[740] | 1 | ======
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| 2 | Manual
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| 3 | ======
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| 4 |
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| 5 | Introduction
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| 6 | ------------
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| 7 |
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| 8 | This document provides overview of the features provided by testtools. Refer
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| 9 | to the API docs (i.e. docstrings) for full details on a particular feature.
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| 10 |
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| 11 | Extensions to TestCase
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| 12 | ----------------------
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| 13 |
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| 14 | Custom exception handling
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| 15 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 16 |
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| 17 | testtools provides a way to control how test exceptions are handled. To do
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| 18 | this, add a new exception to self.exception_handlers on a TestCase. For
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| 19 | example::
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| 20 |
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| 21 | >>> self.exception_handlers.insert(-1, (ExceptionClass, handler)).
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| 22 |
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| 23 | Having done this, if any of setUp, tearDown, or the test method raise
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| 24 | ExceptionClass, handler will be called with the test case, test result and the
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| 25 | raised exception.
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| 26 |
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| 27 | Controlling test execution
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| 28 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 29 |
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| 30 | If you want to control more than just how exceptions are raised, you can
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| 31 | provide a custom `RunTest` to a TestCase. The `RunTest` object can change
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| 32 | everything about how the test executes.
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| 33 |
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| 34 | To work with `testtools.TestCase`, a `RunTest` must have a factory that takes
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| 35 | a test and an optional list of exception handlers. Instances returned by the
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| 36 | factory must have a `run()` method that takes an optional `TestResult` object.
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| 37 |
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| 38 | The default is `testtools.runtest.RunTest` and calls 'setUp', the test method
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| 39 | and 'tearDown' in the normal, vanilla way that Python's standard unittest
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| 40 | does.
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| 41 |
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| 42 | To specify a `RunTest` for all the tests in a `TestCase` class, do something
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| 43 | like this::
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| 44 |
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| 45 | class SomeTests(TestCase):
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| 46 | run_tests_with = CustomRunTestFactory
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| 47 |
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| 48 | To specify a `RunTest` for a specific test in a `TestCase` class, do::
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| 49 |
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| 50 | class SomeTests(TestCase):
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| 51 | @run_test_with(CustomRunTestFactory, extra_arg=42, foo='whatever')
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| 52 | def test_something(self):
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| 53 | pass
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| 54 |
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| 55 | In addition, either of these can be overridden by passing a factory in to the
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| 56 | `TestCase` constructor with the optional 'runTest' argument.
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| 57 |
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| 58 | TestCase.addCleanup
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| 59 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 60 |
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| 61 | addCleanup is a robust way to arrange for a cleanup function to be called
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| 62 | before tearDown. This is a powerful and simple alternative to putting cleanup
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| 63 | logic in a try/finally block or tearDown method. e.g.::
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| 64 |
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| 65 | def test_foo(self):
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| 66 | foo.lock()
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| 67 | self.addCleanup(foo.unlock)
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| 68 | ...
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| 69 |
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| 70 | Cleanups can also report multiple errors, if appropriate by wrapping them in
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| 71 | a testtools.MultipleExceptions object::
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| 72 |
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| 73 | raise MultipleExceptions(exc_info1, exc_info2)
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| 74 |
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| 75 |
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| 76 | TestCase.addOnException
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| 77 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 78 |
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| 79 | addOnException adds an exception handler that will be called from the test
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| 80 | framework when it detects an exception from your test code. The handler is
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| 81 | given the exc_info for the exception, and can use this opportunity to attach
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| 82 | more data (via the addDetails API) and potentially other uses.
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| 83 |
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| 84 |
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| 85 | TestCase.patch
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| 86 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 87 |
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| 88 | ``patch`` is a convenient way to monkey-patch a Python object for the duration
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| 89 | of your test. It's especially useful for testing legacy code. e.g.::
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| 90 |
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| 91 | def test_foo(self):
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| 92 | my_stream = StringIO()
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| 93 | self.patch(sys, 'stderr', my_stream)
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| 94 | run_some_code_that_prints_to_stderr()
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| 95 | self.assertEqual('', my_stream.getvalue())
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| 96 |
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| 97 | The call to ``patch`` above masks sys.stderr with 'my_stream' so that anything
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| 98 | printed to stderr will be captured in a StringIO variable that can be actually
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| 99 | tested. Once the test is done, the real sys.stderr is restored to its rightful
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| 100 | place.
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| 101 |
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| 102 |
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| 103 | TestCase.skipTest
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| 104 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 105 |
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| 106 | ``skipTest`` is a simple way to have a test stop running and be reported as a
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| 107 | skipped test, rather than a success/error/failure. This is an alternative to
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| 108 | convoluted logic during test loading, permitting later and more localized
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| 109 | decisions about the appropriateness of running a test. Many reasons exist to
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| 110 | skip a test - for instance when a dependency is missing, or if the test is
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| 111 | expensive and should not be run while on laptop battery power, or if the test
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| 112 | is testing an incomplete feature (this is sometimes called a TODO). Using this
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| 113 | feature when running your test suite with a TestResult object that is missing
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| 114 | the ``addSkip`` method will result in the ``addError`` method being invoked
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| 115 | instead. ``skipTest`` was previously known as ``skip`` but as Python 2.7 adds
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| 116 | ``skipTest`` support, the ``skip`` name is now deprecated (but no warning
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| 117 | is emitted yet - some time in the future we may do so).
