This commit implements a small subset of the CPython `marshal` module. It
implements `marshal.dumps()` and `marshal.loads()`, but only supports
(un)marshalling code objects at this stage. The semantics match CPython,
except that the actual marshalled bytes is not compatible with CPython's
marshalled bytes.
The module is enabled at the everything level (only on the unix coverage
build at this stage).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows retrieving the code object of a function using
`function.__code__`, and then reconstructing a function from a code object
using `FunctionType(code_object)`.
This feature is controlled by `MICROPY_PY_FUNCTION_ATTRS_CODE` and is
enabled at the full-features level.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit lets the natmod tests runner to automatically detect the
architecture of the test target. This allows to avoid to explicitly
pass the architecture name to the runner in test scripts.
However, the ability to manually specify a target was not removed but it
was made optional. This way the user is able to override the
architecture name if needed (like if one wants to test an armv6 MPY on
an armv7 board).
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
Test is for an issue reported on the micropython-lib Discord as
effecting the rp2 port umqtt.simple interface when reconnecting with TLS,
however it's a more generic problem.
Currently this test fails on RPI_PICO_W and ESP32_GENERIC_C3 (and no doubt
others). Fixes are in the subsequent commits.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This includes making int("01") parse in base 10 like standard Python.
When a base of 0 is specified it means auto-detect based on the prefix, and
literals begining with 0 (except when the literal is all 0's) like "01" are
then invalid and now throw an exception.
The new error message is different from CPython. It says e.g.,
`SyntaxError: invalid syntax for integer with base 0: '09'`
Additional test cases were added to cover the changed & added code.
Co-authored-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Signed-off-by: Jeff Epler <jepler@gmail.com>
This commit fixes a test failure for `extmod/re_sub.py` where the code,
whilst being correct, would not make the test pass due to a newer
Python version than expected.
On Python 3.13, running `tests/extmod/re_sub.py` would yield a
deprecation warning about `re.sub` not providing the match count as a
keyword parameter. This warning would be embedded in the expected test
result and thus the test would always fail.
Co-authored-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
Fix the command that converts `ec_key.pem` to `ec_key.der`, and increase
the certificate validity to 10 years.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
It's needed by the test. This previously passed because the compiler
(actually parser) optimises away errno constants.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
When using unittest (for example) with injected mpy files, not only does
the name of the main test module need to be `__main__`, but also the
`__main__` module should correspond to this injected module. Otherwise the
unittest test won't be detected.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit implements a method to detect at runtime if inline assembler
support is enabled, and if so which platform it targets.
This allows clean test runs even on modified version of ARM-based ports
where inline assembler support is disabled, running inline assembler tests
on ports that have such feature not enabled by default and manually
enabled, and allows to always run the correct inlineasm tests for ports
that support more than one architecture (esp32, qemu, rp2).
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
This commit adds support for writing inline assembler functions when
targeting a RV32IMC processor.
Given that this takes up a bit of rodata space due to its large
instruction decoding table and its extensive error messages, it is
enabled by default only on offline targets such as mpy-cross and the
qemu port.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
Thumb/Thumb2 tests are now into their own subdirectory, as
RV32IMC-specific tests will be added as part of the RV32 inline
assembler support.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
A return value of 0 from Python-level `ioctl()` means success, but if
that's returned unconditionally it means that the method supports all
ioctl calls, which is not true. Returning 0 without doing anything can
potentially lead to a crash, eg for MP_STREAM_SEEK which requires returning
a value in the passed-in struct pointer.
This commit makes it so that all `ioctl()` methods respond only to
MP_STREAM_CLOSE, ie they return -1 (indicating error) for all other ioctl
calls.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Running unittest-based tests with --via-mpy is currently broken, because
the unittest test needs the module to be named `__main__`, whereas it's
actually called `__injected_test`.
Fix this by changing the name when the file is opened.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds a hardware test for `machine.PWM`. It requires a jumper wire
between two pins, uses `machine.PWM` to output on one of them, and
`machine.time_pulse_us()` to time the PWM on the other pin (some boards
test more than one pair of pins).
It times both the high and low duty cycle (and hence the frequency) for a
range of PWM frequencies and duty cycles (including full on and full off).
Currently supported on:
- esp32 (needs a minor hack for initialisation, and some tests still fail)
- esp8266 (passes for frequencies 1kHz and less)
- mimxrt / Teensy 4.0 (passes)
- rp2 (passes)
- samd21 (passes for frequencies 2kHz and less)
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
So that a failing unittest-based test has its entire log printed when using
`run-tests.py --print-failures`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
All the existing tests require a .exp file (either manually specified or
generated running the test first under CPython) that is used to check the
output of running the test under MicroPython. The test passes if the
output matches the expected output exactly.
This has worked very well for a long time now. But some of the newer
hardware tests (eg UART, SPI, PWM) don't really fit this model, for the
following main reasons:
- Some but not all parts of the test should be skipped on certain hardware
targets. With the expected-output approach, skipping tests is either all
or nothing.
- It's often useful to output diagnostics as part of the test, which should
not affect the result of the test (eg the diagnostics change from run to
run, like timing values, or from target to target).
- Sometimes a test will do a complex check and then print False/True if it
passed or not, which obscures the actual test result.
To improve upon this, this commit adds support to `run-tests.py` for a test
to use `unittest`. It detects this by looking at the end of the output
after running the test, looking for the test summary printed by `unittest`
(or an error message saying `unittest` was not found). If the test uses
`unittest` then it should not have a .exp file, and it's not run under
CPython. A `unittest` based test passes or fails based on the summary
printed by `unittest`.
