]> git.ipfire.org Git - thirdparty/Python/cpython.git/commitdiff
gh-96710: Make the test timing more lenient for the int/str DoS regression test....
authorMiss Islington (bot) <31488909+miss-islington@users.noreply.github.com>
Fri, 9 Sep 2022 20:13:45 +0000 (13:13 -0700)
committerGitHub <noreply@github.com>
Fri, 9 Sep 2022 20:13:45 +0000 (13:13 -0700)
A regression would still absolutely fail and even a flaky pass isn't
harmful as it'd fail most of the time across our N system test runs.

Windows has a low resolution timer and CI systems are prone to odd
timing so this just gives more leeway to avoid flakiness.
(cherry picked from commit 11e3548fd1d3445ccde971d613633b58d73c3016)

Co-authored-by: Gregory P. Smith <greg@krypto.org>
Lib/test/test_int.py

index a578ca841f05a5d1ca1d410471126343783a57d7..4939d7bd9c734efeebafaa2c8872e35a9a2b643b 100644 (file)
@@ -641,7 +641,8 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
         self.assertEqual(len(huge_decimal), digits)
         # Ensuring that we chose a slow enough conversion to measure.
         # It takes 0.1 seconds on a Zen based cloud VM in an opt build.
-        if seconds_to_convert < 0.005:
+        # Some OSes have a low res 1/64s timer, skip if hard to measure.
+        if seconds_to_convert < 1/64:
             raise unittest.SkipTest('"slow" conversion took only '
                                     f'{seconds_to_convert} seconds.')
 
@@ -653,7 +654,7 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
                 str(huge_int)
             seconds_to_fail_huge = get_time() - start
         self.assertIn('conversion', str(err.exception))
-        self.assertLess(seconds_to_fail_huge, seconds_to_convert/8)
+        self.assertLessEqual(seconds_to_fail_huge, seconds_to_convert/2)
 
         # Now we test that a conversion that would take 30x as long also fails
         # in a similarly fast fashion.
@@ -664,7 +665,7 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
             str(extra_huge_int)
         seconds_to_fail_extra_huge = get_time() - start
         self.assertIn('conversion', str(err.exception))
-        self.assertLess(seconds_to_fail_extra_huge, seconds_to_convert/8)
+        self.assertLess(seconds_to_fail_extra_huge, seconds_to_convert/2)
 
     def test_denial_of_service_prevented_str_to_int(self):
         """Regression test: ensure we fail before performing O(N**2) work."""
@@ -682,7 +683,8 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
         seconds_to_convert = get_time() - start
         # Ensuring that we chose a slow enough conversion to measure.
         # It takes 0.1 seconds on a Zen based cloud VM in an opt build.
-        if seconds_to_convert < 0.005:
+        # Some OSes have a low res 1/64s timer, skip if hard to measure.
+        if seconds_to_convert < 1/64:
             raise unittest.SkipTest('"slow" conversion took only '
                                     f'{seconds_to_convert} seconds.')
 
@@ -692,7 +694,7 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
                 int(huge)
             seconds_to_fail_huge = get_time() - start
         self.assertIn('conversion', str(err.exception))
-        self.assertLess(seconds_to_fail_huge, seconds_to_convert/8)
+        self.assertLessEqual(seconds_to_fail_huge, seconds_to_convert/2)
 
         # Now we test that a conversion that would take 30x as long also fails
         # in a similarly fast fashion.
@@ -703,7 +705,7 @@ class IntStrDigitLimitsTests(unittest.TestCase):
             int(extra_huge)
         seconds_to_fail_extra_huge = get_time() - start
         self.assertIn('conversion', str(err.exception))
-        self.assertLess(seconds_to_fail_extra_huge, seconds_to_convert/8)
+        self.assertLessEqual(seconds_to_fail_extra_huge, seconds_to_convert/2)
 
     def test_power_of_two_bases_unlimited(self):
         """The limit does not apply to power of 2 bases."""