mirror of
https://github.com/RYDE-WORK/pybind11.git
synced 2026-01-19 21:23:26 +08:00
* error_already_set::what() is now constructed lazily
Prior to this commit throwing error_already_set was expensive due to the
eager construction of the error string (which required traversing the
Python stack). See #1853 for more context and an alternative take on the
issue.
Note that error_already_set no longer inherits from std::runtime_error
because the latter has no default constructor.
* Do not attempt to normalize if no exception occurred
This is not supported on PyPy-2.7 5.8.0.
* Extract exception name via tp_name
This is faster than dynamically looking up __name__ via GetAttrString.
Note though that the runtime of the code throwing an error_already_set
will be dominated by stack unwinding so the improvement will not be
noticeable.
Before:
396 ns ± 0.913 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)
After:
277 ns ± 0.549 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)
Benchmark:
const std::string foo() {
PyErr_SetString(PyExc_KeyError, "");
const std::string &s = py::detail::error_string();
PyErr_Clear();
return s;
}
PYBIND11_MODULE(foo, m) {
m.def("foo", &::foo);
}
* Reverted error_already_set to subclass std::runtime_error
* Revert "Extract exception name via tp_name"
The implementation of __name__ is slightly more complex than that.
It handles the module name prefix, and heap-allocated types. We could
port it to pybind11 later on but for now it seems like an overkill.
This reverts commit f1435c7e6b068a1ed13ebd3db597ea3bb15aa398.
* Cosmit following @YannickJadoul's comments
Note that detail::error_string() no longer calls PyException_SetTraceback
as it is unncessary for pretty-printing the exception.
* Fixed PyPy build
* Moved normalization to error_already_set ctor
* Fix merge bugs
* Fix more merge errors
* Improve formatting
* Improve error message in rare case
* Revert back if statements
* Fix clang-tidy
* Try removing mutable
* Does build_mode release fix it
* Set to Debug to expose segfault
* Fix remove set error string
* Do not run error_string() more than once
* Trying setting the tracebackk to the value
* guard if m_type is null
* Try to debug PGI
* One last try for PGI
* Does reverting this fix PyPy
* Reviewer suggestions
* Remove unnecessary initialization
* Add noexcept move and explicit fail throw
* Optimize error_string creation
* Fix typo
* Revert noexcept
* Fix merge conflict error
* Abuse assignment operator
* Revert operator abuse
* See if we still need debug
* Remove unnecessary mutable
* Report "FATAL failure building pybind11::error_already_set error_string" and terminate process.
* Try specifying noexcept again
* Try explicit ctor
* default ctor is noexcept too
* Apply reviewer suggestions, simplify code, and make helper method private
* Remove unnecessary include
* Clang-Tidy fix
* detail::obj_class_name(), fprintf with [STDERR], [STDOUT] tags, polish comments
* consistently check m_lazy_what.empty() also in production builds
* Make a comment slightly less ambiguous.
* Bug fix: Remove `what();` from `restore()`.
It sure would need to be guarded by `if (m_type)`, otherwise `what()` fails and masks that no error was set (see update unit test). But since `error_already_set` is copyable, there is no point in releasing m_type, m_value, m_trace, therefore we can just as well avoid the runtime overhead of force-building `m_lazy_what`, it may never be used.
* Replace extremely opaque (unhelpful) error message with a truthful reflection of what we know.
* Fix clang-tidy error [performance-move-constructor-init].
* Make expected error message less specific.
* Various changes.
* bug fix: error_string(PyObject **, ...)
* Putting back the two eager PyErr_NormalizeException() calls.
* Change error_already_set() to call pybind11_fail() if the Python error indicator not set. The net result is that a std::runtime_error is thrown instead of error_already_set, but all tests pass as is.
* Remove mutable (fixes oversight in the previous commit).
* Normalize the exception only locally in error_string(). Python 3.6 & 3.7 test failures expected. This is meant for benchmarking, to determine if it is worth the trouble looking into the failures.
* clang-tidy: use auto
* Use `gil_scoped_acquire_local` in `error_already_set` destructor. See long comment.
