| :mod:`unittest.mock` --- getting started |
| ======================================== |
| |
| .. moduleauthor:: Michael Foord <michael@python.org> |
| .. currentmodule:: unittest.mock |
| |
| .. versionadded:: 3.3 |
| |
| |
| .. _getting-started: |
| |
| Using Mock |
| ---------- |
| |
| Mock Patching Methods |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Common uses for :class:`Mock` objects include: |
| |
| * Patching methods |
| * Recording method calls on objects |
| |
| You might want to replace a method on an object to check that |
| it is called with the correct arguments by another part of the system: |
| |
| >>> real = SomeClass() |
| >>> real.method = MagicMock(name='method') |
| >>> real.method(3, 4, 5, key='value') |
| <MagicMock name='method()' id='...'> |
| |
| Once our mock has been used (`real.method` in this example) it has methods |
| and attributes that allow you to make assertions about how it has been used. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| In most of these examples the :class:`Mock` and :class:`MagicMock` classes |
| are interchangeable. As the `MagicMock` is the more capable class it makes |
| a sensible one to use by default. |
| |
| Once the mock has been called its :attr:`~Mock.called` attribute is set to |
| `True`. More importantly we can use the :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` or |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with` method to check that it was called with |
| the correct arguments. |
| |
| This example tests that calling `ProductionClass().method` results in a call to |
| the `something` method: |
| |
| >>> class ProductionClass(object): |
| ... def method(self): |
| ... self.something(1, 2, 3) |
| ... def something(self, a, b, c): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> real = ProductionClass() |
| >>> real.something = MagicMock() |
| >>> real.method() |
| >>> real.something.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3) |
| |
| |
| |
| Mock for Method Calls on an Object |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| In the last example we patched a method directly on an object to check that it |
| was called correctly. Another common use case is to pass an object into a |
| method (or some part of the system under test) and then check that it is used |
| in the correct way. |
| |
| The simple `ProductionClass` below has a `closer` method. If it is called with |
| an object then it calls `close` on it. |
| |
| >>> class ProductionClass(object): |
| ... def closer(self, something): |
| ... something.close() |
| ... |
| |
| So to test it we need to pass in an object with a `close` method and check |
| that it was called correctly. |
| |
| >>> real = ProductionClass() |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> real.closer(mock) |
| >>> mock.close.assert_called_with() |
| |
| We don't have to do any work to provide the 'close' method on our mock. |
| Accessing close creates it. So, if 'close' hasn't already been called then |
| accessing it in the test will create it, but :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` |
| will raise a failure exception. |
| |
| |
| Mocking Classes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A common use case is to mock out classes instantiated by your code under test. |
| When you patch a class, then that class is replaced with a mock. Instances |
| are created by *calling the class*. This means you access the "mock instance" |
| by looking at the return value of the mocked class. |
| |
| In the example below we have a function `some_function` that instantiates `Foo` |
| and calls a method on it. The call to `patch` replaces the class `Foo` with a |
| mock. The `Foo` instance is the result of calling the mock, so it is configured |
| by modifying the mock :attr:`~Mock.return_value`. |
| |
| >>> def some_function(): |
| ... instance = module.Foo() |
| ... return instance.method() |
| ... |
| >>> with patch('module.Foo') as mock: |
| ... instance = mock.return_value |
| ... instance.method.return_value = 'the result' |
| ... result = some_function() |
| ... assert result == 'the result' |
| |
| |
| Naming your mocks |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| It can be useful to give your mocks a name. The name is shown in the repr of |
| the mock and can be helpful when the mock appears in test failure messages. The |
| name is also propagated to attributes or methods of the mock: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock(name='foo') |
| >>> mock |
| <MagicMock name='foo' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.method |
| <MagicMock name='foo.method' id='...'> |
| |
| |
| Tracking all Calls |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Often you want to track more than a single call to a method. The |
| :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` attribute records all calls |
| to child attributes of the mock - and also to their children. |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.method() |
| <MagicMock name='mock.method()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.attribute.method(10, x=53) |
| <MagicMock name='mock.attribute.method()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.mock_calls |
| [call.method(), call.attribute.method(10, x=53)] |
| |
| If you make an assertion about `mock_calls` and any unexpected methods |
| have been called, then the assertion will fail. This is useful because as well |
| as asserting that the calls you expected have been made, you are also checking |
| that they were made in the right order and with no additional calls: |
| |
| You use the :data:`call` object to construct lists for comparing with |
| `mock_calls`: |
| |
| >>> expected = [call.method(), call.attribute.method(10, x=53)] |
| >>> mock.mock_calls == expected |
| True |
| |
| |
| Setting Return Values and Attributes |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Setting the return values on a mock object is trivially easy: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.return_value = 3 |
