| |
| :mod:`unittest.mock` --- mock object library |
| ============================================ |
| |
| .. module:: unittest.mock |
| :synopsis: Mock object library. |
| .. moduleauthor:: Michael Foord <michael@python.org> |
| .. currentmodule:: unittest.mock |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.3 |
| |
| :mod:`unittest.mock` is a library for testing in Python. It allows you to |
| replace parts of your system under test with mock objects and make assertions |
| about how they have been used. |
| |
| `unittest.mock` provides a core :class:`Mock` class removing the need to |
| create a host of stubs throughout your test suite. After performing an |
| action, you can make assertions about which methods / attributes were used |
| and arguments they were called with. You can also specify return values and |
| set needed attributes in the normal way. |
| |
| Additionally, mock provides a :func:`patch` decorator that handles patching |
| module and class level attributes within the scope of a test, along with |
| :const:`sentinel` for creating unique objects. See the `quick guide`_ for |
| some examples of how to use :class:`Mock`, :class:`MagicMock` and |
| :func:`patch`. |
| |
| Mock is very easy to use and is designed for use with :mod:`unittest`. Mock |
| is based on the 'action -> assertion' pattern instead of `'record -> replay'` |
| used by many mocking frameworks. |
| |
| There is a backport of `unittest.mock` for earlier versions of Python, |
| available as `mock on PyPI <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mock>`_. |
| |
| **Source code:** :source:`Lib/unittest/mock.py` |
| |
| |
| Quick Guide |
| ----------- |
| |
| :class:`Mock` and :class:`MagicMock` objects create all attributes and |
| methods as you access them and store details of how they have been used. You |
| can configure them, to specify return values or limit what attributes are |
| available, and then make assertions about how they have been used: |
| |
| >>> from unittest.mock import MagicMock |
| >>> thing = ProductionClass() |
| >>> thing.method = MagicMock(return_value=3) |
| >>> thing.method(3, 4, 5, key='value') |
| 3 |
| >>> thing.method.assert_called_with(3, 4, 5, key='value') |
| |
| :attr:`side_effect` allows you to perform side effects, including raising an |
| exception when a mock is called: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=KeyError('foo')) |
| >>> mock() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError: 'foo' |
| |
| >>> values = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3} |
| >>> def side_effect(arg): |
| ... return values[arg] |
| ... |
| >>> mock.side_effect = side_effect |
| >>> mock('a'), mock('b'), mock('c') |
| (1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.side_effect = [5, 4, 3, 2, 1] |
| >>> mock(), mock(), mock() |
| (5, 4, 3) |
| |
| Mock has many other ways you can configure it and control its behaviour. For |
| example the `spec` argument configures the mock to take its specification |
| from another object. Attempting to access attributes or methods on the mock |
| that don't exist on the spec will fail with an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| The :func:`patch` decorator / context manager makes it easy to mock classes or |
| objects in a module under test. The object you specify will be replaced with a |
| mock (or other object) during the test and restored when the test ends: |
| |
| >>> from unittest.mock import patch |
| >>> @patch('module.ClassName2') |
| ... @patch('module.ClassName1') |
| ... def test(MockClass1, MockClass2): |
| ... module.ClassName1() |
| ... module.ClassName2() |
| ... assert MockClass1 is module.ClassName1 |
| ... assert MockClass2 is module.ClassName2 |
| ... assert MockClass1.called |
| ... assert MockClass2.called |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| When you nest patch decorators the mocks are passed in to the decorated |
| function in the same order they applied (the normal *python* order that |
| decorators are applied). This means from the bottom up, so in the example |
| above the mock for `module.ClassName1` is passed in first. |
| |
| With `patch` it matters that you patch objects in the namespace where they |
| are looked up. This is normally straightforward, but for a quick guide |
| read :ref:`where to patch <where-to-patch>`. |
| |
| As well as a decorator `patch` can be used as a context manager in a with |
| statement: |
| |
| >>> with patch.object(ProductionClass, 'method', return_value=None) as mock_method: |
| ... thing = ProductionClass() |
| ... thing.method(1, 2, 3) |
| ... |
| >>> mock_method.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3) |
| |
| |
| There is also :func:`patch.dict` for setting values in a dictionary just |
| during a scope and restoring the dictionary to its original state when the test |
| ends: |
| |
| >>> foo = {'key': 'value'} |
| >>> original = foo.copy() |
| >>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}, clear=True): |
| ... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'} |
| ... |
| >>> assert foo == original |
| |
| Mock supports the mocking of Python :ref:`magic methods <magic-methods>`. The |
| easiest way of using magic methods is with the :class:`MagicMock` class. It |
| allows you to do things like: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'foobarbaz' |
| >>> str(mock) |
| 'foobarbaz' |
| >>> mock.__str__.assert_called_with() |
| |
| Mock allows you to assign functions (or other Mock instances) to magic methods |
| and they will be called appropriately. The `MagicMock` class is just a Mock |
| variant that has all of the magic methods pre-created for you (well, all the |
| useful ones anyway). |
| |
| The following is an example of using magic methods with the ordinary Mock |
| class: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__str__ = Mock(return_value='wheeeeee') |
| >>> str(mock) |
| 'wheeeeee' |
| |
| For ensuring that the mock objects in your tests have the same api as the |
| objects they are replacing, you can use :ref:`auto-speccing <auto-speccing>`. |
| Auto-speccing can be done through the `autospec` argument to patch, or the |
| :func:`create_autospec` function. Auto-speccing creates mock objects that |
| have the same attributes and methods as the objects they are replacing, and |
| any functions and methods (including constructors) have the same call |
| signature as the real object. |
| |
| This ensures that your mocks will fail in the same way as your production |
| code if they are used incorrectly: |
| |
| >>> from unittest.mock import create_autospec |
| >>> def function(a, b, c): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> mock_function = create_autospec(function, return_value='fishy') |
| >>> mock_function(1, 2, 3) |
| 'fishy' |
| >>> mock_function.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock_function('wrong arguments') |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| TypeError: <lambda>() takes exactly 3 arguments (1 given) |
| |
| `create_autospec` can also be used on classes, where it copies the signature of |
| the `__init__` method, and on callable objects where it copies the signature of |
| the `__call__` method. |
| |
| |
| |
| The Mock Class |
| -------------- |
| |
| |
| `Mock` is a flexible mock object intended to replace the use of stubs and |
| test doubles throughout your code. Mocks are callable and create attributes as |
| new mocks when you access them [#]_. Accessing the same attribute will always |
| return the same mock. Mocks record how you use them, allowing you to make |
| assertions about what your code has done to them. |
| |
| :class:`MagicMock` is a subclass of `Mock` with all the magic methods |
| pre-created and ready to use. There are also non-callable variants, useful |
| when you are mocking out objects that aren't callable: |
| :class:`NonCallableMock` and :class:`NonCallableMagicMock` |
| |
| The :func:`patch` decorators makes it easy to temporarily replace classes |
| in a particular module with a `Mock` object. By default `patch` will create |
| a `MagicMock` for you. You can specify an alternative class of `Mock` using |
| the `new_callable` argument to `patch`. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: Mock(spec=None, side_effect=None, return_value=DEFAULT, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, **kwargs) |
| |
| Create a new `Mock` object. `Mock` takes several optional arguments |
| that specify the behaviour of the Mock object: |
| |
| * `spec`: This can be either a list of strings or an existing object (a |
| class or instance) that acts as the specification for the mock object. If |
| you pass in an object then a list of strings is formed by calling dir on |
| the object (excluding unsupported magic attributes and methods). |
| Accessing any attribute not in this list will raise an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| If `spec` is an object (rather than a list of strings) then |
| :attr:`~instance.__class__` returns the class of the spec object. This |
| allows mocks to pass `isinstance` tests. |
| |
| * `spec_set`: A stricter variant of `spec`. If used, attempting to *set* |
| or get an attribute on the mock that isn't on the object passed as |
| `spec_set` will raise an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| * `side_effect`: A function to be called whenever the Mock is called. See |
| the :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` attribute. Useful for raising exceptions or |
| dynamically changing return values. The function is called with the same |
| arguments as the mock, and unless it returns :data:`DEFAULT`, the return |
| value of this function is used as the return value. |
| |
| Alternatively `side_effect` can be an exception class or instance. In |
| this case the exception will be raised when the mock is called. |
| |
| If `side_effect` is an iterable then each call to the mock will return |
| the next value from the iterable. |
| |
| A `side_effect` can be cleared by setting it to `None`. |
| |
| * `return_value`: The value returned when the mock is called. By default |
| this is a new Mock (created on first access). See the |
| :attr:`return_value` attribute. |
| |
| * `wraps`: Item for the mock object to wrap. If `wraps` is not None then |
| calling the Mock will pass the call through to the wrapped object |
| (returning the real result). Attribute access on the mock will return a |
| Mock object that wraps the corresponding attribute of the wrapped |
| object (so attempting to access an attribute that doesn't exist will |
| raise an `AttributeError`). |
| |
