#!/usr/bin/env python3 # Copyright (c) 2009, Giampaolo Rodola'. All rights reserved. # Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be # found in the LICENSE file. """Tests for psutil.Process class.""" import collections import errno import getpass import itertools import os import signal import socket import stat import subprocess import sys import textwrap import time import types import unittest import psutil from psutil import AIX from psutil import BSD from psutil import LINUX from psutil import MACOS from psutil import NETBSD from psutil import OPENBSD from psutil import OSX from psutil import POSIX from psutil import SUNOS from psutil import WINDOWS from psutil._common import open_text from psutil._compat import PY3 from psutil._compat import FileNotFoundError from psutil._compat import long from psutil._compat import redirect_stderr from psutil._compat import super from psutil.tests import APPVEYOR from psutil.tests import CI_TESTING from psutil.tests import GITHUB_ACTIONS from psutil.tests import GLOBAL_TIMEOUT from psutil.tests import HAS_CPU_AFFINITY from psutil.tests import HAS_ENVIRON from psutil.tests import HAS_IONICE from psutil.tests import HAS_MEMORY_MAPS from psutil.tests import HAS_PROC_CPU_NUM from psutil.tests import HAS_PROC_IO_COUNTERS from psutil.tests import HAS_RLIMIT from psutil.tests import HAS_THREADS from psutil.tests import MACOS_11PLUS from psutil.tests import PYPY from psutil.tests import PYTHON_EXE from psutil.tests import PYTHON_EXE_ENV from psutil.tests import QEMU_USER from psutil.tests import PsutilTestCase from psutil.tests import ThreadTask from psutil.tests import call_until from psutil.tests import copyload_shared_lib from psutil.tests import create_c_exe from psutil.tests import create_py_exe from psutil.tests import mock from psutil.tests import process_namespace from psutil.tests import reap_children from psutil.tests import retry_on_failure from psutil.tests import sh from psutil.tests import skip_on_access_denied from psutil.tests import skip_on_not_implemented from psutil.tests import wait_for_pid # =================================================================== # --- psutil.Process class tests # =================================================================== class TestProcess(PsutilTestCase): """Tests for psutil.Process class.""" def spawn_psproc(self, *args, **kwargs): sproc = self.spawn_testproc(*args, **kwargs) try: return psutil.Process(sproc.pid) except psutil.NoSuchProcess: self.assertPidGone(sproc.pid) raise # --- def test_pid(self): p = psutil.Process() self.assertEqual(p.pid, os.getpid()) with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): p.pid = 33 def test_kill(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() p.kill() code = p.wait() if WINDOWS: self.assertEqual(code, signal.SIGTERM) else: self.assertEqual(code, -signal.SIGKILL) self.assertProcessGone(p) def test_terminate(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() p.terminate() code = p.wait() if WINDOWS: self.assertEqual(code, signal.SIGTERM) else: self.assertEqual(code, -signal.SIGTERM) self.assertProcessGone(p) def test_send_signal(self): sig = signal.SIGKILL if POSIX else signal.SIGTERM p = self.spawn_psproc() p.send_signal(sig) code = p.wait() if WINDOWS: self.assertEqual(code, sig) else: self.assertEqual(code, -sig) self.assertProcessGone(p) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, "not POSIX") def test_send_signal_mocked(self): sig = signal.SIGTERM p = self.spawn_psproc() with mock.patch( 'psutil.os.kill', side_effect=OSError(errno.ESRCH, "") ): self.assertRaises(psutil.NoSuchProcess, p.send_signal, sig) p = self.spawn_psproc() with mock.patch( 'psutil.os.kill', side_effect=OSError(errno.EPERM, "") ): self.assertRaises(psutil.AccessDenied, p.send_signal, sig) def test_wait_exited(self): # Test waitpid() + WIFEXITED -> WEXITSTATUS. # normal return, same as exit(0) cmd = [PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "pass"] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmd) code = p.wait() self.assertEqual(code, 0) self.assertProcessGone(p) # exit(1), implicit in case of error cmd = [PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "1 / 0"] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmd, stderr=subprocess.PIPE) code = p.wait() self.assertEqual(code, 1) self.assertProcessGone(p) # via sys.exit() cmd = [PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "import sys; sys.exit(5);"] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmd) code = p.wait() self.assertEqual(code, 5) self.assertProcessGone(p) # via os._exit() cmd = [PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "import os; os._exit(5);"] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmd) code = p.wait() self.assertEqual(code, 5) self.assertProcessGone(p) @unittest.skipIf(NETBSD, "fails on NETBSD") def test_wait_stopped(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() if POSIX: # Test waitpid() + WIFSTOPPED and WIFCONTINUED. # Note: if a process is stopped it ignores SIGTERM. p.send_signal(signal.SIGSTOP) self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, timeout=0.001) p.send_signal(signal.SIGCONT) self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, timeout=0.001) p.send_signal(signal.SIGTERM) self.assertEqual(p.wait(), -signal.SIGTERM) self.assertEqual(p.wait(), -signal.SIGTERM) else: p.suspend() self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, timeout=0.001) p.resume() self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, timeout=0.001) p.terminate() self.assertEqual(p.wait(), signal.SIGTERM) self.assertEqual(p.wait(), signal.SIGTERM) def test_wait_non_children(self): # Test wait() against a process which is not our direct # child. child, grandchild = self.spawn_children_pair() self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, child.wait, 0.01) self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, grandchild.wait, 0.01) # We also terminate the direct child otherwise the # grandchild will hang until the parent is gone. child.terminate() grandchild.terminate() child_ret = child.wait() grandchild_ret = grandchild.wait() if POSIX: self.assertEqual(child_ret, -signal.SIGTERM) # For processes which are not our children we're supposed # to get None. self.assertEqual(grandchild_ret, None) else: self.assertEqual(child_ret, signal.SIGTERM) self.assertEqual(child_ret, signal.SIGTERM) def