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ruby--ruby/test/reline/helper.rb

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$LOAD_PATH.unshift File.expand_path('../../lib', __FILE__)
require 'reline'
require 'test/unit'
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module Reline
class <<self
def test_mode
remove_const('IOGate') if const_defined?('IOGate')
const_set('IOGate', Reline::GeneralIO)
Reline::GeneralIO.reset
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send(:core).config.instance_variable_set(:@test_mode, true)
send(:core).config.reset
end
def test_reset
Reline.instance_variable_set(:@core, nil)
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end
end
end
def start_pasting
Reline::GeneralIO.start_pasting
end
def finish_pasting
Reline::GeneralIO.finish_pasting
end
RELINE_TEST_ENCODING ||=
if ENV['RELINE_TEST_ENCODING']
Encoding.find(ENV['RELINE_TEST_ENCODING'])
else
Encoding::UTF_8
end
class Reline::TestCase < Test::Unit::TestCase
private def convert_str(input, options = {}, normalized = nil)
return nil if input.nil?
input.chars.map { |c|
if Reline::Unicode::EscapedChars.include?(c.ord)
c
else
Make rb_scan_args handle keywords more similar to Ruby methods (#2460) Cfuncs that use rb_scan_args with the : entry suffer similar keyword argument separation issues that Ruby methods suffer if the cfuncs accept optional or variable arguments. This makes the following changes to : handling. * Treats as **kw, prompting keyword argument separation warnings if called with a positional hash. * Do not look for an option hash if empty keywords are provided. For backwards compatibility, treat an empty keyword splat as a empty mandatory positional hash argument, but emit a a warning, as this behavior will be removed in Ruby 3. The argument number check needs to be moved lower so it can correctly handle an empty positional argument being added. * If the last argument is nil and it is necessary to treat it as an option hash in order to make sure all arguments are processed, continue to treat the last argument as the option hash. Emit a warning in this case, as this behavior will be removed in Ruby 3. * If splitting the keyword hash into two hashes, issue a warning, as we will not be splitting hashes in Ruby 3. * If the keyword argument is required to fill a mandatory positional argument, continue to do so, but emit a warning as this behavior will be going away in Ruby 3. * If keyword arguments are provided and the last argument is not a hash, that indicates something wrong. This can happen if a cfunc is calling rb_scan_args multiple times, and providing arguments that were not passed to it from Ruby. Callers need to switch to the new rb_scan_args_kw function, which allows passing of whether keywords were provided. This commit fixes all warnings caused by the changes above. It switches some function calls to *_kw versions with appropriate kw_splat flags. If delegating arguments, RB_PASS_CALLED_KEYWORDS is used. If creating new arguments, RB_PASS_KEYWORDS is used if the last argument is a hash to be treated as keywords. In open_key_args in io.c, use rb_scan_args_kw. In this case, the arguments provided come from another C function, not Ruby. The last argument may or may not be a hash, so we can't set keyword argument mode. However, if it is a hash, we don't want to warn when treating it as keywords. In Ruby files, make sure to appropriately use keyword splats or literal keywords when calling Cfuncs that now issue keyword argument separation warnings through rb_scan_args. Also, make sure not to pass nil in place of an option hash. Work around Kernel#warn warnings due to problems in the Rubygems override of the method. There is an open pull request to fix these issues in Rubygems, but part of the Rubygems tests for their override fail on ruby-head due to rb_scan_args not recognizing empty keyword splats, which this commit fixes. Implementation wise, adding rb_scan_args_kw is kind of a pain, because rb_scan_args takes a variable number of arguments. In order to not duplicate all the code, the function internals need to be split into two functions taking a va_list, and to avoid passing in a ton of arguments, a single struct argument is used to handle the variables previously local to the function.
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c.encode(@line_editor.instance_variable_get(:@encoding), Encoding::UTF_8, **options)
end
}.join
rescue Encoding::UndefinedConversionError, Encoding::InvalidByteSequenceError
input.unicode_normalize!(:nfc)
if normalized
options[:undef] = :replace
options[:replace] = '?'
end
normalized = true
retry
end
def input_key_by_symbol(input)
@line_editor.input_key(Reline::Key.new(input, input, false))
end
def input_keys(input, convert = true)
input = convert_str(input) if convert
input.chars.each do |c|
if c.bytesize == 1
eighth_bit = 0b10000000
byte = c.bytes.first
if byte.allbits?(eighth_bit)
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@line_editor.input_key(Reline::Key.new(byte ^ eighth_bit, byte, true))
else
@line_editor.input_key(Reline::Key.new(byte, byte, false))
end
else
c.bytes.each do |b|
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@line_editor.input_key(Reline::Key.new(b, b, false))
end
end
end
end
def assert_line(expected)
expected = convert_str(expected)
assert_equal(expected, @line_editor.line)
end
def assert_byte_pointer_size(expected)
expected = convert_str(expected)
byte_pointer = @line_editor.instance_variable_get(:@byte_pointer)
assert_equal(
expected.bytesize, byte_pointer,
"<#{expected.inspect}> expected but was\n<#{@line_editor.line.byteslice(0, byte_pointer).inspect}>")
end
def assert_cursor(expected)
assert_equal(expected, @line_editor.instance_variable_get(:@cursor))
end
def assert_cursor_max(expected)
assert_equal(expected, @line_editor.instance_variable_get(:@cursor_max))
end
end