| >>> mock() |
| 3 |
| |
| Of course you can do the same for methods on the mock: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.method.return_value = 3 |
| >>> mock.method() |
| 3 |
| |
| The return value can also be set in the constructor: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=3) |
| >>> mock() |
| 3 |
| |
| If you need an attribute setting on your mock, just do it: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.x = 3 |
| >>> mock.x |
| 3 |
| |
| Sometimes you want to mock up a more complex situation, like for example |
| `mock.connection.cursor().execute("SELECT 1")`. If we wanted this call to |
| return a list, then we have to configure the result of the nested call. |
| |
| We can use :data:`call` to construct the set of calls in a "chained call" like |
| this for easy assertion afterwards: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> cursor = mock.connection.cursor.return_value |
| >>> cursor.execute.return_value = ['foo'] |
| >>> mock.connection.cursor().execute("SELECT 1") |
| ['foo'] |
| >>> expected = call.connection.cursor().execute("SELECT 1").call_list() |
| >>> mock.mock_calls |
| [call.connection.cursor(), call.connection.cursor().execute('SELECT 1')] |
| >>> mock.mock_calls == expected |
| True |
| |
| It is the call to `.call_list()` that turns our call object into a list of |
| calls representing the chained calls. |
| |
| |
| Raising exceptions with mocks |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A useful attribute is :attr:`~Mock.side_effect`. If you set this to an |
| exception class or instance then the exception will be raised when the mock |
| is called. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=Exception('Boom!')) |
| >>> mock() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| Exception: Boom! |
| |
| |
| Side effect functions and iterables |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| `side_effect` can also be set to a function or an iterable. The use case for |
| `side_effect` as an iterable is where your mock is going to be called several |
| times, and you want each call to return a different value. When you set |
| `side_effect` to an iterable every call to the mock returns the next value |
| from the iterable: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock(side_effect=[4, 5, 6]) |
| >>> mock() |
| 4 |
| >>> mock() |
| 5 |
| >>> mock() |
| 6 |
| |
| |
| For more advanced use cases, like dynamically varying the return values |
| depending on what the mock is called with, `side_effect` can be a function. |
| The function will be called with the same arguments as the mock. Whatever the |
| function returns is what the call returns: |
| |
| >>> vals = {(1, 2): 1, (2, 3): 2} |
| >>> def side_effect(*args): |
| ... return vals[args] |
| ... |
| >>> mock = MagicMock(side_effect=side_effect) |
| >>> mock(1, 2) |
| 1 |
| >>> mock(2, 3) |
| 2 |
| |
| |
| Creating a Mock from an Existing Object |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| One problem with over use of mocking is that it couples your tests to the |
| implementation of your mocks rather than your real code. Suppose you have a |
| class that implements `some_method`. In a test for another class, you |
| provide a mock of this object that *also* provides `some_method`. If later |
| you refactor the first class, so that it no longer has `some_method` - then |
| your tests will continue to pass even though your code is now broken! |
| |
| `Mock` allows you to provide an object as a specification for the mock, |
| using the `spec` keyword argument. Accessing methods / attributes on the |
| mock that don't exist on your specification object will immediately raise an |
| attribute error. If you change the implementation of your specification, then |
| tests that use that class will start failing immediately without you having to |
| instantiate the class in those tests. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(spec=SomeClass) |
| >>> mock.old_method() |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AttributeError: object has no attribute 'old_method' |
| |
| If you want a stronger form of specification that prevents the setting |
| of arbitrary attributes as well as the getting of them then you can use |
| `spec_set` instead of `spec`. |
| |
| |
| |
| Patch Decorators |
| ---------------- |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| 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>`. |
| |
| |
| A common need in tests is to patch a class attribute or a module attribute, |
| for example patching a builtin or patching a class in a module to test that it |
| is instantiated. Modules and classes are effectively global, so patching on |
| them has to be undone after the test or the patch will persist into other |
| tests and cause hard to diagnose problems. |
| |
| mock provides three convenient decorators for this: `patch`, `patch.object` and |
| `patch.dict`. `patch` takes a single string, of the form |
| `package.module.Class.attribute` to specify the attribute you are patching. It |
| also optionally takes a value that you want the attribute (or class or |
| whatever) to be replaced with. 'patch.object' takes an object and the name of |
| the attribute you would like patched, plus optionally the value to patch it |
| with. |
| |
| `patch.object`: |
| |
| >>> original = SomeClass.attribute |
| >>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'attribute', sentinel.attribute) |
| ... def test(): |
| ... assert SomeClass.attribute == sentinel.attribute |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| >>> assert SomeClass.attribute == original |
| |
| >>> @patch('package.module.attribute', sentinel.attribute) |
| ... def test(): |
| ... from package.module import attribute |
| ... assert attribute is sentinel.attribute |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| |
