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Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001:mod:`unittest` --- Unit testing framework
2==========================================
3
4.. module:: unittest
5 :synopsis: Unit testing framework for Python.
6.. moduleauthor:: Steve Purcell <stephen_purcell@yahoo.com>
7.. sectionauthor:: Steve Purcell <stephen_purcell@yahoo.com>
8.. sectionauthor:: Fred L. Drake, Jr. <fdrake@acm.org>
9.. sectionauthor:: Raymond Hettinger <python@rcn.com>
10
11
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000012The Python unit testing framework, sometimes referred to as "PyUnit," is a
13Python language version of JUnit, by Kent Beck and Erich Gamma. JUnit is, in
14turn, a Java version of Kent's Smalltalk testing framework. Each is the de
15facto standard unit testing framework for its respective language.
16
17:mod:`unittest` supports test automation, sharing of setup and shutdown code for
18tests, aggregation of tests into collections, and independence of the tests from
19the reporting framework. The :mod:`unittest` module provides classes that make
20it easy to support these qualities for a set of tests.
21
22To achieve this, :mod:`unittest` supports some important concepts:
23
24test fixture
25 A :dfn:`test fixture` represents the preparation needed to perform one or more
26 tests, and any associate cleanup actions. This may involve, for example,
27 creating temporary or proxy databases, directories, or starting a server
28 process.
29
30test case
31 A :dfn:`test case` is the smallest unit of testing. It checks for a specific
32 response to a particular set of inputs. :mod:`unittest` provides a base class,
33 :class:`TestCase`, which may be used to create new test cases.
34
35test suite
36 A :dfn:`test suite` is a collection of test cases, test suites, or both. It is
37 used to aggregate tests that should be executed together.
38
39test runner
40 A :dfn:`test runner` is a component which orchestrates the execution of tests
41 and provides the outcome to the user. The runner may use a graphical interface,
42 a textual interface, or return a special value to indicate the results of
43 executing the tests.
44
45The test case and test fixture concepts are supported through the
46:class:`TestCase` and :class:`FunctionTestCase` classes; the former should be
47used when creating new tests, and the latter can be used when integrating
48existing test code with a :mod:`unittest`\ -driven framework. When building test
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +000049fixtures using :class:`TestCase`, the :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` and
50:meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` methods can be overridden to provide initialization
51and cleanup for the fixture. With :class:`FunctionTestCase`, existing functions
52can be passed to the constructor for these purposes. When the test is run, the
53fixture initialization is run first; if it succeeds, the cleanup method is run
54after the test has been executed, regardless of the outcome of the test. Each
55instance of the :class:`TestCase` will only be used to run a single test method,
56so a new fixture is created for each test.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000057
58Test suites are implemented by the :class:`TestSuite` class. This class allows
59individual tests and test suites to be aggregated; when the suite is executed,
Benjamin Peterson14a3dd72009-05-25 00:51:58 +000060all tests added directly to the suite and in "child" test suites are run.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000061
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +000062A test runner is an object that provides a single method,
63:meth:`~TestRunner.run`, which accepts a :class:`TestCase` or :class:`TestSuite`
64object as a parameter, and returns a result object. The class
65:class:`TestResult` is provided for use as the result object. :mod:`unittest`
66provides the :class:`TextTestRunner` as an example test runner which reports
67test results on the standard error stream by default. Alternate runners can be
68implemented for other environments (such as graphical environments) without any
69need to derive from a specific class.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000070
71
72.. seealso::
73
74 Module :mod:`doctest`
75 Another test-support module with a very different flavor.
76
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +000077 `unittest2: A backport of new unittest features for Python 2.4-2.6 <http://pypi.python.org/pypi/unittest2>`_
78 Many new features were added to unittest in Python 2.7, including test
79 discovery. unittest2 allows you to use these features with earlier
80 versions of Python.
81
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000082 `Simple Smalltalk Testing: With Patterns <http://www.XProgramming.com/testfram.htm>`_
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000083 Kent Beck's original paper on testing frameworks using the pattern shared
84 by :mod:`unittest`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000085
Raymond Hettinger6b232cd2009-03-24 00:22:53 +000086 `Nose <http://code.google.com/p/python-nose/>`_ and `py.test <http://pytest.org>`_
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000087 Third-party unittest frameworks with a lighter-weight syntax for writing
88 tests. For example, ``assert func(10) == 42``.