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| 118 |
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| 119 | TestCase.useFixture
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| 120 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 121 |
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| 122 | ``useFixture(fixture)`` calls setUp on the fixture, schedules a cleanup to
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| 123 | clean it up, and schedules a cleanup to attach all details held by the
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| 124 | fixture to the details dict of the test case. The fixture object should meet
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| 125 | the ``fixtures.Fixture`` protocol (version 0.3.4 or newer). This is useful
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| 126 | for moving code out of setUp and tearDown methods and into composable side
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| 127 | classes.
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| 128 |
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| 129 |
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| 130 | New assertion methods
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| 131 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 132 |
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| 133 | testtools adds several assertion methods:
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| 134 |
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| 135 | * assertIn
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| 136 | * assertNotIn
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| 137 | * assertIs
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| 138 | * assertIsNot
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| 139 | * assertIsInstance
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| 140 | * assertThat
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| 141 |
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| 142 |
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| 143 | Improved assertRaises
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| 144 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 145 |
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| 146 | TestCase.assertRaises returns the caught exception. This is useful for
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| 147 | asserting more things about the exception than just the type::
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| 148 |
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| 149 | error = self.assertRaises(UnauthorisedError, thing.frobnicate)
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| 150 | self.assertEqual('bob', error.username)
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| 151 | self.assertEqual('User bob cannot frobnicate', str(error))
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| 152 |
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| 153 | Note that this is incompatible with the assertRaises in unittest2/Python2.7.
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| 154 | While we have no immediate plans to change to be compatible consider using the
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| 155 | new assertThat facility instead::
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| 156 |
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| 157 | self.assertThat(
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| 158 | lambda: thing.frobnicate('foo', 'bar'),
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| 159 | Raises(MatchesException(UnauthorisedError('bob')))
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| 160 |
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| 161 | There is also a convenience function to handle this common case::
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| 162 |
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| 163 | self.assertThat(
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| 164 | lambda: thing.frobnicate('foo', 'bar'),
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| 165 | raises(UnauthorisedError('bob')))
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| 166 |
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| 167 |
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| 168 | TestCase.assertThat
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| 169 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 170 |
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| 171 | assertThat is a clean way to write complex assertions without tying them to
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| 172 | the TestCase inheritance hierarchy (and thus making them easier to reuse).
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| 173 |
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| 174 | assertThat takes an object to be matched, and a matcher, and fails if the
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| 175 | matcher does not match the matchee.
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| 176 |
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| 177 | See pydoc testtools.Matcher for the protocol that matchers need to implement.
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| 178 |
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| 179 | testtools includes some matchers in testtools.matchers.
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| 180 | python -c 'import testtools.matchers; print testtools.matchers.__all__' will
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| 181 | list those matchers.
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| 182 |
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| 183 | An example using the DocTestMatches matcher which uses doctests example
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| 184 | matching logic::
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| 185 |
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| 186 | def test_foo(self):
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| 187 | self.assertThat([1,2,3,4], DocTestMatches('[1, 2, 3, 4]'))
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| 188 |
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| 189 |
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| 190 | Creation methods
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| 191 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 192 |
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| 193 | testtools.TestCase implements creation methods called ``getUniqueString`` and
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| 194 | ``getUniqueInteger``. See pages 419-423 of *xUnit Test Patterns* by Meszaros
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| 195 | for a detailed discussion of creation methods.
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| 196 |
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| 197 |
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| 198 | Test renaming
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| 199 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 200 |
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| 201 | ``testtools.clone_test_with_new_id`` is a function to copy a test case
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| 202 | instance to one with a new name. This is helpful for implementing test
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| 203 | parameterization.
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| 204 |
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| 205 |
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| 206 | Extensions to TestResult
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| 207 | ------------------------
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| 208 |
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| 209 | TestResult.addSkip
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| 210 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 211 |
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| 212 | This method is called on result objects when a test skips. The
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| 213 | ``testtools.TestResult`` class records skips in its ``skip_reasons`` instance
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| 214 | dict. The can be reported on in much the same way as succesful tests.
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| 215 |
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| 216 |
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| 217 | TestResult.time
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| 218 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 219 |
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| 220 | This method controls the time used by a TestResult, permitting accurate
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| 221 | timing of test results gathered on different machines or in different threads.
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| 222 | See pydoc testtools.TestResult.time for more details.
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| 223 |
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| 224 |
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| 225 | ThreadsafeForwardingResult
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| 226 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 227 |
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| 228 | A TestResult which forwards activity to another test result, but synchronises
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| 229 | on a semaphore to ensure that all the activity for a single test arrives in a
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| 230 | batch. This allows simple TestResults which do not expect concurrent test
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| 231 | reporting to be fed the activity from multiple test threads, or processes.
