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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PROTON-2237?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=17149543#comment-17149543
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ASF GitHub Bot commented on PROTON-2237:
----------------------------------------
kpvdr commented on a change in pull request #256:
URL: https://github.com/apache/qpid-proton/pull/256#discussion_r448481904
##########
File path: python/proton/_message.py
##########
@@ -90,10 +90,12 @@ def _check(self, err):
def _check_property_keys(self):
for k in self.properties.keys():
- # Check for string type. (py2: unicode, py3: str via type hack
above)
- # String subclasses symbol and char are excluded
- # (But so are other string subclasses that would be encoded as
type string!)
- if type(k) == unicode:
+ # Check for string types. (py2: unicode, py3: str via type hack
above)
+ # or string subclasses
+ if isinstance(k, unicode):
+ # Convert string subclasses (including proton char and symbol
types) to string
Review comment:
It is not logically identical.
We want the continue to be reached for all unicode. However, only for
subclasses of unicode, we make the conversion.
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> [python] Non-string message property keys not handled correctly
> ---------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: PROTON-2237
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/PROTON-2237
> Project: Qpid Proton
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: python-binding
> Reporter: Kim van der Riet
> Priority: Major
>
> The AMQP 1.0 spec allows only string keys for message properties.
> Proton's Python binding has a method (_message.py:91 _check_property_keys())
> for checking message property keys, but it does not handle all cases
> correctly:
> # Proton types Symbol and Char are derived from string, and are allowed in
> the test. This results in an illegal encoding.
> # Because in Python 2, many coders carelessly use string literals without
> the required u'' prefix (and thus results in a bytes type), bytes types are
> converted to unicode string types. However, the encode() function is being
> used, which simply returns a binary type in Python 2 and raises an error in
> Python 3. This should probably be the decode() method, which returns a string
> and works for both Python 2 and 3.
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