Raymond Hettinger6b232cd2009-03-24 00:22:53 +000089
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +000090 `The Python Testing Tools Taxonomy <http://pycheesecake.org/wiki/PythonTestingToolsTaxonomy>`_
91 An extensive list of Python testing tools including functional testing
92 frameworks and mock object libraries.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000093
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +000094 `Testing in Python Mailing List <http://lists.idyll.org/listinfo/testing-in-python>`_
95 A special-interest-group for discussion of testing, and testing tools,
96 in Python.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000097
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000098.. _unittest-minimal-example:
99
100Basic example
101-------------
102
103The :mod:`unittest` module provides a rich set of tools for constructing and
104running tests. This section demonstrates that a small subset of the tools
105suffice to meet the needs of most users.
106
107Here is a short script to test three functions from the :mod:`random` module::
108
109 import random
110 import unittest
111
112 class TestSequenceFunctions(unittest.TestCase):
113
114 def setUp(self):
Benjamin Petersonbe0e1772009-07-25 01:02:01 +0000115 self.seq = list(range(10))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000116
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000117 def test_shuffle(self):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000118 # make sure the shuffled sequence does not lose any elements
119 random.shuffle(self.seq)
120 self.seq.sort()
Benjamin Petersonbe0e1772009-07-25 01:02:01 +0000121 self.assertEqual(self.seq, list(range(10)))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000122
Benjamin Peterson847a4112010-03-14 15:04:17 +0000123 # should raise an exception for an immutable sequence
124 self.assertRaises(TypeError, random.shuffle, (1,2,3))
125
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000126 def test_choice(self):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000127 element = random.choice(self.seq)
Benjamin Peterson847a4112010-03-14 15:04:17 +0000128 self.assertTrue(element in self.seq)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000129
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000130 def test_sample(self):
Benjamin Peterson847a4112010-03-14 15:04:17 +0000131 with self.assertRaises(ValueError):
132 random.sample(self.seq, 20)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000133 for element in random.sample(self.seq, 5):
Benjamin Peterson847a4112010-03-14 15:04:17 +0000134 self.assertTrue(element in self.seq)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000135
136 if __name__ == '__main__':
137 unittest.main()
138
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000139A testcase is created by subclassing :class:`unittest.TestCase`. The three
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000140individual tests are defined with methods whose names start with the letters
141``test``. This naming convention informs the test runner about which methods
142represent tests.
143
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000144The crux of each test is a call to :meth:`~TestCase.assertEqual` to check for an
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +0000145expected result; :meth:`~TestCase.assertTrue` to verify a condition; or
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000146:meth:`~TestCase.assertRaises` to verify that an expected exception gets raised.
147These methods are used instead of the :keyword:`assert` statement so the test
148runner can accumulate all test results and produce a report.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000149
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000150When a :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` method is defined, the test runner will run that
151method prior to each test. Likewise, if a :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` method is
152defined, the test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the
153example, :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` was used to create a fresh sequence for each
154test.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000155
156The final block shows a simple way to run the tests. :func:`unittest.main`
157provides a command line interface to the test script. When run from the command
158line, the above script produces an output that looks like this::
159
160 ...
161 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
162 Ran 3 tests in 0.000s
163
164 OK
165
166Instead of :func:`unittest.main`, there are other ways to run the tests with a
167finer level of control, less terse output, and no requirement to be run from the
168command line. For example, the last two lines may be replaced with::
169
170 suite = unittest.TestLoader().loadTestsFromTestCase(TestSequenceFunctions)
171 unittest.TextTestRunner(verbosity=2).run(suite)
172
173Running the revised script from the interpreter or another script produces the
174following output::
175
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000176 test_choice (__main__.TestSequenceFunctions) ... ok
177 test_sample (__main__.TestSequenceFunctions) ... ok
178 test_shuffle (__main__.TestSequenceFunctions) ... ok
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000179
180 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
181 Ran 3 tests in 0.110s
182
183 OK
184
185The above examples show the most commonly used :mod:`unittest` features which
186are sufficient to meet many everyday testing needs. The remainder of the
187documentation explores the full feature set from first principles.
