Damien George c49d5207e9 py/persistentcode: Remove unicode feature flag from .mpy file.
Prior to this commit, even with unicode disabled .py and .mpy files could
contain unicode characters, eg by entering them directly in a string as
utf-8 encoded.

The only thing the compiler disallowed (with unicode disabled) was using
\uxxxx and \Uxxxxxxxx notation to specify a character within a string with
value >= 0x100; that would give a SyntaxError.

With this change mpy-cross will now accept \u and \U notation to insert a
character with value >= 0x100 into a string (because the -mno-unicode
option is now gone, there's no way to forbid this).  The runtime will
happily work with strings with such characters, just like it already works
with strings with characters that were utf-8 encoded directly.

This change simplifies things because there are no longer any feature
flags in .mpy files, and any bytecode .mpy will now run on any target.

Signed-off-by: Damien George <damien@micropython.org>
2022-05-17 12:51:54 +10:00
..

This directory contains tests for various functionality areas of MicroPython.
To run all stable tests, run "run-tests.py" script in this directory.

Tests of capabilities not supported on all platforms should be written
to check for the capability being present. If it is not, the test
should merely output 'SKIP' followed by the line terminator, and call
sys.exit() to raise SystemExit, instead of attempting to test the
missing capability. The testing framework (run-tests.py in this
directory, test_main.c in qemu_arm) recognizes this as a skipped test.

There are a few features for which this mechanism cannot be used to
condition a test. The run-tests.py script uses small scripts in the
feature_check directory to check whether each such feature is present,
and skips the relevant tests if not.

Tests are generally verified by running the test both in MicroPython and
in CPython and comparing the outputs. If the output differs the test fails
and the outputs are saved in a .out and a .exp file respectively.
For tests that cannot be run in CPython, for example because they use
the machine module, a .exp file can be provided next to the test's .py
file. A convenient way to generate that is to run the test, let it fail
(because CPython cannot run it) and then copy the .out file (but not
before checking it manually!)

When creating new tests, anything that relies on float support should go in the
float/ subdirectory.  Anything that relies on import x, where x is not a built-in
module, should go in the import/ subdirectory.