| If you are patching a module (including `__builtin__`) then use `patch` |
| instead of `patch.object`: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock(return_value = sentinel.file_handle) |
| >>> with patch('__builtin__.open', mock): |
| ... handle = open('filename', 'r') |
| ... |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with('filename', 'r') |
| >>> assert handle == sentinel.file_handle, "incorrect file handle returned" |
| |
| The module name can be 'dotted', in the form `package.module` if needed: |
| |
| >>> @patch('package.module.ClassName.attribute', sentinel.attribute) |
| ... def test(): |
| ... from package.module import ClassName |
| ... assert ClassName.attribute == sentinel.attribute |
| ... |
| >>> test() |
| |
| A nice pattern is to actually decorate test methods themselves: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(unittest2.TestCase): |
| ... @patch.object(SomeClass, 'attribute', sentinel.attribute) |
| ... def test_something(self): |
| ... self.assertEqual(SomeClass.attribute, sentinel.attribute) |
| ... |
| >>> original = SomeClass.attribute |
| >>> MyTest('test_something').test_something() |
| >>> assert SomeClass.attribute == original |
| |
| If you want to patch with a Mock, you can use `patch` with only one argument |
| (or `patch.object` with two arguments). The mock will be created for you and |
| passed into the test function / method: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(unittest2.TestCase): |
| ... @patch.object(SomeClass, 'static_method') |
| ... def test_something(self, mock_method): |
| ... SomeClass.static_method() |
| ... mock_method.assert_called_with() |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_something').test_something() |
| |
| You can stack up multiple patch decorators using this pattern: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(unittest2.TestCase): |
| ... @patch('package.module.ClassName1') |
| ... @patch('package.module.ClassName2') |
| ... def test_something(self, MockClass2, MockClass1): |
| ... self.assertTrue(package.module.ClassName1 is MockClass1) |
| ... self.assertTrue(package.module.ClassName2 is MockClass2) |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_something').test_something() |
| |
| 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 `test_module.ClassName2` is passed in first. |
| |
| 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 |
| |
| `patch`, `patch.object` and `patch.dict` can all be used as context managers. |
| |
| Where you use `patch` to create a mock for you, you can get a reference to the |
| mock using the "as" form of the with statement: |
| |
| >>> class ProductionClass(object): |
| ... def method(self): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> with patch.object(ProductionClass, 'method') as mock_method: |
| ... mock_method.return_value = None |
| ... real = ProductionClass() |
| ... real.method(1, 2, 3) |
| ... |
| >>> mock_method.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3) |
| |
| |
| As an alternative `patch`, `patch.object` and `patch.dict` can be used as |
| class decorators. When used in this way it is the same as applying the |
| decorator indvidually to every method whose name starts with "test". |
| |
| |
| .. _further-examples: |
| |
| Further Examples |
| ================ |
| |
| |
| Here are some more examples for some slightly more advanced scenarios. |
| |
| |
| Mocking chained calls |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Mocking chained calls is actually straightforward with mock once you |
| understand the :attr:`~Mock.return_value` attribute. When a mock is called for |
| the first time, or you fetch its `return_value` before it has been called, a |
| new `Mock` is created. |
| |
| This means that you can see how the object returned from a call to a mocked |
| object has been used by interrogating the `return_value` mock: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock().foo(a=2, b=3) |
| <Mock name='mock().foo()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.return_value.foo.assert_called_with(a=2, b=3) |
| |
| From here it is a simple step to configure and then make assertions about |
| chained calls. Of course another alternative is writing your code in a more |
| testable way in the first place... |
| |
| So, suppose we have some code that looks a little bit like this: |
| |
| >>> class Something(object): |
| ... def __init__(self): |
| ... self.backend = BackendProvider() |
| ... def method(self): |
| ... response = self.backend.get_endpoint('foobar').create_call('spam', 'eggs').start_call() |
| ... # more code |
| |
| Assuming that `BackendProvider` is already well tested, how do we test |
| `method()`? Specifically, we want to test that the code section `# more |
| code` uses the response object in the correct way. |
| |
| As this chain of calls is made from an instance attribute we can monkey patch |
| the `backend` attribute on a `Something` instance. In this particular case |
| we are only interested in the return value from the final call to |
| `start_call` so we don't have much configuration to do. Let's assume the |
| object it returns is 'file-like', so we'll ensure that our response object |
| uses the builtin `file` as its `spec`. |
| |
| To do this we create a mock instance as our mock backend and create a mock |
| response object for it. To set the response as the return value for that final |
| `start_call` we could do this: |
| |
| `mock_backend.get_endpoint.return_value.create_call.return_value.start_call.return_value = mock_response`. |
| |
| We can do that in a slightly nicer way using the :meth:`~Mock.configure_mock` |
| method to directly set the return value for us: |
| |
| >>> something = Something() |
| >>> mock_response = Mock(spec=file) |
| >>> mock_backend = Mock() |
| >>> config = {'get_endpoint.return_value.create_call.return_value.start_call.return_value': mock_response} |
| >>> mock_backend.configure_mock(**config) |