188
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000189
190.. _unittest-command-line-interface:
191
192Command Line Interface
193----------------------
194
195The unittest module can be used from the command line to run tests from
196modules, classes or even individual test methods::
197
198 python -m unittest test_module1 test_module2
199 python -m unittest test_module.TestClass
200 python -m unittest test_module.TestClass.test_method
201
202You can pass in a list with any combination of module names, and fully
203qualified class or method names.
204
205You can run tests with more detail (higher verbosity) by passing in the -v flag::
206
207 python -m unittest -v test_module
208
209For a list of all the command line options::
210
211 python -m unittest -h
212
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +0000213.. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000214 In earlier versions it was only possible to run individual test methods and
215 not modules or classes.
216
217
218failfast, catch and buffer command line options
219~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
220
221unittest supports three command options.
222
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000223* :option:`-b` / :option:`--buffer`
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000224
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000225 The standard output and standard error streams are buffered during the test
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000226 run. Output during a passing test is discarded. Output is echoed normally
227 on test fail or error and is added to the failure messages.
228
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000229* :option:`-c` / :option:`--catch`
230
231 Control-C during the test run waits for the current test to end and then
232 reports all the results so far. A second control-C raises the normal
233 :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` exception.
234
235 See `Signal Handling`_ for the functions that provide this functionality.
236
237* :option:`-f` / :option:`--failfast`
238
239 Stop the test run on the first error or failure.
240
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000241.. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000242 The command line options ``-c``, ``-b`` and ``-f`` were added.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000243
244The command line can also be used for test discovery, for running all of the
245tests in a project or just a subset.
246
247
248.. _unittest-test-discovery:
249
250Test Discovery
251--------------
252
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000253.. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000254
255Unittest supports simple test discovery. For a project's tests to be
256compatible with test discovery they must all be importable from the top level
257directory of the project (in other words, they must all be in Python packages).
258
259Test discovery is implemented in :meth:`TestLoader.discover`, but can also be
260used from the command line. The basic command line usage is::
261
262 cd project_directory
263 python -m unittest discover
264
265The ``discover`` sub-command has the following options:
266
267 -v, --verbose Verbose output
268 -s directory Directory to start discovery ('.' default)
269 -p pattern Pattern to match test files ('test*.py' default)
270 -t directory Top level directory of project (default to
271 start directory)
272
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000273The :option:`-s`, :option:`-p`, and :option:`-t` options can be passed in
274as positional arguments in that order. The following two command lines
275are equivalent::
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000276
277 python -m unittest discover -s project_directory -p '*_test.py'
278 python -m unittest discover project_directory '*_test.py'
279
Michael Foord16f3e902010-05-08 15:13:42 +0000280As well as being a path it is possible to pass a package name, for example
281``myproject.subpackage.test``, as the start directory. The package name you
282supply will then be imported and its location on the filesystem will be used
283as the start directory.
284
285.. caution::
286
Senthil Kumaran916bd382010-10-15 12:55:19 +0000287 Test discovery loads tests by importing them. Once test discovery has found
288 all the test files from the start directory you specify it turns the paths
289 into package names to import. For example :file:`foo/bar/baz.py` will be
Michael Foord16f3e902010-05-08 15:13:42 +0000290 imported as ``foo.bar.baz``.
291
292 If you have a package installed globally and attempt test discovery on
293 a different copy of the package then the import *could* happen from the
294 wrong place. If this happens test discovery will warn you and exit.
295
296 If you supply the start directory as a package name rather than a
297 path to a directory then discover assumes that whichever location it
298 imports from is the location you intended, so you will not get the
299 warning.
300
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000301Test modules and packages can customize test loading and discovery by through
302the `load_tests protocol`_.
303
304
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000305.. _organizing-tests:
306
307Organizing test code
308--------------------
309
310The basic building blocks of unit testing are :dfn:`test cases` --- single
311scenarios that must be set up and checked for correctness. In :mod:`unittest`,
312test cases are represented by instances of :mod:`unittest`'s :class:`TestCase`
313class. To make your own test cases you must write subclasses of
314:class:`TestCase`, or use :class:`FunctionTestCase`.