| If the mock has an explicit `return_value` set then calls are not passed |
| to the wrapped object and the `return_value` is returned instead. |
| |
| * `name`: If the mock has a name then it will be used in the repr of the |
| mock. This can be useful for debugging. The name is propagated to child |
| mocks. |
| |
| Mocks can also be called with arbitrary keyword arguments. These will be |
| used to set attributes on the mock after it is created. See the |
| :meth:`configure_mock` method for details. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: assert_called_with(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| This method is a convenient way of asserting that calls are made in a |
| particular way: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.method(1, 2, 3, test='wow') |
| <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.method.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3, test='wow') |
| |
| .. method:: assert_called_once_with(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| Assert that the mock was called exactly once and with the specified |
| arguments. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock('foo', bar='baz') |
| >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar='baz') |
| >>> mock('foo', bar='baz') |
| >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar='baz') |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: assert_any_call(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| assert the mock has been called with the specified arguments. |
| |
| The assert passes if the mock has *ever* been called, unlike |
| :meth:`assert_called_with` and :meth:`assert_called_once_with` that |
| only pass if the call is the most recent one. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, arg='thing') |
| >>> mock('some', 'thing', 'else') |
| >>> mock.assert_any_call(1, 2, arg='thing') |
| |
| |
| .. method:: assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=False) |
| |
| assert the mock has been called with the specified calls. |
| The `mock_calls` list is checked for the calls. |
| |
| If `any_order` is false (the default) then the calls must be |
| sequential. There can be extra calls before or after the |
| specified calls. |
| |
| If `any_order` is true then the calls can be in any order, but |
| they must all appear in :attr:`mock_calls`. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(1) |
| >>> mock(2) |
| >>> mock(3) |
| >>> mock(4) |
| >>> calls = [call(2), call(3)] |
| >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls) |
| >>> calls = [call(4), call(2), call(3)] |
| >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=True) |
| |
| |
| .. method:: reset_mock() |
| |
| The reset_mock method resets all the call attributes on a mock object: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock('hello') |
| >>> mock.called |
| True |
| >>> mock.reset_mock() |
| >>> mock.called |
| False |
| |
| This can be useful where you want to make a series of assertions that |
| reuse the same object. Note that `reset_mock` *doesn't* clear the |
| return value, :attr:`side_effect` or any child attributes you have |
| set using normal assignment. Child mocks and the return value mock |
| (if any) are reset as well. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: mock_add_spec(spec, spec_set=False) |
| |
| Add a spec to a mock. `spec` can either be an object or a |
| list of strings. Only attributes on the `spec` can be fetched as |
| attributes from the mock. |
| |
| If `spec_set` is `True` then only attributes on the spec can be set. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: attach_mock(mock, attribute) |
| |
| Attach a mock as an attribute of this one, replacing its name and |
| parent. Calls to the attached mock will be recorded in the |
| :attr:`method_calls` and :attr:`mock_calls` attributes of this one. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: configure_mock(**kwargs) |
| |
| Set attributes on the mock through keyword arguments. |
| |
| Attributes plus return values and side effects can be set on child |
| mocks using standard dot notation and unpacking a dictionary in the |
| method call: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} |
| >>> mock.configure_mock(**attrs) |
| >>> mock.method() |
| 3 |
| >>> mock.other() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError |
| |
| The same thing can be achieved in the constructor call to mocks: |
| |
| >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} |
| >>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs) |
| >>> mock.some_attribute |
| 'eggs' |
| >>> mock.method() |
| 3 |
| >>> mock.other() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError |
| |
| `configure_mock` exists to make it easier to do configuration |
| after the mock has been created. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: __dir__() |
| |
| `Mock` objects limit the results of `dir(some_mock)` to useful results. |
| For mocks with a `spec` this includes all the permitted attributes |
| for the mock. |
| |
| See :data:`FILTER_DIR` for what this filtering does, and how to |
| switch it off. |
| |
| |
| .. method:: _get_child_mock(**kw) |
| |
| Create the child mocks for attributes and return value. |
| By default child mocks will be the same type as the parent. |
| Subclasses of Mock may want to override this to customize the way |
| child mocks are made. |
| |
| For non-callable mocks the callable variant will be used (rather than |
| any custom subclass). |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: called |
| |
| A boolean representing whether or not the mock object has been called: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock.called |
| False |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock.called |
| True |
| |
| .. attribute:: call_count |
| |
| An integer telling you how many times the mock object has been called: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock.call_count |
| 0 |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock.call_count |
| 2 |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: return_value |
| |
| Set this to configure the value returned by calling the mock: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.return_value = 'fish' |
| >>> mock() |
| 'fish' |
| |
| The default return value is a mock object and you can configure it in |
| the normal way: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.return_value.attribute = sentinel.Attribute |
| >>> mock.return_value() |
| <Mock name='mock()()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.return_value.assert_called_with() |
| |
| `return_value` can also be set in the constructor: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=3) |
| >>> mock.return_value |
| 3 |
| >>> mock() |
| 3 |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: side_effect |
| |
| This can either be a function to be called when the mock is called, |
| or an exception (class or instance) to be raised. |
| |
| If you pass in a function it will be called with same arguments as the |
| mock and unless the function returns the :data:`DEFAULT` singleton the |
| call to the mock will then return whatever the function returns. If the |
| function returns :data:`DEFAULT` then the mock will return its normal |
| value (from the :attr:`return_value`). |
| |
| An example of a mock that raises an exception (to test exception |
| handling of an API): |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.side_effect = Exception('Boom!') |
| >>> mock() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| Exception: Boom! |
| |
| Using `side_effect` to return a sequence of values: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.side_effect = [3, 2, 1] |
| >>> mock(), mock(), mock() |
| (3, 2, 1) |
| |
| The `side_effect` function is called with the same arguments as the |
| mock (so it is wise for it to take arbitrary args and keyword |
| arguments) and whatever it returns is used as the return value for |
| the call. The exception is if `side_effect` returns :data:`DEFAULT`, |
| in which case the normal :attr:`return_value` is used. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=3) |
| >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): |
| ... return DEFAULT |
| ... |
| >>> mock.side_effect = side_effect |
| >>> mock() |
| 3 |
| |
| `side_effect` can be set in the constructor. Here's an example that |
| adds one to the value the mock is called with and returns it: |
| |
| >>> side_effect = lambda value: value + 1 |
| >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=side_effect) |
| >>> mock(3) |
| 4 |
| >>> mock(-8) |
| -7 |
| |
| Setting `side_effect` to `None` clears it: |
| |
| >>> m = Mock(side_effect=KeyError, return_value=3) |
| >>> m() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError |
| >>> m.side_effect = None |
| >>> m() |
| 3 |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: call_args |
| |
| This is either `None` (if the mock hasn't been called), or the |
| arguments that the mock was last called with. This will be in the |
| form of a tuple: the first member is any ordered arguments the mock |
| was called with (or an empty tuple) and the second member is any |
| keyword arguments (or an empty dictionary). |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> print mock.call_args |
| None |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock.call_args |
| call() |
| >>> mock.call_args == () |
| True |
| >>> mock(3, 4) |
| >>> mock.call_args |
| call(3, 4) |
| >>> mock.call_args == ((3, 4),) |
| True |
| >>> mock(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!') |
| >>> mock.call_args |
| call(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!') |
| |
| `call_args`, along with members of the lists :attr:`call_args_list`, |
| :attr:`method_calls` and :attr:`mock_calls` are :data:`call` objects. |
| These are tuples, so they can be unpacked to get at the individual |
| arguments and make more complex assertions. See |
| :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: call_args_list |
| |
| This is a list of all the calls made to the mock object in sequence |
| (so the length of the list is the number of times it has been |
| called). Before any calls have been made it is an empty list. The |
| :data:`call` object can be used for conveniently constructing lists of |
| calls to compare with `call_args_list`. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock(3, 4) |
| >>> mock(key='fish', next='w00t!') |
| >>> mock.call_args_list |
| [call(), call(3, 4), call(key='fish', next='w00t!')] |
| >>> expected = [(), ((3, 4),), ({'key': 'fish', 'next': 'w00t!'},)] |
