2022-05-23 00:16:32 +04:00

395 lines
11 KiB
Python

# Copyright (c) Jupyter Development Team.
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
import pytest
try:
from unittest import mock
except ImportError:
import mock
from traitlets import Bool, Tuple, List, Instance, CFloat, CInt, Float, Int, TraitError, observe
from .utils import setup, teardown
import ipywidgets
from ipywidgets import Widget
@pytest.fixture(params=[True, False])
def echo(request):
oldvalue = ipywidgets.widgets.widget.JUPYTER_WIDGETS_ECHO
ipywidgets.widgets.widget.JUPYTER_WIDGETS_ECHO = request.param
yield request.param
ipywidgets.widgets.widget.JUPYTER_WIDGETS_ECHO = oldvalue
#
# First some widgets to test on:
#
# A widget with simple traits (list + tuple to ensure both are handled)
class SimpleWidget(Widget):
a = Bool().tag(sync=True)
b = Tuple(Bool(), Bool(), Bool(), default_value=(False, False, False)).tag(sync=True)
c = List(Bool()).tag(sync=True)
# A widget with various kinds of number traits
class NumberWidget(Widget):
f = Float().tag(sync=True)
cf = CFloat().tag(sync=True)
i = Int().tag(sync=True)
ci = CInt().tag(sync=True)
# A widget where the data might be changed on reception:
def transform_fromjson(data, widget):
# Switch the two last elements when setting from json, if the first element is True
# and always set first element to False
if not data[0]:
return data
return [False] + data[1:-2] + [data[-1], data[-2]]
class TransformerWidget(Widget):
d = List(Bool()).tag(sync=True, from_json=transform_fromjson)
# A widget that has a buffer:
class DataInstance():
def __init__(self, data=None):
self.data = data
def mview_serializer(instance, widget):
return { 'data': memoryview(instance.data) if instance.data else None }
def bytes_serializer(instance, widget):
return { 'data': bytearray(memoryview(instance.data).tobytes()) if instance.data else None }
def deserializer(json_data, widget):
return DataInstance( memoryview(json_data['data']).tobytes() if json_data else None )
class DataWidget(SimpleWidget):
d = Instance(DataInstance).tag(sync=True, to_json=mview_serializer, from_json=deserializer)
# A widget that has a buffer that might be changed on reception:
def truncate_deserializer(json_data, widget):
return DataInstance( json_data['data'][:20].tobytes() if json_data else None )
class TruncateDataWidget(SimpleWidget):
d = Instance(DataInstance).tag(sync=True, to_json=bytes_serializer, from_json=truncate_deserializer)
#
# Actual tests:
#
def test_set_state_simple(echo):
w = SimpleWidget()
w.set_state(dict(
a=True,
b=[True, False, True],
c=[False, True, False],
))
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (1 if echo else 0)
def test_set_state_transformer(echo):
w = TransformerWidget()
w.set_state(dict(
d=[True, False, True]
))
# Since the deserialize step changes the state, this should send an update
expected = []
if echo:
expected.append(
((), dict(
buffers=[],
data=dict(
buffer_paths=[],
method='echo_update',
state=dict(d=[True, False, True]),
))))
expected.append(
((), dict(
buffers=[],
data=dict(
buffer_paths=[],
method='update',
state=dict(d=[False, True, False]),
))))
assert w.comm.messages == expected
def test_set_state_data(echo):
w = DataWidget()
data = memoryview(b'x'*30)
w.set_state(dict(
a=True,
d={'data': data},
))
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (1 if echo else 0)
def test_set_state_data_truncate(echo):
w = TruncateDataWidget()
data = memoryview(b'x'*30)
w.set_state(dict(
a=True,
d={'data': data},
))
# Get message for checking
assert len(w.comm.messages) == 2 if echo else 1 # ensure we didn't get more than expected
msg = w.comm.messages[-1]
# Assert that the data update (truncation) sends an update
buffers = msg[1].pop('buffers')
assert msg == ((), dict(
data=dict(
method='update',
state=dict(d={}),
buffer_paths=[['d', 'data']]
)))
# Sanity:
assert len(buffers) == 1
assert buffers[0] == data[:20].tobytes()
def test_set_state_numbers_int(echo):
# JS does not differentiate between float/int.
# Instead, it formats exact floats as ints in JSON (1.0 -> '1').
w = NumberWidget()
# Set everything with ints
w.set_state(dict(
f = 1,
cf = 2,
i = 3,
ci = 4,
))
# Ensure one update message gets produced
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (1 if echo else 0)
def test_set_state_numbers_float(echo):
w = NumberWidget()
# Set floats to int-like floats
w.set_state(dict(
f = 1.0,
cf = 2.0,
ci = 4.0
))
# Ensure one update message gets produced
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (1 if echo else 0)
def test_set_state_float_to_float(echo):
w = NumberWidget()
# Set floats to float
w.set_state(dict(
f = 1.2,
cf = 2.6,
))
# Ensure one message gets produced
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (1 if echo else 0)
def test_set_state_cint_to_float(echo):
w = NumberWidget()
# Set CInt to float
w.set_state(dict(
ci = 5.6
))
# Ensure an update message gets produced
assert len(w.comm.messages) == (2 if echo else 1)
msg = w.comm.messages[-1]
data = msg[1]['data']
assert data['method'] == 'update'
assert data['state'] == {'ci': 5}
# This test is disabled, meaning ipywidgets REQUIRES
# any JSON received to format int-like numbers as ints
def _x_test_set_state_int_to_int_like():