315
316An instance of a :class:`TestCase`\ -derived class is an object that can
317completely run a single test method, together with optional set-up and tidy-up
318code.
319
320The testing code of a :class:`TestCase` instance should be entirely self
321contained, such that it can be run either in isolation or in arbitrary
322combination with any number of other test cases.
323
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000324The simplest :class:`TestCase` subclass will simply override the
325:meth:`~TestCase.runTest` method in order to perform specific testing code::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000326
327 import unittest
328
329 class DefaultWidgetSizeTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
330 def runTest(self):
331 widget = Widget('The widget')
332 self.assertEqual(widget.size(), (50, 50), 'incorrect default size')
333
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000334Note that in order to test something, we use the one of the :meth:`assert\*`
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000335methods provided by the :class:`TestCase` base class. If the test fails, an
336exception will be raised, and :mod:`unittest` will identify the test case as a
337:dfn:`failure`. Any other exceptions will be treated as :dfn:`errors`. This
338helps you identify where the problem is: :dfn:`failures` are caused by incorrect
339results - a 5 where you expected a 6. :dfn:`Errors` are caused by incorrect
340code - e.g., a :exc:`TypeError` caused by an incorrect function call.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000341
342The way to run a test case will be described later. For now, note that to
343construct an instance of such a test case, we call its constructor without
344arguments::
345
346 testCase = DefaultWidgetSizeTestCase()
347
348Now, such test cases can be numerous, and their set-up can be repetitive. In
349the above case, constructing a :class:`Widget` in each of 100 Widget test case
350subclasses would mean unsightly duplication.
351
352Luckily, we can factor out such set-up code by implementing a method called
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000353:meth:`~TestCase.setUp`, which the testing framework will automatically call for
354us when we run the test::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000355
356 import unittest
357
358 class SimpleWidgetTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
359 def setUp(self):
360 self.widget = Widget('The widget')
361
362 class DefaultWidgetSizeTestCase(SimpleWidgetTestCase):
363 def runTest(self):
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000364 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (50,50),
365 'incorrect default size')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000366
367 class WidgetResizeTestCase(SimpleWidgetTestCase):
368 def runTest(self):
369 self.widget.resize(100,150)
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000370 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (100,150),
371 'wrong size after resize')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000372
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000373If the :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` method raises an exception while the test is
374running, the framework will consider the test to have suffered an error, and the
375:meth:`~TestCase.runTest` method will not be executed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000376
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000377Similarly, we can provide a :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` method that tidies up
378after the :meth:`~TestCase.runTest` method has been run::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000379
380 import unittest
381
382 class SimpleWidgetTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
383 def setUp(self):
384 self.widget = Widget('The widget')
385
386 def tearDown(self):
387 self.widget.dispose()
388 self.widget = None
389
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000390If :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` succeeded, the :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` method will
391be run whether :meth:`~TestCase.runTest` succeeded or not.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000392
393Such a working environment for the testing code is called a :dfn:`fixture`.
394
395Often, many small test cases will use the same fixture. In this case, we would
396end up subclassing :class:`SimpleWidgetTestCase` into many small one-method
397classes such as :class:`DefaultWidgetSizeTestCase`. This is time-consuming and
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000398discouraging, so in the same vein as JUnit, :mod:`unittest` provides a simpler
399mechanism::
400
401 import unittest
402
403 class WidgetTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
404 def setUp(self):
405 self.widget = Widget('The widget')
406
407 def tearDown(self):
408 self.widget.dispose()
409 self.widget = None
410
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000411 def test_default_size(self):
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000412 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (50,50),
413 'incorrect default size')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000414
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000415 def test_resize(self):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000416 self.widget.resize(100,150)
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000417 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (100,150),
418 'wrong size after resize')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000419
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000420Here we have not provided a :meth:`~TestCase.runTest` method, but have instead
421provided two different test methods. Class instances will now each run one of
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000422the :meth:`test_\*` methods, with ``self.widget`` created and destroyed
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000423separately for each instance. When creating an instance we must specify the
424test method it is to run. We do this by passing the method name in the
425constructor::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000426
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000427 defaultSizeTestCase = WidgetTestCase('test_default_size')
428 resizeTestCase = WidgetTestCase('test_resize')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000429
430Test case instances are grouped together according to the features they test.