| >>> mock.call_args_list == expected |
| True |
| |
| Members of `call_args_list` are :data:`call` objects. These can be |
| unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See |
| :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: method_calls |
| |
| As well as tracking calls to themselves, mocks also track calls to |
| methods and attributes, and *their* methods and attributes: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.method() |
| <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.property.method.attribute() |
| <Mock name='mock.property.method.attribute()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.method_calls |
| [call.method(), call.property.method.attribute()] |
| |
| Members of `method_calls` are :data:`call` objects. These can be |
| unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See |
| :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: mock_calls |
| |
| `mock_calls` records *all* calls to the mock object, its methods, magic |
| methods *and* return value mocks. |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> result = mock(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.first(a=3) |
| <MagicMock name='mock.first()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.second() |
| <MagicMock name='mock.second()' id='...'> |
| >>> int(mock) |
| 1 |
| >>> result(1) |
| <MagicMock name='mock()()' id='...'> |
| >>> expected = [call(1, 2, 3), call.first(a=3), call.second(), |
| ... call.__int__(), call()(1)] |
| >>> mock.mock_calls == expected |
| True |
| |
| Members of `mock_calls` are :data:`call` objects. These can be |
| unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See |
| :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`. |
| |
| |
| .. attribute:: __class__ |
| |
| Normally the `__class__` attribute of an object will return its type. |
| For a mock object with a `spec` `__class__` returns the spec class |
| instead. This allows mock objects to pass `isinstance` tests for the |
| object they are replacing / masquerading as: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec=3) |
| >>> isinstance(mock, int) |
| True |
| |
| `__class__` is assignable to, this allows a mock to pass an |
| `isinstance` check without forcing you to use a spec: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__class__ = dict |
| >>> isinstance(mock, dict) |
| True |
| |
| .. class:: NonCallableMock(spec=None, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, **kwargs) |
| |
| A non-callable version of `Mock`. The constructor parameters have the same |
| meaning of `Mock`, with the exception of `return_value` and `side_effect` |
| which have no meaning on a non-callable mock. |
| |
| Mock objects that use a class or an instance as a `spec` or `spec_set` are able |
| to pass `isinstance` tests: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec=SomeClass) |
| >>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass) |
| True |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec_set=SomeClass()) |
| >>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass) |
| True |
| |
| The `Mock` classes have support for mocking magic methods. See :ref:`magic |
| methods <magic-methods>` for the full details. |
| |
| The mock classes and the :func:`patch` decorators all take arbitrary keyword |
| arguments for configuration. For the `patch` decorators the keywords are |
| passed to the constructor of the mock being created. The keyword arguments |
| are for configuring attributes of the mock: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(attribute=3, other='fish') |
| >>> m.attribute |
| 3 |
| >>> m.other |
| 'fish' |
| |
| The return value and side effect of child mocks can be set in the same way, |
| using dotted notation. As you can't use dotted names directly in a call you |
| have to create a dictionary and unpack it using `**`: |
| |
| >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} |
| >>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs) |
| >>> mock.some_attribute |
| 'eggs' |
| >>> mock.method() |
| 3 |
| >>> mock.other() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError |
| |
| A callable mock which was created with a *spec* (or a *spec_set*) will |
| introspect the specification object's signature when matching calls to |
| the mock. Therefore, it can match the actual call's arguments regardless |
| of whether they were passed positionally or by name:: |
| |
| >>> def f(a, b, c): pass |
| ... |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec=f) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, c=3) |
| <Mock name='mock()' id='140161580456576'> |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with(a=1, b=2, c=3) |
| |
| This applies to :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with`, |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with`, :meth:`~Mock.assert_has_calls` and |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_any_call`. When :ref:`auto-speccing`, it will also |
| apply to method calls on the mock object. |
| |
| .. versionchanged:: 3.4 |
| Added signature introspection on specced and autospecced mock objects. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: PropertyMock(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| A mock intended to be used as a property, or other descriptor, on a class. |
| `PropertyMock` provides `__get__` and `__set__` methods so you can specify |
| a return value when it is fetched. |
| |
| Fetching a `PropertyMock` instance from an object calls the mock, with |
| no args. Setting it calls the mock with the value being set. |
| |
| >>> class Foo: |
| ... @property |
| ... def foo(self): |
| ... return 'something' |
| ... @foo.setter |
| ... def foo(self, value): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> with patch('__main__.Foo.foo', new_callable=PropertyMock) as mock_foo: |
| ... mock_foo.return_value = 'mockity-mock' |
| ... this_foo = Foo() |
| ... print this_foo.foo |
| ... this_foo.foo = 6 |
| ... |
| mockity-mock |
| >>> mock_foo.mock_calls |
| [call(), call(6)] |
| |
| Because of the way mock attributes are stored you can't directly attach a |
| `PropertyMock` to a mock object. Instead you can attach it to the mock type |
| object:: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> p = PropertyMock(return_value=3) |
| >>> type(m).foo = p |
| >>> m.foo |
| 3 |
| >>> p.assert_called_once_with() |
| |
| |
| Calling |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Mock objects are callable. The call will return the value set as the |
| :attr:`~Mock.return_value` attribute. The default return value is a new Mock |
| object; it is created the first time the return value is accessed (either |
| explicitly or by calling the Mock) - but it is stored and the same one |
| returned each time. |
| |
| Calls made to the object will be recorded in the attributes |
| like :attr:`~Mock.call_args` and :attr:`~Mock.call_args_list`. |
| |
| If :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` is set then it will be called after the call has |
| been recorded, so if `side_effect` raises an exception the call is still |
| recorded. |
| |
| The simplest way to make a mock raise an exception when called is to make |
| :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` an exception class or instance: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=IndexError) |
| >>> m(1, 2, 3) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| IndexError |
| >>> m.mock_calls |
| [call(1, 2, 3)] |
| >>> m.side_effect = KeyError('Bang!') |
| >>> m('two', 'three', 'four') |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError: 'Bang!' |
| >>> m.mock_calls |
| [call(1, 2, 3), call('two', 'three', 'four')] |
| |
| If `side_effect` is a function then whatever that function returns is what |
| calls to the mock return. The `side_effect` function is called with the |
| same arguments as the mock. This allows you to vary the return value of the |
| call dynamically, based on the input: |
| |
| >>> def side_effect(value): |
| ... return value + 1 |
| ... |
| >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=side_effect) |
| >>> m(1) |
| 2 |
| >>> m(2) |
| 3 |
| >>> m.mock_calls |
| [call(1), call(2)] |
| |
| If you want the mock to still return the default return value (a new mock), or |
| any set return value, then there are two ways of doing this. Either return |
| `mock.return_value` from inside `side_effect`, or return :data:`DEFAULT`: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): |
| ... return m.return_value |
| ... |
| >>> m.side_effect = side_effect |
| >>> m.return_value = 3 |
| >>> m() |
| 3 |
| >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): |
| ... return DEFAULT |
| ... |
| >>> m.side_effect = side_effect |
| >>> m() |
| 3 |
| |
| To remove a `side_effect`, and return to the default behaviour, set the |
| `side_effect` to `None`: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=6) |
| >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): |
| ... return 3 |
| ... |
| >>> m.side_effect = side_effect |
| >>> m() |
| 3 |
| >>> m.side_effect = None |
| >>> m() |
| 6 |
| |
| The `side_effect` can also be any iterable object. Repeated calls to the mock |
| will return values from the iterable (until the iterable is exhausted and |
| a `StopIteration` is raised): |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=[1, 2, 3]) |
| >>> m() |
| 1 |
| >>> m() |
| 2 |
| >>> m() |
| 3 |
| >>> m() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| StopIteration |
| |
| If any members of the iterable are exceptions they will be raised instead of |
| returned:: |
| |
| >>> iterable = (33, ValueError, 66) |
| >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=iterable) |
| >>> m() |
| 33 |
| >>> m() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| ValueError |
| >>> m() |
| 66 |
| |
| |
| .. _deleting-attributes: |
| |
| Deleting Attributes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Mock objects create attributes on demand. This allows them to pretend to be |
| objects of any type. |
| |
| You may want a mock object to return `False` to a `hasattr` call, or raise an |
| `AttributeError` when an attribute is fetched. You can do this by providing |
| an object as a `spec` for a mock, but that isn't always convenient. |
| |
| You "block" attributes by deleting them. Once deleted, accessing an attribute |
| will raise an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> hasattr(mock, 'm') |
| True |
| >>> del mock.m |
| >>> hasattr(mock, 'm') |
| False |
| >>> del mock.f |
| >>> mock.f |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: f |
