This file is indexed.

/usr/lib/python3.4/test/test_struct.py is in libpython3.4-testsuite 3.4.2-1.

This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.

The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.

  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
652
653
654
655
656
657
658
659
660
661
662
663
664
665
666
667
from collections import abc
import array
import operator
import unittest
import struct
import sys

from test import support

ISBIGENDIAN = sys.byteorder == "big"

integer_codes = 'b', 'B', 'h', 'H', 'i', 'I', 'l', 'L', 'q', 'Q', 'n', 'N'
byteorders = '', '@', '=', '<', '>', '!'

def iter_integer_formats(byteorders=byteorders):
    for code in integer_codes:
        for byteorder in byteorders:
            if (byteorder in ('', '@') and code in ('q', 'Q') and
                not HAVE_LONG_LONG):
                continue
            if (byteorder not in ('', '@') and code in ('n', 'N')):
                continue
            yield code, byteorder

# Native 'q' packing isn't available on systems that don't have the C
# long long type.
try:
    struct.pack('q', 5)
except struct.error:
    HAVE_LONG_LONG = False
else:
    HAVE_LONG_LONG = True

def string_reverse(s):
    return s[::-1]

def bigendian_to_native(value):
    if ISBIGENDIAN:
        return value
    else:
        return string_reverse(value)

class StructTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def test_isbigendian(self):
        self.assertEqual((struct.pack('=i', 1)[0] == 0), ISBIGENDIAN)

    def test_consistence(self):
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, 'Z')

        sz = struct.calcsize('i')
        self.assertEqual(sz * 3, struct.calcsize('iii'))

        fmt = 'cbxxxxxxhhhhiillffd?'
        fmt3 = '3c3b18x12h6i6l6f3d3?'
        sz = struct.calcsize(fmt)
        sz3 = struct.calcsize(fmt3)
        self.assertEqual(sz * 3, sz3)

        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'iii', 3)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'i', 3, 3, 3)
        self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack, 'i', 'foo')
        self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack, 'P', 'foo')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'd', b'flap')
        s = struct.pack('ii', 1, 2)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'iii', s)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'i', s)

    def test_transitiveness(self):
        c = b'a'
        b = 1
        h = 255
        i = 65535
        l = 65536
        f = 3.1415
        d = 3.1415
        t = True

        for prefix in ('', '@', '<', '>', '=', '!'):
            for format in ('xcbhilfd?', 'xcBHILfd?'):
                format = prefix + format
                s = struct.pack(format, c, b, h, i, l, f, d, t)
                cp, bp, hp, ip, lp, fp, dp, tp = struct.unpack(format, s)
                self.assertEqual(cp, c)
                self.assertEqual(bp, b)
                self.assertEqual(hp, h)
                self.assertEqual(ip, i)
                self.assertEqual(lp, l)
                self.assertEqual(int(100 * fp), int(100 * f))
                self.assertEqual(int(100 * dp), int(100 * d))
                self.assertEqual(tp, t)

