Add response parameters to custom_metadata streaming request for Node and PHP
clients.
The Java server does not respond with separate initial and trailing
metadata when there is no response data - it is only emiting the
requested trailing metadata. Adding the response parameters to the test
(in accordance with the specification) avoids this, but I will open a
separate issue to investigate the Java behavior.
Add the code for three new interop tests: unimplemented_method,
unimplemented_service, and custom_metadata.
Fix and refactor the code for status_code_and_message.
six is necessary for making these scripts cross compatible
between python 2.x and 3.x
Changes:
Add six to python_deps.include
Include python_deps.include to all Dockerfile templates in test directory
Include python_deps.include to all Dockerfile templates in stress_test directory
Include python_deps.include to all Dockerfile templates in interop_test directory
Replace print statements with print function calls (from futute..)
Replace .iteritems() with .items() wherever necessary
use six.moves to import BaseHTTPServer
Generate new dockerfiles using generate_projects.sh
Before this change, running Python tests individually required
building a tox environment via the run_tests script and then specifying
long environment variables to filter out just the test we wanted to run
(and then we wouldn't be able to get the output on interrupt, nor would
we have an easy way of determining the PID of the process for debugger
attachment). Now invoking the build_python.sh script creates a workable
python virtual environment that includes all necessary libraries and
tests (s.t. running a single test is now possible by just knowing the
module name). This does not change existing supported means of running
tests (e.g. through run_tests.py).
An additional way of running individual tests has been introduced.
Following invocation of `./tools/run_tests/build_python.sh` (or
run_tests.py), one may invoke
./$VENV/bin/python -m $TEST_MODULE_NAME
and acquire a single running process that *is* the test process (rather
than a parent of the process). $VENV is the virtual environment name
specified to `build_python.sh` (defaults to `py27`) and
$TEST_MODULE_NAME is what it says on the tin.