---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au> Date: 12 August 2014 15:59 Subject: Re: [Python-modules-team] Bug#757897: FTBFS: self.assertFalse(Certificate(CERT1).has_expired()) fails To: Debian Bug Tracking System <sub...@bugs.debian.org>
On 12 August 2014 15:05, Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au> wrote: > ====================================================================== > FAIL: test_has_expired > (celery.tests.security.test_certificate.test_Certificate) > ---------------------------------------------------------------------- > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/«PKGBUILDDIR»/celery/tests/security/test_certificate.py", line > 26, in test_has_expired > self.assertFalse(Certificate(CERT1).has_expired()) > AssertionError: 1L is not false > > On a hunch, I tried installing the latest python-openssl (see https://bugs.debian.org/751144), now I get: ====================================================================== FAIL: test_has_expired (celery.tests.security.test_certificate.test_Certificate) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Traceback (most recent call last): File "/home/brian/tree/debian/unstable/celery/celery/celery/tests/security/test_certificate.py", line 28, in test_has_expired self.assertFalse(Certificate(CERT1).has_expired()) AssertionError: True is not false ---------------------------------------------------------------------- The certificate expired "Jul 24 12:11:14 2014", so I think the test is faulty. This seems to be further confused by the fact that python-openssl in Debian returns 1L instead of True. -- Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au> -- Brian May <br...@microcomaustralia.com.au>