* For Python < 3.8: `PyErr_NormalizeException` before `PyErr_WriteUnraisable`
* Go back to replacing the held Python exception with then normalized exception, if & when needed. Consistently document the side-effect.
* Slightly rewording comment. (There were also other failures.)
* Add 1-line comment for obj_class_name()
* Benchmark code, with results in this commit message.
function #calls test time [s] μs / call
master pure_unwind 729540 1.061 14.539876
err_set_unwind_err_clear 681476 1.040 15.260282
err_set_error_already_set 508038 1.049 20.640525
error_already_set_restore 555578 1.052 18.933288
pr1895_original_foo 244113 1.050 43.018168
PR / master
PR #1895 pure_unwind 736981 1.054 14.295685 98.32%
err_set_unwind_err_clear 685820 1.045 15.237399 99.85%
err_set_error_already_set 661374 1.046 15.811879 76.61%
error_already_set_restore 669881 1.048 15.645176 82.63%
pr1895_original_foo 318243 1.059 33.290806 77.39%
master @ commit ad146b2a1877e8ba3803f94a7837969835a297a7
Running tests in directory "/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests":
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.9.10, pytest-6.2.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1 -- /usr/bin/python3
cachedir: .pytest_cache
rootdir: /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests, configfile: pytest.ini
collecting ... collected 5 items
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pure_unwind]
PERF pure_unwind,729540,1.061,14.539876
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_unwind_err_clear]
PERF err_set_unwind_err_clear,681476,1.040,15.260282
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_error_already_set]
PERF err_set_error_already_set,508038,1.049,20.640525
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[error_already_set_restore]
PERF error_already_set_restore,555578,1.052,18.933288
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pr1895_original_foo]
PERF pr1895_original_foo,244113,1.050,43.018168
PASSED
============================== 5 passed in 12.38s ==============================
pr1895 @ commit 8dff51d12e4af11aff415ee966070368fe606664
Running tests in directory "/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests":
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.9.10, pytest-6.2.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1 -- /usr/bin/python3
cachedir: .pytest_cache
rootdir: /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests, configfile: pytest.ini
collecting ... collected 5 items
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pure_unwind]
PERF pure_unwind,736981,1.054,14.295685
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_unwind_err_clear]
PERF err_set_unwind_err_clear,685820,1.045,15.237399
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_error_already_set]
PERF err_set_error_already_set,661374,1.046,15.811879
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[error_already_set_restore]
PERF error_already_set_restore,669881,1.048,15.645176
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pr1895_original_foo]
PERF pr1895_original_foo,318243,1.059,33.290806
PASSED
============================== 5 passed in 12.40s ==============================
clang++ -o pybind11/tests/test_perf_error_already_set.os -c -std=c++17 -fPIC -fvisibility=hidden -Os -flto -Wall -Wextra -Wconversion -Wcast-qual -Wdeprecated -Wnon-virtual-dtor -Wunused-result -isystem /usr/include/python3.9 -isystem /usr/include/eigen3 -DPYBIND11_STRICT_ASSERTS_CLASS_HOLDER_VS_TYPE_CASTER_MIX -DPYBIND11_TEST_BOOST -Ipybind11/include -I/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/include -I/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/clone/pybind11/include /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests/test_perf_error_already_set.cpp
clang++ -o lib/pybind11_tests.so -shared -fPIC -Os -flto -shared ...
Debian clang version 13.0.1-3+build2
Target: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
Thread model: posix
* Changing call_repetitions_target_elapsed_secs to 0.1 for regular unit testing.
* Adding in `recursion_depth`
* Optimized ctor
* Fix silly bug in recurse_first_then_call()
* Add tests that have equivalent PyErr_Fetch(), PyErr_Restore() but no try-catch.
* Add call_error_string to tests. Sample only recursion_depth 0, 100.
* Show lazy-what speed-up in percent.
* Include real_work in benchmarks.
* Replace all PyErr_SetString() with generate_python_exception_with_traceback()
* Better organization of test loops.
