7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Adrian McCarthy
e376ba0331 Propagate socket_error exception from handle_read. Otherwise Ninja crashes.
llvm-svn: 255718
2015-12-15 23:51:27 +00:00
Todd Fiala
101ed12712 test infra: catch and print exception info on test runner socket listener
This is the listener's spawned connection, not the listener itself.
(i.e. this is the test runner's receiving side of test event sockets).
A standard socket.error will just issue an INFO statement and continue.
Something other than a socket.error will get an ERROR: printed (and
also continue).

Hopefully this gets us more info and also handles the completely
to-be-expected scenario that the test inferior might go down at
any point.

llvm-svn: 255581
2015-12-14 23:45:38 +00:00
Zachary Turner
fe868acafa Fix test result serialization to use bytes.
llvm-svn: 254563
2015-12-02 23:07:33 +00:00
Todd Fiala
c84311163a Candidate fixes for python2/3 compatible string handling in pickling support.
llvm-svn: 254550
2015-12-02 21:45:15 +00:00
Zachary Turner
c1b7cd72db Python 3 - Turn on absolute imports, and fix existing imports.
Absolute imports were introduced in Python 2.5 as a feature
(e.g. from __future__ import absolute_import), and made default
in Python 3.

When absolute imports are enabled, the import system changes in
a couple of ways:

1) The `import foo` syntax will *only* search sys.path.  If `foo`
   isn't in sys.path, it won't be found.  Period.  Without absolute
   imports, the import system will also search the same directory
   that the importing file resides in, so that you can easily
   import from the same folder.

2) From inside a package, you can use a dot syntax to refer to higher
   levels of the current package.  For example, if you are in the
   package lldbsuite.test.utility, then ..foo refers to
   lldbsuite.test.foo.  You can use this notation with the
   `from X import Y` syntax to write intra-package references.  For
   example, using the previous locationa s a starting point, writing
   `from ..support import seven` would import lldbsuite.support.seven

Since this is now the default behavior in Python 3, this means that
importing from the same directory with `import foo` *no longer works*.
As a result, the only way to have portable code is to force absolute
imports for all versions of Python.

See PEP 0328 [https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0328/] for more
information about absolute and relative imports.

Differential Revision: http://reviews.llvm.org/D14342
Reviewed By: Todd Fiala

llvm-svn: 252191
2015-11-05 19:22:28 +00:00
Zachary Turner
19474e1801 Remove use_lldb_suite from the package, and don't import it anymore.
This module was originally intended to be imported by top-level
scripts to be able to find the LLDB packages and third party
libraries.  Packages themselves shouldn't need to import it,
because by the time it gets into the package, the top-level
script should have already done this.  Indeed, it was just
adding the same values to sys.path multiple times, so this
patch is essentially no functional change.

To make sure it doesn't get re-introduced, we also delete the
`use_lldb_suite` module from `lldbsuite/test`, although the
original copy still remains in `lldb/test`

llvm-svn: 251963
2015-11-03 19:20:39 +00:00
Zachary Turner
c432c8f856 Move lldb/test to lldb/packages/Python/lldbsuite/test.
This is the conclusion of an effort to get LLDB's Python code
structured into a bona-fide Python package.  This has a number
of benefits, but most notably the ability to more easily share
Python code between different but related pieces of LLDB's Python
infrastructure (for example, `scripts` can now share code with
`test`).

llvm-svn: 251532
2015-10-28 17:43:26 +00:00