    def test_new_features(self):
        # Test some of the new features in detail
        # (format, argument, big-endian result, little-endian result, asymmetric)
        tests = [
            ('c', b'a', b'a', b'a', 0),
            ('xc', b'a', b'\0a', b'\0a', 0),
            ('cx', b'a', b'a\0', b'a\0', 0),
            ('s', b'a', b'a', b'a', 0),
            ('0s', b'helloworld', b'', b'', 1),
            ('1s', b'helloworld', b'h', b'h', 1),
            ('9s', b'helloworld', b'helloworl', b'helloworl', 1),
            ('10s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld', b'helloworld', 0),
            ('11s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld\0', b'helloworld\0', 1),
            ('20s', b'helloworld', b'helloworld'+10*b'\0', b'helloworld'+10*b'\0', 1),
            ('b', 7, b'\7', b'\7', 0),
            ('b', -7, b'\371', b'\371', 0),
            ('B', 7, b'\7', b'\7', 0),
            ('B', 249, b'\371', b'\371', 0),
            ('h', 700, b'\002\274', b'\274\002', 0),
            ('h', -700, b'\375D', b'D\375', 0),
            ('H', 700, b'\002\274', b'\274\002', 0),
            ('H', 0x10000-700, b'\375D', b'D\375', 0),
            ('i', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
            ('i', -70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
            ('I', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
            ('I', 0x100000000-70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
            ('l', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
            ('l', -70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
            ('L', 70000000, b'\004,\035\200', b'\200\035,\004', 0),
            ('L', 0x100000000-70000000, b'\373\323\342\200', b'\200\342\323\373', 0),
            ('f', 2.0, b'@\000\000\000', b'\000\000\000@', 0),
            ('d', 2.0, b'@\000\000\000\000\000\000\000',
                       b'\000\000\000\000\000\000\000@', 0),
            ('f', -2.0, b'\300\000\000\000', b'\000\000\000\300', 0),
            ('d', -2.0, b'\300\000\000\000\000\000\000\000',
                        b'\000\000\000\000\000\000\000\300', 0),
            ('?', 0, b'\0', b'\0', 0),
            ('?', 3, b'\1', b'\1', 1),
            ('?', True, b'\1', b'\1', 0),
            ('?', [], b'\0', b'\0', 1),
            ('?', (1,), b'\1', b'\1', 1),
        ]

        for fmt, arg, big, lil, asy in tests:
            for (xfmt, exp) in [('>'+fmt, big), ('!'+fmt, big), ('<'+fmt, lil),
                                ('='+fmt, ISBIGENDIAN and big or lil)]:
                res = struct.pack(xfmt, arg)
                self.assertEqual(res, exp)
                self.assertEqual(struct.calcsize(xfmt), len(res))
                rev = struct.unpack(xfmt, res)[0]
                if rev != arg:
                    self.assertTrue(asy)

    def test_calcsize(self):
        expected_size = {
            'b': 1, 'B': 1,
            'h': 2, 'H': 2,
            'i': 4, 'I': 4,
            'l': 4, 'L': 4,
            'q': 8, 'Q': 8,
            }

        # standard integer sizes
        for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats(('=', '<', '>', '!')):
            format = byteorder+code
            size = struct.calcsize(format)
            self.assertEqual(size, expected_size[code])

        # native integer sizes
        native_pairs = 'bB', 'hH', 'iI', 'lL', 'nN'
        if HAVE_LONG_LONG:
            native_pairs += 'qQ',
        for format_pair in native_pairs:
            for byteorder in '', '@':
                signed_size = struct.calcsize(byteorder + format_pair[0])
                unsigned_size = struct.calcsize(byteorder + format_pair[1])
                self.assertEqual(signed_size, unsigned_size)

        # bounds for native integer sizes
        self.assertEqual(struct.calcsize('b'), 1)
        self.assertLessEqual(2, struct.calcsize('h'))
        self.assertLessEqual(4, struct.calcsize('l'))
        self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('h'), struct.calcsize('i'))
        self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('i'), struct.calcsize('l'))
        if HAVE_LONG_LONG:
            self.assertLessEqual(8, struct.calcsize('q'))
            self.assertLessEqual(struct.calcsize('l'), struct.calcsize('q'))
        self.assertGreaterEqual(struct.calcsize('n'), struct.calcsize('i'))
        self.assertGreaterEqual(struct.calcsize('n'), struct.calcsize('P'))

    def test_integers(self):
        # Integer tests (bBhHiIlLqQnN).
        import binascii

