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mirror of https://github.com/pybind/pybind11.git synced 2025-03-03 13:03:20 +00:00
pybind11/tests/test_exceptions.py
Sergei Lebedev a05bc3d235
error_already_set::what() is now constructed lazily ()
* error_already_set::what() is now constructed lazily

Prior to this commit throwing error_already_set was expensive due to the
eager construction of the error string (which required traversing the
Python stack). See  for more context and an alternative take on the
issue.

Note that error_already_set no longer inherits from std::runtime_error
because the latter has no default constructor.

* Do not attempt to normalize if no exception occurred

This is not supported on PyPy-2.7 5.8.0.

* Extract exception name via tp_name

This is faster than dynamically looking up __name__ via GetAttrString.
Note though that the runtime of the code throwing an error_already_set
will be dominated by stack unwinding so the improvement will not be
noticeable.

Before:

396 ns ± 0.913 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)

After:

277 ns ± 0.549 ns per loop (mean ± std. dev. of 7 runs, 1000000 loops each)

Benchmark:

const std::string foo() {
    PyErr_SetString(PyExc_KeyError, "");
    const std::string &s = py::detail::error_string();
    PyErr_Clear();
    return s;
}

PYBIND11_MODULE(foo, m) {
    m.def("foo", &::foo);
}

* Reverted error_already_set to subclass std::runtime_error

* Revert "Extract exception name via tp_name"

The implementation of __name__ is slightly more complex than that.
It handles the module name prefix, and heap-allocated types. We could
port it to pybind11 later on but for now it seems like an overkill.

This reverts commit f1435c7e6b.

* Cosmit following @YannickJadoul's comments

Note that detail::error_string() no longer calls PyException_SetTraceback
as it is unncessary for pretty-printing the exception.

* Fixed PyPy build

* Moved normalization to error_already_set ctor

* Fix merge bugs

* Fix more merge errors

* Improve formatting

* Improve error message in rare case

* Revert back if statements

* Fix clang-tidy

* Try removing mutable

* Does build_mode release fix it

* Set to Debug to expose segfault

* Fix remove set error string

* Do not run error_string() more than once

* Trying setting the tracebackk to the value

* guard if m_type is null

* Try to debug PGI

* One last try for PGI

* Does reverting this fix PyPy

* Reviewer suggestions

* Remove unnecessary initialization

* Add noexcept move and explicit fail throw

* Optimize error_string creation

* Fix typo

* Revert noexcept

* Fix merge conflict error

* Abuse assignment operator

* Revert operator abuse

* See if we still need debug

* Remove unnecessary mutable

* Report "FATAL failure building pybind11::error_already_set error_string" and terminate process.

* Try specifying noexcept again

* Try explicit ctor

* default ctor is noexcept too

* Apply reviewer suggestions, simplify code, and make helper method private

* Remove unnecessary include

* Clang-Tidy fix

* detail::obj_class_name(), fprintf with [STDERR], [STDOUT] tags, polish comments

* consistently check m_lazy_what.empty() also in production builds

* Make a comment slightly less ambiguous.

* Bug fix: Remove `what();` from `restore()`.

It sure would need to be guarded by `if (m_type)`, otherwise `what()` fails and masks that no error was set (see update unit test). But since `error_already_set` is copyable, there is no point in releasing m_type, m_value, m_trace, therefore we can just as well avoid the runtime overhead of force-building `m_lazy_what`, it may never be used.

* Replace extremely opaque (unhelpful) error message with a truthful reflection of what we know.

* Fix clang-tidy error [performance-move-constructor-init].

* Make expected error message less specific.

* Various changes.

* bug fix: error_string(PyObject **, ...)

* Putting back the two eager PyErr_NormalizeException() calls.

* Change error_already_set() to call pybind11_fail() if the Python error indicator not set. The net result is that a std::runtime_error is thrown instead of error_already_set, but all tests pass as is.

* Remove mutable (fixes oversight in the previous commit).