* Add test_error_already_set_copy_move
* Fix bug in newly added test (discovered by clang-tidy): actually use move ctor
* MSVC detects the unreachable return
* change test_perf_error_already_set.py back to quick mode
* Inherit from std::exception (instead of std::runtime_error, which does not make sense anymore with the lazy what)
* Special handling under Windows.
* print with leading newline
* Removing test_perf_error_already_set (copies are under 7765113fbb).
* Avoid gil and scope overhead if there is nothing to release.
* Restore default move ctor. "member function" instead of "function" (note that "method" is Python terminology).
* Delete error_already_set copy ctor.
* Make restore() non-const again to resolve clang-tidy failure (still experimenting).
* Bring back error_already_set copy ctor, to see if that resolves the 4 MSVC test failures.
* Add noexcept to error_already_set copy & move ctors (as suggested by @skylion007 IIUC).
* Trying one-by-one noexcept copy ctor for old compilers.
* Add back test covering copy ctor. Add another simple test that exercises the copy ctor.
* Exclude more older compilers from using the noexcept = default ctors. (The tests in the previous commit exposed that those are broken.)
* Factor out & reuse gil_scoped_acquire_local as gil_scoped_acquire_simple
* Guard gil_scoped_acquire_simple by _Py_IsFinalizing() check.
* what() GIL safety
* clang-tidy & Python 3.6 fixes
* Use `gil_scoped_acquire` in dtor, copy ctor, `what()`. Remove `_Py_IsFinalizing()` checks (they are racy: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/28525).
* Remove error_scope from copy ctor.
* Add `error_scope` to `get_internals()`, to cover the situation that `get_internals()` is called from the `error_already_set` dtor while a new Python error is in flight already. Also backing out `gil_scoped_acquire_simple` change.
* Add `FlakyException` tests with failure triggers in `__init__` and `__str__`
THIS IS STILL A WORK IN PROGRESS. This commit is only an important resting point.
This commit is a first attempt at addressing the observation that `PyErr_NormalizeException()` completely replaces the original exception if `__init__` fails. This can be very confusing even in small applications, and extremely confusing in large ones.
* Tweaks to resolve Py 3.6 and PyPy CI failures.
* Normalize Python exception immediately in error_already_set ctor.
For background see: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/pull/1895#issuecomment-1135304081
* Fix oversights based on CI failures (copy & move ctor initialization).
* Move @pytest.mark.xfail("env.PYPY") after @pytest.mark.parametrize(...)
* Use @pytest.mark.skipif (xfail does not work for segfaults, of course).
* Remove unused obj_class_name_or() function (it was added only under this PR).
* Remove already obsolete C++ comments and code that were added only under this PR.
* Slightly better (newly added) comments.
* Factor out detail::error_fetch_and_normalize. Preparation for producing identical results from error_already_set::what() and detail::error_string(). Note that this is a very conservative refactoring. It would be much better to first move detail::error_string into detail/error_string.h
* Copy most of error_string() code to new error_fetch_and_normalize::complete_lazy_error_string()
* Remove all error_string() code from detail/type_caster_base.h. Note that this commit includes a subtle bug fix: previously error_string() restored the Python error, which will upset pybind11_fail(). This never was a problem in practice because the two PyType_Ready() calls in detail/class.h do not usually fail.
* Return const std::string& instead of const char * and move error_string() to pytypes.h
* Remove gil_scope_acquire from error_fetch_and_normalize, add back to error_already_set
* Better handling of FlakyException __str__ failure.
* Move error_fetch_and_normalize::complete_lazy_error_string() implementation from pybind11.h to pytypes.h
* Add error_fetch_and_normalize::release_py_object_references() and use from error_already_set dtor.
* Use shared_ptr for m_fetched_error => 1. non-racy, copy ctor that does not need the GIL; 2. enables guard against duplicate restore() calls.
* Add comments.
* Trivial renaming of a newly introduced member function.
* Workaround for PyPy
* Bug fix (oversight). Only valgrind got this one.
