[Neal Norwitz] > ... > I couldn't let Trent have all the fun. > > http://docs.python.org/dev/ > > And hopefully of interest to many here: > > http://docs.python.org/dev/results/ Wow! You get no test failures! I guess nobody tests on Windows anymore. I've been getting test failures for months, and just _assumed_ this was known damage everywhere so was waiting for someone else to fix it ;-) (A parenthentical question: is there a reason you don't pass -uall to regrtest.py?) On WinXP Pro SP2 today, passing -uall, and after fixing all the MS compiler warnings that have crept in: 251 tests OK. 12 tests failed: test_builtin test_coding test_compiler test_pep263 test_univnewlines test_urllib test_urllib2 test_urllibnet test_userlist test_wave test_whichdb test_zipfile 39 tests skipped: test__locale test_aepack test_al test_applesingle test_bsddb185 test_cd test_cl test_commands test_crypt test_curses test_dbm test_dl test_fcntl test_fork1 test_gdbm test_gl test_grp test_hashlib_speed test_imgfile test_ioctl test_linuxaudiodev test_macfs test_macostools test_mhlib test_nis test_openpty test_ossaudiodev test_plistlib test_poll test_posix test_pty test_pwd test_resource test_scriptpackages test_signal test_sunaudiodev test_threadsignals test_timing test_xml_etree_c 1 skip unexpected on win32: test_xml_etree_c Where to begin? Let's start with the first: C:\Code\python\PCbuild>rt -q test_builtin C:\Code\python\PCbuild>python -E -tt ../lib/test/regrtest.py test_builtin test_builtin test test_builtin failed -- errors occurred; run in verbose mode for details 1 test failed: test_builtin OK, try again: C:\Code\python\PCbuild>rt -q -v test_builtin C:\Code\python\PCbuild>python -E -tt ../lib/test/regrtest.py -v test_builtin test_builtin test_abs (test.test_builtin.BuiltinTest) ... ok ... ====================================================================== ERROR: test_compile (test.test_builtin.BuiltinTest) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Code\python\lib\test\test_builtin.py", line 237, in test_compile compile(bom + 'print 1\n', '', 'exec') File "<string>", line 1 ¡É¨[©´print 1 ^ SyntaxError: invalid syntax ====================================================================== ERROR: test_eval (test.test_builtin.BuiltinTest) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "C:\Code\python\lib\test\test_builtin.py", line 306, in test_eval self.assertEqual(eval(bom + 'a', globals, locals), 1) File "<string>", line 1 ¡É¨[©´a ^ SyntaxError: invalid syntax I have no idea what those are trying to test, and remember guessing the first time I saw this that it was fallout from the AST-branch merge. Apparently it wasn't :-(. Anyone have a clue on this one? The code up to the first failure is short: bom = '\xef\xbb\xbf' compile(bom + 'print 1\n', '', 'exec') Curiously, that sequence doesn't blow up under the released Windows Python 2.4.2, so somebody broke something here since then ...
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