431:mod:`unittest` provides a mechanism for this: the :dfn:`test suite`,
432represented by :mod:`unittest`'s :class:`TestSuite` class::
433
434 widgetTestSuite = unittest.TestSuite()
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000435 widgetTestSuite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_default_size'))
436 widgetTestSuite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_resize'))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000437
438For the ease of running tests, as we will see later, it is a good idea to
439provide in each test module a callable object that returns a pre-built test
440suite::
441
442 def suite():
443 suite = unittest.TestSuite()
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000444 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_default_size'))
445 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_resize'))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000446 return suite
447
448or even::
449
450 def suite():
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000451 tests = ['test_default_size', 'test_resize']
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000452
453 return unittest.TestSuite(map(WidgetTestCase, tests))
454
455Since it is a common pattern to create a :class:`TestCase` subclass with many
456similarly named test functions, :mod:`unittest` provides a :class:`TestLoader`
457class that can be used to automate the process of creating a test suite and
458populating it with individual tests. For example, ::
459
460 suite = unittest.TestLoader().loadTestsFromTestCase(WidgetTestCase)
461
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000462will create a test suite that will run ``WidgetTestCase.test_default_size()`` and
463``WidgetTestCase.test_resize``. :class:`TestLoader` uses the ``'test'`` method
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000464name prefix to identify test methods automatically.
465
Mark Dickinsonc48d8342009-02-01 14:18:10 +0000466Note that the order in which the various test cases will be run is
467determined by sorting the test function names with respect to the
468built-in ordering for strings.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000469
470Often it is desirable to group suites of test cases together, so as to run tests
471for the whole system at once. This is easy, since :class:`TestSuite` instances
472can be added to a :class:`TestSuite` just as :class:`TestCase` instances can be
473added to a :class:`TestSuite`::
474
475 suite1 = module1.TheTestSuite()
476 suite2 = module2.TheTestSuite()
477 alltests = unittest.TestSuite([suite1, suite2])
478
479You can place the definitions of test cases and test suites in the same modules
480as the code they are to test (such as :file:`widget.py`), but there are several
481advantages to placing the test code in a separate module, such as
482:file:`test_widget.py`:
483
484* The test module can be run standalone from the command line.
485
486* The test code can more easily be separated from shipped code.
487
488* There is less temptation to change test code to fit the code it tests without
489 a good reason.
490
491* Test code should be modified much less frequently than the code it tests.
492
493* Tested code can be refactored more easily.
494
495* Tests for modules written in C must be in separate modules anyway, so why not
496 be consistent?
497
498* If the testing strategy changes, there is no need to change the source code.
499
500
501.. _legacy-unit-tests:
502
503Re-using old test code
504----------------------
505
506Some users will find that they have existing test code that they would like to
507run from :mod:`unittest`, without converting every old test function to a
508:class:`TestCase` subclass.
509
510For this reason, :mod:`unittest` provides a :class:`FunctionTestCase` class.
511This subclass of :class:`TestCase` can be used to wrap an existing test
512function. Set-up and tear-down functions can also be provided.
513
514Given the following test function::
515
516 def testSomething():
517 something = makeSomething()
518 assert something.name is not None
519 # ...
520
521one can create an equivalent test case instance as follows::
522
523 testcase = unittest.FunctionTestCase(testSomething)
524
525If there are additional set-up and tear-down methods that should be called as
526part of the test case's operation, they can also be provided like so::
527
528 testcase = unittest.FunctionTestCase(testSomething,
529 setUp=makeSomethingDB,
530 tearDown=deleteSomethingDB)
531
532To make migrating existing test suites easier, :mod:`unittest` supports tests
533raising :exc:`AssertionError` to indicate test failure. However, it is
534recommended that you use the explicit :meth:`TestCase.fail\*` and
535:meth:`TestCase.assert\*` methods instead, as future versions of :mod:`unittest`
536may treat :exc:`AssertionError` differently.
