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fix bug in BoundedList for python 3.4 and add tests #199

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4 changes: 2 additions & 2 deletions opentelemetry-sdk/src/opentelemetry/sdk/util.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -62,7 +62,7 @@ def __len__(self):

def __iter__(self):
with self._lock:
return iter(self._dq.copy())
return iter(deque(self._dq))

def append(self, item):
with self._lock:
Expand All @@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ def from_seq(cls, maxlen, seq):


class BoundedDict(MutableMapping):
"""A dict with a fixed max capacity."""
"""An ordered dict with a fixed max capacity."""

def __init__(self, maxlen):
if not isinstance(maxlen, int):
Expand Down
210 changes: 210 additions & 0 deletions opentelemetry-sdk/tests/test_util.py
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -0,0 +1,210 @@
# Copyright 2019, OpenTelemetry Authors
#
# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.

import collections
import unittest

from opentelemetry.sdk.util import BoundedDict, BoundedList


class TestBoundedList(unittest.TestCase):
base = [52, 36, 53, 29, 54, 99, 56, 48, 22, 35, 21, 65, 10, 95, 42, 60]
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Why not just use list(range(n))?

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I am not that happy having base[i] == i.


def test_raises(self):
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could docstrings be added to clarify the behavior expected? minor thing but I find terse unit test names hard to quickly scan to better understand the expected behavior.

with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
BoundedList(-1)

blist = BoundedList(4)
blist.append(37)
blist.append(13)

with self.assertRaises(IndexError):
_ = blist[2]
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is this assignment necessary? wouldn't getitem get called regardless of what is done to the return value?

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I guess this way it's more explicit that we don't care about the value instead of having made a typo.

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pylint will complain with W0104: Statement seems to have no effect (pointless-statement) if _ = is removed.


with self.assertRaises(IndexError):
_ = blist[4]

with self.assertRaises(IndexError):
_ = blist[-3]

def test_from_seq(self):
list_len = len(TestBoundedList.base)
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why not "self.base" here? I worry about calling out the class directly as it just increase the work when one wants to change the class name.

base_copy = list(TestBoundedList.base)
blist = BoundedList.from_seq(list_len, base_copy)

self.assertEqual(len(blist), list_len)

# modify base_copy and test that blist is not changed
for idx in range(list_len):
base_copy[idx] = idx * base_copy[idx]

for idx in range(list_len):
self.assertEqual(blist[idx], TestBoundedList.base[idx])

# test that iter yields the correct number of elements
self.assertEqual(len(tuple(blist)), list_len)

# sequence too big
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
BoundedList.from_seq(list_len / 2, TestBoundedList.base)
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You could also add an assertion that modifying base does not modify the BoundedList or vice versa


def test_append_no_drop(self):
# create empty list
list_len = len(TestBoundedList.base)
blist = BoundedList(list_len)
self.assertEqual(len(blist), 0)

# fill list
for item in TestBoundedList.base:
blist.append(item)

self.assertEqual(len(blist), list_len)
self.assertEqual(blist.dropped, 0)

for idx in range(list_len):
self.assertEqual(blist[idx], TestBoundedList.base[idx])

# test __iter__ in BoundedList
idx = 0
for val in blist:
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could use enumerate() here instead of manually incrementing.

self.assertEqual(val, TestBoundedList.base[idx])
idx += 1

def test_append_drop(self):
list_len = len(TestBoundedList.base)
# create full BoundedList
blist = BoundedList.from_seq(list_len, TestBoundedList.base)

# try to append more items
for idx in range(list_len):
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I think this could just enumerate the list itself, instead of using an index.

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Actually a plain for in self.base would work here.

# should drop the element without raising exceptions
blist.append(2 * TestBoundedList.base[idx])

self.assertEqual(len(blist), list_len)
self.assertEqual(blist.dropped, list_len)

# test that new elements are in the list
for idx in range(list_len):
self.assertEqual(blist[idx], 2 * TestBoundedList.base[idx])

def test_extend_no_drop(self):
# create empty list
list_len = len(TestBoundedList.base)
blist = BoundedList(list_len)
self.assertEqual(len(blist), 0)

# fill list
blist.extend(TestBoundedList.base)

self.assertEqual(len(blist), list_len)
self.assertEqual(blist.dropped, 0)

for idx in range(list_len):
self.assertEqual(blist[idx], TestBoundedList.base[idx])

# test __iter__ in BoundedList
idx = 0
for val in blist:
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could use enumerate

self.assertEqual(val, TestBoundedList.base[idx])
idx += 1

def test_extend_drop(self):
list_len = len(TestBoundedList.base)
# create full BoundedList
blist = BoundedList.from_seq(list_len, TestBoundedList.base)
other_list = [13, 37, 51, 91]

# try to extend with more elements
blist.extend(other_list)

self.assertEqual(len(blist), list_len)
self.assertEqual(blist.dropped, len(other_list))


class TestBoundedDict(unittest.TestCase):
base = collections.OrderedDict(
[
("name", "Firulais"),
("age", 7),
("weight", 13),
("vaccinated", True),
]
)

def test_negative_maxlen(self):
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
BoundedDict(-1)

def test_from_map(self):
dic_len = len(TestBoundedDict.base)
base_copy = collections.OrderedDict(TestBoundedDict.base)
bdict = BoundedDict.from_map(dic_len, base_copy)

self.assertEqual(len(bdict), dic_len)

# modify base_copy and test that bdict is not changed
base_copy["name"] = "Bruno"
base_copy["age"] = 3

for key in TestBoundedDict.base:
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You could also test that all keys are yielded by the iterator like asserting that len(tuple(bdict)) == len(bdict)). Same for BoundedList.

self.assertEqual(bdict[key], TestBoundedDict.base[key])

# test that iter yields the correct number of elements
self.assertEqual(len(tuple(bdict)), dic_len)

# map too big
with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
BoundedDict.from_map(dic_len / 2, TestBoundedDict.base)

def test_bounded_dict(self):
# create empty dict
dic_len = len(TestBoundedDict.base)
bdict = BoundedDict(dic_len)
self.assertEqual(len(bdict), 0)

# fill dict
for key in TestBoundedDict.base:
bdict[key] = TestBoundedDict.base[key]

self.assertEqual(len(bdict), dic_len)
self.assertEqual(bdict.dropped, 0)

for key in TestBoundedDict.base:
self.assertEqual(bdict[key], TestBoundedDict.base[key])

# test __iter__ in BoundedDict
for key in bdict:
self.assertEqual(bdict[key], TestBoundedDict.base[key])

# updating an existing element should not drop
bdict["name"] = "Bruno"
self.assertEqual(bdict.dropped, 0)

# try to append more elements
for key in TestBoundedDict.base:
bdict["new-" + key] = TestBoundedDict.base[key]

self.assertEqual(len(bdict), dic_len)
self.assertEqual(bdict.dropped, dic_len)
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Please also assert that the new key is in the bounded dict (i.e., old elements are dropped instead of new ones).
Same for BoundedList.

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Good one, actually I was thinking that the new elements were dropped.

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could this behavior be documented in the docstring as well?


# test that elements in the dict are the new ones
for key in TestBoundedDict.base:
self.assertEqual(bdict["new-" + key], TestBoundedDict.base[key])

# delete an element
del bdict["new-name"]
self.assertEqual(len(bdict), dic_len - 1)

with self.assertRaises(KeyError):
_ = bdict["new-name"]