Note that (as long as `unittest` is installed on the target) the tests are
still fully independent and you can still run them without `run-tests.py`:
you just run it as usual, eg `mpremote run <test.py>`. This is very useful
when creating and debugging tests.
Note also that the standard test suite testing Python semantics (eg
everything in `tests/basics/`) will probably never use unittest. Only more
advanced tests will, and ones that are not runnable under CPython.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This started failing in CI on the mingw build, after CPython updated to
3.12.7. The test prints two warnings during interpreter shutdown of
"Task was destroyed but it is pending!".
This didn't happen on other CPython builds, and I think that's because of
finalizer order in CPython interpreter shutdown but not certain (the loop
finalizer calls loop.close() if not already closed).
Adding explicit calls to loop.close() causes the warning to be printed on
every run with CPython 3.12.7 on Linux.
Next, added the workaround exception handler to swallow this exception
as MicroPython doesn't produce an equivalent.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
CPython 3.12 has a documented issue with settrace for opcodes, apparently
due to PEP 669. "This behavior will be changed back in 3.13 to be
consistent with previous versions."
No easy way to make the test pass on CPython 3.12, but at least this helps
signal what the problem is to anyone who runs into a failure.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This fixes a bug in FrameBuffer.ellipse where it goes into an infinite loop
if both radii are 0.
This fixes the bug with a simple pre-check to see if both radii are 0, and
in that case sets a single pixel at the center. This is consistent with the
behaviour of the method when called with just one of the radii set to 0,
where it will draw a horizontal or vertical line of 1 pixel width.
The pixel is set with setpixel_checked so it should handle out-of-bounds
drawing correctly.
This fix also includes three new tests: one for the default behaviour, one
for drawing out-of-bounds, and one for when the sector mask is 0.
Fixes issue #16053.
Signed-off-by: Corran Webster <cwebster@unital.dev>
Includes adding some ESP8266 port output to the ignored output list for the
multitest runner.
This test passes on ESP8266 and various ESP32s (including talking to each
other). Without the fix in the parent commit, ESP32 AP will fail if the
station can report its channel (i.e. channel is wrong).
Testing with a CYW43 (RPI_PICO_W) currently fails but I have some fixes
to submit so it can pass as well.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Test currently passes. It was added so it can be used to check for
regressions when fixing channel selection for AP mode in a follow-up
commit.
Also add some docs about how channel setting is observed to work for
ESP-NOW.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
CPython changed its non-blocking socket behaviour recently and this test
would not run under CPython anymore. So the following steps were taken to
get the test working again and then simplify it:
- Run the test against CPython 3.10.10 and capture the output into the .exp
file for the test.
- Run this test on unix port of MicroPython and verify that the output
matches the CPython 3.10.10 output in the new .exp file (it did). From
now on take unix MicroPython as the source of truth for this test when
modifying it.
- Remove all code that was there for CPython compatibility.
- Make it print out more useful information during the test run, including
names of the OSError errno values.
- Add polling of the socket before the send/write/recv/read to verify that
the poll gives the correct result in non-blocking mode.
Tested on unix MicroPython, ESP32_GENERIC, PYBD_SF2 and RPI_PICO_W boards.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The test case was producing the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<stdin>", line 12, in <module>
UnicodeError:
which did not demonstrate the intended difference (this particular
non-json-serializable object DID throw an exception! just not TypeError).
The updated test uses a byte string with all ASCII bytes inside, which
better illustrates the diference.
Signed-off-by: Jeff Epler <jepler@gmail.com>
Removes the deprecated network.[AP|STA]_IF form from unit tests.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Previously to this commit, running the test suite on a bare-metal board
required specifying the target (really platform) and device, eg:
$ ./run-tests.py --target pyboard --device /dev/ttyACM1
That's quite a lot to type, and you also need to know what the target
platform is, when a lot of the time you either don't care or it doesn't
matter.
This commit makes it easier to run the tests by replacing both of these
options with a single `--test-instance` (`-t` for short) option. That
option specifies the executable/port/device to test. Then the target
platform is automatically detected.
The `--test-instance` can be passed:
- "unix" (the default) to use the unix version of MicroPython
- "webassembly" to test the webassembly port
- anything else is considered a port/device to pass to Pyboard
There are also some shortcuts to specify a port/device, following
`mpremote`:
- a<n> is short for /dev/ttyACM<n>
- u<n> is short for /dev/ttyUSB<n>
- c<n> is short for COM<n>
For example:
$ ./run-tests.py -t a1
Note that the default test instance is "unix" and so this commit does not
change the standard way to run tests on the unix port, by just doing
`./run-tests.py`.
As part of this change, the platform (and it's native architecture if it
supports importing native .mpy files) is show at the start of the test run.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Because VfsLfs2 uses time_ns to create timestamps for files, and for the
test to give consistent results it also needs to use this same function.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This previously passed on some targets that automatically import the
`machine` module in `boot.py`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Getting this test running on stm32- and mimxrt-based boards requires adding
a small delay after constructing the UART so that the initial idle frame
has time to be transmitted before the test starts.
Also, the timing margin needs to account for an additional 1-bit worth of
time on some MCUs.
Thanks to @robert-hh for the esp32, mimxrt and samd settings.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Some ports (eg stm32) configure the FAT driver differently (eg with
multi-partition support) and that leads to a slightly different sequence of
block reads, compared to other configurations (eg rp2).
Comment out the printing in `readblocks()` so the tests are deterministic
(the printing is still useful for debugging).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is a fix for issue #15944, and handles corner cases in the FrameBuffer
code when using stride values where the last line's stride may extend past
the end of the underlying buffer. This commit includes extra tests for
these corner cases.