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| 232 |
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| 233 | Note that when you provide multiple errors for a single test, the target sees
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| 234 | each error as a distinct complete test.
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| 235 |
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| 236 |
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| 237 | TextTestResult
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| 238 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 239 |
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| 240 | A TestResult that provides a text UI very similar to the Python standard
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| 241 | library UI. Key differences are that its supports the extended outcomes and
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| 242 | details API, and is completely encapsulated into the result object, permitting
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| 243 | it to be used without a 'TestRunner' object. Not all the Python 2.7 outcomes
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| 244 | are displayed (yet). It is also a 'quiet' result with no dots or verbose mode.
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| 245 | These limitations will be corrected soon.
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| 246 |
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| 247 |
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| 248 | Test Doubles
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| 249 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 250 |
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| 251 | In testtools.testresult.doubles there are three test doubles that testtools
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| 252 | uses for its own testing: Python26TestResult, Python27TestResult,
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| 253 | ExtendedTestResult. These TestResult objects implement a single variation of
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| 254 | the TestResult API each, and log activity to a list self._events. These are
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| 255 | made available for the convenience of people writing their own extensions.
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| 256 |
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| 257 |
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| 258 | startTestRun and stopTestRun
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| 259 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 260 |
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| 261 | Python 2.7 added hooks 'startTestRun' and 'stopTestRun' which are called
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| 262 | before and after the entire test run. 'stopTestRun' is particularly useful for
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| 263 | test results that wish to produce summary output.
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| 264 |
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| 265 | testtools.TestResult provides empty startTestRun and stopTestRun methods, and
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| 266 | the default testtools runner will call these methods appropriately.
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| 267 |
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| 268 |
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| 269 | Extensions to TestSuite
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| 270 | -----------------------
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| 271 |
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| 272 | ConcurrentTestSuite
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| 273 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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| 274 |
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| 275 | A TestSuite for parallel testing. This is used in conjuction with a helper that
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| 276 | runs a single suite in some parallel fashion (for instance, forking, handing
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| 277 | off to a subprocess, to a compute cloud, or simple threads).
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| 278 | ConcurrentTestSuite uses the helper to get a number of separate runnable
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| 279 | objects with a run(result), runs them all in threads using the
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| 280 | ThreadsafeForwardingResult to coalesce their activity.
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| 281 |
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| 282 |
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| 283 | Running tests
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| 284 | -------------
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| 285 |
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| 286 | testtools provides a convenient way to run a test suite using the testtools
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| 287 | result object: python -m testtools.run testspec [testspec...].
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| 288 |
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| 289 | To run tests with Python 2.4, you'll have to do something like:
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| 290 | python2.4 /path/to/testtools/run.py testspec [testspec ...].
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| 291 |
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| 292 |
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| 293 | Test discovery
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| 294 | --------------
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| 295 |
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| 296 | testtools includes a backported version of the Python 2.7 glue for using the
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| 297 | discover test discovery module. If you either have Python 2.7/3.1 or newer, or
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| 298 | install the 'discover' module, then you can invoke discovery::
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| 299 |
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| 300 | python -m testtools.run discover [path]
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| 301 |
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| 302 | For more information see the Python 2.7 unittest documentation, or::
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| 303 |
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| 304 | python -m testtools.run --help
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| 305 |
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| 306 |
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| 307 | Twisted support
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| 308 | ---------------
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| 309 |
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| 310 | Support for running Twisted tests is very experimental right now. You
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| 311 | shouldn't really do it. However, if you are going to, here are some tips for
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| 312 | converting your Trial tests into testtools tests.
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| 313 |
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| 314 | * Use the AsynchronousDeferredRunTest runner
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| 315 | * Make sure to upcall to setUp and tearDown
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| 316 | * Don't use setUpClass or tearDownClass
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| 317 | * Don't expect setting .todo, .timeout or .skip attributes to do anything
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| 318 | * flushLoggedErrors is not there for you. Sorry.
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| 319 | * assertFailure is not there for you. Even more sorry.
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| 320 |
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| 321 |
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| 322 | General helpers
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| 323 | ---------------
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| 324 |
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| 325 | Lots of the time we would like to conditionally import modules. testtools
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| 326 | needs to do this itself, and graciously extends the ability to its users.
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| 327 |
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| 328 | Instead of::
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| 329 |
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| 330 | try:
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| 331 | from twisted.internet import defer
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| 332 | except ImportError:
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| 333 | defer = None
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| 334 |
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| 335 | You can do::
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| 336 |
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| 337 | defer = try_import('twisted.internet.defer')
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| 338 |
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| 339 |
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| 340 | Instead of::
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| 341 |
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| 342 | try:
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| 343 | from StringIO import StringIO
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| 344 | except ImportError:
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| 345 | from io import StringIO
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| 346 |
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| 347 | You can do::
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| 348 |
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| 349 | StringIO = try_imports(['StringIO.StringIO', 'io.StringIO'])
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