# Note: Setting i to an int-like float will produce an
# error, so if JSON producer were to always create
# float formatted numbers, this would fail!
w = NumberWidget()
# Set floats to int-like floats
w.set_state(dict(
i = 3.0
))
# Ensure no update message gets produced
assert len(w.comm.messages) == 0
def test_set_state_int_to_float(echo):
w = NumberWidget()
# Set Int to float
with pytest.raises(TraitError):
w.set_state(dict(
i = 3.5
))
def test_property_lock(echo):
# when this widget's value is set to 42, it sets itself to 2, and then back to 42 again (and then stops)
class AnnoyingWidget(Widget):
value = Float().tag(sync=True)
stop = Bool(False)
@observe('value')
def _propagate_value(self, change):
print('_propagate_value', change.new)
if self.stop:
return
if change.new == 42:
self.value = 2
if change.new == 2:
self.stop = True
self.value = 42
widget = AnnoyingWidget(value=1)
assert widget.value == 1
widget._send = mock.MagicMock()
# this mimics a value coming from the front end
widget.set_state({'value': 42})
assert widget.value == 42
assert widget.stop is True
# we expect no new state to be sent
calls = []
widget._send.assert_has_calls(calls)
def test_hold_sync(echo):
# when this widget's value is set to 42, it sets the value to 2, and also sets a different trait value
class AnnoyingWidget(Widget):
value = Float().tag(sync=True)
other = Float().tag(sync=True)
@observe('value')
def _propagate_value(self, change):
print('_propagate_value', change.new)
if change.new == 42:
with self.hold_sync():
self.value = 2
self.other = 11
widget = AnnoyingWidget(value=1)
assert widget.value == 1
widget._send = mock.MagicMock()
# this mimics a value coming from the front end
widget.set_state({'value': 42})
assert widget.value == 2
assert widget.other == 11
msg = {'method': 'echo_update', 'state': {'value': 42.0}, 'buffer_paths': []}
call42 = mock.call(msg, buffers=[])
msg = {'method': 'update', 'state': {'value': 2.0, 'other': 11.0}, 'buffer_paths': []}
call2 = mock.call(msg, buffers=[])
calls = [call42, call2] if echo else [call2]
widget._send.assert_has_calls(calls)
def test_echo(echo):
# we always echo values back to the frontend if configured
class ValueWidget(Widget):
value = Float().tag(sync=True)
widget = ValueWidget(value=1)
assert widget.value == 1
widget._send = mock.MagicMock()
# this mimics a value coming from the front end
widget.set_state({'value': 42})
assert widget.value == 42
# we expect this to be echoed
msg = {'method': 'echo_update', 'state': {'value': 42.0}, 'buffer_paths': []}
call42 = mock.call(msg, buffers=[])
calls = [call42] if echo else []
widget._send.assert_has_calls(calls)
def test_echo_single(echo):
# we always echo multiple changes back in 1 update
class ValueWidget(Widget):
value = Float().tag(sync=True)
square = Float().tag(sync=True)
@observe('value')
def _square(self, change):
self.square = self.value**2
widget = ValueWidget(value=1)
assert widget.value == 1
widget._send = mock.MagicMock()
# this mimics a value coming from the front end
widget._handle_msg({
'content': {
'data': {
'method': 'update',
'state': {
'value': 8,
}
}
}
})
assert widget.value == 8
assert widget.square == 64
# we expect this to be echoed
# note that only value is echoed, not square
msg = {'method': 'echo_update', 'state': {'value': 8.0}, 'buffer_paths': []}
call = mock.call(msg, buffers=[])
msg = {'method': 'update', 'state': {'square': 64}, 'buffer_paths': []}
call2 = mock.call(msg, buffers=[])
calls = [call, call2] if echo else [call2]
widget._send.assert_has_calls(calls)
def test_no_echo(echo):
# in cases where values coming from the frontend are 'heavy', we might want to opt out
class ValueWidget(Widget):
value = Float().tag(sync=True, echo_update=False)
widget = ValueWidget(value=1)
assert widget.value == 1
widget._send = mock.MagicMock()
# this mimics a value coming from the front end
widget._handle_msg({
'content': {
'data': {
'method': 'update',
'state': {
'value': 42,
}
}
}
})
assert widget.value == 42
# widget._send.assert_not_called(calls)
widget._send.assert_not_called()
# a regular set should sync to the frontend
widget.value = 43
widget._send.assert_has_calls([mock.call({'method': 'update', 'state': {'value': 43.0}, 'buffer_paths': []}, buffers=[])])