For example a GS8 format FrameBuffer with a width of 8, height of 2 and
stride of 10 should be able to fit into a buffer of size 18 (10 bytes for
the first horizontal line, and 8 bytes for the second -- the full 10 bytes
are not needed).
Similarly a 1 by 9 FrameBuffer in MONO_VLSB format with a stride of 10
should be able to fit into a buffer of length 11 (10 bytes for the first
8 lines, and then one byte for the 9th line.
Being able to do this is particularly important when cropping the corner of
an existing FrameBuffer, either to copy a sprite or to clip drawing.
Signed-off-by: Corran Webster <cwebster@unital.dev>
Prior to this commit, when flushing a UART on the rp2 port, it returns just
before the last character is sent out the wire.
Fix this by waiting until the BUSY flag is cleared.
This also fixes the behaviour of `UART.txdone()` to return `True` only when
the last byte has gone out.
Updated docs and tests to match. The test now checks that UART TX time is
very close to the expected time (prior, it was just testing that the TX
time was less than the expected time).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
When descriptors are enabled, lookup of the `__get__`, `__set__` and
`__delete__` descriptor methods should not be delegated to `__getattr__`.
That follows CPython behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Commit 69c25ea865 made raising `SystemExit`
do a soft reset (on bare-metal targets). This means that any test which is
skipped by a target (by raising `SystemExit`) will trigger a soft reset on
that target, and then it must execute its startup code, such as `boot.py`.
If the timing is right, this startup code can be unintentionally
interrupted by the test runner when preparing the next test, because the
test runner enters the raw REPL again via a Ctrl-C Ctrl-A ctrl-D sequence
(in `Pyboard.enter_raw_repl()`).
When this happens (`boot.py` is interrupted) the target may not be set up
correctly, and it may (in the case of stm32 boards) flash LEDs and take
extra time, slowing down the test run.
Fix this by explicitly waiting for the target to finish its soft reset when
it skips a test.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Regression introduced in 337742f.
The hang occurs because the esp32 port was calling "from ISR" port-layer
functions to set/clear the interrupt mask. FreeRTOS kernel therefore
doesn't know the CPU is in a critical section. In taskYIELD() the riscv
port layer blocks after yielding until it knows the yield has happened, and
would block indefinitely if IRQs are disabled (until INT WDT triggers).
Moving to the "public" portENTER_CRITICAL/portEXIT_CRITICAL API means that
FreeRTOS knows we're in a critical section and can react accordingly.
Adds a regression test for this case (should be safe to run on all ports).
On single core CPUs, this should result in almost exactly the same
behaviour apart from fixing this case.
On dual core CPUs, we now have cross-CPU mutual exclusion for atomic
sections. This also shouldn't change anything, mostly because all the code
which enters an atomic section runs on the same CPU. If it does change
something, it will be to fix a thread safety bug.
There is some risk that this change triggers a FreeRTOS crash where there
is a call to a blocking FreeRTOS API with interrupts disabled. Previously
this code might have worked, but was probably thread unsafe and would have
hung in some circumstances.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Allowing passing keyword arguments to a native base's __init__, i.e.
`make_new` in the C code. Previously only positional arguments were
allowed.
The main trade-off in this commit is that every call to the native base's
`make_new` is now going to be preceded by a call to
`mp_map_init_fixed_table` even though most of what that does is unused and
instead it merely serves as a way to pass the number of keyword arguments.
Fixes issue #15465.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
This commit fixes the addition of a stray separator before the number
when printing an MPZ-backed integer and the first group is three digits
long.
This fixes#8984.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
- Code size saving as all of these functions are very similar.
- Resolves the "TODO" of the plain read and write functions not propagating
errors. An error in the underlying block device now causes VFatFs to
return EIO, for example.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
A positive result here can result in eventual memory corruption
as littlefs expects the result of a cache read/write function to be
0 or a negative integer for an error.
Closes#13046
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This commit adds a new `RingIO` type which exposes the internal ring-buffer
code for general use in Python programs. It has the stream interface
making it similar to `StringIO` and `BytesIO`, except `RingIO` has a fixed
buffer size and is automatically safe when reads and writes are in
different threads or an IRQ.
This new type is enabled at the "extra features" ROM level.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Leech <andrew.leech@planetinnovation.com.au>
Added the "long" modffi tests. The tests could not be added to the existing
ffi_types test because two .exp files were required for the 32-bit and
64-bit results. Code common to both the ffi_types and type "long" tests was
factored into ffi_int_base. ffi_types was renamed to ffi_int_types to group
the related tests under the "ffi_int" prefix.
Signed-off-by: Michael Sawyer <mjfsawyer@gmail.com>
Removing the now-unused (see previous commit for details) `--write-exp` and
`--list-tests` options helps to simplify the rather complex logic in
`run-tests.py`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If GIL is disabled then there's threat of a race condition if some other
code specifically requests USB processing (i.e. to unblock stdio), while
a scheduled TinyUSB callback is already running on another thread.
Relies on the change in the parent commit, where scheduler is restricted
to main thread if GIL is disabled.
Fixes#15390 - "TinyUSB callback can't recurse" exceptions on rp2 when
using _thread module and USB serial I/O.
Adds a unit test for stdin functioning correctly in threads (fails on rp2
port without this fix).
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
So that certain tests can be skipped when running on this target. These
thread tests do not pass because the zephyr port cannot create more than 4
threads at once.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The printed type for stdio streams indicates "FileIO", which is a binary IO
stream. Stdio is not binary by design, and its printed type should
indicate a text stream. "TextIOWrapper" suits that purpose, and is used
by VfsPosix files.