* Use shared_ptr custom deleter for m_fetched_error in error_already_set. This enables removing the dtor, copy ctor, move ctor completely.
* Further small simplification. With the GIL held, simply deleting the raw_ptr takes care of everything.
* IWYU cleanup
```
iwyu version: include-what-you-use 0.17 based on Debian clang version 13.0.1-3+build2
```
Command used:
```
iwyu -c -std=c++17 -DPYBIND11_TEST_BOOST -Iinclude/pybind11 -I/usr/include/python3.9 -I/usr/include/eigen3 include/pybind11/pytypes.cpp
```
pytypes.cpp is a temporary file: `#include "pytypes.h"`
The raw output is very long and noisy.
I decided to use `#include <cstddef>` instead of `#include <cstdio>` for `std::size_t` (iwyu sticks to the manual choice).
I ignored all iwyu suggestions that are indirectly covered by `#include <Python.h>`.
I manually verified that all added includes are actually needed.
Co-authored-by: Aaron Gokaslan <skylion.aaron@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve <rwgk@google.com>
363 lines
12 KiB
Python
363 lines
12 KiB
Python
import sys
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import pytest
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import env
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import pybind11_cross_module_tests as cm
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from pybind11_tests import exceptions as m
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def test_std_exception(msg):
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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m.throw_std_exception()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "This exception was intentionally thrown."
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def test_error_already_set(msg):
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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m.throw_already_set(False)
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assert (
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msg(excinfo.value)
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== "Internal error: pybind11::error_already_set called while Python error indicator not set."
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)
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with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
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m.throw_already_set(True)
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "foo"
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def test_raise_from(msg):
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with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
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m.raise_from()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "outer"
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assert msg(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "inner"
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def test_raise_from_already_set(msg):
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with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
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m.raise_from_already_set()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "outer"
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assert msg(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "inner"
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def test_cross_module_exceptions(msg):
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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cm.raise_runtime_error()
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "My runtime error"
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with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
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cm.raise_value_error()
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "My value error"
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with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
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cm.throw_pybind_value_error()
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "pybind11 value error"
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with pytest.raises(TypeError) as excinfo:
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cm.throw_pybind_type_error()
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "pybind11 type error"
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with pytest.raises(StopIteration) as excinfo:
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cm.throw_stop_iteration()
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with pytest.raises(cm.LocalSimpleException) as excinfo:
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cm.throw_local_simple_error()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "external mod"
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with pytest.raises(KeyError) as excinfo:
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cm.throw_local_error()
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# KeyError is a repr of the key, so it has an extra set of quotes
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "'just local'"
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# TODO: FIXME
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@pytest.mark.xfail(
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"env.PYPY and env.MACOS",
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raises=RuntimeError,
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reason="Expected failure with PyPy and libc++ (Issue #2847 & PR #2999)",
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)
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def test_cross_module_exception_translator():
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with pytest.raises(KeyError):
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# translator registered in cross_module_tests
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m.throw_should_be_translated_to_key_error()
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def test_python_call_in_catch():
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d = {}
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assert m.python_call_in_destructor(d) is True
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assert d["good"] is True
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def ignore_pytest_unraisable_warning(f):
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unraisable = "PytestUnraisableExceptionWarning"
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if hasattr(pytest, unraisable): # Python >= 3.8 and pytest >= 6
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dec = pytest.mark.filterwarnings(f"ignore::pytest.{unraisable}")
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return dec(f)
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else:
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return f
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# TODO: find out why this fails on PyPy, https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/issues/3583
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@pytest.mark.xfail(env.PYPY, reason="Failure on PyPy 3.8 (7.3.7)", strict=False)
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@ignore_pytest_unraisable_warning
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def test_python_alreadyset_in_destructor(monkeypatch, capsys):
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hooked = False
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triggered = False
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if hasattr(sys, "unraisablehook"): # Python 3.8+
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hooked = True
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# Don't take `sys.unraisablehook`, as that's overwritten by pytest
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default_hook = sys.__unraisablehook__
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def hook(unraisable_hook_args):
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exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb, err_msg, obj = unraisable_hook_args
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if obj == "already_set demo":
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nonlocal triggered
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triggered = True
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default_hook(unraisable_hook_args)
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return
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# Use monkeypatch so pytest can apply and remove the patch as appropriate
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monkeypatch.setattr(sys, "unraisablehook", hook)
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assert m.python_alreadyset_in_destructor("already_set demo") is True
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if hooked:
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assert triggered is True
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_, captured_stderr = capsys.readouterr()
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assert captured_stderr.startswith("Exception ignored in: 'already_set demo'")
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assert captured_stderr.rstrip().endswith("KeyError: 'bar'")
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def test_exception_matches():
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assert m.exception_matches()
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assert m.exception_matches_base()
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assert m.modulenotfound_exception_matches_base()
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def test_custom(msg):
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# Can we catch a MyException?