| |
| |
| Mock names and the name attribute |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Since "name" is an argument to the :class:`Mock` constructor, if you want your |
| mock object to have a "name" attribute you can't just pass it in at creation |
| time. There are two alternatives. One option is to use |
| :meth:`~Mock.configure_mock`:: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.configure_mock(name='my_name') |
| >>> mock.name |
| 'my_name' |
| |
| A simpler option is to simply set the "name" attribute after mock creation:: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.name = "foo" |
| |
| |
| Attaching Mocks as Attributes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| When you attach a mock as an attribute of another mock (or as the return |
| value) it becomes a "child" of that mock. Calls to the child are recorded in |
| the :attr:`~Mock.method_calls` and :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` attributes of the |
| parent. This is useful for configuring child mocks and then attaching them to |
| the parent, or for attaching mocks to a parent that records all calls to the |
| children and allows you to make assertions about the order of calls between |
| mocks: |
| |
| >>> parent = MagicMock() |
| >>> child1 = MagicMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> child2 = MagicMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> parent.child1 = child1 |
| >>> parent.child2 = child2 |
| >>> child1(1) |
| >>> child2(2) |
| >>> parent.mock_calls |
| [call.child1(1), call.child2(2)] |
| |
| The exception to this is if the mock has a name. This allows you to prevent |
| the "parenting" if for some reason you don't want it to happen. |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> not_a_child = MagicMock(name='not-a-child') |
| >>> mock.attribute = not_a_child |
| >>> mock.attribute() |
| <MagicMock name='not-a-child()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.mock_calls |
| [] |
| |
| Mocks created for you by :func:`patch` are automatically given names. To |
| attach mocks that have names to a parent you use the :meth:`~Mock.attach_mock` |
| method: |
| |
| >>> thing1 = object() |
| >>> thing2 = object() |
| >>> parent = MagicMock() |
| >>> with patch('__main__.thing1', return_value=None) as child1: |
| ... with patch('__main__.thing2', return_value=None) as child2: |
| ... parent.attach_mock(child1, 'child1') |
| ... parent.attach_mock(child2, 'child2') |
| ... child1('one') |
| ... child2('two') |
| ... |
| >>> parent.mock_calls |
| [call.child1('one'), call.child2('two')] |
| |
| |
| .. [#] The only exceptions are magic methods and attributes (those that have |
| leading and trailing double underscores). Mock doesn't create these but |
| instead raises an ``AttributeError``. This is because the interpreter |
| will often implicitly request these methods, and gets *very* confused to |
| get a new Mock object when it expects a magic method. If you need magic |
| method support see :ref:`magic methods <magic-methods>`. |
| |
| |
| The patchers |
| ------------ |
| |
| The patch decorators are used for patching objects only within the scope of |
| the function they decorate. They automatically handle the unpatching for you, |
| even if exceptions are raised. All of these functions can also be used in with |
| statements or as class decorators. |
| |
| |
| patch |
| ~~~~~ |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| `patch` is straightforward to use. The key is to do the patching in the |
| right namespace. See the section `where to patch`_. |
| |
| .. function:: patch(target, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs) |
| |
| `patch` acts as a function decorator, class decorator or a context |
| manager. Inside the body of the function or with statement, the `target` |
| is patched with a `new` object. When the function/with statement exits |
| the patch is undone. |
| |
| If `new` is omitted, then the target is replaced with a |
| :class:`MagicMock`. If `patch` is used as a decorator and `new` is |
| omitted, the created mock is passed in as an extra argument to the |
| decorated function. If `patch` is used as a context manager the created |
| mock is returned by the context manager. |
| |
| `target` should be a string in the form `'package.module.ClassName'`. The |
| `target` is imported and the specified object replaced with the `new` |
| object, so the `target` must be importable from the environment you are |
| calling `patch` from. The target is imported when the decorated function |
| is executed, not at decoration time. |
| |
| The `spec` and `spec_set` keyword arguments are passed to the `MagicMock` |
| if patch is creating one for you. |
| |
| In addition you can pass `spec=True` or `spec_set=True`, which causes |
| patch to pass in the object being mocked as the spec/spec_set object. |
| |
| `new_callable` allows you to specify a different class, or callable object, |
| that will be called to create the `new` object. By default `MagicMock` is |
| used. |
| |
| A more powerful form of `spec` is `autospec`. If you set `autospec=True` |
| then the mock with be created with a spec from the object being replaced. |
| All attributes of the mock will also have the spec of the corresponding |
| attribute of the object being replaced. Methods and functions being mocked |
| will have their arguments checked and will raise a `TypeError` if they are |
| called with the wrong signature. For mocks |
| replacing a class, their return value (the 'instance') will have the same |
| spec as the class. See the :func:`create_autospec` function and |
| :ref:`auto-speccing`. |
| |
| Instead of `autospec=True` you can pass `autospec=some_object` to use an |
| arbitrary object as the spec instead of the one being replaced. |
| |
| By default `patch` will fail to replace attributes that don't exist. If |
| you pass in `create=True`, and the attribute doesn't exist, patch will |
| create the attribute for you when the patched function is called, and |
| delete it again afterwards. This is useful for writing tests against |
| attributes that your production code creates at runtime. It is off by |
| default because it can be dangerous. With it switched on you can write |
| passing tests against APIs that don't actually exist! |
| |
| Patch can be used as a `TestCase` class decorator. It works by |
| decorating each test method in the class. This reduces the boilerplate |
| code when your test methods share a common patchings set. `patch` finds |
| tests by looking for method names that start with `patch.TEST_PREFIX`. |
| By default this is `test`, which matches the way `unittest` finds tests. |
| You can specify an alternative prefix by setting `patch.TEST_PREFIX`. |
| |
| Patch can be used as a context manager, with the with statement. Here the |
| patching applies to the indented block after the with statement. If you |
| use "as" then the patched object will be bound to the name after the |
| "as"; very useful if `patch` is creating a mock object for you. |
| |
| `patch` takes arbitrary keyword arguments. These will be passed to |
| the `Mock` (or `new_callable`) on construction. |
| |
| `patch.dict(...)`, `patch.multiple(...)` and `patch.object(...)` are |
| available for alternate use-cases. |
| |
| `patch` as function decorator, creating the mock for you and passing it into |
| the decorated function: |
| |
| >>> @patch('__main__.SomeClass') |
| ... def function(normal_argument, mock_class): |
| ... print(mock_class is SomeClass) |
| ... |
| >>> function(None) |
| True |
| |
| Patching a class replaces the class with a `MagicMock` *instance*. If the |
| class is instantiated in the code under test then it will be the |
| :attr:`~Mock.return_value` of the mock that will be used. |
| |
| If the class is instantiated multiple times you could use |
| :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` to return a new mock each time. Alternatively you |
| can set the `return_value` to be anything you want. |
| |
| To configure return values on methods of *instances* on the patched class |
| you must do this on the `return_value`. For example: |
| |
| >>> class Class: |
| ... def method(self): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> with patch('__main__.Class') as MockClass: |
| ... instance = MockClass.return_value |
| ... instance.method.return_value = 'foo' |
| ... assert Class() is instance |
| ... assert Class().method() == 'foo' |
| ... |
| |
| If you use `spec` or `spec_set` and `patch` is replacing a *class*, then the |
| return value of the created mock will have the same spec. |
| |
| >>> Original = Class |
| >>> patcher = patch('__main__.Class', spec=True) |
| >>> MockClass = patcher.start() |
| >>> instance = MockClass() |
| >>> assert isinstance(instance, Original) |
| >>> patcher.stop() |
| |
| The `new_callable` argument is useful where you want to use an alternative |
| class to the default :class:`MagicMock` for the created mock. For example, if |
| you wanted a :class:`NonCallableMock` to be used: |
| |
| >>> thing = object() |
| >>> with patch('__main__.thing', new_callable=NonCallableMock) as mock_thing: |
| ... assert thing is mock_thing |
| ... thing() |
| ... |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| TypeError: 'NonCallableMock' object is not callable |
| |
| Another use case might be to replace an object with a `io.StringIO` instance: |
| |
| >>> from io import StringIO |
| >>> def foo(): |
| ... print 'Something' |
| ... |
| >>> @patch('sys.stdout', new_callable=StringIO) |
| ... def test(mock_stdout): |
| ... foo() |
| ... assert mock_stdout.getvalue() == 'Something\n' |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| |
| When `patch` is creating a mock for you, it is common that the first thing |
| you need to do is to configure the mock. Some of that configuration can be done |
| in the call to patch. Any arbitrary keywords you pass into the call will be |
| used to set attributes on the created mock: |
| |
| >>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', first='one', second='two') |
| >>> mock_thing = patcher.start() |
| >>> mock_thing.first |
| 'one' |
| >>> mock_thing.second |
| 'two' |
| |
| As well as attributes on the created mock attributes, like the |
| :attr:`~Mock.return_value` and :attr:`~Mock.side_effect`, of child mocks can |
| also be configured. These aren't syntactically valid to pass in directly as |
| keyword arguments, but a dictionary with these as keys can still be expanded |
| into a `patch` call using `**`: |
| |
| >>> config = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} |