        class IntTester(unittest.TestCase):
            def __init__(self, format):
                super(IntTester, self).__init__(methodName='test_one')
                self.format = format
                self.code = format[-1]
                self.byteorder = format[:-1]
                if not self.byteorder in byteorders:
                    raise ValueError("unrecognized packing byteorder: %s" %
                                     self.byteorder)
                self.bytesize = struct.calcsize(format)
                self.bitsize = self.bytesize * 8
                if self.code in tuple('bhilqn'):
                    self.signed = True
                    self.min_value = -(2**(self.bitsize-1))
                    self.max_value = 2**(self.bitsize-1) - 1
                elif self.code in tuple('BHILQN'):
                    self.signed = False
                    self.min_value = 0
                    self.max_value = 2**self.bitsize - 1
                else:
                    raise ValueError("unrecognized format code: %s" %
                                     self.code)

            def test_one(self, x, pack=struct.pack,
                                  unpack=struct.unpack,
                                  unhexlify=binascii.unhexlify):

                format = self.format
                if self.min_value <= x <= self.max_value:
                    expected = x
                    if self.signed and x < 0:
                        expected += 1 << self.bitsize
                    self.assertGreaterEqual(expected, 0)
                    expected = '%x' % expected
                    if len(expected) & 1:
                        expected = "0" + expected
                    expected = expected.encode('ascii')
                    expected = unhexlify(expected)
                    expected = (b"\x00" * (self.bytesize - len(expected)) +
                                expected)
                    if (self.byteorder == '<' or
                        self.byteorder in ('', '@', '=') and not ISBIGENDIAN):
                        expected = string_reverse(expected)
                    self.assertEqual(len(expected), self.bytesize)

                    # Pack work?
                    got = pack(format, x)
                    self.assertEqual(got, expected)

                    # Unpack work?
                    retrieved = unpack(format, got)[0]
                    self.assertEqual(x, retrieved)

                    # Adding any byte should cause a "too big" error.
                    self.assertRaises((struct.error, TypeError), unpack, format,
                                                                 b'\x01' + got)
                else:
                    # x is out of range -- verify pack realizes that.
                    self.assertRaises((OverflowError, ValueError, struct.error),
                                      pack, format, x)

            def run(self):
                from random import randrange

                # Create all interesting powers of 2.
                values = []
                for exp in range(self.bitsize + 3):
                    values.append(1 << exp)

                # Add some random values.
                for i in range(self.bitsize):
                    val = 0
                    for j in range(self.bytesize):
                        val = (val << 8) | randrange(256)
                    values.append(val)

                # Values absorbed from other tests
                values.extend([300, 700000, sys.maxsize*4])

                # Try all those, and their negations, and +-1 from
                # them.  Note that this tests all power-of-2
                # boundaries in range, and a few out of range, plus
                # +-(2**n +- 1).
                for base in values:
                    for val in -base, base:
                        for incr in -1, 0, 1:
                            x = val + incr
                            self.test_one(x)

                # Some error cases.
                class NotAnInt:
                    def __int__(self):
                        return 42

                # Objects with an '__index__' method should be allowed
                # to pack as integers.  That is assuming the implemented
                # '__index__' method returns an 'int'.
                class Indexable(object):
                    def __init__(self, value):
                        self._value = value

                    def __index__(self):
                        return self._value

                # If the '__index__' method raises a type error, then
                # '__int__' should be used with a deprecation warning.
                class BadIndex(object):
                    def __index__(self):
                        raise TypeError

                    def __int__(self):
                        return 42

                self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                  struct.pack, self.format,
                                  "a string")
                self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                  struct.pack, self.format,
                                  randrange)
                self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                  struct.pack, self.format,
                                  3+42j)
                self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                  struct.pack, self.format,
                                  NotAnInt())
                self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                  struct.pack, self.format,
                                  BadIndex())

                # Check for legitimate values from '__index__'.
                for obj in (Indexable(0), Indexable(10), Indexable(17),
                            Indexable(42), Indexable(100), Indexable(127)):
                    try:
                        struct.pack(format, obj)
                    except:
                        self.fail("integer code pack failed on object "
                                  "with '__index__' method")