* Normalize the exception only locally in error_string(). Python 3.6 & 3.7 test failures expected. This is meant for benchmarking, to determine if it is worth the trouble looking into the failures.

* clang-tidy: use auto

* Use `gil_scoped_acquire_local` in `error_already_set` destructor. See long comment.

* For Python < 3.8: `PyErr_NormalizeException` before `PyErr_WriteUnraisable`

* Go back to replacing the held Python exception with then normalized exception, if & when needed. Consistently document the side-effect.

* Slightly rewording comment. (There were also other failures.)

* Add 1-line comment for obj_class_name()

* Benchmark code, with results in this commit message.

          function                   #calls  test time [s]  μs / call
master    pure_unwind                729540      1.061      14.539876
          err_set_unwind_err_clear   681476      1.040      15.260282
          err_set_error_already_set  508038      1.049      20.640525
          error_already_set_restore  555578      1.052      18.933288
          pr1895_original_foo        244113      1.050      43.018168
                                                                       PR / master
PR   pure_unwind                736981      1.054      14.295685       98.32%
          err_set_unwind_err_clear   685820      1.045      15.237399       99.85%
          err_set_error_already_set  661374      1.046      15.811879       76.61%
          error_already_set_restore  669881      1.048      15.645176       82.63%
          pr1895_original_foo        318243      1.059      33.290806       77.39%

master @ commit ad146b2a18

Running tests in directory "/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests":
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.9.10, pytest-6.2.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1 -- /usr/bin/python3
cachedir: .pytest_cache
rootdir: /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests, configfile: pytest.ini
collecting ... collected 5 items

test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pure_unwind]
PERF pure_unwind,729540,1.061,14.539876
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_unwind_err_clear]
PERF err_set_unwind_err_clear,681476,1.040,15.260282
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_error_already_set]
PERF err_set_error_already_set,508038,1.049,20.640525
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[error_already_set_restore]
PERF error_already_set_restore,555578,1.052,18.933288
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pr1895_original_foo]
PERF pr1895_original_foo,244113,1.050,43.018168
PASSED

============================== 5 passed in 12.38s ==============================

pr1895 @ commit 8dff51d12e

Running tests in directory "/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests":
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.9.10, pytest-6.2.3, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1 -- /usr/bin/python3
cachedir: .pytest_cache
rootdir: /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests, configfile: pytest.ini
collecting ... collected 5 items

test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pure_unwind]
PERF pure_unwind,736981,1.054,14.295685
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_unwind_err_clear]
PERF err_set_unwind_err_clear,685820,1.045,15.237399
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[err_set_error_already_set]
PERF err_set_error_already_set,661374,1.046,15.811879
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[error_already_set_restore]
PERF error_already_set_restore,669881,1.048,15.645176
PASSED
test_perf_error_already_set.py::test_perf[pr1895_original_foo]
PERF pr1895_original_foo,318243,1.059,33.290806
PASSED

============================== 5 passed in 12.40s ==============================

clang++ -o pybind11/tests/test_perf_error_already_set.os -c -std=c++17 -fPIC -fvisibility=hidden -Os -flto -Wall -Wextra -Wconversion -Wcast-qual -Wdeprecated -Wnon-virtual-dtor -Wunused-result -isystem /usr/include/python3.9 -isystem /usr/include/eigen3 -DPYBIND11_STRICT_ASSERTS_CLASS_HOLDER_VS_TYPE_CASTER_MIX -DPYBIND11_TEST_BOOST -Ipybind11/include -I/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/include -I/usr/local/google/home/rwgk/clone/pybind11/include /usr/local/google/home/rwgk/forked/pybind11/tests/test_perf_error_already_set.cpp

clang++ -o lib/pybind11_tests.so -shared -fPIC -Os -flto -shared ...

Debian clang version 13.0.1-3+build2
Target: x86_64-pc-linux-gnu
Thread model: posix

* Changing call_repetitions_target_elapsed_secs to 0.1 for regular unit testing.