| |
| With these we monkey patch the "mock backend" in place and can make the real |
| call: |
| |
| >>> something.backend = mock_backend |
| >>> something.method() |
| |
| Using :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` we can check the chained call with a single |
| assert. A chained call is several calls in one line of code, so there will be |
| several entries in `mock_calls`. We can use :meth:`call.call_list` to create |
| this list of calls for us: |
| |
| >>> chained = call.get_endpoint('foobar').create_call('spam', 'eggs').start_call() |
| >>> call_list = chained.call_list() |
| >>> assert mock_backend.mock_calls == call_list |
| |
| |
| Partial mocking |
| --------------- |
| |
| In some tests I wanted to mock out a call to `datetime.date.today() |
| <http://docs.python.org/library/datetime.html#datetime.date.today>`_ to return |
| a known date, but I didn't want to prevent the code under test from |
| creating new date objects. Unfortunately `datetime.date` is written in C, and |
| so I couldn't just monkey-patch out the static `date.today` method. |
| |
| I found a simple way of doing this that involved effectively wrapping the date |
| class with a mock, but passing through calls to the constructor to the real |
| class (and returning real instances). |
| |
| The :func:`patch decorator <patch>` is used here to |
| mock out the `date` class in the module under test. The :attr:`side_effect` |
| attribute on the mock date class is then set to a lambda function that returns |
| a real date. When the mock date class is called a real date will be |
| constructed and returned by `side_effect`. |
| |
| >>> from datetime import date |
| >>> with patch('mymodule.date') as mock_date: |
| ... mock_date.today.return_value = date(2010, 10, 8) |
| ... mock_date.side_effect = lambda *args, **kw: date(*args, **kw) |
| ... |
| ... assert mymodule.date.today() == date(2010, 10, 8) |
| ... assert mymodule.date(2009, 6, 8) == date(2009, 6, 8) |
| ... |
| |
| Note that we don't patch `datetime.date` globally, we patch `date` in the |
| module that *uses* it. See :ref:`where to patch <where-to-patch>`. |
| |
| When `date.today()` is called a known date is returned, but calls to the |
| `date(...)` constructor still return normal dates. Without this you can find |
| yourself having to calculate an expected result using exactly the same |
| algorithm as the code under test, which is a classic testing anti-pattern. |
| |
| Calls to the date constructor are recorded in the `mock_date` attributes |
| (`call_count` and friends) which may also be useful for your tests. |
| |
| An alternative way of dealing with mocking dates, or other builtin classes, |
| is discussed in `this blog entry |
| <http://williamjohnbert.com/2011/07/how-to-unit-testing-in-django-with-mocking-and-patching/>`_. |
| |
| |
| Mocking a Generator Method |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| A Python generator is a function or method that uses the `yield statement |
| <http://docs.python.org/reference/simple_stmts.html#the-yield-statement>`_ to |
| return a series of values when iterated over [#]_. |
| |
| A generator method / function is called to return the generator object. It is |
| the generator object that is then iterated over. The protocol method for |
| iteration is `__iter__ |
| <http://docs.python.org/library/stdtypes.html#container.__iter__>`_, so we can |
| mock this using a `MagicMock`. |
| |
| Here's an example class with an "iter" method implemented as a generator: |
| |
| >>> class Foo(object): |
| ... def iter(self): |
| ... for i in [1, 2, 3]: |
| ... yield i |
| ... |
| >>> foo = Foo() |
| >>> list(foo.iter()) |
| [1, 2, 3] |
| |
| |
| How would we mock this class, and in particular its "iter" method? |
| |
| To configure the values returned from the iteration (implicit in the call to |
| `list`), we need to configure the object returned by the call to `foo.iter()`. |
| |
| >>> mock_foo = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock_foo.iter.return_value = iter([1, 2, 3]) |
| >>> list(mock_foo.iter()) |
| [1, 2, 3] |
| |
| .. [#] There are also generator expressions and more `advanced uses |
| <http://www.dabeaz.com/coroutines/index.html>`_ of generators, but we aren't |
| concerned about them here. A very good introduction to generators and how |
| powerful they are is: `Generator Tricks for Systems Programmers |
| <http://www.dabeaz.com/generators/>`_. |
| |
| |
| Applying the same patch to every test method |
| -------------------------------------------- |
| |
| If you want several patches in place for multiple test methods the obvious way |
| is to apply the patch decorators to every method. This can feel like unnecessary |
| repetition. For Python 2.6 or more recent you can use `patch` (in all its |
| various forms) as a class decorator. This applies the patches to all test |
| methods on the class. A test method is identified by methods whose names start |
| with `test`: |
| |
| >>> @patch('mymodule.SomeClass') |
| ... class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... |
| ... def test_one(self, MockSomeClass): |
| ... self.assertTrue(mymodule.SomeClass is MockSomeClass) |
| ... |
| ... def test_two(self, MockSomeClass): |
| ... self.assertTrue(mymodule.SomeClass is MockSomeClass) |
| ... |
| ... def not_a_test(self): |
| ... return 'something' |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_one').test_one() |
| >>> MyTest('test_two').test_two() |
| >>> MyTest('test_two').not_a_test() |
| 'something' |
| |
| An alternative way of managing patches is to use the :ref:`start-and-stop`. |
| These allow you to move the patching into your `setUp` and `tearDown` methods. |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... def setUp(self): |
| ... self.patcher = patch('mymodule.foo') |
| ... self.mock_foo = self.patcher.start() |
| ... |
| ... def test_foo(self): |
| ... self.assertTrue(mymodule.foo is self.mock_foo) |
| ... |
| ... def tearDown(self): |