| >>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', **config) |
| >>> mock_thing = patcher.start() |
| >>> mock_thing.method() |
| 3 |
| >>> mock_thing.other() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError |
| |
| |
| patch.object |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: patch.object(target, attribute, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs) |
| |
| patch the named member (`attribute`) on an object (`target`) with a mock |
| object. |
| |
| `patch.object` can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context |
| manager. Arguments `new`, `spec`, `create`, `spec_set`, `autospec` and |
| `new_callable` have the same meaning as for `patch`. Like `patch`, |
| `patch.object` takes arbitrary keyword arguments for configuring the mock |
| object it creates. |
| |
| When used as a class decorator `patch.object` honours `patch.TEST_PREFIX` |
| for choosing which methods to wrap. |
| |
| You can either call `patch.object` with three arguments or two arguments. The |
| three argument form takes the object to be patched, the attribute name and the |
| object to replace the attribute with. |
| |
| When calling with the two argument form you omit the replacement object, and a |
| mock is created for you and passed in as an extra argument to the decorated |
| function: |
| |
| >>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method') |
| ... def test(mock_method): |
| ... SomeClass.class_method(3) |
| ... mock_method.assert_called_with(3) |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| |
| `spec`, `create` and the other arguments to `patch.object` have the same |
| meaning as they do for `patch`. |
| |
| |
| patch.dict |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: patch.dict(in_dict, values=(), clear=False, **kwargs) |
| |
| Patch a dictionary, or dictionary like object, and restore the dictionary |
| to its original state after the test. |
| |
| `in_dict` can be a dictionary or a mapping like container. If it is a |
| mapping then it must at least support getting, setting and deleting items |
| plus iterating over keys. |
| |
| `in_dict` can also be a string specifying the name of the dictionary, which |
| will then be fetched by importing it. |
| |
| `values` can be a dictionary of values to set in the dictionary. `values` |
| can also be an iterable of `(key, value)` pairs. |
| |
| If `clear` is true then the dictionary will be cleared before the new |
| values are set. |
| |
| `patch.dict` can also be called with arbitrary keyword arguments to set |
| values in the dictionary. |
| |
| `patch.dict` can be used as a context manager, decorator or class |
| decorator. When used as a class decorator `patch.dict` honours |
| `patch.TEST_PREFIX` for choosing which methods to wrap. |
| |
| `patch.dict` can be used to add members to a dictionary, or simply let a test |
| change a dictionary, and ensure the dictionary is restored when the test |
| ends. |
| |
| >>> foo = {} |
| >>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}): |
| ... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'} |
| ... |
| >>> assert foo == {} |
| |
| >>> import os |
| >>> with patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'}): |
| ... print os.environ['newkey'] |
| ... |
| newvalue |
| >>> assert 'newkey' not in os.environ |
| |
| Keywords can be used in the `patch.dict` call to set values in the dictionary: |
| |
| >>> mymodule = MagicMock() |
| >>> mymodule.function.return_value = 'fish' |
| >>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', mymodule=mymodule): |
| ... import mymodule |
| ... mymodule.function('some', 'args') |
| ... |
| 'fish' |
| |
| `patch.dict` can be used with dictionary like objects that aren't actually |
| dictionaries. At the very minimum they must support item getting, setting, |
| deleting and either iteration or membership test. This corresponds to the |
| magic methods `__getitem__`, `__setitem__`, `__delitem__` and either |
| `__iter__` or `__contains__`. |
| |
| >>> class Container: |
| ... def __init__(self): |
| ... self.values = {} |
| ... def __getitem__(self, name): |
| ... return self.values[name] |
| ... def __setitem__(self, name, value): |
| ... self.values[name] = value |
| ... def __delitem__(self, name): |
| ... del self.values[name] |
| ... def __iter__(self): |
| ... return iter(self.values) |
| ... |
| >>> thing = Container() |
| >>> thing['one'] = 1 |
| >>> with patch.dict(thing, one=2, two=3): |
| ... assert thing['one'] == 2 |
| ... assert thing['two'] == 3 |
| ... |
| >>> assert thing['one'] == 1 |
| >>> assert list(thing) == ['one'] |
| |
| |
| patch.multiple |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: patch.multiple(target, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs) |
| |
| Perform multiple patches in a single call. It takes the object to be |
| patched (either as an object or a string to fetch the object by importing) |
| and keyword arguments for the patches:: |
| |
| with patch.multiple(settings, FIRST_PATCH='one', SECOND_PATCH='two'): |
| ... |
| |
| Use :data:`DEFAULT` as the value if you want `patch.multiple` to create |
| mocks for you. In this case the created mocks are passed into a decorated |
| function by keyword, and a dictionary is returned when `patch.multiple` is |
| used as a context manager. |
| |
| `patch.multiple` can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context |
| manager. The arguments `spec`, `spec_set`, `create`, `autospec` and |
| `new_callable` have the same meaning as for `patch`. These arguments will |
| be applied to *all* patches done by `patch.multiple`. |
| |
| When used as a class decorator `patch.multiple` honours `patch.TEST_PREFIX` |
| for choosing which methods to wrap. |
| |
| If you want `patch.multiple` to create mocks for you, then you can use |
| :data:`DEFAULT` as the value. If you use `patch.multiple` as a decorator |
| then the created mocks are passed into the decorated function by keyword. |
| |
| >>> thing = object() |
| >>> other = object() |
| |
| >>> @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT) |
| ... def test_function(thing, other): |
| ... assert isinstance(thing, MagicMock) |
| ... assert isinstance(other, MagicMock) |
| ... |
| >>> test_function() |
| |
| `patch.multiple` can be nested with other `patch` decorators, but put arguments |
| passed by keyword *after* any of the standard arguments created by `patch`: |
| |
| >>> @patch('sys.exit') |
| ... @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT) |
| ... def test_function(mock_exit, other, thing): |
| ... assert 'other' in repr(other) |
| ... assert 'thing' in repr(thing) |
| ... assert 'exit' in repr(mock_exit) |
| ... |
| >>> test_function() |
| |
| If `patch.multiple` is used as a context manager, the value returned by the |
| context manger is a dictionary where created mocks are keyed by name: |
| |
| >>> with patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT) as values: |
| ... assert 'other' in repr(values['other']) |
| ... assert 'thing' in repr(values['thing']) |
| ... assert values['thing'] is thing |
| ... assert values['other'] is other |
| ... |
| |
| |
| .. _start-and-stop: |
| |
| patch methods: start and stop |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| All the patchers have `start` and `stop` methods. These make it simpler to do |
| patching in `setUp` methods or where you want to do multiple patches without |
| nesting decorators or with statements. |
| |
| To use them call `patch`, `patch.object` or `patch.dict` as normal and keep a |
| reference to the returned `patcher` object. You can then call `start` to put |
| the patch in place and `stop` to undo it. |
| |
| If you are using `patch` to create a mock for you then it will be returned by |
| the call to `patcher.start`. |
| |
| >>> patcher = patch('package.module.ClassName') |
| >>> from package import module |
| >>> original = module.ClassName |
| >>> new_mock = patcher.start() |
| >>> assert module.ClassName is not original |
| >>> assert module.ClassName is new_mock |
| >>> patcher.stop() |
| >>> assert module.ClassName is original |
| >>> assert module.ClassName is not new_mock |
| |
| |
| A typical use case for this might be for doing multiple patches in the `setUp` |
| method of a `TestCase`: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... def setUp(self): |
| ... self.patcher1 = patch('package.module.Class1') |
| ... self.patcher2 = patch('package.module.Class2') |
| ... self.MockClass1 = self.patcher1.start() |
| ... self.MockClass2 = self.patcher2.start() |
| ... |
| ... def tearDown(self): |
| ... self.patcher1.stop() |
| ... self.patcher2.stop() |
| ... |
| ... def test_something(self): |
| ... assert package.module.Class1 is self.MockClass1 |
| ... assert package.module.Class2 is self.MockClass2 |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_something').run() |
| |
| .. caution:: |
| |
| If you use this technique you must ensure that the patching is "undone" by |
| calling `stop`. This can be fiddlier than you might think, because if an |
| exception is raised in the ``setUp`` then ``tearDown`` is not called. |
| :meth:`unittest.TestCase.addCleanup` makes this easier: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... def setUp(self): |
| ... patcher = patch('package.module.Class') |
| ... self.MockClass = patcher.start() |
| ... self.addCleanup(patcher.stop) |
| ... |
| ... def test_something(self): |
| ... assert package.module.Class is self.MockClass |
| ... |
| |
| As an added bonus you no longer need to keep a reference to the `patcher` |
| object. |
| |
| It is also possible to stop all patches which have been started by using |
| `patch.stopall`. |
| |
| .. function:: patch.stopall |
| |
| Stop all active patches. Only stops patches started with `start`. |
| |
| |
| TEST_PREFIX |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| All of the patchers can be used as class decorators. When used in this way |
| they wrap every test method on the class. The patchers recognise methods that |
| start with `test` as being test methods. This is the same way that the |
| :class:`unittest.TestLoader` finds test methods by default. |
| |
| It is possible that you want to use a different prefix for your tests. You can |
| inform the patchers of the different prefix by setting `patch.TEST_PREFIX`: |
| |
| >>> patch.TEST_PREFIX = 'foo' |
| >>> value = 3 |
| >>> |
| >>> @patch('__main__.value', 'not three') |
| ... class Thing: |
| ... def foo_one(self): |
| ... print value |
| ... def foo_two(self): |
| ... print value |
| ... |
| >>> |
| >>> Thing().foo_one() |
| not three |