test_wait_timeout(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() p.name() self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, 0.01) self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, 0) self.assertRaises(ValueError, p.wait, -1) def test_wait_timeout_nonblocking(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() self.assertRaises(psutil.TimeoutExpired, p.wait, 0) p.kill() stop_at = time.time() + GLOBAL_TIMEOUT while time.time() < stop_at: try: code = p.wait(0) break except psutil.TimeoutExpired: pass else: raise self.fail('timeout') if POSIX: self.assertEqual(code, -signal.SIGKILL) else: self.assertEqual(code, signal.SIGTERM) self.assertProcessGone(p) def test_cpu_percent(self): p = psutil.Process() p.cpu_percent(interval=0.001) p.cpu_percent(interval=0.001) for _ in range(100): percent = p.cpu_percent(interval=None) self.assertIsInstance(percent, float) self.assertGreaterEqual(percent, 0.0) with self.assertRaises(ValueError): p.cpu_percent(interval=-1) def test_cpu_percent_numcpus_none(self): # See: https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/1087 with mock.patch('psutil.cpu_count', return_value=None) as m: psutil.Process().cpu_percent() assert m.called @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "QEMU user not supported") def test_cpu_times(self): times = psutil.Process().cpu_times() assert times.user >= 0.0, times assert times.system >= 0.0, times assert times.children_user >= 0.0, times assert times.children_system >= 0.0, times if LINUX: assert times.iowait >= 0.0, times # make sure returned values can be pretty printed with strftime for name in times._fields: time.strftime("%H:%M:%S", time.localtime(getattr(times, name))) @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "QEMU user not supported") def test_cpu_times_2(self): user_time, kernel_time = psutil.Process().cpu_times()[:2] utime, ktime = os.times()[:2] # Use os.times()[:2] as base values to compare our results # using a tolerance of +/- 0.1 seconds. # It will fail if the difference between the values is > 0.1s. if (max([user_time, utime]) - min([user_time, utime])) > 0.1: raise self.fail("expected: %s, found: %s" % (utime, user_time)) if (max([kernel_time, ktime]) - min([kernel_time, ktime])) > 0.1: raise self.fail("expected: %s, found: %s" % (ktime, kernel_time)) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_PROC_CPU_NUM, "not supported") def test_cpu_num(self): p = psutil.Process() num = p.cpu_num() self.assertGreaterEqual(num, 0) if psutil.cpu_count() == 1: self.assertEqual(num, 0) self.assertIn(p.cpu_num(), range(psutil.cpu_count())) def test_create_time(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() now = time.time() create_time = p.create_time() # Use time.time() as base value to compare our result using a # tolerance of +/- 1 second. # It will fail if the difference between the values is > 2s. difference = abs(create_time - now) if difference > 2: raise self.fail( "expected: %s, found: %s, difference: %s" % (now, create_time, difference) ) # make sure returned value can be pretty printed with strftime time.strftime("%Y %m %d %H:%M:%S", time.localtime(p.create_time())) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_terminal(self): terminal = psutil.Process().terminal() if terminal is not None: tty = os.path.realpath(sh('tty')) self.assertEqual(terminal, tty) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_PROC_IO_COUNTERS, 'not supported') @skip_on_not_implemented(only_if=LINUX) def test_io_counters(self): p = psutil.Process() # test reads io1 = p.io_counters() with open(PYTHON_EXE, 'rb') as f: f.read() io2 = p.io_counters() if not BSD and not AIX: self.assertGreater(io2.read_count, io1.read_count) self.assertEqual(io2.write_count, io1.write_count) if LINUX: self.assertGreater(io2.read_chars, io1.read_chars) self.assertEqual(io2.write_chars, io1.write_chars) else: self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.read_bytes, io1.read_bytes) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.write_bytes, io1.write_bytes) # test writes io1 = p.io_counters() with open(self.get_testfn(), 'wb') as f: if PY3: f.write(bytes("x" * 1000000, 'ascii')) else: f.write("x" * 1000000) io2 = p.io_counters() self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.write_count, io1.write_count) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.write_bytes, io1.write_bytes) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.read_count, io1.read_count) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.read_bytes, io1.read_bytes) if LINUX: self.assertGreater(io2.write_chars, io1.write_chars) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2.read_chars, io1.read_chars) # sanity check for i in range(len(io2)): if BSD and i >= 2: # On BSD read_bytes and write_bytes are always set to -1. continue self.assertGreaterEqual(io2[i], 0) self.assertGreaterEqual(io2[i], 0) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_IONICE, "not supported") @unittest.skipIf(not LINUX, "linux only") def test_ionice_linux(self): def cleanup(init): ioclass, value = init if ioclass == psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE: value = 0 p.ionice(ioclass, value) p = psutil.Process() if not CI_TESTING: self.assertEqual(p.ionice()[0], psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE) self.assertEqual(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE, 0) self.assertEqual(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_RT, 1) # high self.assertEqual(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE, 2) # normal self.assertEqual(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE, 3) # low init = p.ionice() self.addCleanup(cleanup, init) # low p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE) self.assertEqual(tuple(p.ionice()), (psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE, 0)) with self.assertRaises(ValueError): # accepts no value p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE, value=7) # normal p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE) self.assertEqual(tuple(p.ionice()), (psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE, 0)) p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE, value=7) self.assertEqual(tuple(p.ionice()), (psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE, 7)) with self.assertRaises(ValueError): p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_BE, value=8) try: p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_RT, value=7) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass # errs with self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, "ioclass accepts no value"): p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_NONE, 1) with self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, "ioclass accepts no value"): p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_CLASS_IDLE, 1) with self.assertRaisesRegex( ValueError, "'ioclass' argument must be specified" ): p.ionice(value=1) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_IONICE, "not supported") @unittest.skipIf(not WINDOWS, 'not supported on this win version') def test_ionice_win(self): p = psutil.Process() if not CI_TESTING: self.assertEqual(p.ionice(), psutil.IOPRIO_NORMAL) init = p.ionice() self.addCleanup(p.ionice, init) # base p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_VERYLOW) self.assertEqual(p.ionice(), psutil.IOPRIO_VERYLOW) p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_LOW) self.assertEqual(p.ionice(), psutil.IOPRIO_LOW) try: p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_HIGH) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass else: self.assertEqual(p.ionice(), psutil.IOPRIO_HIGH) # errs with self.assertRaisesRegex( TypeError, "value argument not accepted on Windows" ): p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_NORMAL, value=1) with self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, "is not a valid priority"): p.ionice(psutil.IOPRIO_HIGH + 1) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_RLIMIT, "not supported") def test_rlimit_get(self): import resource p = psutil.Process(os.getpid()) names = [x for x in dir(psutil) if x.startswith('RLIMIT')] assert names, names for name in names: value = getattr(psutil, name) self.assertGreaterEqual(value, 0) if name in dir(resource): self.assertEqual(value, getattr(resource, name)) # XXX - On PyPy RLIMIT_INFINITY returned by # resource.getrlimit() is reported as a very big long # number instead of -1. It looks like a bug with PyPy. if PYPY: continue self.assertEqual(p.rlimit(value), resource.getrlimit(value)) else: ret = p.rlimit(value) self.assertEqual(len(ret), 2) self.assertGreaterEqual(ret[0], -1) self.assertGreaterEqual(ret[1], -1) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_RLIMIT, "not supported") def test_rlimit_set(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_NOFILE, (5, 5)) self.assertEqual(p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_NOFILE), (5, 5)) # If pid is 0 prlimit() applies to the calling process and # we don't want that. if LINUX: with self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, "can't use prlimit"): psutil._psplatform.Process(0).rlimit(0) with self.assertRaises(ValueError): p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_NOFILE, (5, 5, 5)) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_RLIMIT, "not supported") def test_rlimit(self): p = psutil.Process() testfn = self.get_testfn() soft, hard = p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE) try: p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (1024, hard)) with open(testfn, "wb") as f: f.write(b"X" * 1024) # write() or flush() doesn't always cause the exception # but close() will. with self.assertRaises(IOError) as exc: with open(testfn, "wb") as f: f.write(b"X" * 1025) self.assertEqual( exc.exception.errno if PY3 else exc.exception[0], errno.EFBIG ) finally: p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (soft, hard)) self.assertEqual(p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE), (soft, hard)) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_RLIMIT, "not supported") def test_rlimit_infinity(self): # First set a limit, then re-set it by specifying INFINITY # and assume we overridden the previous limit. p = psutil.Process() soft, hard = p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE) try: p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (1024, hard)) p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (psutil.RLIM_INFINITY, hard)) with open(self.get_testfn(), "wb") as f: f.write(b"X" * 2048) finally: p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (soft, hard)) self.assertEqual(p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE), (soft, hard)) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_RLIMIT, "not supported") def test_rlimit_infinity_value(self): # RLIMIT_FSIZE should be RLIM_INFINITY, which will be a really # big number on a platform with large file support. On these # platforms we need to test that the get/setrlimit functions # properly convert the number to a C long long and that the # conversion doesn't raise an error. p = psutil.Process() soft, hard = p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE) self.assertEqual(psutil.RLIM_INFINITY, hard) p.rlimit(psutil.RLIMIT_FSIZE, (soft, hard)) def test_num_threads(self): # on certain platforms such as Linux we might test for exact # thread number, since we always have with 1 thread per process, # but this does not apply across all platforms (MACOS, Windows) p = psutil.Process() if OPENBSD: try: step1 = p.num_threads() except psutil.AccessDenied: raise unittest.SkipTest("on OpenBSD this requires root access") else: step1 = p.num_threads() with ThreadTask(): step2 = p.num_threads() self.assertEqual(step2, step1 + 1) @unittest.skipIf(not WINDOWS, 'WINDOWS only') def test_num_handles(self): # a better test is done later into test/_windows.py p = psutil.Process() self.assertGreater(p.num_handles(), 0) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_THREADS, 'not supported') def test_threads(self): p = psutil.Process() if OPENBSD: try: step1 = p.threads() except psutil.AccessDenied: raise unittest.SkipTest("on OpenBSD this requires root access") else: step1 = p.threads() with ThreadTask(): step2 = p.threads() self.assertEqual(len(step2), len(step1) + 1) athread = step2[0] # test named tuple self.assertEqual(athread.id, athread[0]) self.assertEqual(athread.user_time, athread[1]) self.assertEqual(athread.system_time, athread[2]) @retry_on_failure() @skip_on_access_denied(only_if=MACOS) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_THREADS, 'not supported') def test_threads_2(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() if OPENBSD: try: p.threads() except psutil.AccessDenied: raise unittest.SkipTest("on OpenBSD this requires root access") self.assertAlmostEqual( p.cpu_times().user, sum([x.user_time for x in p.threads()]), delta=0.1, ) self.assertAlmostEqual( p.cpu_times().system, sum([x.system_time for x in p.threads()]), delta=0.1, ) @retry_on_failure() def test_memory_info(self): p = psutil.Process() # step 1 - get a base value to compare our results rss1, vms1 = p.memory_info()[:2] percent1 = p.memory_percent() self.assertGreater(rss1, 0) self.assertGreater(vms1, 0) # step 2 - allocate some memory memarr = [None] * 1500000 rss2, vms2 = p.memory_info()[:2] percent2 = p.memory_percent() # step 3 - make sure that the memory usage bumped up self.assertGreater(rss2, rss1) self.assertGreaterEqual(vms2, vms1) # vms might be equal self.assertGreater(percent2, percent1) del memarr if WINDOWS: mem = p.memory_info() self.assertEqual(mem.rss, mem.wset) self.assertEqual(mem.vms, mem.pagefile) mem = p.memory_info() for name in mem._fields: self.assertGreaterEqual(getattr(mem, name), 0) def test_memory_full_info(self): p = psutil.Process() total = psutil.virtual_memory().total mem = p.memory_full_info() for name in mem._fields: value = getattr(mem, name) self.assertGreaterEqual(value, 0, msg=(name, value)) if name == 'vms' and OSX or LINUX: continue self.assertLessEqual(value, total, msg=(name, value, total)) if LINUX or WINDOWS or MACOS: self.assertGreaterEqual(mem.uss, 0) if LINUX: self.assertGreaterEqual(mem.pss, 0) self.assertGreaterEqual(mem.swap, 0) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_MEMORY_MAPS, "not supported") def test_memory_maps(self): p = psutil.Process() maps = p.memory_maps() self.assertEqual(len(maps), len(set(maps))) ext_maps = p.memory_maps(grouped=False) for nt in maps: if not nt.path.startswith('['): if QEMU_USER and "/bin/qemu-" in nt.path: continue assert os.path.isabs(nt.path), nt.path if POSIX: try: assert os.path.exists(nt.path) or os.path.islink( nt.path ), nt.path except AssertionError: if not LINUX: raise else: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/759 with open_text('/proc/self/smaps') as f: data = f.read() if "%s (deleted)" % nt.path not in data: raise else: # XXX - On Windows we have this strange behavior with # 64 bit dlls: they are visible via explorer but cannot # be accessed via os.stat() (wtf?). if '64' not in os.path.basename(nt.path): try: st = os.stat(nt.path) except FileNotFoundError: pass else: assert stat.S_ISREG(st.st_mode), nt.path for nt in ext_maps: for fname in nt._fields: value = getattr(nt, fname) if fname == 'path': continue if fname in ('addr', 'perms'): assert value, value else: self.assertIsInstance(value, (int, long)) assert value >= 0, value @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_MEMORY_MAPS, "not supported") def test_memory_maps_lists_lib(self): # Make sure a newly loaded shared lib is listed. p = psutil.Process() with copyload_shared_lib() as path: def normpath(p): return os.path.realpath(os.path.normcase(p)) libpaths = [normpath(x.path) for x in p.memory_maps()] self.assertIn(normpath(path), libpaths) def test_memory_percent(self): p = psutil.Process() p.memory_percent() self.assertRaises(ValueError, p.memory_percent, memtype="?!?") if LINUX or MACOS or WINDOWS: p.memory_percent(memtype='uss') def test_is_running(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() assert p.is_running() assert p.is_running() p.kill() p.wait() assert not p.is_running() assert not p.is_running() @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "QEMU user not supported") def test_exe(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() exe = p.exe() try: self.assertEqual(exe, PYTHON_EXE) except AssertionError: if WINDOWS and len(exe) == len(PYTHON_EXE): # on Windows we don't care about case sensitivity normcase = os.path.normcase self.assertEqual(normcase(exe), normcase(PYTHON_EXE)) else: # certain platforms such as BSD are more accurate returning: # "/usr/local/bin/python2.7" # ...instead of: # "/usr/local/bin/python" # We do not want to consider this difference in accuracy # an error. ver = "%s.%s" % (sys.version_info[0], sys.version_info[1]) try: self.assertEqual( exe.replace(ver, ''), PYTHON_EXE.replace(ver, '') ) except AssertionError: # Typically MACOS. Really not sure what to do here. pass out = sh([exe, "-c", "import os; print('hey')"]) self.assertEqual(out, 'hey') def test_cmdline(self): cmdline = [ PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)]", ] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmdline) if NETBSD and p.cmdline() == []: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/2250 raise unittest.SkipTest("OPENBSD: returned EBUSY") # XXX - most of the times the underlying sysctl() call on Net # and Open BSD returns a truncated string. # Also /proc/pid/cmdline behaves the same so it looks # like this is a kernel bug. # XXX - AIX truncates long arguments in /proc/pid/cmdline if NETBSD or OPENBSD or AIX: self.assertEqual(p.cmdline()[0], PYTHON_EXE) else: if MACOS and CI_TESTING: pyexe = p.cmdline()[0] if pyexe != PYTHON_EXE: self.assertEqual( ' '.join(p.cmdline()[1:]), ' '.join(cmdline[1:]) ) return if QEMU_USER: self.assertEqual(' '.join(p.cmdline()[2:]), ' '.join(cmdline)) return self.assertEqual(' '.join(p.cmdline()), ' '.join(cmdline)) @unittest.skipIf(PYPY, "broken on PYPY") def test_long_cmdline(self): cmdline = [PYTHON_EXE] cmdline.extend(["-v"] * 50) cmdline.extend( ["-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)]"] ) p = self.spawn_psproc(cmdline) if OPENBSD: # XXX: for some reason the test process may turn into a # zombie (don't know why). try: self.assertEqual(p.cmdline(), cmdline) except psutil.ZombieProcess: raise unittest.SkipTest("OPENBSD: process turned into zombie") elif QEMU_USER: self.assertEqual(p.cmdline()[2:], cmdline) else: ret = p.cmdline() if NETBSD and ret == []: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/2250 raise unittest.SkipTest("OPENBSD: returned EBUSY") self.assertEqual(ret, cmdline) def test_name(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() name = p.name().lower() pyexe = os.path.basename(os.path.realpath(sys.executable)).lower() assert pyexe.startswith(name), (pyexe, name) @unittest.skipIf(PYPY or QEMU_USER, "unreliable on PYPY") @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "unreliable on QEMU user") def test_long_name(self): pyexe = create_py_exe(self.get_testfn(suffix="0123456789" * 2)) cmdline = [ pyexe, "-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)]", ] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmdline) if OPENBSD: # XXX: for some reason the test process may turn into a # zombie (don't know why). Because the name() is long, all # UNIX kernels truncate it to 15 chars, so internally psutil # tries to guess the full name() from the cmdline(). But the # cmdline() of a zombie on OpenBSD fails (internally), so we # just compare the first 15 chars. Full explanation: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/2239 try: self.assertEqual(p.name(), os.path.basename(pyexe)) except AssertionError: if p.status() == psutil.STATUS_ZOMBIE: assert os.path.basename(pyexe).startswith(p.name()) else: raise else: self.assertEqual(p.name(), os.path.basename(pyexe)) # XXX @unittest.skipIf(SUNOS, "broken on SUNOS") @unittest.skipIf(AIX, "broken on AIX") @unittest.skipIf(PYPY, "broken on PYPY") @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "broken on QEMU user") def test_prog_w_funky_name(self): # Test that name(), exe() and cmdline() correctly handle programs # with funky chars such as spaces and ")", see: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/628 pyexe = create_py_exe(self.get_testfn(suffix='foo bar )')) cmdline = [ pyexe, "-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)]", ] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmdline) self.assertEqual(p.cmdline(), cmdline) self.assertEqual(p.name(), os.path.basename(pyexe)) self.assertEqual(os.path.normcase(p.exe()), os.path.normcase(pyexe)) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_uids(self): p = psutil.Process() real, effective, _saved = p.uids() # os.getuid() refers to "real" uid self.assertEqual(real, os.getuid()) # os.geteuid() refers to "effective" uid self.assertEqual(effective, os.geteuid()) # No such thing as os.getsuid() ("saved" uid), but starting # from python 2.7 we have os.getresuid() which returns all # of them. if hasattr(os, "getresuid"): self.assertEqual(os.getresuid(), p.uids()) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_gids(self): p = psutil.Process() real, effective, _saved = p.gids() # os.getuid() refers to "real" uid self.assertEqual(real, os.getgid()) # os.geteuid() refers to "effective" uid self.assertEqual(effective, os.getegid()) # No such thing as os.getsgid() ("saved" gid), but starting # from python 2.7 we have os.getresgid() which returns all # of them. if hasattr(os, "getresuid"): self.assertEqual(os.getresgid(), p.gids()) def test_nice(self): def cleanup(init): try: p.nice(init) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass p = psutil.Process() self.assertRaises(TypeError, p.nice, "str") init = p.nice() self.addCleanup(cleanup, init) if WINDOWS: highest_prio = None for prio in [ psutil.IDLE_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.BELOW_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.REALTIME_PRIORITY_CLASS, ]: with self.subTest(prio=prio): try: p.nice(prio) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass else: new_prio = p.nice() # The OS may limit our maximum priority, # even if the function succeeds. For higher # priorities, we match either the expected # value or the highest so far. if prio in ( psutil.ABOVE_NORMAL_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.HIGH_PRIORITY_CLASS, psutil.REALTIME_PRIORITY_CLASS, ): if new_prio == prio or highest_prio is None: highest_prio = prio self.assertEqual(new_prio, highest_prio) else: self.assertEqual(new_prio, prio) else: try: if hasattr(os, "getpriority"): self.assertEqual( os.getpriority(os.PRIO_PROCESS, os.getpid()), p.nice() ) p.nice(1) self.assertEqual(p.nice(), 1) if hasattr(os, "getpriority"): self.assertEqual( os.getpriority(os.PRIO_PROCESS, os.getpid()), p.nice() ) # XXX - going back to previous nice value raises # AccessDenied on MACOS if not MACOS: p.nice(0) self.assertEqual(p.nice(), 0) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "QEMU user not supported") def test_status(self): p = psutil.Process() self.assertEqual(p.status(), psutil.STATUS_RUNNING) def test_username(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() username = p.username() if WINDOWS: domain, username = username.split('\\') getpass_user = getpass.getuser() if getpass_user.endswith('$'): # When running as a service account (most likely to be # NetworkService), these user name calculations don't produce # the same result, causing the test to fail. raise unittest.SkipTest('running as service account') self.assertEqual(username, getpass_user) if 'USERDOMAIN' in os.environ: self.assertEqual(domain, os.environ['USERDOMAIN']) else: self.assertEqual(username, getpass.getuser()) def test_cwd(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() self.assertEqual(p.cwd(), os.getcwd()) def test_cwd_2(self): cmd = [ PYTHON_EXE, "-c", ( "import os, time; os.chdir('..'); [time.sleep(0.1) for x in" " range(100)]" ), ] p = self.spawn_psproc(cmd) call_until(p.cwd, "ret == os.path.dirname(os.getcwd())") @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_CPU_AFFINITY, 'not supported') def test_cpu_affinity(self): p = psutil.Process() initial = p.cpu_affinity() assert initial, initial self.addCleanup(p.cpu_affinity, initial) if hasattr(os, "sched_getaffinity"): self.assertEqual(initial, list(os.sched_getaffinity(p.pid))) self.assertEqual(len(initial), len(set(initial))) all_cpus = list(range(len(psutil.cpu_percent(percpu=True)))) for n in all_cpus: p.cpu_affinity([n]) self.assertEqual(p.cpu_affinity(), [n]) if hasattr(os, "sched_getaffinity"): self.assertEqual( p.cpu_affinity(), list(os.sched_getaffinity(p.pid)) ) # also test num_cpu() if hasattr(p, "num_cpu"): self.assertEqual(p.cpu_affinity()[0], p.num_cpu()) # [] is an alias for "all eligible CPUs"; on Linux this may # not be equal to all available CPUs, see: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/956 p.cpu_affinity([]) if LINUX: self.assertEqual(p.cpu_affinity(), p._proc._get_eligible_cpus()) else: self.assertEqual(p.cpu_affinity(), all_cpus) if hasattr(os, "sched_getaffinity"): self.assertEqual( p.cpu_affinity(), list(os.sched_getaffinity(p.pid)) ) self.assertRaises(TypeError, p.cpu_affinity, 1) p.cpu_affinity(initial) # it should work with all iterables, not only lists