| ... self.patcher.stop() |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_foo').run() |
| |
| 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('mymodule.foo') |
| ... self.addCleanup(patcher.stop) |
| ... self.mock_foo = patcher.start() |
| ... |
| ... def test_foo(self): |
| ... self.assertTrue(mymodule.foo is self.mock_foo) |
| ... |
| >>> MyTest('test_foo').run() |
| |
| |
| Mocking Unbound Methods |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Whilst writing tests today I needed to patch an *unbound method* (patching the |
| method on the class rather than on the instance). I needed self to be passed |
| in as the first argument because I want to make asserts about which objects |
| were calling this particular method. The issue is that you can't patch with a |
| mock for this, because if you replace an unbound method with a mock it doesn't |
| become a bound method when fetched from the instance, and so it doesn't get |
| self passed in. The workaround is to patch the unbound method with a real |
| function instead. The :func:`patch` decorator makes it so simple to |
| patch out methods with a mock that having to create a real function becomes a |
| nuisance. |
| |
| If you pass `autospec=True` to patch then it does the patching with a |
| *real* function object. This function object has the same signature as the one |
| it is replacing, but delegates to a mock under the hood. You still get your |
| mock auto-created in exactly the same way as before. What it means though, is |
| that if you use it to patch out an unbound method on a class the mocked |
| function will be turned into a bound method if it is fetched from an instance. |
| It will have `self` passed in as the first argument, which is exactly what I |
| wanted: |
| |
| >>> class Foo(object): |
| ... def foo(self): |
| ... pass |
| ... |
| >>> with patch.object(Foo, 'foo', autospec=True) as mock_foo: |
| ... mock_foo.return_value = 'foo' |
| ... foo = Foo() |
| ... foo.foo() |
| ... |
| 'foo' |
| >>> mock_foo.assert_called_once_with(foo) |
| |
| If we don't use `autospec=True` then the unbound method is patched out |
| with a Mock instance instead, and isn't called with `self`. |
| |
| |
| Checking multiple calls with mock |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| mock has a nice API for making assertions about how your mock objects are used. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.foo_bar.return_value = None |
| >>> mock.foo_bar('baz', spam='eggs') |
| >>> mock.foo_bar.assert_called_with('baz', spam='eggs') |
| |
| If your mock is only being called once you can use the |
| :meth:`assert_called_once_with` method that also asserts that the |
| :attr:`call_count` is one. |
| |
| >>> mock.foo_bar.assert_called_once_with('baz', spam='eggs') |
| >>> mock.foo_bar() |
| >>> mock.foo_bar.assert_called_once_with('baz', spam='eggs') |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected to be called once. Called 2 times. |
| |
| Both `assert_called_with` and `assert_called_once_with` make assertions about |
| the *most recent* call. If your mock is going to be called several times, and |
| you want to make assertions about *all* those calls you can use |
| :attr:`~Mock.call_args_list`: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(1, 2, 3) |
| >>> mock(4, 5, 6) |
| >>> mock() |
| >>> mock.call_args_list |
| [call(1, 2, 3), call(4, 5, 6), call()] |
| |
| The :data:`call` helper makes it easy to make assertions about these calls. You |
| can build up a list of expected calls and compare it to `call_args_list`. This |
| looks remarkably similar to the repr of the `call_args_list`: |
| |
| >>> expected = [call(1, 2, 3), call(4, 5, 6), call()] |
| >>> mock.call_args_list == expected |
| True |
| |
| |
| Coping with mutable arguments |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Another situation is rare, but can bite you, is when your mock is called with |
| mutable arguments. `call_args` and `call_args_list` store *references* to the |
| arguments. If the arguments are mutated by the code under test then you can no |
| longer make assertions about what the values were when the mock was called. |
| |
| Here's some example code that shows the problem. Imagine the following functions |
| defined in 'mymodule':: |
| |
| def frob(val): |
| pass |
| |
| def grob(val): |
| "First frob and then clear val" |
| frob(val) |
| val.clear() |
| |
| When we try to test that `grob` calls `frob` with the correct argument look |
| what happens: |
| |
| >>> with patch('mymodule.frob') as mock_frob: |
| ... val = set([6]) |
| ... mymodule.grob(val) |
| ... |
| >>> val |
| set([]) |
| >>> mock_frob.assert_called_with(set([6])) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected: ((set([6]),), {}) |
| Called with: ((set([]),), {}) |
| |
| One possibility would be for mock to copy the arguments you pass in. This |
| could then cause problems if you do assertions that rely on object identity |
| for equality. |
| |
| Here's one solution that uses the :attr:`side_effect` |
| functionality. If you provide a `side_effect` function for a mock then |
| `side_effect` will be called with the same args as the mock. This gives us an |
| opportunity to copy the arguments and store them for later assertions. In this |
| example I'm using *another* mock to store the arguments so that I can use the |
| mock methods for doing the assertion. Again a helper function sets this up for |
| me. |
| |
| >>> from copy import deepcopy |
| >>> from unittest.mock import Mock, patch, DEFAULT |
| >>> def copy_call_args(mock): |
| ... new_mock = Mock() |
| ... def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): |
| ... args = deepcopy(args) |
| ... kwargs = deepcopy(kwargs) |
| ... new_mock(*args, **kwargs) |
| ... return DEFAULT |
| ... mock.side_effect = side_effect |
| ... return new_mock |
| ... |
| >>> with patch('mymodule.frob') as mock_frob: |
| ... new_mock = copy_call_args(mock_frob) |
