Sure, why not, Here's a recipe that should do it. Create a context manager 'pool' that can enter an arbitrary number of contexts (by calling it's enter()
method) and they will be cleaned up at the end of the end of the suite.
class ContextPool(object):
def __init__(self):
self._pool = []
def __enter__(self):
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb):
for close in reversed(self._pool):
close(exc_type, exc_value, exc_tb)
def enter(self, context):
close = context.__exit__
result = context.__enter__()
self._pool.append(close)
return result
For example:
>>> class StubContextManager(object):
... def __init__(self, name):
... self.__name = name
... def __repr__(self):
... return "%s(%r)" % (type(self).__name__, self.__name)
...
... def __enter__(self):
... print "called %r.__enter__()" % (self)
...
... def __exit__(self, *args):
... print "called %r.__exit__%r" % (self, args)
...
>>> with ContextPool() as pool:
... pool.enter(StubContextManager("foo"))
... pool.enter(StubContextManager("bar"))
... 1/0
...
called StubContextManager('foo').__enter__()
called StubContextManager('bar').__enter__()
called StubContextManager('bar').__exit__(<type 'exceptions.ZeroDivisionError'>, ZeroDivisionError('integer division or modulo by zero',), <traceback object at 0x02958648>)
called StubContextManager('foo').__exit__(<type 'exceptions.ZeroDivisionError'>, ZeroDivisionError('integer division or modulo by zero',), <traceback object at 0x02958648>)
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<pyshell#67>", line 4, in <module>
1/0
ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero
>>>
Caveats: context managers aren't supposed to raise exceptions in their __exit__()
methods, but if they do, this recipe doesn't do the cleanup for all the context managers. Similarly, even if every context manager indicates that an exception should be ignored (by returning True
from their exit methods), this will still allow the exception to be raised.