p.cpu_affinity(set(all_cpus)) p.cpu_affinity(tuple(all_cpus)) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_CPU_AFFINITY, 'not supported') def test_cpu_affinity_errs(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() invalid_cpu = [len(psutil.cpu_times(percpu=True)) + 10] self.assertRaises(ValueError, p.cpu_affinity, invalid_cpu) self.assertRaises(ValueError, p.cpu_affinity, range(10000, 11000)) self.assertRaises(TypeError, p.cpu_affinity, [0, "1"]) self.assertRaises(ValueError, p.cpu_affinity, [0, -1]) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_CPU_AFFINITY, 'not supported') def test_cpu_affinity_all_combinations(self): p = psutil.Process() initial = p.cpu_affinity() assert initial, initial self.addCleanup(p.cpu_affinity, initial) # All possible CPU set combinations. if len(initial) > 12: initial = initial[:12] # ...otherwise it will take forever combos = [] for i in range(len(initial) + 1): for subset in itertools.combinations(initial, i): if subset: combos.append(list(subset)) for combo in combos: p.cpu_affinity(combo) self.assertEqual(sorted(p.cpu_affinity()), sorted(combo)) # TODO: #595 @unittest.skipIf(BSD, "broken on BSD") # can't find any process file on Appveyor @unittest.skipIf(APPVEYOR, "unreliable on APPVEYOR") def test_open_files(self): p = psutil.Process() testfn = self.get_testfn() files = p.open_files() self.assertNotIn(testfn, files) with open(testfn, 'wb') as f: f.write(b'x' * 1024) f.flush() # give the kernel some time to see the new file files = call_until(p.open_files, "len(ret) != %i" % len(files)) filenames = [os.path.normcase(x.path) for x in files] self.assertIn(os.path.normcase(testfn), filenames) if LINUX: for file in files: if file.path == testfn: self.assertEqual(file.position, 1024) for file in files: assert os.path.isfile(file.path), file # another process cmdline = ( "import time; f = open(r'%s', 'r'); [time.sleep(0.1) for x in" " range(100)];" % testfn ) p = self.spawn_psproc([PYTHON_EXE, "-c", cmdline]) for x in range(100): filenames = [os.path.normcase(x.path) for x in p.open_files()] if testfn in filenames: break time.sleep(0.01) else: self.assertIn(os.path.normcase(testfn), filenames) for file in filenames: assert os.path.isfile(file), file # TODO: #595 @unittest.skipIf(BSD, "broken on BSD") # can't find any process file on Appveyor @unittest.skipIf(APPVEYOR, "unreliable on APPVEYOR") def test_open_files_2(self): # test fd and path fields p = psutil.Process() normcase = os.path.normcase testfn = self.get_testfn() with open(testfn, 'w') as fileobj: for file in p.open_files(): if ( normcase(file.path) == normcase(fileobj.name) or file.fd == fileobj.fileno() ): break else: raise self.fail( "no file found; files=%s" % (repr(p.open_files())) ) self.assertEqual(normcase(file.path), normcase(fileobj.name)) if WINDOWS: self.assertEqual(file.fd, -1) else: self.assertEqual(file.fd, fileobj.fileno()) # test positions ntuple = p.open_files()[0] self.assertEqual(ntuple[0], ntuple.path) self.assertEqual(ntuple[1], ntuple.fd) # test file is gone self.assertNotIn(fileobj.name, p.open_files()) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_num_fds(self): p = psutil.Process() testfn = self.get_testfn() start = p.num_fds() file = open(testfn, 'w') self.addCleanup(file.close) self.assertEqual(p.num_fds(), start + 1) sock = socket.socket() self.addCleanup(sock.close) self.assertEqual(p.num_fds(), start + 2) file.close() sock.close() self.assertEqual(p.num_fds(), start) @skip_on_not_implemented(only_if=LINUX) @unittest.skipIf(OPENBSD or NETBSD, "not reliable on OPENBSD & NETBSD") def test_num_ctx_switches(self): p = psutil.Process() before = sum(p.num_ctx_switches()) for _ in range(2): time.sleep(0.05) # this shall ensure a context switch happens after = sum(p.num_ctx_switches()) if after > before: return raise self.fail("num ctx switches still the same after 2 iterations") def test_ppid(self): p = psutil.Process() if hasattr(os, 'getppid'): self.assertEqual(p.ppid(), os.getppid()) p = self.spawn_psproc() self.assertEqual(p.ppid(), os.getpid()) def test_parent(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() self.assertEqual(p.parent().pid, os.getpid()) lowest_pid = psutil.pids()[0] self.assertIsNone(psutil.Process(lowest_pid).parent()) def test_parent_multi(self): parent = psutil.Process() child, grandchild = self.spawn_children_pair() self.assertEqual(grandchild.parent(), child) self.assertEqual(child.parent(), parent) @unittest.skipIf(QEMU_USER, "QEMU user not supported") @retry_on_failure() def test_parents(self): parent = psutil.Process() assert parent.parents() child, grandchild = self.spawn_children_pair() self.assertEqual(child.parents()[0], parent) self.assertEqual(grandchild.parents()[0], child) self.assertEqual(grandchild.parents()[1], parent) def test_children(self): parent = psutil.Process() self.assertEqual(parent.children(), []) self.assertEqual(parent.children(recursive=True), []) # On Windows we set the flag to 0 in order to cancel out the # CREATE_NO_WINDOW flag (enabled by default) which creates # an extra "conhost.exe" child. child = self.spawn_psproc(creationflags=0) children1 = parent.children() children2 = parent.children(recursive=True) for children in (children1, children2): self.assertEqual(len(children), 1) self.assertEqual(children[0].pid, child.pid) self.assertEqual(children[0].ppid(), parent.pid) def test_children_recursive(self): # Test children() against two sub processes, p1 and p2, where # p1 (our child) spawned p2 (our grandchild). parent = psutil.Process() child, grandchild = self.spawn_children_pair() self.assertEqual(parent.children(), [child]) self.assertEqual(parent.children(recursive=True), [child, grandchild]) # If the intermediate process is gone there's no way for # children() to recursively find it. child.terminate() child.wait() self.assertEqual(parent.children(recursive=True), []) def test_children_duplicates(self): # find the process which has the highest number of children table = collections.defaultdict(int) for p in psutil.process_iter(): try: table[p.ppid()] += 1 except psutil.Error: pass # this is the one, now let's make sure there are no duplicates pid = sorted(table.items(), key=lambda x: x[1])[-1][0] if LINUX and pid == 0: raise unittest.SkipTest("PID 0") p = psutil.Process(pid) try: c = p.children(recursive=True) except psutil.AccessDenied: # windows pass else: self.assertEqual(len(c), len(set(c))) def test_parents_and_children(self): parent = psutil.Process() child, grandchild = self.spawn_children_pair() # forward children = parent.children(recursive=True) self.assertEqual(len(children), 2) self.assertEqual(children[0], child) self.assertEqual(children[1], grandchild) # backward parents = grandchild.parents() self.assertEqual(parents[0], child) self.assertEqual(parents[1], parent) def test_suspend_resume(self): p = self.spawn_psproc() p.suspend() for _ in range(100): if p.status() == psutil.STATUS_STOPPED: break time.sleep(0.01) p.resume() self.assertNotEqual(p.status(), psutil.STATUS_STOPPED) def test_invalid_pid(self): self.assertRaises(TypeError, psutil.Process, "1") self.assertRaises(ValueError, psutil.Process, -1) def test_as_dict(self): p = psutil.Process() d = p.as_dict(attrs=['exe', 'name']) self.assertEqual(sorted(d.keys()), ['exe', 'name']) p = psutil.Process(min(psutil.pids())) d = p.as_dict(attrs=['net_connections'], ad_value='foo') if not isinstance(d['net_connections'], list): self.assertEqual(d['net_connections'], 'foo') # Test ad_value is set on AccessDenied. with mock.patch( 'psutil.Process.nice', create=True, side_effect=psutil.AccessDenied ): self.assertEqual( p.as_dict(attrs=["nice"], ad_value=1), {"nice": 1} ) # Test that NoSuchProcess bubbles up. with mock.patch( 'psutil.Process.nice', create=True, side_effect=psutil.NoSuchProcess(p.pid, "name"), ): self.assertRaises(psutil.NoSuchProcess, p.as_dict, attrs=["nice"]) # Test that ZombieProcess is swallowed. with mock.patch( 'psutil.Process.nice', create=True, side_effect=psutil.ZombieProcess(p.pid, "name"), ): self.assertEqual( p.as_dict(attrs=["nice"], ad_value="foo"), {"nice": "foo"} ) # By default APIs raising NotImplementedError are # supposed to be skipped. with mock.patch( 'psutil.Process.nice', create=True, side_effect=NotImplementedError ): d = p.as_dict() self.assertNotIn('nice', list(d.keys())) # ...unless the user explicitly asked for some attr. with self.assertRaises(NotImplementedError): p.as_dict(attrs=["nice"]) # errors with self.assertRaises(TypeError): p.as_dict('name') with self.assertRaises(ValueError): p.as_dict(['foo']) with self.assertRaises(ValueError): p.as_dict(['foo', 'bar']) def test_oneshot(self): p = psutil.Process() with mock.patch("psutil._psplatform.Process.cpu_times") as m: with p.oneshot(): p.cpu_times() p.cpu_times() self.assertEqual(m.call_count, 1) with mock.patch("psutil._psplatform.Process.cpu_times") as m: p.cpu_times() p.cpu_times() self.assertEqual(m.call_count, 2) def test_oneshot_twice(self): # Test the case where the ctx manager is __enter__ed twice. # The second __enter__ is supposed to resut in a NOOP. p = psutil.Process() with mock.patch("psutil._psplatform.Process.cpu_times") as m1: with mock.patch("psutil._psplatform.Process.oneshot_enter") as m2: with p.oneshot(): p.cpu_times() p.cpu_times() with p.oneshot(): p.cpu_times() p.cpu_times() self.assertEqual(m1.call_count, 1) self.assertEqual(m2.call_count, 1) with mock.patch("psutil._psplatform.Process.cpu_times") as m: p.cpu_times() p.cpu_times() self.assertEqual(m.call_count, 2) def test_oneshot_cache(self): # Make sure oneshot() cache is nonglobal. Instead it's # supposed to be bound to the Process instance, see: # https://github.com/giampaolo/psutil/issues/1373 p1, p2 = self.spawn_children_pair() p1_ppid = p1.ppid() p2_ppid = p2.ppid() self.assertNotEqual(p1_ppid, p2_ppid) with p1.oneshot(): self.assertEqual(p1.ppid(), p1_ppid) self.assertEqual(p2.ppid(), p2_ppid) with p2.oneshot(): self.assertEqual(p1.ppid(), p1_ppid) self.assertEqual(p2.ppid(), p2_ppid) def test_halfway_terminated_process(self): # Test that NoSuchProcess exception gets raised in case the # process dies after we create the Process object. # Example: # >>> proc = Process(1234) # >>> time.sleep(2) # time-consuming task, process dies in meantime # >>> proc.name() # Refers to Issue #15 def assert_raises_nsp(fun, fun_name): try: ret = fun() except psutil.ZombieProcess: # differentiate from NSP raise except psutil.NoSuchProcess: pass except psutil.AccessDenied: if OPENBSD and fun_name in ('threads', 'num_threads'): return raise else: # NtQuerySystemInformation succeeds even if process is gone. if WINDOWS and fun_name in ('exe', 'name'): return raise self.fail( "%r didn't raise NSP and returned %r instead" % (fun, ret) ) p = self.spawn_psproc() p.terminate() p.wait() if WINDOWS: # XXX call_until(psutil.pids, "%s not in ret" % p.pid) self.assertProcessGone(p) ns = process_namespace(p) for fun, name in ns.iter(ns.all): assert_raises_nsp(fun, name) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_zombie_process(self): _parent, zombie = self.spawn_zombie() self.assertProcessZombie(zombie) @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_zombie_process_is_running_w_exc(self): # Emulate a case where internally is_running() raises # ZombieProcess. p = psutil.Process() with mock.patch( "psutil.Process", side_effect=psutil.ZombieProcess(0) ) as m: assert p.is_running() assert m.called @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, 'POSIX only') def test_zombie_process_status_w_exc(self): # Emulate a case where internally status() raises # ZombieProcess. p = psutil.Process() with mock.patch( "psutil._psplatform.Process.status", side_effect=psutil.ZombieProcess(0), ) as m: self.assertEqual(p.status(), psutil.STATUS_ZOMBIE) assert m.called def test_reused_pid(self): # Emulate a case where PID has been reused by another process. if PY3: from io import StringIO else: from StringIO import StringIO subp = self.spawn_testproc() p = psutil.Process(subp.pid) p._ident = (p.pid, p.create_time() + 100) list(psutil.process_iter()) self.assertIn(p.pid, psutil._pmap) assert not p.is_running() # make sure is_running() removed PID from process_iter() # internal cache with redirect_stderr(StringIO()) as f: list(psutil.process_iter()) self.assertIn( "refreshing Process instance for reused PID %s" % p.pid, f.getvalue(), ) self.assertNotIn(p.pid, psutil._pmap) assert p != psutil.Process(subp.pid) msg = "process no longer exists and its PID has been reused" ns = process_namespace(p) for fun, name in ns.iter(ns.setters + ns.killers, clear_cache=False): with self.subTest(name=name): self.assertRaisesRegex(psutil.NoSuchProcess, msg, fun) self.assertIn("terminated + PID reused", str(p)) self.assertIn("terminated + PID