# Copyright (c) testtools developers. See LICENSE for details. """Matchers that operate on synchronous Deferreds. A "synchronous" Deferred is one that does not need the reactor or any other asynchronous process in order to fire. Normal application code can't know when a Deferred is going to fire, because that is generally left up to the reactor. Unit tests can (and should!) provide fake reactors, or don't use the reactor at all, so that Deferreds fire synchronously. These matchers allow you to make assertions about when and how Deferreds fire, and about what values they fire with. """ from testtools.matchers import Mismatch from ._deferred import failure_content, on_deferred_result class _NoResult: """Matches a Deferred that has not yet fired.""" @staticmethod def _got_result(deferred, result): return Mismatch( 'No result expected on %r, found %r instead' % (deferred, result)) def match(self, deferred): """Match ``deferred`` if it hasn't fired.""" return on_deferred_result( deferred, on_success=self._got_result, on_failure=self._got_result, on_no_result=lambda _: None, ) _NO_RESULT = _NoResult() def has_no_result(): """Match a Deferred that has not yet fired. For example, this will pass:: assert_that(defer.Deferred(), has_no_result()) But this will fail: >>> assert_that(defer.succeed(None), has_no_result()) Traceback (most recent call last): ... File "testtools/assertions.py", line 22, in assert_that raise MismatchError(matchee, matcher, mismatch, verbose) testtools.matchers._impl.MismatchError: No result expected on , found None instead As will this: >>> assert_that(defer.fail(RuntimeError('foo')), has_no_result()) Traceback (most recent call last): ... File "testtools/assertions.py", line 22, in assert_that raise MismatchError(matchee, matcher, mismatch, verbose) testtools.matchers._impl.MismatchError: No result expected on >>, found > instead """ return _NO_RESULT class _Succeeded: """Matches a Deferred that has fired successfully.""" def __init__(self, matcher): """Construct a ``_Succeeded`` matcher.""" self._matcher = matcher @staticmethod def _got_failure(deferred, failure): deferred.addErrback(lambda _: None) return Mismatch( 'Success result expected on %r, found failure result ' 'instead: %r' % (deferred, failure), {'traceback': failure_content(failure)}, ) @staticmethod def _got_no_result(deferred): return Mismatch( 'Success result expected on %r, found no result ' 'instead' % (deferred,)) def match(self, deferred): """Match against the successful result of ``deferred``.""" return on_deferred_result( deferred, on_success=lambda _, value: self._matcher.match(value), on_failure=self._got_failure, on_no_result=self._got_no_result, ) def succeeded(matcher): """Match a Deferred that has fired successfully. For example:: fires_with_the_answer = succeeded(Equals(42)) deferred = defer.succeed(42) assert_that(deferred, fires_with_the_answer) This assertion will pass. However, if ``deferred`` had fired with a different value, or had failed, or had not fired at all, then it would fail. Use this instead of :py:meth:`twisted.trial.unittest.SynchronousTestCase.successResultOf`. :param matcher: A matcher to match against the result of a :class:`~twisted.internet.defer.Deferred`. :return: A matcher that can be applied to a synchronous :class:`~twisted.internet.defer.Deferred`. """ return _Succeeded(matcher) class _Failed: """Matches a Deferred that has failed.""" def __init__(self, matcher): self._matcher = matcher def _got_failure(self, deferred, failure): # We have handled the failure, so suppress its output. deferred.addErrback(lambda _: None) return self._matcher.match(failure) @staticmethod def _got_success(deferred, success): return Mismatch( 'Failure result expected on %r, found success ' 'result (%r) instead' % (deferred, success)) @staticmethod def _got_no_result(deferred): return Mismatch( 'Failure result expected on %r, found no result instead' % (deferred,)) def match(self, deferred): return on_deferred_result( deferred, on_success=self._got_success, on_failure=self._got_failure, on_no_result=self._got_no_result, ) def failed(matcher): """Match a Deferred that has failed. For example:: error = RuntimeError('foo') fails_at_runtime = failed( AfterPreprocessing(lambda f: f.value, Equals(error))) deferred = defer.fail(error) assert_that(deferred, fails_at_runtime) This assertion will pass. However, if ``deferred`` had fired successfully, had failed with a different error, or had not fired at all, then it would fail. Use this instead of :py:meth:`twisted.trial.unittest.SynchronousTestCase.failureResultOf`. :param matcher: A matcher to match against the result of a failing :class:`~twisted.internet.defer.Deferred`. :return: A matcher that can be applied to a synchronous :class:`~twisted.internet.defer.Deferred`. """ return _Failed(matcher)