forked from beartype/beartype
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
tox
executable file
·113 lines (101 loc) · 4.83 KB
/
tox
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
#!/usr/bin/env bash
# --------------------( LICENSE )--------------------
# Copyright (c) 2014-2022 Beartype authors.
# See "LICENSE" for further details.
#
# --------------------( SYNOPSIS )--------------------
# Bash shell script wrapping this project's tox-based test suite, passing
# sane default options suitable for interactive terminal testing and otherwise
# passing all passed arguments as is to the "tox" command.
#
# This script is defined as a Bash rather than Bourne script purely for the
# canonical ${BASH_SOURCE} string global, reliably providing the absolute
# pathnames of this script and hence this script's directory.
#
# --------------------( CAVEATS )--------------------
# *THE HIGHER-LEVEL "tox" SCRIPT SHOULD TYPICALLY BE RUN INSTEAD.* This
# lower-level script only exercises this project against the single Python
# interpreter associated with the "pytest" command and is thus suitable *ONLY*
# as a rapid sanity check. Meanwhile, the higher-level "tox" command exercises
# this project against all installed Python interpreters and is thus suitable
# as a full-blown correctness check (e.g., before submitting pull requests).
# ....................{ PREAMBLE }....................
# Enable strictness for sanity.
set -e
# ....................{ ARRAYS }....................
# Array of all arguments with which to invoke Python.
#
# Note that the "-X dev" option enabling the Python Development Mode (PDM) need
# *NOT* be explicitly passed to "tox", as the ${PYTHONDEVMODE} shell variable
# in the "tox.ini" file already enables the PDM.
PYTHON_ARGS=( command python3 )
# PYTHON_ARGS=( command python3.8 )
# PYTHON_ARGS=( command python3.9 )
# PYTHON_ARGS=( command python3.10 )
# PYTHON_ARGS=( command python3.11 )
# PYTHON_ARGS=( command pypy3.7 )
# ....................{ FUNCTIONS }....................
# str canonicalize_path(str pathname)
#
# Canonicalize the passed pathname.
function canonicalize_path() {
# Validate and localize all passed arguments.
(( $# == 1 )) || {
echo 'Expected exactly one argument.' 1>&2
return 1
}
local pathname="${1}"
# The "readlink" command's GNU-specific "-f" option would be preferable but
# is unsupported by macOS's NetBSD-specific version of "readlink". Instead,
# just defer to Python for portability.
command python3 -c "
import os, sys
print(os.path.realpath(os.path.expanduser(sys.argv[1])))" "${pathname}"
}
# ....................{ PATHS }....................
# Absolute or relative filename of this script.
script_filename="$(canonicalize_path "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")"
# Absolute or relative dirname of the directory directly containing this
# script, equivalent to the top-level directory for this project.
script_dirname="$(dirname "${script_filename}")"
# ....................{ MAIN }....................
# Temporarily change the current working directory to that of this project.
pushd "${script_dirname}" >/dev/null
#FIXME: Excise us up, please. This no longer appears to be working as intended
#as has, in fact, obstructed sanity on multiple occasions.
# # Comma-delimited list of all tox environments. Dismantled, this is:
# #
# # * "tox -l", listing all environments defined by the "envlist" default.
# # * "grep linux", removing all duplicate platform-specific environments from
# # that list.
# # * "paste ...", converting all newlines in that "grep" output into commas
# # expected by the parent "tox -e" command.
# #
# # This pipeline is gratefully inspired by this StackOverflow answer:
# # https://stackoverflow.com/a/56387013/2809027
# tox_envs="$(command tox -l | command paste -sd "," -)"
#
# # Strip the optional "-coverage" suffix from these environments, preventing
# # tox from measuring coverage. While tox can be made to measure coverage at the
# # command line, coverage is best measured either:
# # * Directly by "pytest" from the command line.
# # * Indirectly by "tox" from continuous integration (CI).
# tox_envs="${tox_envs//-coverage}"
#
# # Print this munged list for debuggability.
# echo "Exercising tox environments \"${tox_envs}\"..."
#
# # Run this project's tox-based test suite with all passed arguments.
# # Dismantled, this is:
# #
# # * "tox -e", exercising only the passed comma-delimited list of environments.
# # Note this implicitly disables the "envlist" default in "tox.ini".
# "${PYTHON_ARGS[@]}" -m tox -e "${tox_envs}" "${@}"
# Run this project's tox-based test suite with all passed arguments.
"${PYTHON_ARGS[@]}" -m tox "${@}"
# 0-based exit code reported by the prior command.
exit_code=$?
# Revert the current working directory to the prior such directory.
popd >/dev/null
# Report the same exit code from this script.
exit ${exit_code}