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
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m.throws1()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should go to a custom type"
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# Can we translate to standard Python exceptions?
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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m.throws2()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should go to a standard Python exception"
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# Can we handle unknown exceptions?
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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m.throws3()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "Caught an unknown exception!"
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# Can we delegate to another handler by rethrowing?
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
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m.throws4()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error is rethrown"
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# Can we fall-through to the default handler?
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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m.throws_logic_error()
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assert (
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msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should fall through to the standard handler"
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)
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# OverFlow error translation.
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with pytest.raises(OverflowError) as excinfo:
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m.throws_overflow_error()
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# Can we handle a helper-declared exception?
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
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m.throws5()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
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# Exception subclassing:
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
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m.throws5_1()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException5 subclass"
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assert isinstance(excinfo.value, m.MyException5_1)
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException5_1) as excinfo:
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m.throws5_1()
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException5 subclass"
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
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try:
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m.throws5()
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except m.MyException5_1:
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raise RuntimeError("Exception error: caught child from parent")
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assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
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def test_nested_throws(capture):
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"""Tests nested (e.g. C++ -> Python -> C++) exception handling"""
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def throw_myex():
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raise m.MyException("nested error")
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def throw_myex5():
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raise m.MyException5("nested error 5")
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# In the comments below, the exception is caught in the first step, thrown in the last step
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# C++ -> Python
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with capture:
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m.try_catch(m.MyException5, throw_myex5)
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assert str(capture).startswith("MyException5: nested error 5")
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# Python -> C++ -> Python
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with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
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m.try_catch(m.MyException5, throw_myex)
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assert str(excinfo.value) == "nested error"
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def pycatch(exctype, f, *args):
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try:
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f(*args)
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except m.MyException as e:
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print(e)
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|
# C++ -> Python -> C++ -> Python
|
|
with capture:
|
|
m.try_catch(