* Adding in `recursion_depth`

* Optimized ctor

* Fix silly bug in recurse_first_then_call()

* Add tests that have equivalent PyErr_Fetch(), PyErr_Restore() but no try-catch.

* Add call_error_string to tests. Sample only recursion_depth 0, 100.

* Show lazy-what speed-up in percent.

* Include real_work in benchmarks.

* Replace all PyErr_SetString() with generate_python_exception_with_traceback()

* Better organization of test loops.

* Add test_error_already_set_copy_move

* Fix bug in newly added test (discovered by clang-tidy): actually use move ctor

* MSVC detects the unreachable return

* change test_perf_error_already_set.py back to quick mode

* Inherit from std::exception (instead of std::runtime_error, which does not make sense anymore with the lazy what)

* Special handling under Windows.

* print with leading newline

* Removing test_perf_error_already_set (copies are under 7765113fbb).

* Avoid gil and scope overhead if there is nothing to release.

* Restore default move ctor. "member function" instead of "function" (note that "method" is Python terminology).

* Delete error_already_set copy ctor.

* Make restore() non-const again to resolve clang-tidy failure (still experimenting).

* Bring back error_already_set copy ctor, to see if that resolves the 4 MSVC test failures.

* Add noexcept to error_already_set copy & move ctors (as suggested by @skylion007 IIUC).

* Trying one-by-one noexcept copy ctor for old compilers.

* Add back test covering copy ctor. Add another simple test that exercises the copy ctor.

* Exclude more older compilers from using the noexcept = default ctors. (The tests in the previous commit exposed that those are broken.)

* Factor out & reuse gil_scoped_acquire_local as gil_scoped_acquire_simple

* Guard gil_scoped_acquire_simple by _Py_IsFinalizing() check.

* what() GIL safety

* clang-tidy & Python 3.6 fixes

* Use `gil_scoped_acquire` in dtor, copy ctor, `what()`. Remove `_Py_IsFinalizing()` checks (they are racy: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/28525).

* Remove error_scope from copy ctor.

* Add `error_scope` to `get_internals()`, to cover the situation that `get_internals()` is called from the `error_already_set` dtor while a new Python error is in flight already. Also backing out `gil_scoped_acquire_simple` change.

* Add `FlakyException` tests with failure triggers in `__init__` and `__str__`

THIS IS STILL A WORK IN PROGRESS. This commit is only an important resting point.

This commit is a first attempt at addressing the observation that `PyErr_NormalizeException()` completely replaces the original exception if `__init__` fails. This can be very confusing even in small applications, and extremely confusing in large ones.

* Tweaks to resolve Py 3.6 and PyPy CI failures.

* Normalize Python exception immediately in error_already_set ctor.

For background see: https://github.com/pybind/pybind11/pull/1895#issuecomment-1135304081

* Fix oversights based on CI failures (copy & move ctor initialization).

* Move @pytest.mark.xfail("env.PYPY") after @pytest.mark.parametrize(...)

* Use @pytest.mark.skipif (xfail does not work for segfaults, of course).

* Remove unused obj_class_name_or() function (it was added only under this PR).

* Remove already obsolete C++ comments and code that were added only under this PR.

* Slightly better (newly added) comments.

* Factor out detail::error_fetch_and_normalize. Preparation for producing identical results from error_already_set::what() and detail::error_string(). Note that this is a very conservative refactoring. It would be much better to first move detail::error_string into detail/error_string.h

* Copy most of error_string() code to new error_fetch_and_normalize::complete_lazy_error_string()

* Remove all error_string() code from detail/type_caster_base.h. Note that this commit includes a subtle bug fix: previously error_string() restored the Python error, which will upset pybind11_fail(). This never was a problem in practice because the two PyType_Ready() calls in detail/class.h do not usually fail.