| ... val = set([6]) |
| ... mymodule.grob(val) |
| ... |
| >>> new_mock.assert_called_with(set([6])) |
| >>> new_mock.call_args |
| call(set([6])) |
| |
| `copy_call_args` is called with the mock that will be called. It returns a new |
| mock that we do the assertion on. The `side_effect` function makes a copy of |
| the args and calls our `new_mock` with the copy. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| If your mock is only going to be used once there is an easier way of |
| checking arguments at the point they are called. You can simply do the |
| checking inside a `side_effect` function. |
| |
| >>> def side_effect(arg): |
| ... assert arg == set([6]) |
| ... |
| >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=side_effect) |
| >>> mock(set([6])) |
| >>> mock(set()) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError |
| |
| An alternative approach is to create a subclass of `Mock` or `MagicMock` that |
| copies (using :func:`copy.deepcopy`) the arguments. |
| Here's an example implementation: |
| |
| >>> from copy import deepcopy |
| >>> class CopyingMock(MagicMock): |
| ... def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs): |
| ... args = deepcopy(args) |
| ... kwargs = deepcopy(kwargs) |
| ... return super(CopyingMock, self).__call__(*args, **kwargs) |
| ... |
| >>> c = CopyingMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> arg = set() |
| >>> c(arg) |
| >>> arg.add(1) |
| >>> c.assert_called_with(set()) |
| >>> c.assert_called_with(arg) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected call: mock(set([1])) |
| Actual call: mock(set([])) |
| >>> c.foo |
| <CopyingMock name='mock.foo' id='...'> |
| |
| When you subclass `Mock` or `MagicMock` all dynamically created attributes, |
| and the `return_value` will use your subclass automatically. That means all |
| children of a `CopyingMock` will also have the type `CopyingMock`. |
| |
| |
| Nesting Patches |
| --------------- |
| |
| Using patch as a context manager is nice, but if you do multiple patches you |
| can end up with nested with statements indenting further and further to the |
| right: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... |
| ... def test_foo(self): |
| ... with patch('mymodule.Foo') as mock_foo: |
| ... with patch('mymodule.Bar') as mock_bar: |
| ... with patch('mymodule.Spam') as mock_spam: |
| ... assert mymodule.Foo is mock_foo |
| ... assert mymodule.Bar is mock_bar |
| ... assert mymodule.Spam is mock_spam |
| ... |
| >>> original = mymodule.Foo |
| >>> MyTest('test_foo').test_foo() |
| >>> assert mymodule.Foo is original |
| |
| With unittest `cleanup` functions and the :ref:`start-and-stop` we can |
| achieve the same effect without the nested indentation. A simple helper |
| method, `create_patch`, puts the patch in place and returns the created mock |
| for us: |
| |
| >>> class MyTest(TestCase): |
| ... |
| ... def create_patch(self, name): |
| ... patcher = patch(name) |
| ... thing = patcher.start() |
| ... self.addCleanup(patcher.stop) |
| ... return thing |
| ... |
| ... def test_foo(self): |
| ... mock_foo = self.create_patch('mymodule.Foo') |
| ... mock_bar = self.create_patch('mymodule.Bar') |
| ... mock_spam = self.create_patch('mymodule.Spam') |
| ... |
| ... assert mymodule.Foo is mock_foo |
| ... assert mymodule.Bar is mock_bar |
| ... assert mymodule.Spam is mock_spam |
| ... |
| >>> original = mymodule.Foo |
| >>> MyTest('test_foo').run() |
| >>> assert mymodule.Foo is original |
| |
| |
| Mocking a dictionary with MagicMock |
| ----------------------------------- |
| |
| You may want to mock a dictionary, or other container object, recording all |
| access to it whilst having it still behave like a dictionary. |
| |
| We can do this with :class:`MagicMock`, which will behave like a dictionary, |
| and using :data:`~Mock.side_effect` to delegate dictionary access to a real |
| underlying dictionary that is under our control. |
| |
| When the `__getitem__` and `__setitem__` methods of our `MagicMock` are called |
| (normal dictionary access) then `side_effect` is called with the key (and in |
| the case of `__setitem__` the value too). We can also control what is returned. |
| |
| After the `MagicMock` has been used we can use attributes like |
| :data:`~Mock.call_args_list` to assert about how the dictionary was used: |
| |
| >>> my_dict = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3} |
| >>> def getitem(name): |
| ... return my_dict[name] |
| ... |
| >>> def setitem(name, val): |
| ... my_dict[name] = val |
| ... |
| >>> mock = MagicMock() |
| >>> mock.__getitem__.side_effect = getitem |
| >>> mock.__setitem__.side_effect = setitem |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| An alternative to using `MagicMock` is to use `Mock` and *only* provide |
| the magic methods you specifically want: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> mock.__setitem__ = Mock(side_effect=getitem) |
| >>> mock.__getitem__ = Mock(side_effect=setitem) |
| |
| A *third* option is to use `MagicMock` but passing in `dict` as the `spec` |
| (or `spec_set`) argument so that the `MagicMock` created only has |
| dictionary magic methods available: |
| |
| >>> mock = MagicMock(spec_set=dict) |
| >>> mock.__getitem__.side_effect = getitem |
| >>> mock.__setitem__.side_effect = setitem |
| |
| With these side effect functions in place, the `mock` will behave like a normal |
| dictionary but recording the access. It even raises a `KeyError` if you try |
| to access a key that doesn't exist. |
| |
| >>> mock['a'] |
| 1 |
| >>> mock['c'] |
| 3 |
| >>> mock['d'] |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| KeyError: 'd' |
| >>> mock['b'] = 'fish' |
| >>> mock['d'] = 'eggs' |
| >>> mock['b'] |
| 'fish' |
| >>> mock['d'] |
| 'eggs' |
| |
| After it has been used you can make assertions about the access using the normal |
| mock methods and attributes: |
| |
| >>> mock.__getitem__.call_args_list |