|
|
m.MyException5,
|
|
pycatch,
|
|
m.MyException,
|
|
m.try_catch,
|
|
m.MyException,
|
|
throw_myex5,
|
|
)
|
|
assert str(capture).startswith("MyException5: nested error 5")
|
|
|
|
# C++ -> Python -> C++
|
|
with capture:
|
|
m.try_catch(m.MyException, pycatch, m.MyException5, m.throws4)
|
|
assert capture == "this error is rethrown"
|
|
|
|
# Python -> C++ -> Python -> C++
|
|
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
|
|
m.try_catch(m.MyException, pycatch, m.MyException, m.throws5)
|
|
assert str(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_throw_nested_exception():
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.throw_nested_exception()
|
|
assert str(excinfo.value) == "Outer Exception"
|
|
assert str(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "Inner Exception"
|
|
|
|
|
|
# This can often happen if you wrap a pybind11 class in a Python wrapper
|
|
def test_invalid_repr():
|
|
class MyRepr:
|
|
def __repr__(self):
|
|
raise AttributeError("Example error")
|
|
|
|
with pytest.raises(TypeError):
|
|
m.simple_bool_passthrough(MyRepr())
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_local_translator(msg):
|
|
"""Tests that a local translator works and that the local translator from
|
|
the cross module is not applied"""
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.throws6()
|
|
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException6 only handled in this module"
|
|
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.throws_local_error()
|
|
assert not isinstance(excinfo.value, KeyError)
|
|
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "never caught"
|
|
|
|
with pytest.raises(Exception) as excinfo:
|
|
m.throws_local_simple_error()
|
|
assert not isinstance(excinfo.value, cm.LocalSimpleException)
|
|
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this mod"
|
|
|
|
|
|
class FlakyException(Exception):
|
|
def __init__(self, failure_point):
|
|
if failure_point == "failure_point_init":
|
|
raise ValueError("triggered_failure_point_init")
|
|
self.failure_point = failure_point
|
|
|
|
def __str__(self):
|
|
if self.failure_point == "failure_point_str":
|
|
raise ValueError("triggered_failure_point_str")
|
|
return "FlakyException.__str__"
|
|
|
|
|
|
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
|
|
"exc_type, exc_value, expected_what",
|
|
(
|
|
(ValueError, "plain_str", "ValueError: plain_str"),
|
|
(ValueError, ("tuple_elem",), "ValueError: tuple_elem"),
|
|
(FlakyException, ("happy",), "FlakyException: FlakyException.__str__"),
|
|
),
|
|
)
|
|
def test_error_already_set_what_with_happy_exceptions(
|
|
exc_type, exc_value, expected_what
|
|
):
|
|
what, py_err_set_after_what = m.error_already_set_what(exc_type, exc_value)
|
|
assert not py_err_set_after_what
|
|
assert what == expected_what
|
|
|
|
|
|
@pytest.mark.skipif("env.PYPY", reason="PyErr_NormalizeException Segmentation fault")
|
|
def test_flaky_exception_failure_point_init():
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.error_already_set_what(FlakyException, ("failure_point_init",))
|
|
lines = str(excinfo.value).splitlines()
|
|
# PyErr_NormalizeException replaces the original FlakyException with ValueError:
|
|
assert lines[:3] == [
|
|
"pybind11::error_already_set: MISMATCH of original and normalized active exception types:"
|
|
" ORIGINAL FlakyException REPLACED BY ValueError: triggered_failure_point_init",
|
|
"",
|
|
"At:",
|
|
]
|
|
# Checking the first two lines of the traceback as formatted in error_string():
|
|
assert "test_exceptions.py(" in lines[3]
|
|
assert lines[3].endswith("): __init__")
|
|
assert lines[4].endswith("): test_flaky_exception_failure_point_init")
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_flaky_exception_failure_point_str():
|
|
what, py_err_set_after_what = m.error_already_set_what(
|
|
FlakyException, ("failure_point_str",)
|
|
)
|
|
assert not py_err_set_after_what
|
|
lines = what.splitlines()
|
|
if env.PYPY and len(lines) == 3:
|
|
n = 3 # Traceback is missing.
|
|
else:
|
|
n = 5
|
|
assert (
|
|
lines[:n]
|
|
== [
|
|
"FlakyException: <MESSAGE UNAVAILABLE DUE TO ANOTHER EXCEPTION>",
|
|
"",
|
|
"MESSAGE UNAVAILABLE DUE TO EXCEPTION: ValueError: triggered_failure_point_str",
|
|
"",
|
|
"At:",
|
|
][:n]
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_cross_module_interleaved_error_already_set():
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.test_cross_module_interleaved_error_already_set()
|
|
assert str(excinfo.value) in (
|
|
"2nd error.", # Almost all platforms.
|
|
"RuntimeError: 2nd error.", # Some PyPy builds (seen under macOS).
|
|
)
|
|
|
|
|
|
def test_error_already_set_double_restore():
|
|
m.test_error_already_set_double_restore(True) # dry_run
|
|
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
|
|
m.test_error_already_set_double_restore(False)
|
|
assert str(excinfo.value) == (
|
|
"Internal error: pybind11::detail::error_fetch_and_normalize::restore()"
|
|
" called a second time. ORIGINAL ERROR: ValueError: Random error."
|
|
)
|