* Return const std::string& instead of const char * and move error_string() to pytypes.h

* Remove gil_scope_acquire from error_fetch_and_normalize, add back to error_already_set

* Better handling of FlakyException __str__ failure.

* Move error_fetch_and_normalize::complete_lazy_error_string() implementation from pybind11.h to pytypes.h

* Add error_fetch_and_normalize::release_py_object_references() and use from error_already_set dtor.

* Use shared_ptr for m_fetched_error => 1. non-racy, copy ctor that does not need the GIL; 2. enables guard against duplicate restore() calls.

* Add comments.

* Trivial renaming of a newly introduced member function.

* Workaround for PyPy

* Bug fix (oversight). Only valgrind got this one.

* Use shared_ptr custom deleter for m_fetched_error in error_already_set. This enables removing the dtor, copy ctor, move ctor completely.

* Further small simplification. With the GIL held, simply deleting the raw_ptr takes care of everything.

* IWYU cleanup

```
iwyu version: include-what-you-use 0.17 based on Debian clang version 13.0.1-3+build2
```

Command used:

```
iwyu -c -std=c++17 -DPYBIND11_TEST_BOOST -Iinclude/pybind11 -I/usr/include/python3.9 -I/usr/include/eigen3 include/pybind11/pytypes.cpp
```

pytypes.cpp is a temporary file: `#include "pytypes.h"`

The raw output is very long and noisy.

I decided to use `#include <cstddef>` instead of `#include <cstdio>` for `std::size_t` (iwyu sticks to the manual choice).

I ignored all iwyu suggestions that are indirectly covered by `#include <Python.h>`.

I manually verified that all added includes are actually needed.

Co-authored-by: Aaron Gokaslan <skylion.aaron@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ralf W. Grosse-Kunstleve <rwgk@google.com>
2022-06-02 16:17:38 -07:00