| [call('a'), call('c'), call('d'), call('b'), call('d')] |
| >>> mock.__setitem__.call_args_list |
| [call('b', 'fish'), call('d', 'eggs')] |
| >>> my_dict |
| {'a': 1, 'c': 3, 'b': 'fish', 'd': 'eggs'} |
| |
| |
| Mock subclasses and their attributes |
| ------------------------------------ |
| |
| There are various reasons why you might want to subclass `Mock`. One reason |
| might be to add helper methods. Here's a silly example: |
| |
| >>> class MyMock(MagicMock): |
| ... def has_been_called(self): |
| ... return self.called |
| ... |
| >>> mymock = MyMock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mymock |
| <MyMock id='...'> |
| >>> mymock.has_been_called() |
| False |
| >>> mymock() |
| >>> mymock.has_been_called() |
| True |
| |
| The standard behaviour for `Mock` instances is that attributes and the return |
| value mocks are of the same type as the mock they are accessed on. This ensures |
| that `Mock` attributes are `Mocks` and `MagicMock` attributes are `MagicMocks` |
| [#]_. So if you're subclassing to add helper methods then they'll also be |
| available on the attributes and return value mock of instances of your |
| subclass. |
| |
| >>> mymock.foo |
| <MyMock name='mock.foo' id='...'> |
| >>> mymock.foo.has_been_called() |
| False |
| >>> mymock.foo() |
| <MyMock name='mock.foo()' id='...'> |
| >>> mymock.foo.has_been_called() |
| True |
| |
| Sometimes this is inconvenient. For example, `one user |
| <https://code.google.com/p/mock/issues/detail?id=105>`_ is subclassing mock to |
| created a `Twisted adaptor |
| <http://twistedmatrix.com/documents/11.0.0/api/twisted.python.components.html>`_. |
| Having this applied to attributes too actually causes errors. |
| |
| `Mock` (in all its flavours) uses a method called `_get_child_mock` to create |
| these "sub-mocks" for attributes and return values. You can prevent your |
| subclass being used for attributes by overriding this method. The signature is |
| that it takes arbitrary keyword arguments (`**kwargs`) which are then passed |
| onto the mock constructor: |
| |
| >>> class Subclass(MagicMock): |
| ... def _get_child_mock(self, **kwargs): |
| ... return MagicMock(**kwargs) |
| ... |
| >>> mymock = Subclass() |
| >>> mymock.foo |
| <MagicMock name='mock.foo' id='...'> |
| >>> assert isinstance(mymock, Subclass) |
| >>> assert not isinstance(mymock.foo, Subclass) |
| >>> assert not isinstance(mymock(), Subclass) |
| |
| .. [#] An exception to this rule are the non-callable mocks. Attributes use the |
| callable variant because otherwise non-callable mocks couldn't have callable |
| methods. |
| |
| |
| Mocking imports with patch.dict |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| One situation where mocking can be hard is where you have a local import inside |
| a function. These are harder to mock because they aren't using an object from |
| the module namespace that we can patch out. |
| |
| Generally local imports are to be avoided. They are sometimes done to prevent |
| circular dependencies, for which there is *usually* a much better way to solve |
| the problem (refactor the code) or to prevent "up front costs" by delaying the |
| import. This can also be solved in better ways than an unconditional local |
| import (store the module as a class or module attribute and only do the import |
| on first use). |
| |
| That aside there is a way to use `mock` to affect the results of an import. |
| Importing fetches an *object* from the `sys.modules` dictionary. Note that it |
| fetches an *object*, which need not be a module. Importing a module for the |
| first time results in a module object being put in `sys.modules`, so usually |
| when you import something you get a module back. This need not be the case |
| however. |
| |
| This means you can use :func:`patch.dict` to *temporarily* put a mock in place |
| in `sys.modules`. Any imports whilst this patch is active will fetch the mock. |
| When the patch is complete (the decorated function exits, the with statement |
| body is complete or `patcher.stop()` is called) then whatever was there |
| previously will be restored safely. |
| |
| Here's an example that mocks out the 'fooble' module. |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', {'fooble': mock}): |
| ... import fooble |
| ... fooble.blob() |
| ... |
| <Mock name='mock.blob()' id='...'> |
| >>> assert 'fooble' not in sys.modules |
| >>> mock.blob.assert_called_once_with() |
| |
| As you can see the `import fooble` succeeds, but on exit there is no 'fooble' |
| left in `sys.modules`. |
| |
| This also works for the `from module import name` form: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', {'fooble': mock}): |
| ... from fooble import blob |
| ... blob.blip() |
| ... |
| <Mock name='mock.blob.blip()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.blob.blip.assert_called_once_with() |
| |
| With slightly more work you can also mock package imports: |
| |
| >>> mock = Mock() |
| >>> modules = {'package': mock, 'package.module': mock.module} |
| >>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', modules): |
| ... from package.module import fooble |
| ... fooble() |
| ... |
| <Mock name='mock.module.fooble()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock.module.fooble.assert_called_once_with() |
| |
| |
| Tracking order of calls and less verbose call assertions |
| -------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| The :class:`Mock` class allows you to track the *order* of method calls on |
| your mock objects through the :attr:`~Mock.method_calls` attribute. This |
| doesn't allow you to track the order of calls between separate mock objects, |
| however we can use :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` to achieve the same effect. |
| |
| Because mocks track calls to child mocks in `mock_calls`, and accessing an |
| arbitrary attribute of a mock creates a child mock, we can create our separate |
| mocks from a parent one. Calls to those child mock will then all be recorded, |
