John Newbery
8 years ago
2 changed files with 220 additions and 0 deletions
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#!/usr/bin/env python3 |
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# Copyright (c) 2017 The Bitcoin Core developers |
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# Distributed under the MIT software license, see the accompanying |
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# file COPYING or http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php. |
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"""An example functional test |
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|
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The module-level docstring should include a high-level description of |
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what the test is doing. It's the first thing people see when they open |
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the file and should give the reader information about *what* the test |
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is testing and *how* it's being tested |
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""" |
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# Imports should be in PEP8 ordering (std library first, then third party |
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# libraries then local imports). |
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from collections import defaultdict |
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|
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# Avoid wildcard * imports if possible |
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from test_framework.blocktools import (create_block, create_coinbase) |
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from test_framework.mininode import ( |
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CInv, |
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NetworkThread, |
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NodeConn, |
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NodeConnCB, |
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mininode_lock, |
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msg_block, |
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msg_getdata, |
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wait_until, |
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) |
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from test_framework.test_framework import BitcoinTestFramework |
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from test_framework.util import ( |
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assert_equal, |
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connect_nodes, |
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p2p_port, |
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) |
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# NodeConnCB is a class containing callbacks to be executed when a P2P |
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# message is received from the node-under-test. Subclass NodeConnCB and |
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# override the on_*() methods if you need custom behaviour. |
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class BaseNode(NodeConnCB): |
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def __init__(self): |
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"""Initialize the NodeConnCB |
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Used to inialize custom properties for the Node that aren't |
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included by default in the base class. Be aware that the NodeConnCB |
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base class already stores a counter for each P2P message type and the |
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last received message of each type, which should be sufficient for the |
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needs of most tests. |
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Call super().__init__() first for standard initialization and then |
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initialize custom properties.""" |
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super().__init__() |
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# Stores a dictionary of all blocks received |
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self.block_receive_map = defaultdict(int) |
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def on_block(self, conn, message): |
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"""Override the standard on_block callback |
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Store the hash of a received block in the dictionary.""" |
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message.block.calc_sha256() |
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self.block_receive_map[message.block.sha256] += 1 |
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|
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def custom_function(): |
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"""Do some custom behaviour |
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If this function is more generally useful for other tests, consider |
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moving it to a module in test_framework.""" |
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# self.log.info("running custom_function") # Oops! Can't run self.log outside the BitcoinTestFramework |
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pass |
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|
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class ExampleTest(BitcoinTestFramework): |
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# Each functional test is a subclass of the BitcoinTestFramework class. |
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# Override the __init__(), add_options(), setup_chain(), setup_network() |
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# and setup_nodes() methods to customize the test setup as required. |
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|
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def __init__(self): |
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"""Initialize the test |
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|
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Call super().__init__() first, and then override any test parameters |
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for your individual test.""" |
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super().__init__() |
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self.setup_clean_chain = True |
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self.num_nodes = 3 |
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# Use self.extra_args to change command-line arguments for the nodes |
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self.extra_args = [[], ["-logips"], []] |
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# self.log.info("I've finished __init__") # Oops! Can't run self.log before run_test() |
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|
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# Use add_options() to add specific command-line options for your test. |
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# In practice this is not used very much, since the tests are mostly written |
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# to be run in automated environments without command-line options. |
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# def add_options() |
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# pass |
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# Use setup_chain() to customize the node data directories. In practice |
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# this is not used very much since the default behaviour is almost always |
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# fine |
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# def setup_chain(): |
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# pass |
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|
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def setup_network(self): |
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"""Setup the test network topology |
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Often you won't need to override this, since the standard network topology |
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(linear: node0 <-> node1 <-> node2 <-> ...) is fine for most tests. |
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If you do override this method, remember to start the nodes, assign |