537
538.. note::
539
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000540 Even though :class:`FunctionTestCase` can be used to quickly convert an
541 existing test base over to a :mod:`unittest`\ -based system, this approach is
542 not recommended. Taking the time to set up proper :class:`TestCase`
543 subclasses will make future test refactorings infinitely easier.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000544
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000545In some cases, the existing tests may have been written using the :mod:`doctest`
546module. If so, :mod:`doctest` provides a :class:`DocTestSuite` class that can
547automatically build :class:`unittest.TestSuite` instances from the existing
548:mod:`doctest`\ -based tests.
549
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000550
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000551.. _unittest-skipping:
552
553Skipping tests and expected failures
554------------------------------------
555
Michael Foordf5c851a2010-02-05 21:48:03 +0000556.. versionadded:: 3.1
557
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000558Unittest supports skipping individual test methods and even whole classes of
559tests. In addition, it supports marking a test as a "expected failure," a test
560that is broken and will fail, but shouldn't be counted as a failure on a
561:class:`TestResult`.
562
563Skipping a test is simply a matter of using the :func:`skip` :term:`decorator`
564or one of its conditional variants.
565
566Basic skipping looks like this: ::
567
568 class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
569
570 @unittest.skip("demonstrating skipping")
571 def test_nothing(self):
572 self.fail("shouldn't happen")
573
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000574 @unittest.skipIf(mylib.__version__ < (1, 3),
575 "not supported in this library version")
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000576 def test_format(self):
577 # Tests that work for only a certain version of the library.
578 pass
579
580 @unittest.skipUnless(sys.platform.startswith("win"), "requires Windows")
581 def test_windows_support(self):
582 # windows specific testing code
583 pass
584
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000585This is the output of running the example above in verbose mode: ::
586
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000587 test_format (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'not supported in this library version'
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000588 test_nothing (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'demonstrating skipping'
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000589 test_windows_support (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'requires Windows'
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000590
591 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000592 Ran 3 tests in 0.005s
593
594 OK (skipped=3)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000595
596Classes can be skipped just like methods: ::
597
598 @skip("showing class skipping")
599 class MySkippedTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
600 def test_not_run(self):
601 pass
602
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000603:meth:`TestCase.setUp` can also skip the test. This is useful when a resource
604that needs to be set up is not available.
605
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000606Expected failures use the :func:`expectedFailure` decorator. ::
607
608 class ExpectedFailureTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
609 @unittest.expectedFailure
610 def test_fail(self):
611 self.assertEqual(1, 0, "broken")
612
613It's easy to roll your own skipping decorators by making a decorator that calls
614:func:`skip` on the test when it wants it to be skipped. This decorator skips
615the test unless the passed object has a certain attribute: ::
616
617 def skipUnlessHasattr(obj, attr):
618 if hasattr(obj, attr):
619 return lambda func: func
620 return unittest.skip("{0!r} doesn't have {1!r}".format(obj, attr))
621
622The following decorators implement test skipping and expected failures:
623
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000624.. decorator:: skip(reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000625
626 Unconditionally skip the decorated test. *reason* should describe why the
627 test is being skipped.
628
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000629.. decorator:: skipIf(condition, reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000630
631 Skip the decorated test if *condition* is true.
632
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000633.. decorator:: skipUnless(condition, reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000634
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +0000635 Skip the decorated test unless *condition* is true.
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000636
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000637.. decorator:: expectedFailure
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000638
639 Mark the test as an expected failure. If the test fails when run, the test
640 is not counted as a failure.
641
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000642Skipped tests will not have :meth:`setUp` or :meth:`tearDown` run around them.
643Skipped classes will not have :meth:`setUpClass` or :meth:`tearDownClass` run.
644
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000645
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000646.. _unittest-contents:
647
648Classes and functions
649---------------------
650
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000651This section describes in depth the API of :mod:`unittest`.
652
653
654.. _testcase-objects:
655
656Test cases
657~~~~~~~~~~
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000658
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000659.. class:: TestCase(methodName='runTest')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000660
661 Instances of the :class:`TestCase` class represent the smallest testable units
662 in the :mod:`unittest` universe. This class is intended to be used as a base
663 class, with specific tests being implemented by concrete subclasses. This class
664 implements the interface needed by the test runner to allow it to drive the
665 test, and methods that the test code can use to check for and report various
666 kinds of failure.