| >>> Thing().foo_two() |
| not three |
| >>> value |
| 3 |
| |
| |
| Nesting Patch Decorators |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| If you want to perform multiple patches then you can simply stack up the |
| decorators. |
| |
| You can stack up multiple patch decorators using this pattern: |
| |
| >>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method') |
| ... @patch.object(SomeClass, 'static_method') |
| ... def test(mock1, mock2): |
| ... assert SomeClass.static_method is mock1 |
| ... assert SomeClass.class_method is mock2 |
| ... SomeClass.static_method('foo') |
| ... SomeClass.class_method('bar') |
| ... return mock1, mock2 |
| ... |
| >>> mock1, mock2 = test() |
| >>> mock1.assert_called_once_with('foo') |
| >>> mock2.assert_called_once_with('bar') |
| |
| |
| Note that the decorators are applied from the bottom upwards. This is the |
| standard way that Python applies decorators. The order of the created mocks |
| passed into your test function matches this order. |
| |
| |
| .. _where-to-patch: |
| |
| Where to patch |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| `patch` works by (temporarily) changing the object that a *name* points to with |
| another one. There can be many names pointing to any individual object, so |
| for patching to work you must ensure that you patch the name used by the system |
| under test. |
| |
| The basic principle is that you patch where an object is *looked up*, which |
| is not necessarily the same place as where it is defined. A couple of |
| examples will help to clarify this. |
| |
| Imagine we have a project that we want to test with the following structure:: |
| |
| a.py |
| -> Defines SomeClass |
| |
| b.py |
| -> from a import SomeClass |
| -> some_function instantiates SomeClass |
| |
| Now we want to test `some_function` but we want to mock out `SomeClass` using |
| `patch`. The problem is that when we import module b, which we will have to |
| do then it imports `SomeClass` from module a. If we use `patch` to mock out |
| `a.SomeClass` then it will have no effect on our test; module b already has a |
| reference to the *real* `SomeClass` and it looks like our patching had no |
| effect. |
| |
| The key is to patch out `SomeClass` where it is used (or where it is looked up |
| ). In this case `some_function` will actually look up `SomeClass` in module b, |
| where we have imported it. The patching should look like:: |
| |
| @patch('b.SomeClass') |
| |
| However, consider the alternative scenario where instead of `from a import |
| SomeClass` module b does `import a` and `some_function` uses `a.SomeClass`. Both |
| of these import forms are common. In this case the class we want to patch is |
| being looked up on the a module and so we have to patch `a.SomeClass` instead:: |
| |
| @patch('a.SomeClass') |
| |
| |
| Patching Descriptors and Proxy Objects |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Both patch_ and patch.object_ correctly patch and restore descriptors: class |
| methods, static methods and properties. You should patch these on the *class* |
| rather than an instance. They also work with *some* objects |
| that proxy attribute access, like the `django settings object |
| <http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/weblog/arch_d7_2010_12_04.shtml#e1198>`_. |
| |
| |
| MagicMock and magic method support |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| .. _magic-methods: |
| |
| Mocking Magic Methods |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| :class:`Mock` supports mocking the Python protocol methods, also known as |
| "magic methods". This allows mock objects to replace containers or other |
| objects that implement Python protocols. |
| |
| Because magic methods are looked up differently from normal methods [#]_, this |
| support has been specially implemented. This means that only specific magic |
| methods are supported. The supported list includes *almost* all of them. If |
| there are any missing that you need please let us know. |
| |
| You mock magic methods by setting the method you are interested in to a function |
| or a mock instance. If you are using a function then it *must* take ``self`` as |
| the first argument [#]_. |
| |
| >>> def __str__(self): |
| ... return 'fooble' |
| ... |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__str__ = __str__ |
| >>> str(mock) |
| 'fooble' |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__str__ = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'fooble' |
| >>> str(mock) |
| 'fooble' |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__iter__ = Mock(return_value=iter([])) |
| >>> list(mock) |
| [] |
| |
| One use case for this is for mocking objects used as context managers in a |
| `with` statement: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__enter__ = Mock(return_value='foo') |
| >>> mock.__exit__ = Mock(return_value=False) |
| >>> with mock as m: |
| ... assert m == 'foo' |
| ... |
| >>> mock.__enter__.assert_called_with() |
| >>> mock.__exit__.assert_called_with(None, None, None) |
| |
| Calls to magic methods do not appear in :attr:`~Mock.method_calls`, but they |
| are recorded in :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls`. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| If you use the `spec` keyword argument to create a mock then attempting to |
| set a magic method that isn't in the spec will raise an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| The full list of supported magic methods is: |
| |
| * ``__hash__``, ``__sizeof__``, ``__repr__`` and ``__str__`` |
| * ``__dir__``, ``__format__`` and ``__subclasses__`` |
| * ``__floor__``, ``__trunc__`` and ``__ceil__`` |
| * Comparisons: ``__cmp__``, ``__lt__``, ``__gt__``, ``__le__``, ``__ge__``, |
| ``__eq__`` and ``__ne__`` |
| * Container methods: ``__getitem__``, ``__setitem__``, ``__delitem__``, |
| ``__contains__``, ``__len__``, ``__iter__``, ``__getslice__``, |
| ``__setslice__``, ``__reversed__`` and ``__missing__`` |
| * Context manager: ``__enter__`` and ``__exit__`` |
| * Unary numeric methods: ``__neg__``, ``__pos__`` and ``__invert__`` |
| * The numeric methods (including right hand and in-place variants): |
| ``__add__``, ``__sub__``, ``__mul__``, ``__div__``, |
| ``__floordiv__``, ``__mod__``, ``__divmod__``, ``__lshift__``, |
| ``__rshift__``, ``__and__``, ``__xor__``, ``__or__``, and ``__pow__`` |
| * Numeric conversion methods: ``__complex__``, ``__int__``, ``__float__``, |
| ``__index__`` and ``__coerce__`` |
| * Descriptor methods: ``__get__``, ``__set__`` and ``__delete__`` |
| * Pickling: ``__reduce__``, ``__reduce_ex__``, ``__getinitargs__``, |
| ``__getnewargs__``, ``__getstate__`` and ``__setstate__`` |
| |
| |
| The following methods exist but are *not* supported as they are either in use |
| by mock, can't be set dynamically, or can cause problems: |
| |
| * ``__getattr__``, ``__setattr__``, ``__init__`` and ``__new__`` |
| * ``__prepare__``, ``__instancecheck__``, ``__subclasscheck__``, ``__del__`` |
| |
| |
| |
| Magic Mock |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| There are two `MagicMock` variants: `MagicMock` and `NonCallableMagicMock`. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: MagicMock(*args, **kw) |
| |
| ``MagicMock`` is a subclass of :class:`Mock` with default implementations |
| of most of the magic methods. You can use ``MagicMock`` without having to |
| configure the magic methods yourself. |
| |
| The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for :class:`Mock`. |
| |
| If you use the `spec` or `spec_set` arguments then *only* magic methods |
| that exist in the spec will be created. |
| |
| |
| .. class:: NonCallableMagicMock(*args, **kw) |
| |
| A non-callable version of `MagicMock`. |
| |
| The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for |
| :class:`MagicMock`, with the exception of `return_value` and |
| `side_effect` which have no meaning on a non-callable mock. |
| |
| The magic methods are setup with `MagicMock` objects, so you can configure them |
| and use them in the usual way: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock[3] = 'fish' |
| >>> mock.__setitem__.assert_called_with(3, 'fish') |
| >>> mock.__getitem__.return_value = 'result' |
| >>> mock[2] |
| 'result' |
| |
| By default many of the protocol methods are required to return objects of a |
| specific type. These methods are preconfigured with a default return value, so |
| that they can be used without you having to do anything if you aren't interested |
| in the return value. You can still *set* the return value manually if you want |
| to change the default. |
| |
| Methods and their defaults: |
| |
| * ``__lt__``: NotImplemented |
| * ``__gt__``: NotImplemented |
| * ``__le__``: NotImplemented |
| * ``__ge__``: NotImplemented |
| * ``__int__``: 1 |
| * ``__contains__``: False |
| * ``__len__``: 1 |
| * ``__iter__``: iter([]) |
| * ``__exit__``: False |
| * ``__complex__``: 1j |
| * ``__float__``: 1.0 |
| * ``__bool__``: True |
| * ``__index__``: 1 |
| * ``__hash__``: default hash for the mock |
| * ``__str__``: default str for the mock |
| * ``__sizeof__``: default sizeof for the mock |
| |
| For example: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> int(mock) |
| 1 |
| >>> len(mock) |
| 0 |
| >>> list(mock) |
| [] |
| >>> object() in mock |
| False |
| |
| The two equality method, `__eq__` and `__ne__`, are special. |
| They do the default equality comparison on identity, using a side |
| effect, unless you change their return value to return something else: |
| |
| >>> MagicMock() == 3 |
| False |
| >>> MagicMock() != 3 |
| True |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.__eq__.return_value = True |
| >>> mock == 3 |
| True |
| |
| The return value of `MagicMock.__iter__` can be any iterable object and isn't |
| required to be an iterator: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.__iter__.return_value = ['a', 'b', 'c'] |
| >>> list(mock) |
| ['a', 'b', 'c'] |
| >>> list(mock) |
| ['a', 'b', 'c'] |
| |
| If the return value *is* an iterator, then iterating over it once will consume |
| it and subsequent iterations will result in an empty list: |
| |
| >>> mock.__iter__.return_value = iter(['a', 'b', 'c']) |
| >>> list(mock) |
| ['a', 'b', 'c'] |
| >>> list(mock) |
| [] |
| |
| ``MagicMock`` has all of the supported magic methods configured except for some |
| of the obscure and obsolete ones. You can still set these up if you want. |
| |
| Magic methods that are supported but not setup by default in ``MagicMock`` are: |
| |
| * ``__subclasses__`` |
| * ``__dir__`` |
| * ``__format__`` |
