run-tests: on windows, put correct python at front of PATH
The older approach of trying to copy the python executable into the test
directory was doomed to fail.
There remains one weakness with this approach: if you've run "make local",
tests may pick up the wrong extension DLLs from inside the source tree. I
don't know why this happens.
A reasonable workaround for now is to test either using --local or with
a working directory that does not contain built DLLs.
[ original upstream message ]
#!/usr/bin/env python
import os, sys, time, errno, signal
if os.name =='nt':
import ctypes
def kill(pid, logfn, tryhard=True):
logfn('# Killing daemon process %d' % pid)
PROCESS_TERMINATE = 1
handle = ctypes.windll.kernel32.OpenProcess(
PROCESS_TERMINATE, False, pid)
ctypes.windll.kernel32.TerminateProcess(handle, -1)
ctypes.windll.kernel32.CloseHandle(handle)
else:
def kill(pid, logfn, tryhard=True):
try:
os.kill(pid, 0)
logfn('# Killing daemon process %d' % pid)
os.kill(pid, signal.SIGTERM)
if tryhard:
for i in range(10):
time.sleep(0.05)
os.kill(pid, 0)
else:
time.sleep(0.1)
os.kill(pid, 0)
logfn('# Daemon process %d is stuck - really killing it' % pid)
os.kill(pid, signal.SIGKILL)
except OSError, err:
if err.errno != errno.ESRCH:
raise
def killdaemons(pidfile, tryhard=True, remove=False, logfn=None):
if not logfn:
logfn = lambda s: s
# Kill off any leftover daemon processes
try:
fp = open(pidfile)
for line in fp:
try:
pid = int(line)
except ValueError:
continue
kill(pid, logfn, tryhard)
fp.close()
if remove:
os.unlink(pidfile)
except IOError:
pass
if __name__ == '__main__':
path, = sys.argv[1:]
killdaemons(path)