Signed-off-by: timdechant <timdechant.git@gmail.com>
Now that some ports support multiple architectures (eg esp32 has both
Xtensa and RISC-V CPUs) it's no longer possible to set mpy-cross flags
based on the target, eg `./run-tests.py --target esp32`. Instead this
commit makes it so the `-march=xxx` argument to mpy-cross is detected
automatically via evaluation of `sys.implementation._mpy`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
These all require hardware connections, so live in a different directory.
Except for the IRQ_BREAK test of ESP32 devices a single UART with loopback
is sufficient.
General:
SAMD21: Due to the limited flash size only SAMD21 devices with external
flash support uart.irq().
IRQ_BREAK:
ESP32 needs different UART devices for creating and sensing a break.
Lacking a second UART the test is skipped for ESP32S2 and ESP32C3. RP2
does not pass the test reliable at 115200 baud, reason to be found.
Thus the upper limit is set to 57600 Baud.
Coverage:
esp32 pass when different UART devices are used.
rp2 pass up to 57600 baud
IRQ_RX:
SAMD21: Being a slow device it needs data to be sent byte-by-byte at
9600 baud, since the IRQ callback is scheduled delayed and then the
flags do not match any more. The data matches since it is queued in
the FIFO resp. ringbuffer.
CC3200: The test cannot be performed since no calls are accepted in the
IRQ handler like u.read(). Skipped.
Coverage:
cc3200 fail due to major differences in the implementation.
esp32 pass
nrf pass
renesas-ra pass
samd pass see the notes.
stm32 pass
IRQ_RXIDLE:
STM32: With PyBoard the IRQ is called several times, but only once with
the flag IRQ_RXIDLE set.
Coverage:
esp32 pass
mimxrt pass
renesas-ra pass
rp2 pass
samd pass for both SAMD21 and SAMD51
stm32 fail. see notes.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Signed-off-by: robert-hh <robert@hammelrath.com>
The test checks whether the message created by the IRQ handler appears
about at the end of the data sent by UART.
Supported MCUs resp. boards:
- RP2040
- Teensy 4.x
- Adafruit ItsyBitsy M0
- Adafruit ItsyBitsy M4
- NRF52 (Arduino Nano Connect 33 BLE)
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Currently, the qemu-arm (and qemu-riscv) port has two build modes:
- a simple test that executes a Python string; and
- a full test that uses tinytest to embed all tests within the firmware,
then executes that and captures the output.
This is very different to all the other ports. A difficulty with using
tinytest is that with the large number of tests the firmware overflows its
virtual flash size. It's also hard to run tests via .mpy files and with
the native emitter. Being different to the other ports also means an extra
burden on maintenance.
This commit reworks the qemu-arm port so that it has a single build target
that creates a standard firmware which has a REPL. When run under
qemu-system-arm, the REPL acts like any other bare-metal port, complete
with soft reset (use machine.reset() to turn it off and exit
qemu-system-arm).
This approach gives many benefits:
- allows playing with a REPL without hardware;
- allows running the test suite as it would on a bare-metal board, by
making qemu-system-arm redirect the UART serial of the virtual device to
a /dev/pts/xx file, and then running run-tests.py against that serial
device;
- skipping tests is now done via the logic in `run-tests.py` and no longer
needs multiple places to define which tests to skip
(`tools/tinytest-codegen.py`, `ports/qemu-arm/tests_profile.txt` and also
`tests/run-tests.py`);
- allows testing/using mpremote with the qemu-arm port.
Eventually the qemu-riscv port would have a similar change.
Prior to this commit the test results were:
743 tests ok. (121 skipped)
With this commit the test results are:
753 tests performed (22673 individual testcases)
753 tests passed
138 tests skipped
More tests are skipped because more are included in the run. But overall
more tests pass.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Skip whitespace characters between pairs of hex numbers.
This makes `bytes.fromhex()` compatible with cpython.
Includes simple test in `tests/basic/builtin_str_hex.py`.
Signed-off-by: Glenn Moloney <glenn.moloney@gmail.com>
Update to the test added in 1e98c4cb75,
changes the SPI pins for ESP32-C3 (IO 18 and 19 are the native USB pins).
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Necessary to pass CI when testing the V2 preview APIs.
Also adds an extra coverage test for the legacy stackctrl API, to maintain
coverage and check for any regression.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Based on machine_i2s_rate, allows testing basic SPI functionality and
timings.
Implemented and confirmed working for rp2, esp32, and pyboard.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
The `sslcontext_server_client_ciphers.py` test was using stat to test for
the .der files after it already tried to open them for reading. That is
now fixed. And `sslcontext_server_client.py` is adjusted to use the same
pattern for skipping the test.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Install the mingw variant of Python since it behaves more like a 'real'
Windows CPython than the msys2 variant: os.name == 'nt', not 'posix'. Note
that os.sep is still '/' though so we don't actually need to skip the
import_file test. This way one single Python version can be used both for
running run-tests.py and getting the expected test output.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
This fixes various null dereferencing and out-of-bounds access because
super_attr assumes the held obj is effectively an object of the held type,
which is now verified.
Fixes issue #12830.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
This adds a CPython diff that explains why calling `super().__init__()` is
required in MicroPython when subclassing a native type (because `__new__`
and `__init__` are not separate functions).
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
When subclassing a native type, calling native members in `__init__` before
`super().__init__()` has been called could cause a crash. In this
situation, `self` in `mp_convert_member_lookup` is the
`native_base_init_wrapper_obj`. The check added in this commit ensures
that an `AttributeError` is raised before this happens, which is consistent
with other failed lookups.
