body is a list of steps of
the form [line_number, step_name, data], with line_number being an addition by this parser (or
None if not available).
"""
if not script_path:
script_path = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), "testscript.json")
comment_re = re.compile(r'^\s*//')
add_line_no_re = re.compile(r'"(APPLY|CHECK_OUTPUT|LOAD_SAMPLE)"\s*,')
all_lines = []
with open(script_path, "r") as testfile:
for i, line in enumerate(testfile):
if comment_re.match(line):
all_lines.append("\n")
else:
line = add_line_no_re.sub(r'"\1@%s",' % (i + 1), line)
all_lines.append(line)
full_text = "".join(all_lines)
script = json.loads(full_text)
samples = {}
test_cases = []
for obj in script:
if "TEST_CASE" in obj:
body = []
for step, data in obj["BODY"]:
step_line = step.split('@', 1)
step = step_line[0]
line = step_line[1] if len(step_line) > 1 else None
body.append([line, step, data])
obj["BODY"] = body
test_cases.append(obj)
elif "SAMPLE_NAME" in obj:
samples[obj["SAMPLE_NAME"]] = parse_test_sample(obj, samples=samples)
else:
raise ValueError("Unrecognized object in test script: %s" % obj)
return (samples, test_cases)
def parse_test_sample(obj, samples={}):
"""
Parses human-readable sample data (with "SCHEMA" or "SCHEMA_FROM", and "DATA" dictionaries; see
testscript.json for an example) into a sample containing "SCHEMA" and "DATA" keys, each a
dictionary mapping table name to TableData object.
"""
if "SCHEMA_FROM" in obj:
schema = samples[obj["SCHEMA_FROM"]]["SCHEMA"].copy()
else:
raw_schema = obj["SCHEMA"]
# Convert the meta tables to appropriate table representations for loading.
schema = {
'_grist_Tables': table_data_from_rows(
'_grist_Tables',
("id", "tableId"),
[(table_row_id, table_id) for (table_row_id, table_id, _) in raw_schema]),
'_grist_Tables_column': table_data_from_rows(
'_grist_Tables_column',
("parentId", "parentPos", "id", "colId", "type", "isFormula",
(core) Implement trigger formulas (generalizing default formulas) Summary: Trigger formulas can be calculated for new records, or for new records and updates to certain fields, or all fields. They do not recalculate on open, and they MAY be set directly by the user, including for data-cleaning. - Column metadata now includes recalcWhen and recalcDeps fields. - Trigger formulas are NOT recalculated on open or on schema changes. - When recalcWhen is "never", formula isn't calculated even for new records. - When recalcWhen is "allupdates", formula is calculated for new records and any manual (non-formula) updates to the record. - When recalcWhen is "", formula is calculated for new records, and changes to recalcDeps fields (which may be formula fields or column itself). - A column whose recalcDeps includes itself is a "data-cleaning" column; a value set by the user will still trigger the formula. - All trigger-formulas receive a "value" argument (to support the case above). Small changes - Update RefLists (used for recalcDeps) when target rows are deleted. - Add RecordList.__contains__ (for `rec in refList` or `id in refList` checks) - Clarify that Calculate action has replaced load_done() in practice, and use it in tests too, to better match reality. Left for later: - UI for setting recalcWhen / recalcDeps. - Implementation of actions such as "Recalculate for all cells". - Allowing trigger-formulas access to the current user's info. Test Plan: Added a comprehensive python-side test for various trigger combinations Reviewers: paulfitz, alexmojaki Reviewed By: paulfitz Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2872
3 years ago
"formula", "label", "widgetOptions", "recalcWhen", "recalcDeps"),
[[table_row_id, i+1] + col_schema_row(*e) for (table_row_id, _, entries) in raw_schema
for (i, e) in enumerate(entries)])
}
data = {t: table_data_from_rows(t, data[0], data[1:])
for t, data in six.iteritems(obj["DATA"])}
return {"SCHEMA": schema, "DATA": data}
(core) Implement trigger formulas (generalizing default formulas) Summary: Trigger formulas can be calculated for new records, or for new records and updates to certain fields, or all fields. They do not recalculate on open, and they MAY be set directly by the user, including for data-cleaning. - Column metadata now includes recalcWhen and recalcDeps fields. - Trigger formulas are NOT recalculated on open or on schema changes. - When recalcWhen is "never", formula isn't calculated even for new records. - When recalcWhen is "allupdates", formula is calculated for new records and any manual (non-formula) updates to the record. - When recalcWhen is "", formula is calculated for new records, and changes to recalcDeps fields (which may be formula fields or column itself). - A column whose recalcDeps includes itself is a "data-cleaning" column; a value set by the user will still trigger the formula. - All trigger-formulas receive a "value" argument (to support the case above). Small changes - Update RefLists (used for recalcDeps) when target rows are deleted. - Add RecordList.__contains__ (for `rec in refList` or `id in refList` checks) - Clarify that Calculate action has replaced load_done() in practice, and use it in tests too, to better match reality. Left for later: - UI for setting recalcWhen / recalcDeps. - Implementation of actions such as "Recalculate for all cells". - Allowing trigger-formulas access to the current user's info. Test Plan: Added a comprehensive python-side test for various trigger combinations Reviewers: paulfitz, alexmojaki Reviewed By: paulfitz Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D2872
3 years ago
def col_schema_row(id_, colId, type_, isFormula, formula="",
label="", widgetOptions="", recalcWhen=0, recalcDeps=None):
"""
Helper to specify columns in test SCHEMA descriptions, to allow omitting some column properties.
"""
return [id_, colId, type_, isFormula, formula, label, widgetOptions, recalcWhen, recalcDeps]
def replace_nans(data):
"""
Convert all NaNs and Infinities in the data to descriptive strings, since they cannot be
serialized to JS-compliant JSON. (But we can serialize them using marshalling, so this
workaround is just for the testscript-based tests.)
"""
if isinstance(data, float) and (math.isnan(data) or math.isinf(data)):
return "@+Infinity" if data > 0 else "@-Infinity" if data < 0 else "@NaN"
return actions.convert_recursive_in_action(replace_nans, data)
def repeat_until_passes(count):
"""
Use as a decorator on test cases to repeat a failing test case up to count times, until it
passes. The resulting test cases will fail only if every repetition failed. This is suitable for
flaky timing test when unexpected load spikes could cause spurious failures.
"""
def decorator(f):
def wrapped(*args):
for i in range(0, count):
try:
f(*args)
return
except AssertionError as e:
pass
# Raises the last caught exception, even outside try/except (see
# https://stackoverflow.com/questions/25632147/raise-at-the-end-of-a-python-function-outside-try-or-except-block)
raise # pylint: disable=misplaced-bare-raise
return wrapped
return decorator