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them to self.nodes, connect them and then sync.""" |
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self.setup_nodes() |
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# In this test, we're not connecting node2 to node0 or node1. Calls to |
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# sync_all() should not include node2, since we're not expecting it to |
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# sync. |
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connect_nodes(self.nodes[0], 1) |
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self.sync_all([self.nodes[0:1]]) |
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# Use setup_nodes() to customize the node start behaviour (for example if |
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# you don't want to start all nodes at the start of the test). |
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# def setup_nodes(): |
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# pass |
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|
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def custom_method(self): |
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"""Do some custom behaviour for this test |
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Define it in a method here because you're going to use it repeatedly. |
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If you think it's useful in general, consider moving it to the base |
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BitcoinTestFramework class so other tests can use it.""" |
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self.log.info("Running custom_method") |
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def run_test(self): |
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"""Main test logic""" |
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# Create a P2P connection to one of the nodes |
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node0 = BaseNode() |
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connections = [] |
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connections.append(NodeConn('127.0.0.1', p2p_port(0), self.nodes[0], node0)) |
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node0.add_connection(connections[0]) |
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# Start up network handling in another thread. This needs to be called |
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# after the P2P connections have been created. |
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NetworkThread().start() |
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# wait_for_verack ensures that the P2P connection is fully up. |
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node0.wait_for_verack() |
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# Generating a block on one of the nodes will get us out of IBD |
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blocks = [int(self.nodes[0].generate(nblocks=1)[0], 16)] |
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self.sync_all([self.nodes[0:1]]) |
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# Notice above how we called an RPC by calling a method with the same |
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# name on the node object. Notice also how we used a keyword argument |
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# to specify a named RPC argument. Neither of those are defined on the |
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# node object. Instead there's some __getattr__() magic going on under |
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# the covers to dispatch unrecognised attribute calls to the RPC |
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# interface. |
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# Logs are nice. Do plenty of them. They can be used in place of comments for |
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# breaking the test into sub-sections. |
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self.log.info("Starting test!") |
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self.log.info("Calling a custom function") |
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custom_function() |
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self.log.info("Calling a custom method") |
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self.custom_method() |
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self.log.info("Create some blocks") |
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self.tip = int(self.nodes[0].getbestblockhash(), 16) |
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self.block_time = self.nodes[0].getblock(self.nodes[0].getbestblockhash())['time'] + 1 |
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height = 1 |
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for i in range(10): |
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# Use the mininode and blocktools functionality to manually build a block |
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# Calling the generate() rpc is easier, but this allows us to exactly |
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# control the blocks and transactions. |
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block = create_block(self.tip, create_coinbase(height), self.block_time) |
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block.solve() |
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block_message = msg_block(block) |
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# Send message is used to send a P2P message to the node over our NodeConn connection |
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node0.send_message(block_message) |
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self.tip = block.sha256 |
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blocks.append(self.tip) |
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self.block_time += 1 |
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height += 1 |
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self.log.info("Wait for node1 to reach current tip (height 11) using RPC") |
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self.nodes[1].waitforblockheight(11) |
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self.log.info("Connect node2 and node1") |
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connect_nodes(self.nodes[1], 2) |
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self.log.info("Add P2P connection to node2") |
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node2 = BaseNode() |
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connections.append(NodeConn('127.0.0.1', p2p_port(2), self.nodes[2], node2)) |
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node2.add_connection(connections[1]) |
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node2.wait_for_verack() |
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self.log.info("Wait for node2 reach current tip. Test that it has propogated all the blocks to us") |
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for block in blocks: |
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getdata_request = msg_getdata() |
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getdata_request.inv.append(CInv(2, block)) |
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node2.send_message(getdata_request) |
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# wait_until() will loop until a predicate condition is met. Use it to test properties of the |
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# NodeConnCB objects. |
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assert wait_until(lambda: sorted(blocks) == sorted(list(node2.block_receive_map.keys())), timeout=5) |
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self.log.info("Check that each block was received only once") |
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# The network thread uses a global lock on data access to the NodeConn objects when sending and receiving |
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# messages. The test thread should acquire the global lock before accessing any NodeConn data to avoid locking |
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# and synchronization issues. Note wait_until() acquires this global lock when testing the predicate. |
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with mininode_lock: |
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for block in node2.block_receive_map.values(): |
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assert_equal(block, 1) |
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if __name__ == '__main__': |
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ExampleTest().main() |
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