| * ``__get__``, ``__set__`` and ``__delete__`` |
| * ``__reversed__`` and ``__missing__`` |
| * ``__reduce__``, ``__reduce_ex__``, ``__getinitargs__``, ``__getnewargs__``, |
| ``__getstate__`` and ``__setstate__`` |
| * ``__getformat__`` and ``__setformat__`` |
| |
| |
| |
| .. [#] Magic methods *should* be looked up on the class rather than the |
| instance. Different versions of Python are inconsistent about applying this |
| rule. The supported protocol methods should work with all supported versions |
| of Python. |
| .. [#] The function is basically hooked up to the class, but each ``Mock`` |
| instance is kept isolated from the others. |
| |
| |
| Helpers |
| ------- |
| |
| sentinel |
| ~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. data:: sentinel |
| |
| The ``sentinel`` object provides a convenient way of providing unique |
| objects for your tests. |
| |
| Attributes are created on demand when you access them by name. Accessing |
| the same attribute will always return the same object. The objects |
| returned have a sensible repr so that test failure messages are readable. |
| |
| Sometimes when testing you need to test that a specific object is passed as an |
| argument to another method, or returned. It can be common to create named |
| sentinel objects to test this. `sentinel` provides a convenient way of |
| creating and testing the identity of objects like this. |
| |
| In this example we monkey patch `method` to return `sentinel.some_object`: |
| |
| >>> real = ProductionClass() |
| >>> real.method = Mock(name="method") |
| >>> real.method.return_value = sentinel.some_object |
| >>> result = real.method() |
| >>> assert result is sentinel.some_object |
| >>> sentinel.some_object |
| sentinel.some_object |
| |
| |
| DEFAULT |
| ~~~~~~~ |
| |
| |
| .. data:: DEFAULT |
| |
| The `DEFAULT` object is a pre-created sentinel (actually |
| `sentinel.DEFAULT`). It can be used by :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` |
| functions to indicate that the normal return value should be used. |
| |
| |
| call |
| ~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: call(*args, **kwargs) |
| |
| `call` is a helper object for making simpler assertions, for comparing with |
| :attr:`~Mock.call_args`, :attr:`~Mock.call_args_list`, |
| :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` and :attr:`~Mock.method_calls`. `call` can also be |
| used with :meth:`~Mock.assert_has_calls`. |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> m(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar') |
| >>> m() |
| >>> m.call_args_list == [call(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar'), call()] |
| True |
| |
| .. method:: call.call_list() |
| |
| For a call object that represents multiple calls, `call_list` |
| returns a list of all the intermediate calls as well as the |
| final call. |
| |
| `call_list` is particularly useful for making assertions on "chained calls". A |
| chained call is multiple calls on a single line of code. This results in |
| multiple entries in :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` on a mock. Manually constructing |
| the sequence of calls can be tedious. |
| |
| :meth:`~call.call_list` can construct the sequence of calls from the same |
| chained call: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> m(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0) |
| <MagicMock name='mock().method().other()()' id='...'> |
| >>> kall = call(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0) |
| >>> kall.call_list() |
| [call(1), |
| call().method(arg='foo'), |
| call().method().other('bar'), |
| call().method().other()(2.0)] |
| >>> m.mock_calls == kall.call_list() |
| True |
| |
| .. _calls-as-tuples: |
| |
| A `call` object is either a tuple of (positional args, keyword args) or |
| (name, positional args, keyword args) depending on how it was constructed. When |
| you construct them yourself this isn't particularly interesting, but the `call` |
| objects that are in the :attr:`Mock.call_args`, :attr:`Mock.call_args_list` and |
| :attr:`Mock.mock_calls` attributes can be introspected to get at the individual |
| arguments they contain. |
| |
| The `call` objects in :attr:`Mock.call_args` and :attr:`Mock.call_args_list` |
| are two-tuples of (positional args, keyword args) whereas the `call` objects |
| in :attr:`Mock.mock_calls`, along with ones you construct yourself, are |
| three-tuples of (name, positional args, keyword args). |
| |
| You can use their "tupleness" to pull out the individual arguments for more |
| complex introspection and assertions. The positional arguments are a tuple |
| (an empty tuple if there are no positional arguments) and the keyword |
| arguments are a dictionary: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> m(1, 2, 3, arg='one', arg2='two') |
| >>> kall = m.call_args |
| >>> args, kwargs = kall |
| >>> args |
| (1, 2, 3) |
| >>> kwargs |
| {'arg2': 'two', 'arg': 'one'} |
| >>> args is kall[0] |
| True |
| >>> kwargs is kall[1] |
| True |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> m.foo(4, 5, 6, arg='two', arg2='three') |
| <MagicMock name='mock.foo()' id='...'> |
| >>> kall = m.mock_calls[0] |
| >>> name, args, kwargs = kall |
| >>> name |
| 'foo' |
| >>> args |
| (4, 5, 6) |
| >>> kwargs |
| {'arg2': 'three', 'arg': 'two'} |
| >>> name is m.mock_calls[0][0] |
| True |
| |
| |
| create_autospec |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: create_autospec(spec, spec_set=False, instance=False, **kwargs) |
| |
| Create a mock object using another object as a spec. Attributes on the |
| mock will use the corresponding attribute on the `spec` object as their |
| spec. |
| |
| Functions or methods being mocked will have their arguments checked to |
| ensure that they are called with the correct signature. |
| |
| If `spec_set` is `True` then attempting to set attributes that don't exist |
| on the spec object will raise an `AttributeError`. |
| |
| If a class is used as a spec then the return value of the mock (the |
| instance of the class) will have the same spec. You can use a class as the |
| spec for an instance object by passing `instance=True`. The returned mock |
| will only be callable if instances of the mock are callable. |
| |
| `create_autospec` also takes arbitrary keyword arguments that are passed to |
| the constructor of the created mock. |
| |
| See :ref:`auto-speccing` for examples of how to use auto-speccing with |
| `create_autospec` and the `autospec` argument to :func:`patch`. |
| |
| |
| ANY |
| ~~~ |
| |
| .. data:: ANY |
| |
| Sometimes you may need to make assertions about *some* of the arguments in a |
| call to mock, but either not care about some of the arguments or want to pull |
| them individually out of :attr:`~Mock.call_args` and make more complex |
| assertions on them. |
| |
| To ignore certain arguments you can pass in objects that compare equal to |
| *everything*. Calls to :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` and |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with` will then succeed no matter what was |
| passed in. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock('foo', bar=object()) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar=ANY) |
| |
| `ANY` can also be used in comparisons with call lists like |
| :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls`: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> m(1) |
| >>> m(1, 2) |
| >>> m(object()) |
| >>> m.mock_calls == [call(1), call(1, 2), ANY] |
| True |
| |
| |
| |
| FILTER_DIR |
| ~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. data:: FILTER_DIR |
| |
| `FILTER_DIR` is a module level variable that controls the way mock objects |
| respond to `dir` (only for Python 2.6 or more recent). The default is `True`, |
| which uses the filtering described below, to only show useful members. If you |
| dislike this filtering, or need to switch it off for diagnostic purposes, then |
| set `mock.FILTER_DIR = False`. |
| |
| With filtering on, `dir(some_mock)` shows only useful attributes and will |
| include any dynamically created attributes that wouldn't normally be shown. |
| If the mock was created with a `spec` (or `autospec` of course) then all the |
| attributes from the original are shown, even if they haven't been accessed |
| yet: |
| |
| >>> dir(Mock()) |
| ['assert_any_call', |
| 'assert_called_once_with', |
| 'assert_called_with', |
| 'assert_has_calls', |
| 'attach_mock', |
| ... |
| >>> from urllib import request |
| >>> dir(Mock(spec=request)) |
| ['AbstractBasicAuthHandler', |
| 'AbstractDigestAuthHandler', |
| 'AbstractHTTPHandler', |
| 'BaseHandler', |
| ... |
| |
| Many of the not-very-useful (private to `Mock` rather than the thing being |
| mocked) underscore and double underscore prefixed attributes have been |
| filtered from the result of calling `dir` on a `Mock`. If you dislike this |
| behaviour you can switch it off by setting the module level switch |
| `FILTER_DIR`: |
| |
| >>> from unittest import mock |
| >>> mock.FILTER_DIR = False |
| >>> dir(mock.Mock()) |
| ['_NonCallableMock__get_return_value', |
| '_NonCallableMock__get_side_effect', |
| '_NonCallableMock__return_value_doc', |
| '_NonCallableMock__set_return_value', |
| '_NonCallableMock__set_side_effect', |
| '__call__', |
| '__class__', |
| ... |
| |
| Alternatively you can just use `vars(my_mock)` (instance members) and |
| `dir(type(my_mock))` (type members) to bypass the filtering irrespective of |
| `mock.FILTER_DIR`. |
| |
| |
| mock_open |
| ~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| .. function:: mock_open(mock=None, read_data=None) |
| |
| A helper function to create a mock to replace the use of `open`. It works |
| for `open` called directly or used as a context manager. |
| |
| The `mock` argument is the mock object to configure. If `None` (the |
| default) then a `MagicMock` will be created for you, with the API limited |
| to methods or attributes available on standard file handles. |
| |
| `read_data` is a string for the :meth:`~io.IOBase.read`, |
| :meth:`~io.IOBase.readline`, and :meth:`~io.IOBase.readlines` methods |
| of the file handle to return. Calls to those methods will take data from |
| `read_data` until it is depleted. The mock of these methods is pretty |
| simplistic. If you need more control over the data that you are feeding to |
| the tested code you will need to customize this mock for yourself. |
| `read_data` is an empty string by default. |
| |
| Using `open` as a context manager is a great way to ensure your file handles |
| are closed properly and is becoming common:: |
