self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_item(1), "entrée 1")
self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_item(2), "entrée 22")
+ def test_write_read_limited_history(self):
+ previous_length = readline.get_history_length()
+ self.addCleanup(readline.set_history_length, previous_length)
+
+ readline.clear_history()
+ readline.add_history("first line")
+ readline.add_history("second line")
+ readline.add_history("third line")
+
+ readline.set_history_length(2)
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_length(), 2)
+ readline.write_history_file(TESTFN)
+ self.addCleanup(os.remove, TESTFN)
+
+ readline.clear_history()
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_current_history_length(), 0)
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_length(), 2)
+
+ readline.read_history_file(TESTFN)
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_item(1), "second line")
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_item(2), "third line")
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_item(3), None)
+
+ # Readline seems to report an additional history element.
+ self.assertIn(readline.get_current_history_length(), (2, 3))
+
class TestReadline(unittest.TestCase):
self.assertEqual(len(lines), history_size)
self.assertEqual(lines[-1].strip(), b"last input")
+ def test_write_read_limited_history(self):
+ previous_length = readline.get_history_length()
+ self.addCleanup(readline.set_history_length, previous_length)
+
+ readline.add_history("first line")
+ readline.add_history("second line")
+ readline.add_history("third line")
+
+ readline.set_history_length(2)
+ self.assertEqual(readline.get_history_length(), 2)
+ readline.write_history_file(TESTFN)
+ self.addCleanup(os.remove, TESTFN)
+
+ readline.read_history_file(TESTFN)
+ # Without clear_history() there's no good way to test if
+ # the correct entries are present (we're combining history limiting and
+ # possible deduplication with arbitrary previous content).
+ # So, we've only tested that the read did not fail.
+ # See TestHistoryManipulation for the full test.
+
if __name__ == "__main__":
unittest.main()