Also fix a typo in a related comment.
Signed-off-by: Laurens Valk <laurens@pybricks.com>
This adds a separate `AdvancedTimer` class that demonstrates a few more
advanced concepts usch as custom handlers for printing and attributes.
Signed-off-by: Laurens Valk <laurens@pybricks.com>
Updates rp2 port to always resume from idle within 1ms max.
When rp2 port went tickless the behaviour of machine.idle() changed as
there is no longer a tick interrupt to wake it up every millisecond. On a
quiet system it would now block indefinitely. No other port does this.
See parent commit for justification of why this change is useful.
Also adds a test case that fails without this change.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Before the fix in parent commit, some of these tests hung indefinitely.
After, they seem to consistently pass.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Explicitly yield each time a thread mutex is unlocked.
Key to understanding this bug is that Python threads run at equal RTOS
priority, and although ESP-IDF FreeRTOS (and I think vanilla FreeRTOS)
scheduler will round-robin equal priority tasks in the ready state it does
not make a similar guarantee for tasks moving between ready and waiting.
The pathological case of this bug is when one Python thread task is busy
(i.e. never blocks) it will hog the CPU more than expected, sometimes for
an unbounded amount of time. This happens even though it periodically
unlocks the GIL to allow another task to run.
Assume T1 is busy and T2 is blocked waiting for the GIL. T1 is executing
and hits a condition to yield execution:
1. T1 calls MP_THREAD_GIL_EXIT
2. FreeRTOS sees T2 is waiting for the GIL and moves it to the Ready list
(but does not preempt, as T2 is same priority, so T1 keeps running).
3. T1 immediately calls MP_THREAD_GIL_ENTER and re-takes the GIL.
4. Pre-emptive context switch happens, T2 wakes up, sees GIL is not
available, and goes on the waiting list for the GIL again.
To break this cycle step 4 must happen before step 3, but this may be a
very narrow window of time so it may not happen regularly - and
quantisation of the timing of the tick interrupt to trigger a context
switch may mean it never happens.
Yielding at the end of step 2 maximises the chance for another task to run.
Adds a test that fails on esp32 before this fix and passes afterwards.
Fixes issue #15423.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Fixes various null dereferencing, out-of-bounds memory accesses and
`assert(0)` failures in the case of an invalid `uctypes` descriptor.
By design `uctypes` can crash because it accesses arbitrary memory, but at
least describing the descriptor layout should be forced to be correct and
not crash.
Fixes issue #12702.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
Fixes use-after-free when accessing the database after it is closed with
`btree_close`. `btree_close` always succeeds when called with an
already-closed database.
The new test checks that operations that access the underlying database
(get, set, flush, seq) fail with a `ValueError` when the btree is already
closed. It also checks that closing and printing the btree succeed when
the btree is already closed.
Fixes issue #12543.
Signed-off-by: Michael Vornovitsky <michaelvornovitskiy@outlook.com>
This commit makes it so that PyProxy objects are reused (on the JavaScript
side) when they correspond to an existing Python object that is the same
object.
For example, proxying the same Python function to JavaScript, the same
PyProxy instance is now used. This means that if `foo` is a Python
function then accessing it on the JavaScript side such as
`api.globals().get("foo")` has the property that:
api.globals().get("foo") === api.globals().get("foo")
Prior to this commit the above was not true because new PyProxy instances
were created each time `foo` was accessed.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Follow up to 2e852522b1: instead of having
.exp files for the get_event_loop tests, tweak them so they are compatible
with CPython 3.12. This requires calling `asyncio.set_event_loop()` so
there is an active event loop and `asyncio.get_event_loop()` succeeds
without a warning.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
A target may have enough RAM to run the n=433 test but then run out of RAM
on the n=432 test. So allow the test to skip on the n=432 case before it
prints any output.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Because the main thread executes `thread_entry()` it means there's an
additional one added to `count`, so the test must wait for the count to
reach `n_thread + 1`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Enable support for cipher suites like
TLS_ECDHE_RSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256, as suggested in
https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/14204#issuecomment-2024366349
and https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/10485#issuecomment-1396426824
Tests have been run on the top 500 domains from moz.com. Without this
patch, 155 out of 500 fail to connect because of TLS issues. This patch
fixes them all. And it seems all existing mbedtls flags are needed to get
good coverage of those top 500 domains.
The `ssl_poll.py` test has the cipher bits increased from 512 to 1024 in
its test key/cert so that it can work with ECDHE-RSA which is now the
chosen cipher.
Signed-off-by: Sylvain Zimmer <sylvain@sylvainzimmer.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Before this change, long/mpz ints propagated into all future calculations,
even if their value could fit in a small-int object. With this change, the
result of a big-int binary op will now be converted to a small-int object
if the value fits in a small-int.
For example, a relatively common operation like `x = a * b // c` where
a,b,c all small ints would always result in a long/mpz int, even if it
didn't need to, and then this would impact all future calculations with
x.
This adds +24 bytes on PYBV11 but avoids heap allocations and potential
surprises (e.g. `big-big` is now a small `0`, and can safely be accessed
with MP_OBJ_SMALL_INT_VALUE).
Performance tests are unchanged on PYBV10, except for `bm_pidigits.py`
which makes heavy use of big-ints and gains about 8% in speed.
Unix coverage tests have been updated to cover mpz code that is now
unreachable by normal Python code (removing the unreachable code would lead
to some surprising gaps in the internal C functions and the functionality
may be needed in the future, so it is kept because it has minimal
overhead).
