Add extra files and base64 encode externally contributed docs. This
prevents the accidental opening of such documents, since they couldn't
be rebuit by the Dangerzone developers to ensure their safety.
Now that sample_doc was renamed to sample_pdf it could cause some
confusion the fact that that the TestBase class had an attribute called
sample_doc which referenced the sample PDF.
By removing this attribute and passing the fixture instead we are
following a more pytest-native approach of passing arguments explicitly.
Due to a bump in our Python dependencies, we now install Mypy 1.1.1
instead of 0.982. This change triggered the following errors:
* Incompatible default for argument <a> (default has type
None, argument has type <t>):
Mypy further explains here that PEP 484 prohibits implicit Optional,
so we need to make these types explicit Optional.
* Unused "type: ignore" comment, use narrower [method-assign] instead of
[assignment]:
Mypy has specialized some of its lints, meaning that we should switch
to the newer variants.
Also, it detected several other small inconsistencies. We fix all of
these errors in this commit.
Do not leave stale temporary directories when conversion fails
unexpectedly. Instead, wrap the conversion operation in a context
manager that wipes the temporary dir afterwards.
Fixes#317
Run each CLI command in a separate config/cache dir, to avoid leaks
between tests. Moreover, this way we are able to check the contents of
the config/cache dirs for a single CLI run.
Adds tests for macOS and Windows with the dummy converter. Tests won't
actually perform the conversion. But it should be enough for us to test
the remainder of the codebase.
Fixes#229
When enabled, the conversion part does nothing but print some simulated
output. This can be useful for testing non-conversion code (e.g. GUI).
Activated with the hidden flag --unsafe-dummy-conversion.
Wildcard arguments like `*` can lead to security vulnerabilities
if files are maliciously named as would-be parameters. In the following
scenario if a file in the current directory was named '--help', running
the following command would show the help.
$ dangerzone-cli *
By checking if parameters also happen to be files, we mitigate this
risk and have a chance to warn the user.
Run Mypy static checks against our tests. This brings them inline with
the rest of the codebase, and we have an extra level of certainty that
the tests (and unit tests in particular) will not significantly diverge
from the code they are testing.
Concatenate directories and filenames in a platform-independent way, by
using pathlib.Path. This fixes issues in the tests where the "/" path
separator made the tests fail on Windows.
Add two tests that check if Dangerzone properly handles input and output
filenames with spaces in them. Previously this was not straight-forward
because we didn't tokenize arguments, which lead to Click splitting
filenames with spaces in two.
Pass tokenized arguments (i.e., arguments as lists of strings) to CLI
invocations, else Click will attempt to tokenize them internally. The
problem with leaving tokenization to Click is that it uses
`shlex.split()`, which is Unix-oriented, and may miss some cases in
Windows.
Wrap Click results (`Result`) with a new class (`CLIResult`), which
includes:
1. Assertion statements.
2. Logic for formatting and printing a Click result.
3. Invocation arguments, which are missing from the original `Result`
class.
- display_banner() was only displayed in CLI mode so it makes sense
for it to be in the CLI.
- get_version(), was mvoed to util since it is a static function
that is needed in multiple parts of the application.
originally PDF files were included for these edge-cases but in
reality all we want to test is the filename itself. So it reduces
repo size if we have them generated dynamically.