363 lines
12 KiB
Python

import sys
import pytest
import env
import pybind11_cross_module_tests as cm
from pybind11_tests import exceptions as m
def test_std_exception(msg):
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throw_std_exception()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "This exception was intentionally thrown."
def test_error_already_set(msg):
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throw_already_set(False)
assert (
msg(excinfo.value)
== "Internal error: pybind11::error_already_set called while Python error indicator not set."
)
with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
m.throw_already_set(True)
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "foo"
def test_raise_from(msg):
with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
m.raise_from()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "outer"
assert msg(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "inner"
def test_raise_from_already_set(msg):
with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
m.raise_from_already_set()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "outer"
assert msg(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "inner"
def test_cross_module_exceptions(msg):
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
cm.raise_runtime_error()
assert str(excinfo.value) == "My runtime error"
with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
cm.raise_value_error()
assert str(excinfo.value) == "My value error"
with pytest.raises(ValueError) as excinfo:
cm.throw_pybind_value_error()
assert str(excinfo.value) == "pybind11 value error"
with pytest.raises(TypeError) as excinfo:
cm.throw_pybind_type_error()
assert str(excinfo.value) == "pybind11 type error"
with pytest.raises(StopIteration) as excinfo:
cm.throw_stop_iteration()
with pytest.raises(cm.LocalSimpleException) as excinfo:
cm.throw_local_simple_error()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "external mod"
with pytest.raises(KeyError) as excinfo:
cm.throw_local_error()
# KeyError is a repr of the key, so it has an extra set of quotes
assert str(excinfo.value) == "'just local'"
# TODO: FIXME
@pytest.mark.xfail(
"env.PYPY and env.MACOS",
raises=RuntimeError,
reason="Expected failure with PyPy and libc++ (Issue #2847 & PR #2999)",
)
def test_cross_module_exception_translator():
with pytest.raises(KeyError):
# translator registered in cross_module_tests
m.throw_should_be_translated_to_key_error()
def test_python_call_in_catch():
d = {}
assert m.python_call_in_destructor(d) is True
assert d["good"] is True
def ignore_pytest_unraisable_warning(f):
unraisable = "PytestUnraisableExceptionWarning"
if hasattr(pytest, unraisable): # Python >= 3.8 and pytest >= 6
dec = pytest.mark.filterwarnings(f"ignore::pytest.{unraisable}")
return dec(f)
else:
return f
# TODO: find out why this fails on PyPy, https://foss.heptapod.net/pypy/pypy/-/issues/3583
@pytest.mark.xfail(env.PYPY, reason="Failure on PyPy 3.8 (7.3.7)", strict=False)
@ignore_pytest_unraisable_warning
def test_python_alreadyset_in_destructor(monkeypatch, capsys):
hooked = False
triggered = False
if hasattr(sys, "unraisablehook"): # Python 3.8+
hooked = True
# Don't take `sys.unraisablehook`, as that's overwritten by pytest
default_hook = sys.__unraisablehook__
def hook(unraisable_hook_args):
exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb, err_msg, obj = unraisable_hook_args
if obj == "already_set demo":
nonlocal triggered
triggered = True
default_hook(unraisable_hook_args)
return
# Use monkeypatch so pytest can apply and remove the patch as appropriate
monkeypatch.setattr(sys, "unraisablehook", hook)
assert m.python_alreadyset_in_destructor("already_set demo") is True
if hooked:
assert triggered is True
_, captured_stderr = capsys.readouterr()
assert captured_stderr.startswith("Exception ignored in: 'already_set demo'")
assert captured_stderr.rstrip().endswith("KeyError: 'bar'")
def test_exception_matches():
assert m.exception_matches()
assert m.exception_matches_base()
assert m.modulenotfound_exception_matches_base()
def test_custom(msg):
# Can we catch a MyException?
with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
m.throws1()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should go to a custom type"
# Can we translate to standard Python exceptions?
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throws2()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should go to a standard Python exception"
# Can we handle unknown exceptions?
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throws3()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "Caught an unknown exception!"
# Can we delegate to another handler by rethrowing?
with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
m.throws4()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this error is rethrown"
# Can we fall-through to the default handler?
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throws_logic_error()
assert (
msg(excinfo.value) == "this error should fall through to the standard handler"
)
# OverFlow error translation.
with pytest.raises(OverflowError) as excinfo:
m.throws_overflow_error()
# Can we handle a helper-declared exception?
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
m.throws5()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
# Exception subclassing:
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
m.throws5_1()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException5 subclass"
