228 lines
8.5 KiB
Python
228 lines
8.5 KiB
Python
# Copyright (c) 2018 gevent community
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#
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# Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
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# of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
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# in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
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# to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
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# copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
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# furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
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#
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# The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
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# all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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#
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# THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
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# IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
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# FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
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# AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
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# LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
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# OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
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# THE SOFTWARE.
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from __future__ import absolute_import, print_function, division
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import os
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import unittest
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import re
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import gc
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import functools
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from . import sysinfo
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# Linux/OS X/BSD platforms /can/ implement this by calling out to lsof.
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# However, if psutil is available (it is cross-platform) use that.
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# It is *much* faster than shelling out to lsof each time
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# (Running 14 tests takes 3.964s with lsof and 0.046 with psutil)
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# However, it still doesn't completely solve the issue on Windows: fds are reported
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# as -1 there, so we can't fully check those.
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def _collects(func):
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# We've seen OSError: No such file or directory /proc/PID/fd/NUM.
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# This occurs in the loop that checks open files. It first does
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# listdir() and then tries readlink() on each file. But the file
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# went away. This must be because of async GC in PyPy running
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# destructors at arbitrary times. This became an issue in PyPy 7.2
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# but could theoretically be an issue with any objects caught in a
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# cycle. This is one reason we GC before we begin. (The other is
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# to clean up outstanding objects that will close files in
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# __del__.)
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#
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# Note that this can hide errors, though, by causing greenlets to get
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# collected and drop references and thus close files. We should be deterministic
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# and careful about closing things.
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@functools.wraps(func)
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def f(**kw):
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gc.collect()
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gc.collect()
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enabled = gc.isenabled()
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gc.disable()
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try:
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return func(**kw)
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finally:
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if enabled:
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gc.enable()
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return f
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if sysinfo.WIN:
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def _run_lsof():
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raise unittest.SkipTest("lsof not expected on Windows")
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else:
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@_collects
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def _run_lsof():
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import tempfile
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pid = os.getpid()
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fd, tmpname = tempfile.mkstemp('get_open_files')
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os.close(fd)
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lsof_command = 'lsof -p %s > %s' % (pid, tmpname)
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if os.system(lsof_command):
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# XXX: This prints to the console an annoying message: 'lsof is not recognized'
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raise unittest.SkipTest("lsof failed")
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with open(tmpname) as fobj: # pylint:disable=unspecified-encoding
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data = fobj.read().strip()
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os.remove(tmpname)
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return data
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def default_get_open_files(pipes=False, **_kwargs):
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data = _run_lsof()
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results = {}
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for line in data.split('\n'):
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line = line.strip()
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if not line or line.startswith("COMMAND"):
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# Skip header and blank lines
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continue
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split = re.split(r'\s+', line)
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# Note that this needs the real lsof; it won't work with
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# the lsof that comes from BusyBox. You'll get parsing errors
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# here.
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_command, _pid, _user, fd = split[:4]
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# Pipes (on OS X, at least) get an fd like "3" while normal files get an fd like "1u"
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if fd[:-1].isdigit() or fd.isdigit():
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if not pipes and fd[-1].isdigit():
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continue
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fd = int(fd[:-1]) if not fd[-1].isdigit() else int(fd)
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if fd in results:
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params = (fd, line, split, results.get(fd), data)
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raise AssertionError('error when parsing lsof output: duplicate fd=%r\nline=%r\nsplit=%r\nprevious=%r\ndata:\n%s' % params)
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results[fd] = line
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if not results:
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raise AssertionError('failed to parse lsof:\n%s' % (data, ))
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results['data'] = data
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return results
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@_collects
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def default_get_number_open_files():
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if os.path.exists('/proc/'):
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# Linux only
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fd_directory = '/proc/%d/fd' % os.getpid()
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return len(os.listdir(fd_directory))
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try:
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return len(get_open_files(pipes=True)) - 1
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except (OSError, AssertionError, unittest.SkipTest):
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return 0
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lsof_get_open_files = default_get_open_files
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try:
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# psutil import subprocess which on Python 3 imports selectors.
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# This can expose issues with monkey-patching.
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import psutil
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except ImportError:
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get_open_files = default_get_open_files
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get_number_open_files = default_get_number_open_files
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else:
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class _TrivialOpenFile(object):
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__slots__ = ('fd',)
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def __init__(self, fd):
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self.fd = fd
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@_collects
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def get_open_files(count_closing_as_open=True, **_kw):
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"""
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Return a list of popenfile and pconn objects.
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Note that other than `fd`, they have different attributes.
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.. important:: If you want to find open sockets, on Windows
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and linux, it is important that the socket at least be listening
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(socket.listen(1)). Unlike the lsof implementation, this will only
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return sockets in a state like that.
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"""
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results = {}
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for _ in range(3):
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try:
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if count_closing_as_open and os.path.exists('/proc/'):
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# Linux only.
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# psutil doesn't always see all connections, even though
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# they exist in the filesystem. It's not entirely clear why.
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# It sees them on Travis (prior to Ubuntu Bionic, at least)
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# but doesn't in the manylinux image or Fedora 33 Rawhide image.
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# This happens in test__makefile_ref TestSSL.*; in particular, if a
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# ``sslsock.makefile()`` is opened and used to read all data, and the sending
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# side shuts down, psutil no longer finds the open file. So we add them
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# back in.
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#
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# Of course, the flip side of this is that we sometimes find connections
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# we're not expecting.
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# I *think* this has to do with CLOSE_WAIT handling?
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fd_directory = '/proc/%d/fd' % os.getpid()
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fd_files = os.listdir(fd_directory)
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else:
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fd_files = []
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process = psutil.Process()
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results['data'] = process.open_files()
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results['data'] += process.connections('all')
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break
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except OSError:
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pass
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else:
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# No break executed
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raise unittest.SkipTest("Unable to read open files")
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for x in results['data']:
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results[x.fd] = x
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for fd_str in fd_files:
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if fd_str not in results:
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fd = int(fd_str)
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results[fd] = _TrivialOpenFile(fd)
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results['data'] += [('From psutil', process)]
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results['data'] += [('fd files', fd_files)]
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return results
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@_collects
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def get_number_open_files():
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process = psutil.Process()
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try:
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return process.num_fds()
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except AttributeError:
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# num_fds is unix only. Is num_handles close enough on Windows?
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return 0
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class DoesNotLeakFilesMixin(object): # pragma: no cover
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"""
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A test case mixin that helps find a method that's leaking an
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open file.
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Only mix this in when needed to debug, it slows tests down.
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"""
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def setUp(self):
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self.__open_files_count = get_number_open_files()
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super(DoesNotLeakFilesMixin, self).setUp()
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def tearDown(self):
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super(DoesNotLeakFilesMixin, self).tearDown()
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after = get_number_open_files()
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if after > self.__open_files_count:
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raise AssertionError(
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"Too many open files. Before: %s < After: %s.\n%s" % (
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self.__open_files_count,
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after,
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get_open_files()
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)
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)
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