| #!/usr/bin/env python |
| |
| r""" |
| This module provides robot keyword execution functions such as run_key.. |
| """ |
| |
| import gen_print as gp |
| from robot.libraries.BuiltIn import BuiltIn |
| |
| |
| def run_key(keyword_buf, |
| quiet=None, |
| test_mode=None, |
| ignore=0): |
| r""" |
| Run the given keyword, return the status and the keyword return values. |
| |
| The advantage of using this function verses having robot simply run your |
| keyword is the handling of parameters like quiet, test_mode and ignore. |
| |
| Description of arguments: |
| keyword_buf The keyword string to be run. |
| quiet Indicates whether this function should run |
| the pissuing function to print 'Issuing: |
| <keyword string>' to stdout. |
| test_mode If test_mode is set, this function will |
| not actually run the command. If quiet is |
| 0, it will print a message indicating what |
| it would have run (e.g. "Issuing: |
| (test_mode) your command"). |
| ignore Ignore errors from running keyword. If |
| this is 0, this function will fail with |
| whatever error occurred when running the |
| keyword. |
| |
| Example usage from a robot script: |
| |
| ${status} ${ret_values}= Run Key My Keyword \ Arg1 \ Arg2 |
| |
| Note that to get robot to pass your command + args as a single string to |
| this function, you must escape extra spaces with a backslash. |
| |
| Also note that ret_values is a python list: |
| ret_values: |
| ret_values[0]: value1 |
| ret_values[1]: value2 |
| """ |
| |
| # Set these vars to default values if they are None. |
| quiet = int(gp.get_var_value(quiet, 0)) |
| test_mode = int(gp.get_var_value(test_mode, 0)) |
| ignore = int(ignore) |
| |
| # Convert the keyword_buf into a list split wherever 2 or more spaces are |
| # found. |
| keyword_list = keyword_buf.split(' ') |
| # Strip spaces from each argument to make the output look clean and |
| # uniform. |
| keyword_list = [item.strip(' ') for item in keyword_list] |
| |
| if not quiet: |
| # Join the list back into keyword_buf for the sake of output. |
| keyword_buf = ' '.join(keyword_list) |
| gp.pissuing(keyword_buf, test_mode) |
| |
| if test_mode: |
| return 'PASS', "" |
| |
| try: |
| status, ret_values = \ |
| BuiltIn().run_keyword_and_ignore_error(*keyword_list) |
| except Exception as my_assertion_error: |
| status = "FAIL" |
| ret_values = my_assertion_error.args[0] |
| |
| if not (status == 'PASS' or ignore): |
| # Output the error message to stderr. |
| BuiltIn().log_to_console(ret_values, stream='STDERR') |
| # Fail with the given error message. |
| BuiltIn().fail(ret_values) |
| |
| return status, ret_values |
| |
| |
| def run_key_u(keyword_buf, |
| quiet=None, |
| ignore=0): |
| r""" |
| Run keyword unconditionally (i.e. without regard to global test_mode |
| setting). |
| |
| This function will simply call the run_key function passing on all of the |
| callers parameters except test_mode which will be hard-coded to 0. See |
| run_key (above) for details. |
| |
| See the proglog of "run_key" function above for description of arguments. |
| """ |
| |
| return run_key(keyword_buf, test_mode=0, quiet=quiet, ignore=ignore) |