| |
| with open('/some/path', 'w') as f: |
| f.write('something') |
| |
| The issue is that even if you mock out the call to `open` it is the |
| *returned object* that is used as a context manager (and has `__enter__` and |
| `__exit__` called). |
| |
| Mocking context managers with a :class:`MagicMock` is common enough and fiddly |
| enough that a helper function is useful. |
| |
| >>> m = mock_open() |
| >>> with patch('__main__.open', m, create=True): |
| ... with open('foo', 'w') as h: |
| ... h.write('some stuff') |
| ... |
| >>> m.mock_calls |
| [call('foo', 'w'), |
| call().__enter__(), |
| call().write('some stuff'), |
| call().__exit__(None, None, None)] |
| >>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo', 'w') |
| >>> handle = m() |
| >>> handle.write.assert_called_once_with('some stuff') |
| |
| And for reading files: |
| |
| >>> with patch('__main__.open', mock_open(read_data='bibble'), create=True) as m: |
| ... with open('foo') as h: |
| ... result = h.read() |
| ... |
| >>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo') |
| >>> assert result == 'bibble' |
| |
| |
| .. _auto-speccing: |
| |
| Autospeccing |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Autospeccing is based on the existing `spec` feature of mock. It limits the |
| api of mocks to the api of an original object (the spec), but it is recursive |
| (implemented lazily) so that attributes of mocks only have the same api as |
| the attributes of the spec. In addition mocked functions / methods have the |
| same call signature as the original so they raise a `TypeError` if they are |
| called incorrectly. |
| |
| Before I explain how auto-speccing works, here's why it is needed. |
| |
| `Mock` is a very powerful and flexible object, but it suffers from two flaws |
| when used to mock out objects from a system under test. One of these flaws is |
| specific to the `Mock` api and the other is a more general problem with using |
| mock objects. |
| |
| First the problem specific to `Mock`. `Mock` has two assert methods that are |
| extremely handy: :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` and |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with`. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times. |
| |
| Because mocks auto-create attributes on demand, and allow you to call them |
| with arbitrary arguments, if you misspell one of these assert methods then |
| your assertion is gone: |
| |
| .. code-block:: pycon |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock.assret_called_once_with(4, 5, 6) |
| |
| Your tests can pass silently and incorrectly because of the typo. |
| |
| The second issue is more general to mocking. If you refactor some of your |
| code, rename members and so on, any tests for code that is still using the |
| *old api* but uses mocks instead of the real objects will still pass. This |
| means your tests can all pass even though your code is broken. |
| |
| Note that this is another reason why you need integration tests as well as |
| unit tests. Testing everything in isolation is all fine and dandy, but if you |
| don't test how your units are "wired together" there is still lots of room |
| for bugs that tests might have caught. |
| |
| `mock` already provides a feature to help with this, called speccing. If you |
| use a class or instance as the `spec` for a mock then you can only access |
| attributes on the mock that exist on the real class: |
| |
| >>> from urllib import request |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec=request.Request) |
| >>> mock.assret_called_with |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with' |
| |
| The spec only applies to the mock itself, so we still have the same issue |
| with any methods on the mock: |
| |
| .. code-block:: pycon |
| |
| >>> mock.has_data() |
| <mock.Mock object at 0x...> |
| >>> mock.has_data.assret_called_with() |
| |
| Auto-speccing solves this problem. You can either pass `autospec=True` to |
| `patch` / `patch.object` or use the `create_autospec` function to create a |
| mock with a spec. If you use the `autospec=True` argument to `patch` then the |
| object that is being replaced will be used as the spec object. Because the |
| speccing is done "lazily" (the spec is created as attributes on the mock are |
| accessed) you can use it with very complex or deeply nested objects (like |
| modules that import modules that import modules) without a big performance |
| hit. |
| |
| Here's an example of it in use: |
| |
| >>> from urllib import request |
| >>> patcher = patch('__main__.request', autospec=True) |
| >>> mock_request = patcher.start() |
| >>> request is mock_request |
| True |
| >>> mock_request.Request |
| <MagicMock name='request.Request' spec='Request' id='...'> |
| |
| You can see that `request.Request` has a spec. `request.Request` takes two |
| arguments in the constructor (one of which is `self`). Here's what happens if |
| we try to call it incorrectly: |
| |
| >>> req = request.Request() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| TypeError: <lambda>() takes at least 2 arguments (1 given) |
| |
| The spec also applies to instantiated classes (i.e. the return value of |
| specced mocks): |
| |
| >>> req = request.Request('foo') |
| >>> req |
| <NonCallableMagicMock name='request.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'> |
| |
| `Request` objects are not callable, so the return value of instantiating our |
| mocked out `request.Request` is a non-callable mock. With the spec in place |
| any typos in our asserts will raise the correct error: |
| |
| >>> req.add_header('spam', 'eggs') |
| <MagicMock name='request.Request().add_header()' id='...'> |
| >>> req.add_header.assret_called_with |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with' |
| >>> req.add_header.assert_called_with('spam', 'eggs') |
| |
| In many cases you will just be able to add `autospec=True` to your existing |
| `patch` calls and then be protected against bugs due to typos and api |
| changes. |
| |
| As well as using `autospec` through `patch` there is a |
| :func:`create_autospec` for creating autospecced mocks directly: |
| |
| >>> from urllib import request |
| >>> mock_request = create_autospec(request) |
| >>> mock_request.Request('foo', 'bar') |
| <NonCallableMagicMock name='mock.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'> |
| |
| This isn't without caveats and limitations however, which is why it is not |
| the default behaviour. In order to know what attributes are available on the |
| spec object, autospec has to introspect (access attributes) the spec. As you |
| traverse attributes on the mock a corresponding traversal of the original |
| object is happening under the hood. If any of your specced objects have |
| properties or descriptors that can trigger code execution then you may not be |
| able to use autospec. On the other hand it is much better to design your |
| objects so that introspection is safe [#]_. |
| |
| A more serious problem is that it is common for instance attributes to be |
| created in the `__init__` method and not to exist on the class at all. |
| `autospec` can't know about any dynamically created attributes and restricts |
| the api to visible attributes. |
| |
| >>> class Something: |
| ... def __init__(self): |
| ... self.a = 33 |
| ... |
| >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True): |
| ... thing = Something() |
| ... thing.a |
| ... |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a' |
| |
| There are a few different ways of resolving this problem. The easiest, but |
| not necessarily the least annoying, way is to simply set the required |
| attributes on the mock after creation. Just because `autospec` doesn't allow |
| you to fetch attributes that don't exist on the spec it doesn't prevent you |
| setting them: |
| |
| >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True): |
| ... thing = Something() |
| ... thing.a = 33 |
| ... |
| |
| There is a more aggressive version of both `spec` and `autospec` that *does* |
| prevent you setting non-existent attributes. This is useful if you want to |
| ensure your code only *sets* valid attributes too, but obviously it prevents |
| this particular scenario: |
| |
| >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True, spec_set=True): |
| ... thing = Something() |
| ... thing.a = 33 |
| ... |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a' |
| |
| Probably the best way of solving the problem is to add class attributes as |
| default values for instance members initialised in `__init__`. Note that if |
| you are only setting default attributes in `__init__` then providing them via |
| class attributes (shared between instances of course) is faster too. e.g. |
| |
| .. code-block:: python |
| |
| class Something: |
| a = 33 |
| |
| This brings up another issue. It is relatively common to provide a default |
| value of `None` for members that will later be an object of a different type. |
| `None` would be useless as a spec because it wouldn't let you access *any* |
| attributes or methods on it. As `None` is *never* going to be useful as a |
| spec, and probably indicates a member that will normally of some other type, |
| `autospec` doesn't use a spec for members that are set to `None`. These will |
| just be ordinary mocks (well - `MagicMocks`): |
| |
| >>> class Something: |
| ... member = None |
| ... |
| >>> mock = create_autospec(Something) |
| >>> mock.member.foo.bar.baz() |
| <MagicMock name='mock.member.foo.bar.baz()' id='...'> |
| |
| If modifying your production classes to add defaults isn't to your liking |
| then there are more options. One of these is simply to use an instance as the |
| spec rather than the class. The other is to create a subclass of the |
| production class and add the defaults to the subclass without affecting the |
| production class. Both of these require you to use an alternative object as |
| the spec. Thankfully `patch` supports this - you can simply pass the |
| alternative object as the `autospec` argument: |
| |
| >>> class Something: |
| ... def __init__(self): |
| ... self.a = 33 |
| ... |
| >>> class SomethingForTest(Something): |
| ... a = 33 |
| ... |
| >>> p = patch('__main__.Something', autospec=SomethingForTest) |
| >>> mock = p.start() |
| >>> mock.a |
| <NonCallableMagicMock name='Something.a' spec='int' id='...'> |
| |
| |
| .. [#] This only applies to classes or already instantiated objects. Calling |
| a mocked class to create a mock instance *does not* create a real instance. |
| It is only attribute lookups - along with calls to `dir` - that are done. |
| |