                # Check for bogus values from '__index__'.
                for obj in (Indexable(b'a'), Indexable('b'), Indexable(None),
                            Indexable({'a': 1}), Indexable([1, 2, 3])):
                    self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error),
                                      struct.pack, self.format,
                                      obj)

        for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats():
            format = byteorder+code
            t = IntTester(format)
            t.run()

    def test_nN_code(self):
        # n and N don't exist in standard sizes
        def assertStructError(func, *args, **kwargs):
            with self.assertRaises(struct.error) as cm:
                func(*args, **kwargs)
            self.assertIn("bad char in struct format", str(cm.exception))
        for code in 'nN':
            for byteorder in ('=', '<', '>', '!'):
                format = byteorder+code
                assertStructError(struct.calcsize, format)
                assertStructError(struct.pack, format, 0)
                assertStructError(struct.unpack, format, b"")

    def test_p_code(self):
        # Test p ("Pascal string") code.
        for code, input, expected, expectedback in [
                ('p',  b'abc', b'\x00',            b''),
                ('1p', b'abc', b'\x00',            b''),
                ('2p', b'abc', b'\x01a',           b'a'),
                ('3p', b'abc', b'\x02ab',          b'ab'),
                ('4p', b'abc', b'\x03abc',         b'abc'),
                ('5p', b'abc', b'\x03abc\x00',     b'abc'),
                ('6p', b'abc', b'\x03abc\x00\x00', b'abc'),
                ('1000p', b'x'*1000, b'\xff' + b'x'*999, b'x'*255)]:
            got = struct.pack(code, input)
            self.assertEqual(got, expected)
            (got,) = struct.unpack(code, got)
            self.assertEqual(got, expectedback)

    def test_705836(self):
        # SF bug 705836.  "<f" and ">f" had a severe rounding bug, where a carry
        # from the low-order discarded bits could propagate into the exponent
        # field, causing the result to be wrong by a factor of 2.
        import math

        for base in range(1, 33):
            # smaller <- largest representable float less than base.
            delta = 0.5
            while base - delta / 2.0 != base:
                delta /= 2.0
            smaller = base - delta
            # Packing this rounds away a solid string of trailing 1 bits.
            packed = struct.pack("<f", smaller)
            unpacked = struct.unpack("<f", packed)[0]
            # This failed at base = 2, 4, and 32, with unpacked = 1, 2, and
            # 16, respectively.
            self.assertEqual(base, unpacked)
            bigpacked = struct.pack(">f", smaller)
            self.assertEqual(bigpacked, string_reverse(packed))
            unpacked = struct.unpack(">f", bigpacked)[0]
            self.assertEqual(base, unpacked)

        # Largest finite IEEE single.
        big = (1 << 24) - 1
        big = math.ldexp(big, 127 - 23)
        packed = struct.pack(">f", big)
        unpacked = struct.unpack(">f", packed)[0]
        self.assertEqual(big, unpacked)

        # The same, but tack on a 1 bit so it rounds up to infinity.
        big = (1 << 25) - 1
        big = math.ldexp(big, 127 - 24)
        self.assertRaises(OverflowError, struct.pack, ">f", big)

    def test_1530559(self):
        for code, byteorder in iter_integer_formats():
            format = byteorder + code
            self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, format, 1.0)
            self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, format, 1.5)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'P', 1.0)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'P', 1.5)

    def test_unpack_from(self):
        test_string = b'abcd01234'
        fmt = '4s'
        s = struct.Struct(fmt)
        for cls in (bytes, bytearray):
            data = cls(test_string)
            self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data), (b'abcd',))
            self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, 2), (b'cd01',))
            self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, 4), (b'0123',))
            for i in range(6):
                self.assertEqual(s.unpack_from(data, i), (data[i:i+4],))
            for i in range(6, len(test_string) + 1):
                self.assertRaises(struct.error, s.unpack_from, data, i)
        for cls in (bytes, bytearray):
            data = cls(test_string)
            self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data), (b'abcd',))
            self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, 2), (b'cd01',))
            self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, 4), (b'0123',))
            for i in range(6):
                self.assertEqual(struct.unpack_from(fmt, data, i), (data[i:i+4],))
            for i in range(6, len(test_string) + 1):
                self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, fmt, data, i)

    def test_pack_into(self):
        test_string = b'Reykjavik rocks, eow!'
        writable_buf = array.array('b', b' '*100)
        fmt = '21s'
        s = struct.Struct(fmt)