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Jim Mussared <jim.mussared@gmail.com>
In JavaScript when accessing an attribute such as `obj.attr` a value of
`undefined` is returned if the attribute does not exist. This is unlike
Python semantics where an `AttributeError` is raised. Furthermore, in some
cases in JavaScript (eg a Proxy instance) `attr in obj` can return false
yet `obj.attr` is still valid and returns something other than `undefined`.
So the source of truth for whether a JavaScript attribute exists is to just
right away attempt `obj.attr`.
To more closely match these JavaScript semantics when proxying a JavaScript
object through to Python, change the attribute lookup logic on a `JsProxy`
so that it immediately attempts `obj.attr` instead of first testing if the
attribute exists via `attr in obj`.
This allows JavaScript objects which dynamically create attributes to work
correctly on the Python side, with both `obj.attr` and `obj["attr"]`. Note
that `obj["attr"]` already works in all cases because it immediately does
the subscript access without first testing if the attribute exists.
As a benefit, this new behaviour matches the Pyodide behaviour.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Follow-up to a84c7a0ed9, this commit works most of the time but has an
intermittent bug where USB doesn't resume as expected after waking from
light sleep.
Turns out waking calls clocks_init() which will re-initialise the USB PLL.
Most of the time this is OK but occasionally it seems like the clock
glitches the USB peripheral and it stops working until the next hard reset.
Adds a machine.lightsleep() test that consistently hangs in the first
two dozen iterations on rp2 without this fix. Passed over 100 times in a
row with this fix.
The test is currently rp2-only as it seems similar lightsleep USB issues
exist on other ports (both pyboard and ESP32-S3 native USB don't send any
data to the host after waking, until they receive something from the host
first.)
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
mp_thread_begin_atomic_section() is expected to be recursive (i.e. for
nested machine.disable_irq() calls, or if Python code calls disable_irq()
and then the Python runtime calls mp_handle_pending() which also enters an
atomic section to check the scheduler state).
On rp2 when not using core1 the atomic sections are recursive.
However when core1 was active (i.e. _thread) then there was a bug that
caused the core to live-lock if an atomic section recursed.
Adds a test case specifically for mutual exclusion and recursive atomic
sections when using two threads. Without this fix the test immediately
hangs on rp2.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
Fixes and improvements to `int.to_bytes()` are:
- No longer overflows if byte size is 0 (closes#13041).
- Raises OverflowError in any case where number won't fit into byte length
(now matches CPython, previously MicroPython would return a truncated
bytes object).
- Document that `micropython int.to_bytes()` doesn't implement the optional
signed kwarg, but will behave as if `signed=True` when the integer is
negative (this is the current behaviour). Add tests for this also.
Requires changes for small ints, MPZ large ints, and "long long" large
ints.
Adds a new set of unit tests for ints between 32 and 64 bits to increase
coverage of "long long" large ints, which are otherwise untested.
Tested on unix port (64 bit small ints, MPZ long ints) and Zephyr STM32WB
board (32 bit small ints, long long large ints).
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
The code generating the entry to the finally handler of an async-with
statement was simply wrong for the case of the native emitter. Among other
things the layout of the stack was incorrect.
This is fixed by this commit. The setup of the async-with finally handler
is now put in a dedicated emit function, for both the bytecode and native
emitters to implement in their own way (the bytecode emitter is unchanged,
just factored to a function).
With this fix all of the async-with tests now work when using the native
emitter.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
A value thrown/injected into a native generator needs to be stored in a
dedicated variable outside `nlr_buf_t`, following the `inject_exc` variable
in `py/vm.c`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Otherwise GC stays disabled (not re-enabled by soft reset) and later test
runs fail with MemoryError.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This allows increasing the Python recursion depth if needed.
Also increase the default to 2k words. There is enough RAM in the
browser/node context for this to be increased, and having a larger pystack
allows more complex code to run without hitting the limit.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
In the webassembly port there is no asyncio run loop running at the top
level. Instead the Python asyncio run loop is scheduled through setTimeout
and run by the outer JavaScript event loop. Because tasks can become
runable from an external (to Python) event (eg a JavaScript callback), the
run loop must be scheduled whenever a task is pushed to the asyncio task
queue, otherwise tasks may be waiting forever on the queue.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This change allows doing a top-level await on an asyncio primitive like
Task and Event.
This feature enables a better interaction and synchronisation between
JavaScript and Python, because `api.runPythonAsync` can now be used (called
from JavaScript) to await on the completion of asyncio primitives.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds a QEMU-based bare metal RISC-V 32 bits port. For the time being
only QEMU's "virt" 32 bits board is supported, using the ilp32 ABI and the
RV32IMC architecture.
The top-level README and the run-tests.py files are updated for this new
port.
Signed-off-by: Alessandro Gatti <a.gatti@frob.it>
If the socket timeout is 0 then a failed socket.connect() raises
EINPROGRESS (which is what the lwIP bindings already did), but if the
socket timeout is non-zero then a failed socket.connect() should raise
ETIMEDOUT. The latter is fixed in this commit.
A test is added for these timeout cases.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Support for raw str/bytes already exists, and extending that to raw
f-strings is easy. It also reduces code size because it eliminates an
error message.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is quite a simple and small change to support concatenation of
adjacent f-strings, and improve compatibility with CPython.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
In CPython 3.12 these invalid str/bytes/fstring escapes will issue a
SyntaxWarning, and so differ to MicroPython.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Otherwise CPython gives a deprecation warning.
