People sometimes want to load large tables of constant data from a
module. Using require(), this has to be reparsed every time, which can
be slow.
mw.loadData() will load the just data once, and return a table with a
metatable cleverly designed to give read-only access to the loaded data.
Change-Id: Icec192bdbe6cfca7902fd5cb5d0e217bd8399637
Allowing a module to call mw.makeProtectedEnvFuncs() lets it bypass the
allowEnvFuncs setting. It can also be used to manipulate the global
tables that other modules' sandboxes will be copied from.
And for paranoia's sake, let's tighten up what setfenv is allowed to
set. This requires changing a unit test, because it is no longer
sane to do something like
env.setfenv, env.getfenv = mw.makeProtectedEnvFuncs( { [env] = true }, {} )
Nothing real does this, it was only in the unit test.
Change-Id: I8e0d83bb0980ee869af3ac4413afd211717ca92f
It's easy to forget a 'local' somewhere and accidentally leak a global
variable. Add a unit test to catch that.
Change-Id: I3a8dda22f108d88039f9562a1da7a739850bb14b
Rework the LuaEngine tests to be entirely modular, so that every library
need not add itself to one monolithic file. This also allows other
extensions that add Lua modules to make unit tests without having to
somehow inject them into a test class owned by Scribunto.
The approach taken is similar to that used for Selenium for running
tests against multiple browsers.
Change-Id: I294b2a8195759c0e4fa211f879305a8eb66d9c9a
2013-02-06 09:10:57 -05:00
Renamed from tests/engines/LuaCommon/LuaEngineTest.php (Browse further)