        # Test without offset
        s.pack_into(writable_buf, 0, test_string)
        from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)]
        self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string)

        # Test with offset.
        s.pack_into(writable_buf, 10, test_string)
        from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)+10]
        self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string[:10] + test_string)

        # Go beyond boundaries.
        small_buf = array.array('b', b' '*10)
        self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), s.pack_into, small_buf, 0,
                          test_string)
        self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), s.pack_into, small_buf, 2,
                          test_string)

        # Test bogus offset (issue 3694)
        sb = small_buf
        self.assertRaises((TypeError, struct.error), struct.pack_into, b'', sb,
                          None)

    def test_pack_into_fn(self):
        test_string = b'Reykjavik rocks, eow!'
        writable_buf = array.array('b', b' '*100)
        fmt = '21s'
        pack_into = lambda *args: struct.pack_into(fmt, *args)

        # Test without offset.
        pack_into(writable_buf, 0, test_string)
        from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)]
        self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string)

        # Test with offset.
        pack_into(writable_buf, 10, test_string)
        from_buf = writable_buf.tobytes()[:len(test_string)+10]
        self.assertEqual(from_buf, test_string[:10] + test_string)

        # Go beyond boundaries.
        small_buf = array.array('b', b' '*10)
        self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), pack_into, small_buf, 0,
                          test_string)
        self.assertRaises((ValueError, struct.error), pack_into, small_buf, 2,
                          test_string)

    def test_unpack_with_buffer(self):
        # SF bug 1563759: struct.unpack doesn't support buffer protocol objects
        data1 = array.array('B', b'\x12\x34\x56\x78')
        data2 = memoryview(b'\x12\x34\x56\x78') # XXX b'......XXXX......', 6, 4
        for data in [data1, data2]:
            value, = struct.unpack('>I', data)
            self.assertEqual(value, 0x12345678)

    def test_bool(self):
        class ExplodingBool(object):
            def __bool__(self):
                raise OSError
        for prefix in tuple("<>!=")+('',):
            false = (), [], [], '', 0
            true = [1], 'test', 5, -1, 0xffffffff+1, 0xffffffff/2

            falseFormat = prefix + '?' * len(false)
            packedFalse = struct.pack(falseFormat, *false)
            unpackedFalse = struct.unpack(falseFormat, packedFalse)

            trueFormat = prefix + '?' * len(true)
            packedTrue = struct.pack(trueFormat, *true)
            unpackedTrue = struct.unpack(trueFormat, packedTrue)

            self.assertEqual(len(true), len(unpackedTrue))
            self.assertEqual(len(false), len(unpackedFalse))

            for t in unpackedFalse:
                self.assertFalse(t)
            for t in unpackedTrue:
                self.assertTrue(t)

            packed = struct.pack(prefix+'?', 1)

            self.assertEqual(len(packed), struct.calcsize(prefix+'?'))

            if len(packed) != 1:
                self.assertFalse(prefix, msg='encoded bool is not one byte: %r'
                                             %packed)

            try:
                struct.pack(prefix + '?', ExplodingBool())
            except OSError:
                pass
            else:
                self.fail("Expected OSError: struct.pack(%r, "
                          "ExplodingBool())" % (prefix + '?'))

        for c in [b'\x01', b'\x7f', b'\xff', b'\x0f', b'\xf0']:
            self.assertTrue(struct.unpack('>?', c)[0])

    def test_count_overflow(self):
        hugecount = '{}b'.format(sys.maxsize+1)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, hugecount)

        hugecount2 = '{}b{}H'.format(sys.maxsize//2, sys.maxsize//2)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.calcsize, hugecount2)

    def test_trailing_counter(self):
        store = array.array('b', b' '*100)