This test is not actually testing inversion of bools, rather that bit of
the test is used to compute the pass/fail result.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The `cert` argument passed to the verify callback is actually a memoryview.
And the `depth` argument seems to start at 1 for the tested URL.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The three-argument form of `.throw()` is deprecated since CPython 3.12. So
split out into separate tests (with .exp files) the parts of the generator
tests that test more than one argument.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
And use `asyncio.new_event_loop()` where possible. This change is needed
because CPython 3.12 deprecated the `get_event_loop()` function.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Also define `mp_type_bytearray`. These all help to write native modules.
Signed-off-by: Brian Pugh <bnp117@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Instead of raising KeyError. These semantics match JavaScript behaviour
and make it much more seamless to pass Python dicts through to JavaScript
as though they were JavaScript {} objects.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This adds a new undefined singleton to Python, that corresponds directly to
JavaScript `undefined`. It's accessible via `js.undefined`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This reverts part of commit fa23e4b093, to
make it so that Python `None` converts to JavaScript `null` (and JavaScript
`null` already converts to Python `None`). That's consistent with how the
`json` module converts these values back and forth.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
And change Py None conversion so it converts to JS undefined.
The semantics for conversion of these objects are then:
- Python None -> JavaScript undefined
- JavaScript undefined -> Python None
- JavaScript null -> Python None
This follows Pyodide:
https://pyodide.org/en/stable/usage/type-conversions.html
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit defines a new `JsException` exception type which is used on the
Python side to wrap JavaScript errors. That's then used when a JavaScript
Promise is rejected, and the reason is then converted to a `JsException`
for the Python side to handle.
This new exception is exposed as `jsffi.JsException`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
JavaScript semantics are such that the caller of an async function does not
need to await that function for it to run to completion. This commit makes
that behaviour also apply to top-level async Python code run via
`runPythonAsync()`.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The `reason` in a rejected promise should be an instance of `Error`. That
leads to better error messages on the JavaScript side.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit adds a significant portion of the existing MicroPython asyncio
module to the webassembly port, using parts of the existing asyncio code
and some custom JavaScript parts.
The key difference to the standard asyncio is that this version uses the
JavaScript runtime to do the actual scheduling and waiting on events, eg
Promise fulfillment, timeouts, fetching URLs.
This implementation does not include asyncio.run(). Instead one just uses
asyncio.create_task(..) to start tasks and then returns to the JavaScript.
Then JavaScript will run the tasks.
The implementation here tries to reuse as much existing asyncio code as
possible, and gets all the semantics correct for things like cancellation
and asyncio.wait_for. An alternative approach would reimplement Task,
Event, etc using JavaScript Promise's. That approach is very difficult to
get right when trying to implement cancellation (because it's not possible
to cancel a JavaScript Promise).
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Two cases, one assigning to a slice.
Closes https://github.com/micropython/micropython/issues/13283
Second is extending a slice from itself, similar logic.
In both cases the problem occurs when m_renew causes realloc to move the
buffer, leaving a dangling pointer behind.
There are more complex and hard to fix cases when either argument is a
memoryview into the buffer, currently resizing to a new address breaks
memoryviews into that object.
Reproducing this bug and confirming the fix was done by running the unix
port under valgrind with GC-aware extensions.
Note in default configurations with GIL this bug exists but has no impact
(the free buffer won't be reused while the function is still executing, and
is no longer referenced after it returns).
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This optimises the case where a Python function is, for example, stored to
a JavaScript attribute and then later retrieved from Python. The Python
function no longer needs to be a proxy with double proxying needed for the
call from Python -> JavaScript -> Python.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Ports that use axtls cannot run the `test_tls_sites.py` test because the
sites it connects to use advanced ciphers. So skip this test on such
ports, and add a new, simpler test that doesn't require certificate
verification and works with axtls.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This is required because the .mpy native ABI was changed by the
introduction of `mp_proto_fun_t`, see commits:
- 416465d81e
- 5e3006f117
- e2ff00e811
And three `mp_binary` functions were added to `mp_fun_table` in
commit d2276f0d41.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This allows running tests with a .js/.mjs suffix, and also .py tests using
node and the webassembly port.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This commit implements the 'e' half-float format: 10-bit mantissa, 5-bit
exponent. It uses native _Float16 if supported by the compiler, otherwise
uses custom bitshifting encoding/decoding routines.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Urlichs <matthias@urlichs.de>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
So that the MicroPython-specific behaviour can be isolated, and the CPython
compatible test don't need a .exp file.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Add `pop()`, `appendleft()`, and `extend()` methods, support iteration
and indexing, and initializing from an existing sequence.
Iteration and indexing (subscription) have independent configuration flags
to enable them. They are enabled by default at the same level that
collections.deque is enabled (the extra features level).
Also add tests for checking new behavior.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
This new DMA API corrects possible cache coherency issues on chips with
D-Cache, when working with buffers at arbitrary memory locations (i.e.
supplied by Python code).
The API is used by SPI to fix an issue with corrupt data when reading from
SPI using DMA in certain cases. A regression test is included (it depends
on external hardware connection).
Explanation:
1) It's necessary to invalidate D-Cache after a DMA RX operation completes
in case the CPU reads (or speculatively reads) from the DMA RX region
during the operation. This seems to have been the root cause of issue
#13471 (only when src==dest for this case).
2) More generally, it is also necessary to temporarily mark the first and
last cache lines of a DMA RX operation as "uncached", in case the DMA
buffer shares this cache line with unrelated data. The CPU could
otherwise write the other data at any time during the DMA operation (for
example from an interrupt handler), creating a dirty cache line that's
inconsistent with the DMA result.
Fixes issue #13471.