reused", repr(p)) self.assertRaisesRegex(psutil.NoSuchProcess, msg, p.ppid) self.assertRaisesRegex(psutil.NoSuchProcess, msg, p.parent) self.assertRaisesRegex(psutil.NoSuchProcess, msg, p.parents) self.assertRaisesRegex(psutil.NoSuchProcess, msg, p.children) def test_pid_0(self): # Process(0) is supposed to work on all platforms except Linux if 0 not in psutil.pids(): self.assertRaises(psutil.NoSuchProcess, psutil.Process, 0) # These 2 are a contradiction, but "ps" says PID 1's parent # is PID 0. assert not psutil.pid_exists(0) self.assertEqual(psutil.Process(1).ppid(), 0) return p = psutil.Process(0) exc = psutil.AccessDenied if WINDOWS else ValueError self.assertRaises(exc, p.wait) self.assertRaises(exc, p.terminate) self.assertRaises(exc, p.suspend) self.assertRaises(exc, p.resume) self.assertRaises(exc, p.kill) self.assertRaises(exc, p.send_signal, signal.SIGTERM) # test all methods ns = process_namespace(p) for fun, name in ns.iter(ns.getters + ns.setters): try: ret = fun() except psutil.AccessDenied: pass else: if name in ("uids", "gids"): self.assertEqual(ret.real, 0) elif name == "username": user = 'NT AUTHORITY\\SYSTEM' if WINDOWS else 'root' self.assertEqual(p.username(), user) elif name == "name": assert name, name if not OPENBSD: self.assertIn(0, psutil.pids()) assert psutil.pid_exists(0) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_ENVIRON, "not supported") def test_environ(self): def clean_dict(d): # Most of these are problematic on Travis. d.pop("PLAT", None) d.pop("HOME", None) if MACOS: d.pop("__CF_USER_TEXT_ENCODING", None) d.pop("VERSIONER_PYTHON_PREFER_32_BIT", None) d.pop("VERSIONER_PYTHON_VERSION", None) return dict([ ( k.replace("\r", "").replace("\n", ""), v.replace("\r", "").replace("\n", ""), ) for k, v in d.items() ]) self.maxDiff = None p = psutil.Process() d1 = clean_dict(p.environ()) d2 = clean_dict(os.environ.copy()) if not OSX and GITHUB_ACTIONS: self.assertEqual(d1, d2) @unittest.skipIf(not HAS_ENVIRON, "not supported") @unittest.skipIf(not POSIX, "POSIX only") @unittest.skipIf( MACOS_11PLUS, "macOS 11+ can't get another process environment, issue #2084", ) @unittest.skipIf(NETBSD, "sometimes fails on `assert is_running()`") def test_weird_environ(self): # environment variables can contain values without an equals sign code = textwrap.dedent(""" #include #include char * const argv[] = {"cat", 0}; char * const envp[] = {"A=1", "X", "C=3", 0}; int main(void) { // Close stderr on exec so parent can wait for the // execve to finish. if (fcntl(2, F_SETFD, FD_CLOEXEC) != 0) return 0; return execve("/bin/cat", argv, envp); } """) cexe = create_c_exe(self.get_testfn(), c_code=code) sproc = self.spawn_testproc( [cexe], stdin=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE ) p = psutil.Process(sproc.pid) wait_for_pid(p.pid) assert p.is_running() # Wait for process to exec or exit. self.assertEqual(sproc.stderr.read(), b"") if MACOS and CI_TESTING: try: env = p.environ() except psutil.AccessDenied: # XXX: fails sometimes with: # PermissionError from 'sysctl(KERN_PROCARGS2) -> EIO' return else: env = p.environ() self.assertEqual(env, {"A": "1", "C": "3"}) sproc.communicate() self.assertEqual(sproc.returncode, 0) # =================================================================== # --- Limited user tests # =================================================================== if POSIX and os.getuid() == 0: class LimitedUserTestCase(TestProcess): """Repeat the previous tests by using a limited user. Executed only on UNIX and only if the user who run the test script is root. """ # the uid/gid the test suite runs under if hasattr(os, 'getuid'): PROCESS_UID = os.getuid() PROCESS_GID = os.getgid() def __init__(self, *args, **kwargs): super().__init__(*args, **kwargs) # re-define all existent test methods in order to # ignore AccessDenied exceptions for attr in [x for x in dir(self) if x.startswith('test')]: meth = getattr(self, attr) def test_(self): try: meth() # noqa except psutil.AccessDenied: pass setattr(self, attr, types.MethodType(test_, self)) def setUp(self): super().setUp() os.setegid(1000) os.seteuid(1000) def tearDown(self): os.setegid(self.PROCESS_UID) os.seteuid(self.PROCESS_GID) super().tearDown() def test_nice(self): try: psutil.Process().nice(-1) except psutil.AccessDenied: pass else: raise self.fail("exception not raised") @unittest.skipIf(1, "causes problem as root") def test_zombie_process(self): pass # =================================================================== # --- psutil.Popen tests # =================================================================== class TestPopen(PsutilTestCase): """Tests for psutil.Popen class.""" @classmethod def tearDownClass(cls): reap_children() def test_misc(self): # XXX this test causes a ResourceWarning on Python 3 because # psutil.__subproc instance doesn't get properly freed. # Not sure what to do though. cmd = [ PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)];", ] with psutil.Popen( cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, env=PYTHON_EXE_ENV, ) as proc: proc.name() proc.cpu_times() proc.stdin # noqa self.assertTrue(dir(proc)) self.assertRaises(AttributeError, getattr, proc, 'foo') proc.terminate() if POSIX: self.assertEqual(proc.wait(5), -signal.SIGTERM) else: self.assertEqual(proc.wait(5), signal.SIGTERM) def test_ctx_manager(self): with psutil.Popen( [PYTHON_EXE, "-V"], stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, stdin=subprocess.PIPE, env=PYTHON_EXE_ENV, ) as proc: proc.communicate() assert proc.stdout.closed assert proc.stderr.closed assert proc.stdin.closed self.assertEqual(proc.returncode, 0) def test_kill_terminate(self): # subprocess.Popen()'s terminate(), kill() and send_signal() do # not raise exception after the process is gone. psutil.Popen # diverges from that. cmd = [ PYTHON_EXE, "-c", "import time; [time.sleep(0.1) for x in range(100)];", ] with psutil.Popen( cmd, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE, env=PYTHON_EXE_ENV, ) as proc: proc.terminate() proc.wait() self.assertRaises(psutil.NoSuchProcess, proc.terminate) self.assertRaises(psutil.NoSuchProcess, proc.kill) self.assertRaises( psutil.NoSuchProcess, proc.send_signal, signal.SIGTERM ) if WINDOWS: self.assertRaises( psutil.NoSuchProcess, proc.send_signal, signal.CTRL_C_EVENT ) self.assertRaises( psutil.NoSuchProcess, proc.send_signal, signal.CTRL_BREAK_EVENT, ) if __name__ == '__main__': from psutil.tests.runner import run_from_name run_from_name(__file__)