        # format lists containing only count spec should result in an error
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, '12345')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, '12345', '')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, '12345', store, 0)
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, '12345', store, 0)

        # Format lists with trailing count spec should result in an error
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, 'c12345', 'x')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, 'c12345', 'x')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, 'c12345', store, 0,
                           'x')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, 'c12345', store,
                           0)

        # Mixed format tests
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack, '14s42', 'spam and eggs')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack, '14s42',
                          'spam and eggs')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.pack_into, '14s42', store, 0,
                          'spam and eggs')
        self.assertRaises(struct.error, struct.unpack_from, '14s42', store, 0)

    def test_Struct_reinitialization(self):
        # Issue 9422: there was a memory leak when reinitializing a
        # Struct instance.  This test can be used to detect the leak
        # when running with regrtest -L.
        s = struct.Struct('i')
        s.__init__('ii')

    def check_sizeof(self, format_str, number_of_codes):
        # The size of 'PyStructObject'
        totalsize = support.calcobjsize('2n3P')
        # The size taken up by the 'formatcode' dynamic array
        totalsize += struct.calcsize('P3n0P') * (number_of_codes + 1)
        support.check_sizeof(self, struct.Struct(format_str), totalsize)

    @support.cpython_only
    def test__sizeof__(self):
        for code in integer_codes:
            self.check_sizeof(code, 1)
        self.check_sizeof('BHILfdspP', 9)
        self.check_sizeof('B' * 1234, 1234)
        self.check_sizeof('fd', 2)
        self.check_sizeof('xxxxxxxxxxxxxx', 0)
        self.check_sizeof('100H', 1)
        self.check_sizeof('187s', 1)
        self.check_sizeof('20p', 1)
        self.check_sizeof('0s', 1)
        self.check_sizeof('0c', 0)


class UnpackIteratorTest(unittest.TestCase):
    """
    Tests for iterative unpacking (struct.Struct.iter_unpack).
    """

    def test_construct(self):
        def _check_iterator(it):
            self.assertIsInstance(it, abc.Iterator)
            self.assertIsInstance(it, abc.Iterable)
        s = struct.Struct('>ibcp')
        it = s.iter_unpack(b"")
        _check_iterator(it)
        it = s.iter_unpack(b"1234567")
        _check_iterator(it)
        # Wrong bytes length
        with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
            s.iter_unpack(b"123456")
        with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
            s.iter_unpack(b"12345678")
        # Zero-length struct
        s = struct.Struct('>')
        with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
            s.iter_unpack(b"")
        with self.assertRaises(struct.error):
            s.iter_unpack(b"12")

    def test_iterate(self):
        s = struct.Struct('>IB')
        b = bytes(range(1, 16))
        it = s.iter_unpack(b)
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x0b0c0d0e, 15))
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)

    def test_arbitrary_buffer(self):
        s = struct.Struct('>IB')
        b = bytes(range(1, 11))
        it = s.iter_unpack(memoryview(b))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)

    def test_length_hint(self):
        lh = operator.length_hint
        s = struct.Struct('>IB')
        b = bytes(range(1, 16))
        it = s.iter_unpack(b)
        self.assertEqual(lh(it), 3)
        next(it)
        self.assertEqual(lh(it), 2)
        next(it)
        self.assertEqual(lh(it), 1)
        next(it)
        self.assertEqual(lh(it), 0)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertEqual(lh(it), 0)

    def test_module_func(self):
        # Sanity check for the global struct.iter_unpack()
        it = struct.iter_unpack('>IB', bytes(range(1, 11)))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x01020304, 5))
        self.assertEqual(next(it), (0x06070809, 10))
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)
        self.assertRaises(StopIteration, next, it)


def test_main():
    support.run_unittest(__name__)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    test_main()