This work was funded through GitHub Sponsors.
Signed-off-by: Angus Gratton <angus@redyak.com.au>
This test cannot run on boards that have a native USB REPL, so rename it to
indicate that its "special". This makes it easier to run a subset of
tests, for example:
./run-multitests.py multi_bluetooth/ble*.py
./run-multitests.py multi_bluetooth/perf*.py
./run-multitests.py multi_bluetooth/stress*.py
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
When the websocket closes currently, it does not send a proper
"close"-frame, but rather encodes the 0x8800-sequence inside a binary
packet, which is wrong. The close packet is a different kind of websocket
frame, according to https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc6455.
This change resolves an error in Firefox when the websocket closes.
Signed-off-by: Felix Dörre <felix@dogcraft.de>
This is now easy to support, since the first machine-word of a native
function tells how to find the prelude, from which the function name can be
extracted in the same way as for bytecode.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Similar to the previous commit but for MP_BLUETOOTH_IRQ_GATTC_READ_DONE:
the pending_value_handle needs to be reset before calling
mp_bluetooth_gattc_on_read_write_status(), which will call the Python IRQ
handler, which may in turn call back into BTstack to perform an action like
a write. In that case the pending_value_handle will need to be available
for the write/read/etc to proceed.
Fixes issue #13634.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The pending_value_handle needs to be freed and reset before calling
mp_bluetooth_gattc_on_read_write_status(), which will call the Python IRQ
handler, which may in turn call back into BTstack to perform an action like
a write. In that case the pending_value_handle will need to be available
for the write/read/etc to proceed.
Fixes issue #13611.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The current `ssl` module has quite a few differences to the CPython
implementation. This change moves the MicroPython variant to a new `tls`
module and provides a wrapper module for `ssl` (in micropython-lib).
Users who only rely on implemented comparible behavior can continue to use
`ssl`, while users that rely on non-compatible behavior should switch to
`tls`. Then we can make the facade in `ssl` more strictly adhere to
CPython.
Signed-off-by: Felix Dörre <felix@dogcraft.de>
By moving to GitHub actions, all MicroPython CI builds are now on GitHub
actions. This allows faster parallel builds and saves time by not building
when no relevant files changed.
This reveals a few failing tests, so those are temporarily disabled until
they can be fixed.
Signed-off-by: David Lechner <david@pybricks.com>
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
If a return is executed within the try block of a try-finally then the
return value is stored on the top of the Python stack during the execution
of the finally block. In this case the Python stack is one larger than it
normally would be in the finally block.
Prior to this commit, the compiler was not taking this case into account
and could have a Python stack overflow if the Python stack used by the
finally block was more than that used elsewhere in the function. In such
a scenario the last argument of the function would be clobbered by the
top-most temporary value used in the deepest Python expression/statement.
This commit fixes that case by making sure enough Python stack is allocated
to the function.
Fixes issue #13562.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
The timing of the DMA transfer can vary a bit, so tweak the allowed values.
Also test the return value of `rp2.DMA.irq.flags()` to make sure the IRQ is
correctly signalled.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Changes include:
- Some mbedtls source files renamed or deprecated.
- Our `mbedtls_config.h` files are renamed to `mbedtls_config_port.h`, so
they don't clash with mbedtls's new default configuration file named
`mbedtls_config.h`.
- MBEDTLS_TLS_DEFAULT_ALLOW_SHA1_IN_KEY_EXCHANGE is deprecated.
- MBEDTLS_HAVE_TIME now requires an `mbedtls_ms_time` function to be
defined but it's only used for TLSv1.3 (currently not enabled in
MicroPython so there is a lazy implementation, i.e. seconds * 1000).
- `tests/multi_net/ssl_data.py` is removed (due to deprecation of
MBEDTLS_TLS_DEFAULT_ALLOW_SHA1_IN_KEY_EXCHANGE), there are the existing
`ssl_cert_rsa.py` and `sslcontext_server_client.py` tests which do very
similar, simple SSL data transfer.
- Tests now use an EC key by default (they are smaller and faster), and the
RSA key has been regenerated due to the old PKCS encoding used by openssl
rsa command, see
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/40822328/openssl-rsa-key-pem-and-der-conversion-does-not-match
(and `tests/README.md` has been updated accordingly).
Signed-off-by: Carlos Gil <carlosgilglez@gmail.com>
Prior to this commit it would skip every second cipher returned from
mbedtls.
The corresponding test is also updated and now passes on esp32, rp2, stm32
and unix.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
These were added back in commit c4935f3049
because the tests required CPython 3.8, which was quite new at the time.
But CPython 3.8 was released over 4 years ago (October 2019) and the CI
test runners, and developers, have this (or a more recent) CPython version.
Removing the .exp files also helps keep MicroPython semantics the same as
CPython.
The asyncio_fair.py test it adjusted slightly to have more deterministic
timing and output.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Adds support to asyncio.gather() for the case that one or more (or all)
sub-tasks finish and/or raise an exception before the gather starts.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
Compare the full absolute path instead of relying on the path form
passed by the user.
For instance, this will make
python3 run-tests.py -d basics
python3 run-tests.py -d ./basics
python3 run-tests.py -d ../tests/basics
python3 run-tests.py -d /full/path/to/basics
all behave the same by correctly treating the bytes_compare3 and
builtin_help tests as special, whereas previously only the first
invocation would do that and hence result in these tests to fail
when called with a different path form.
Signed-off-by: stijn <stijn@ignitron.net>
Codespell doesn't pick up "re-used" or "re-uses", and ignores the tests/
directory, so fix these manually.
Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>