assert isinstance(excinfo.value, m.MyException5_1)
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5_1) as excinfo:
m.throws5_1()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException5 subclass"
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
try:
m.throws5()
except m.MyException5_1:
raise RuntimeError("Exception error: caught child from parent")
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
def test_nested_throws(capture):
"""Tests nested (e.g. C++ -> Python -> C++) exception handling"""
def throw_myex():
raise m.MyException("nested error")
def throw_myex5():
raise m.MyException5("nested error 5")
# In the comments below, the exception is caught in the first step, thrown in the last step
# C++ -> Python
with capture:
m.try_catch(m.MyException5, throw_myex5)
assert str(capture).startswith("MyException5: nested error 5")
# Python -> C++ -> Python
with pytest.raises(m.MyException) as excinfo:
m.try_catch(m.MyException5, throw_myex)
assert str(excinfo.value) == "nested error"
def pycatch(exctype, f, *args):
try:
f(*args)
except m.MyException as e:
print(e)
# C++ -> Python -> C++ -> Python
with capture:
m.try_catch(
m.MyException5,
pycatch,
m.MyException,
m.try_catch,
m.MyException,
throw_myex5,
)
assert str(capture).startswith("MyException5: nested error 5")
# C++ -> Python -> C++
with capture:
m.try_catch(m.MyException, pycatch, m.MyException5, m.throws4)
assert capture == "this error is rethrown"
# Python -> C++ -> Python -> C++
with pytest.raises(m.MyException5) as excinfo:
m.try_catch(m.MyException, pycatch, m.MyException, m.throws5)
assert str(excinfo.value) == "this is a helper-defined translated exception"
def test_throw_nested_exception():
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throw_nested_exception()
assert str(excinfo.value) == "Outer Exception"
assert str(excinfo.value.__cause__) == "Inner Exception"
# This can often happen if you wrap a pybind11 class in a Python wrapper
def test_invalid_repr():
class MyRepr:
def __repr__(self):
raise AttributeError("Example error")
with pytest.raises(TypeError):
m.simple_bool_passthrough(MyRepr())
def test_local_translator(msg):
"""Tests that a local translator works and that the local translator from
the cross module is not applied"""
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throws6()
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "MyException6 only handled in this module"
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.throws_local_error()
assert not isinstance(excinfo.value, KeyError)
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "never caught"
with pytest.raises(Exception) as excinfo:
m.throws_local_simple_error()
assert not isinstance(excinfo.value, cm.LocalSimpleException)
assert msg(excinfo.value) == "this mod"
class FlakyException(Exception):
def __init__(self, failure_point):
if failure_point == "failure_point_init":
raise ValueError("triggered_failure_point_init")
self.failure_point = failure_point
def __str__(self):
if self.failure_point == "failure_point_str":
raise ValueError("triggered_failure_point_str")
return "FlakyException.__str__"
@pytest.mark.parametrize(
"exc_type, exc_value, expected_what",
(
(ValueError, "plain_str", "ValueError: plain_str"),
(ValueError, ("tuple_elem",), "ValueError: tuple_elem"),
(FlakyException, ("happy",), "FlakyException: FlakyException.__str__"),
),
)
def test_error_already_set_what_with_happy_exceptions(
exc_type, exc_value, expected_what
):
what, py_err_set_after_what = m.error_already_set_what(exc_type, exc_value)
assert not py_err_set_after_what
assert what == expected_what
@pytest.mark.skipif("env.PYPY", reason="PyErr_NormalizeException Segmentation fault")
def test_flaky_exception_failure_point_init():
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.error_already_set_what(FlakyException, ("failure_point_init",))
lines = str(excinfo.value).splitlines()
# PyErr_NormalizeException replaces the original FlakyException with ValueError:
assert lines[:3] == [
"pybind11::error_already_set: MISMATCH of original and normalized active exception types:"
" ORIGINAL FlakyException REPLACED BY ValueError: triggered_failure_point_init",
"",
"At:",
]
# Checking the first two lines of the traceback as formatted in error_string():
assert "test_exceptions.py(" in lines[3]
assert lines[3].endswith("): __init__")
assert lines[4].endswith("): test_flaky_exception_failure_point_init")
def test_flaky_exception_failure_point_str():
what, py_err_set_after_what = m.error_already_set_what(
FlakyException, ("failure_point_str",)
)
assert not py_err_set_after_what
lines = what.splitlines()
if env.PYPY and len(lines) == 3:
n = 3 # Traceback is missing.
else:
n = 5
assert (
lines[:n]
== [
"FlakyException: <MESSAGE UNAVAILABLE DUE TO ANOTHER EXCEPTION>",
"",
"MESSAGE UNAVAILABLE DUE TO EXCEPTION: ValueError: triggered_failure_point_str",
"",
"At:",
][:n]
)
def test_cross_module_interleaved_error_already_set():
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.test_cross_module_interleaved_error_already_set()
assert str(excinfo.value) in (
"2nd error.", # Almost all platforms.
"RuntimeError: 2nd error.", # Some PyPy builds (seen under macOS).
)
def test_error_already_set_double_restore():
m.test_error_already_set_double_restore(True) # dry_run
with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
m.test_error_already_set_double_restore(False)
assert str(excinfo.value) == (
"Internal error: pybind11::detail::error_fetch_and_normalize::restore()"
" called a second time. ORIGINAL ERROR: ValueError: Random error."
)