| in order, in the `mock_calls` of the parent: |
| |
| >>> manager = Mock() |
| >>> mock_foo = manager.foo |
| >>> mock_bar = manager.bar |
| |
| >>> mock_foo.something() |
| <Mock name='mock.foo.something()' id='...'> |
| >>> mock_bar.other.thing() |
| <Mock name='mock.bar.other.thing()' id='...'> |
| |
| >>> manager.mock_calls |
| [call.foo.something(), call.bar.other.thing()] |
| |
| We can then assert about the calls, including the order, by comparing with |
| the `mock_calls` attribute on the manager mock: |
| |
| >>> expected_calls = [call.foo.something(), call.bar.other.thing()] |
| >>> manager.mock_calls == expected_calls |
| True |
| |
| If `patch` is creating, and putting in place, your mocks then you can attach |
| them to a manager mock using the :meth:`~Mock.attach_mock` method. After |
| attaching calls will be recorded in `mock_calls` of the manager. |
| |
| >>> manager = MagicMock() |
| >>> with patch('mymodule.Class1') as MockClass1: |
| ... with patch('mymodule.Class2') as MockClass2: |
| ... manager.attach_mock(MockClass1, 'MockClass1') |
| ... manager.attach_mock(MockClass2, 'MockClass2') |
| ... MockClass1().foo() |
| ... MockClass2().bar() |
| ... |
| <MagicMock name='mock.MockClass1().foo()' id='...'> |
| <MagicMock name='mock.MockClass2().bar()' id='...'> |
| >>> manager.mock_calls |
| [call.MockClass1(), |
| call.MockClass1().foo(), |
| call.MockClass2(), |
| call.MockClass2().bar()] |
| |
| If many calls have been made, but you're only interested in a particular |
| sequence of them then an alternative is to use the |
| :meth:`~Mock.assert_has_calls` method. This takes a list of calls (constructed |
| with the :data:`call` object). If that sequence of calls are in |
| :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` then the assert succeeds. |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> m().foo().bar().baz() |
| <MagicMock name='mock().foo().bar().baz()' id='...'> |
| >>> m.one().two().three() |
| <MagicMock name='mock.one().two().three()' id='...'> |
| >>> calls = call.one().two().three().call_list() |
| >>> m.assert_has_calls(calls) |
| |
| Even though the chained call `m.one().two().three()` aren't the only calls that |
| have been made to the mock, the assert still succeeds. |
| |
| Sometimes a mock may have several calls made to it, and you are only interested |
| in asserting about *some* of those calls. You may not even care about the |
| order. In this case you can pass `any_order=True` to `assert_has_calls`: |
| |
| >>> m = MagicMock() |
| >>> m(1), m.two(2, 3), m.seven(7), m.fifty('50') |
| (...) |
| >>> calls = [call.fifty('50'), call(1), call.seven(7)] |
| >>> m.assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=True) |
| |
| |
| More complex argument matching |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| Using the same basic concept as :data:`ANY` we can implement matchers to do more |
| complex assertions on objects used as arguments to mocks. |
| |
| Suppose we expect some object to be passed to a mock that by default |
| compares equal based on object identity (which is the Python default for user |
| defined classes). To use :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` we would need to pass |
| in the exact same object. If we are only interested in some of the attributes |
| of this object then we can create a matcher that will check these attributes |
| for us. |
| |
| You can see in this example how a 'standard' call to `assert_called_with` isn't |
| sufficient: |
| |
| >>> class Foo(object): |
| ... def __init__(self, a, b): |
| ... self.a, self.b = a, b |
| ... |
| >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) |
| >>> mock(Foo(1, 2)) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with(Foo(1, 2)) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected: call(<__main__.Foo object at 0x...>) |
| Actual call: call(<__main__.Foo object at 0x...>) |
| |
| A comparison function for our `Foo` class might look something like this: |
| |
| >>> def compare(self, other): |
| ... if not type(self) == type(other): |
| ... return False |
| ... if self.a != other.a: |
| ... return False |
| ... if self.b != other.b: |
| ... return False |
| ... return True |
| ... |
| |
| And a matcher object that can use comparison functions like this for its |
| equality operation would look something like this: |
| |
| >>> class Matcher(object): |
| ... def __init__(self, compare, some_obj): |
| ... self.compare = compare |
| ... self.some_obj = some_obj |
| ... def __eq__(self, other): |
| ... return self.compare(self.some_obj, other) |
| ... |
| |
| Putting all this together: |
| |
| >>> match_foo = Matcher(compare, Foo(1, 2)) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with(match_foo) |
| |
| The `Matcher` is instantiated with our compare function and the `Foo` object |
| we want to compare against. In `assert_called_with` the `Matcher` equality |
| method will be called, which compares the object the mock was called with |
| against the one we created our matcher with. If they match then |
| `assert_called_with` passes, and if they don't an `AssertionError` is raised: |
| |
| >>> match_wrong = Matcher(compare, Foo(3, 4)) |
| >>> mock.assert_called_with(match_wrong) |
| Traceback (most recent call last): |
| ... |
| AssertionError: Expected: ((<Matcher object at 0x...>,), {}) |
| Called with: ((<Foo object at 0x...>,), {}) |
| |
| With a bit of tweaking you could have the comparison function raise the |
| `AssertionError` directly and provide a more useful failure message. |
| |
| As of version 1.5, the Python testing library `PyHamcrest |
| <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyHamcrest>`_ provides similar functionality, |
| that may be useful here, in the form of its equality matcher |
| (`hamcrest.library.integration.match_equality |
| <http://packages.python.org/PyHamcrest/integration.html#hamcrest.library.integration.match_equality>`_). |