667
668 Each instance of :class:`TestCase` will run a single test method: the method
669 named *methodName*. If you remember, we had an earlier example that went
670 something like this::
671
672 def suite():
673 suite = unittest.TestSuite()
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000674 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_default_size'))
675 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_resize'))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000676 return suite
677
678 Here, we create two instances of :class:`WidgetTestCase`, each of which runs a
679 single test.
680
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000681 *methodName* defaults to :meth:`runTest`.
682
683 :class:`TestCase` instances provide three groups of methods: one group used
684 to run the test, another used by the test implementation to check conditions
685 and report failures, and some inquiry methods allowing information about the
686 test itself to be gathered.
687
688 Methods in the first group (running the test) are:
689
690
691 .. method:: setUp()
692
693 Method called to prepare the test fixture. This is called immediately
694 before calling the test method; any exception raised by this method will
695 be considered an error rather than a test failure. The default
696 implementation does nothing.
697
698
699 .. method:: tearDown()
700
701 Method called immediately after the test method has been called and the
702 result recorded. This is called even if the test method raised an
703 exception, so the implementation in subclasses may need to be particularly
704 careful about checking internal state. Any exception raised by this
705 method will be considered an error rather than a test failure. This
706 method will only be called if the :meth:`setUp` succeeds, regardless of
707 the outcome of the test method. The default implementation does nothing.
708
709
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000710 .. method:: setUpClass()
711
712 A class method called before tests in an individual class run.
713 ``setUpClass`` is called with the class as the only argument
714 and must be decorated as a :func:`classmethod`::
715
716 @classmethod
717 def setUpClass(cls):
718 ...
719
720 See `Class and Module Fixtures`_ for more details.
721
722 .. versionadded:: 3.2
723
724
725 .. method:: tearDownClass()
726
727 A class method called after tests in an individual class have run.
728 ``tearDownClass`` is called with the class as the only argument
729 and must be decorated as a :meth:`classmethod`::
730
731 @classmethod
732 def tearDownClass(cls):
733 ...
734
735 See `Class and Module Fixtures`_ for more details.
736
737 .. versionadded:: 3.2
738
739
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000740 .. method:: run(result=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000741
742 Run the test, collecting the result into the test result object passed as
743 *result*. If *result* is omitted or :const:`None`, a temporary result
Alexandre Vassalotti260484d2009-07-17 11:43:26 +0000744 object is created (by calling the :meth:`defaultTestResult` method) and
745 used. The result object is not returned to :meth:`run`'s caller.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000746
747 The same effect may be had by simply calling the :class:`TestCase`
748 instance.
749
750
Benjamin Petersone549ead2009-03-28 21:42:05 +0000751 .. method:: skipTest(reason)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000752
Stefan Kraha5bf3f52010-05-19 16:09:41 +0000753 Calling this during a test method or :meth:`setUp` skips the current
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000754 test. See :ref:`unittest-skipping` for more information.
755
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000756 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000757
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000758
759 .. method:: debug()
760
761 Run the test without collecting the result. This allows exceptions raised
762 by the test to be propagated to the caller, and can be used to support
763 running tests under a debugger.
