osmo-gsm-tester/selftest/config_test.ok

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{'addr': ['0.0.0.0',
'255.255.255.255',
'10.11.12.13',
'10.0.99.1',
'192.168.0.14'],
'bts': [{'addr': '10.42.42.114',
'name': 'sysmoBTS 1002',
'trx': [{'band': 'GSM-1800',
'timeslots': ['CCCH+SDCCH4',
'SDCCH8',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH',
'TCH/F_TCH/H_PDCH']},
{'band': 'GSM-1900',
'timeslots': ['SDCCH8',
'PDCH',
'PDCH',
'PDCH',
'PDCH',
'PDCH',
'PDCH',
'PDCH']}],
'type': 'sysmobts'}],
'hwaddr': ['ca:ff:ee:ba:aa:be',
'00:00:00:00:00:00',
'CA:FF:EE:BA:AA:BE',
'cA:Ff:eE:Ba:aA:Be',
'ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff'],
'imsi': ['012345', '012345678', '012345678912345'],
'ki': ['000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f', '000102030405060708090a0b0c0d0e0f'],
'modems': [{'dbus_path': '/sierra_0',
'imsi': '901700000009001',
'ki': 'D620F48487B1B782DA55DF6717F08FF9',
'msisdn': '7801'},
{'dbus_path': '/sierra_1',
'imsi': '901700000009002',
'ki': 'D620F48487B1B782DA55DF6717F08FF9',
'msisdn': '7802'}]}
- expect validation success:
Validation: OK
- unknown item:
--- -: ERR: ValueError: config item not known: 'bts[].unknown_item'
Validation: Error
- wrong type modems[].imsi:
--- -: ERR: ValueError: config item is dict but should be a leaf node of type 'imsi': 'modems[].imsi'
Validation: Error
- invalid key with space:
--- -: ERR: ValueError: invalid config key: 'imsi '
Validation: Error
- list instead of dict:
--- -: ERR: ValueError: config item not known: 'a_dict[]'
Validation: Error
- unknown band:
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- bts[].trx[].band: ERR: ValueError: Unknown GSM band: 'what'
Validation: Error
- invalid v4 addrs:
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: '1.2.3'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: '1.2.3 .4'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: '91.2.3'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: 'go away'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: ''
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- addr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IPv4 address: None
Validation: Error
- invalid hw addrs:
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: '1.2.3'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: '0b:0c:0d:0e:0f:0g'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: '0b:0c:0d:0e : 0f:0f'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: 'go away'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: ''
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- hwaddr[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid hardware address: None
Validation: Error
- invalid imsis:
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- imsi[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IMSI: '99999999x9'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- imsi[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IMSI: '123 456 789 123'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- imsi[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IMSI: 'go away'
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- imsi[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IMSI: ''
Validation: Error
fix and refactor logging: drop 'with', simplify With the recent fix of the junit report related issues, another issue arose: the 'with log.Origin' was changed to disallow __enter__ing an object twice to fix problems, now still code would fail because it tries to do 'with' on the same object twice. The only reason is to ensure that logging is associated with a given object. Instead of complicating even more, implement differently. Refactor logging to simplify use: drop the 'with Origin' style completely, and instead use the python stack to determine which objects are created by which, and which object to associate a log statement with. The new way: we rely on the convention that each class instance has a local 'self' referencing the object instance. If we need to find an origin as a new object's parent, or to associate a log message with, we traverse each stack frame, fetching the first local 'self' object that is a log.Origin class instance. How to use: Simply call log.log() anywhere, and it finds an Origin object to log for, from the stack. Alternatively call self.log() for any Origin() object to skip the lookup. Create classes as child class of log.Origin and make sure to call super().__init__(category, name). This constructor will magically find a parent Origin on the stack. When an exception happens, we first escalate the exception up through call scopes to where ever it is handled by log.log_exn(). This then finds an Origin object in the traceback's stack frames, no need to nest in 'with' scopes. Hence the 'with log.Origin' now "happens implicitly", we can write pure natural python code, no more hassles with scope ordering. Furthermore, any frame can place additional logging information in a frame by calling log.ctx(). This is automatically inserted in the ancestry associated with a log statement / exception. Change-Id: I5f9b53150f2bb6fa9d63ce27f0806f0ca6a45e90
2017-06-09 23:18:27 +00:00
--- imsi[]: ERR: ValueError: Invalid IMSI: None
Validation: Error
- Combine dicts:
- Combine dicts 2:
- Combine lists:
- Combine lists 2:
- Combine lists 3:
ValueError expected
- Combine lists 4:
ValueError expected
- Combine lists 5:
ValueError expected
- Combine lists 6:
- Combine lists 7:
- Combine lists 8:
- Combine lists 9:
- Combine lists 10:
- Combine lists 13:
- Combine lists 14: