This adds a new test decorator: skip_unless_feature(). The argument is
the same as passed to features.check(). If the feature is not supported,
the test will be skipped.
This removes several kinds of boilerplate copied and pasted around tests
so test feature checking is handled and displayed more consistently.
Refs #4193
These modules are safe to import and this better follows PEP 8.
From https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#imports
> Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module
> comments and docstrings, and before module globals and constants.
Follow Python's file object semantics. User code is responsible for
closing resources (usually through a context manager) in a deterministic
way.
To achieve this, remove __del__ functions. These functions used to
closed open file handlers in an attempt to silence Python
ResourceWarnings. However, using __del__ has the following drawbacks:
- __del__ isn't called until the object's reference count reaches 0.
Therefore, resource handlers remain open or in use longer than
necessary.
- The __del__ method isn't guaranteed to execute on system exit. See the
Python documentation:
https://docs.python.org/3/reference/datamodel.html#object.__del__
> It is not guaranteed that __del__() methods are called for objects
> that still exist when the interpreter exits.
- Exceptions that occur inside __del__ are ignored instead of raised.
This has the potential of hiding bugs. This is also in the Python
documentation:
> Warning: Due to the precarious circumstances under which __del__()
> methods are invoked, exceptions that occur during their execution
> are ignored, and a warning is printed to sys.stderr instead.
Instead, always close resource handlers when they are no longer in use.
This will close the file handler at a specified point in the user's code
and not wait until the interpreter chooses to. It is always guaranteed
to run. And, if an exception occurs while closing the file handler, the
bug will not be ignored.
Now, when code receives a ResourceWarning, it will highlight an area
that is mishandling resources. It should not simply be silenced, but
fixed by closing resources with a context manager.
All warnings that were emitted during tests have been cleaned up. To
enable warnings, I passed the `-Wa` CLI option to Python. This exposed
some mishandling of resources in ImageFile.__init__() and
SpiderImagePlugin.loadImageSeries(), they too were fixed.
This better follows PEP 8 style guide:
https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#imports
> Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module
> comments and docstrings, and before module globals and constants.
This also avoids duplicate import code within the same file.
Similar to the recent adoption of Black. isort is a Python utility to
sort imports alphabetically and automatically separate into sections. By
using isort, contributors can quickly and automatically conform to the
projects style without thinking. Just let the tool do it.
Uses the configuration recommended by the Black to avoid conflicts of
style.
Rewrite TestImageQt.test_deprecated to no rely on import order.
Uses JPEGQUALITY pseudo-tag from libtiff.
Also changes the way tags are passed to PyImaging_LibTiffEncoderNew from
dict to list to ensure that COMPRESSION tag is added before JPEGQUALITY.
This is required as the COMPRESSION tag registers the JPEGQUALITY
pseudo-tag.
- Pass tagtype from v2 directory to libtiff encoder, instead of
autodetecting type.
- Use explicit types. E.g. uint32_t for TIFF_LONG to fix issues on
platforms with 64bit longs.
- Add support for multiple values (arrays). Requires type in v2
directory and values must be passed as a tuple.
- Add support for signed types (e.g. TIFFTypes.TIFF_SIGNED_SHORT).
With the introduction and use of pytest, it is simple and easy to
execute specific tests in isolation through documented command line
arguments. Either by specifying the module path or through the `-k
EXPRESSION` argument. There is no longer any need to provide the
boilerplate:
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
To every test file. It is simply noise.
The pattern remains in test files that aren't named with `test_*` as
those files are not discovered and executed by pytest by default.
The previous test configuration made it difficult to run a single test
with the pytest CLI. There were two major issues:
- The Tests directory was not a package. It now includes a __init__.py
file and imports from other tests modules are done with relative
imports.
- setup.cfg always specified the Tests directory. So even if a specific
test were specified as a CLI arg, this configuration would also always
include all tests. This configuration has been removed to allow
specifying a single test on the command line.
Contributors can now run specific tests with a single command such as:
$ tox -e py37 -- Tests/test_file_pdf.py::TestFilePdf.test_rgb
This makes it easy and faster to iterate on a single test failure and is
very familiar to those that have previously used tox and pytest.
When running tox or pytest with no arguments, they still discover and
runs all tests in the Tests directory.
Old-style JPEG compression in TIFFs are able to be read using Strip/Tile APIs. Although, it should be possible to read them using Scanline API, it does not work for some reason. Anyway, reading subsampled YCbCr formats through Strip/Tile/Scanline libtiff API does not de-subsample the data, so caller should unpack data to whatever format is appropriate. New-style JPEG compressed images were already read through libtiff as RGB images (https://github.com/python-pillow/Pillow/pull/3227). Unfortunately, there is no flag to ask libtiff to de-subsample old jpeg, but it provides a way to read any image as 32bit RGBA. This commit adds ability to read old-style JPEG TIFFs through reading *all* YCbCr images as RGBX using Tile and Strip reading API. This supersedes previous work (PR #3227) to read new-style JPEG-TIFFs.
Instead, allow exceptions to bubble up to the unittest exception
handler.
Prevents replacing the exception trace with a less informative
message. As the exceptions are always unexpected, should not need to
catch them explicitly in tests.
iter(dict) is equivalent to iter(dict.keys()), so simply act on the dict
instead of adding the extra call.
Inspired by Lennart Regebro's PyCon 2017 presentation "Prehistoric
Patterns in Python". Available at:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V5-JH23Vk0I