764
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000765
766
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000767 The :class:`TestCase` class provides a number of methods to check for and
768 report failures, such as:
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000769
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000770 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
771 | Method | Checks that | New in |
772 +=========================================+=============================+===============+
773 | :meth:`assertEqual(a, b) | ``a == b`` | |
774 | <TestCase.assertEqual>` | | |
775 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
776 | :meth:`assertNotEqual(a, b) | ``a != b`` | |
777 | <TestCase.assertNotEqual>` | | |
778 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
779 | :meth:`assertTrue(x) | ``bool(x) is True`` | |
780 | <TestCase.assertTrue>` | | |
781 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
782 | :meth:`assertFalse(x) | ``bool(x) is False`` | |
783 | <TestCase.assertFalse>` | | |
784 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
785 | :meth:`assertIs(a, b) | ``a is b`` | 3.1 |
786 | <TestCase.assertIs>` | | |
787 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
788 | :meth:`assertIsNot(a, b) | ``a is not b`` | 3.1 |
789 | <TestCase.assertIsNot>` | | |
790 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
791 | :meth:`assertIsNone(x) | ``x is None`` | 3.1 |
792 | <TestCase.assertIsNone>` | | |
793 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
794 | :meth:`assertIsNotNone(x) | ``x is not None`` | 3.1 |
795 | <TestCase.assertIsNotNone>` | | |
796 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
797 | :meth:`assertIn(a, b) | ``a in b`` | 3.1 |
798 | <TestCase.assertIn>` | | |
799 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
800 | :meth:`assertNotIn(a, b) | ``a not in b`` | 3.1 |
801 | <TestCase.assertNotIn>` | | |
802 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
803 | :meth:`assertIsInstance(a, b) | ``isinstance(a, b)`` | 3.2 |
804 | <TestCase.assertIsInstance>` | | |
805 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
806 | :meth:`assertNotIsInstance(a, b) | ``not isinstance(a, b)`` | 3.2 |
807 | <TestCase.assertNotIsInstance>` | | |
808 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------------+
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000809
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000810
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000811 .. method:: assertEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000812
813 Test that *first* and *second* are equal. If the values do not compare
814 equal, the test will fail with the explanation given by *msg*, or
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000815 :const:`None`. Note that using :meth:`assertEqual` improves upon
816 doing the comparison as the first parameter to :meth:`assertTrue`: the
817 default value for *msg* include representations of both *first* and
818 *second*.
819
820 In addition, if *first* and *second* are the exact same type and one of
Michael Foord02834952010-02-08 23:10:39 +0000821 list, tuple, dict, set, frozenset or str or any type that a subclass
822 registers with :meth:`addTypeEqualityFunc` the type specific equality
823 function will be called in order to generate a more useful default
824 error message.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000825
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000826 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000827 Added the automatic calling of type specific equality function.
828
Michael Foord28a817e2010-02-09 00:03:57 +0000829 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
830 :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual` added as the default type equality
831 function for comparing strings.
Michael Foord02834952010-02-08 23:10:39 +0000832
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000833
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000834 .. method:: assertNotEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000835
836 Test that *first* and *second* are not equal. If the values do compare
837 equal, the test will fail with the explanation given by *msg*, or
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000838 :const:`None`. Note that using :meth:`assertNotEqual` improves upon doing
839 the comparison as the first parameter to :meth:`assertTrue` is that the
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000840 default value for *msg* can be computed to include representations of both
841 *first* and *second*.
842
Benjamin Peterson70e32c82009-03-24 01:00:11 +0000843
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000844 .. method:: assertTrue(expr, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000845
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000846 Signal a test failure if *expr* is false; the explanation for the failure
847 will be *msg* if given, otherwise it will be :const:`None`.
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +0000848
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000849
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000850 .. method:: assertFalse(expr, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000851
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000852 The inverse of the :meth:`assertTrue` method is the :meth:`assertFalse` method.
853 This signals a test failure if *expr* is true, with *msg* or :const:`None`
854 for the error message.
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +0000855
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000856
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000857 .. method:: assertIs(first, second, msg=None)
858 assertIsNot(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000859
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000860 Test that *first* and *second* evaluate (or don't evaluate) to the same object.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000861
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000862 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000863
864
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000865 .. method:: assertIsNone(expr, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000866 assertIsNotNone(expr, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000867
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000868 Test that *expr* is (or is not) None.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000869
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000870 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000871
872
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000873 .. method:: assertIn(first, second, msg=None)
874 assertNotIn(first, second, msg=None)
875
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000876 Test that *first* is (or is not) in *second* with an explanatory error
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000877 message as appropriate.
878
Michael Foordabd91d52010-03-20 18:09:14 +0000879 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000880
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000881 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000882
883
Ezio Melotti9c02c2f2010-11-03 20:45:31 +0000884 .. method:: assertIsInstance(obj, cls, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000885 assertNotIsInstance(obj, cls, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000886
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000887 Test that *obj* is (or is not) an instance of *cls* (which can be a
888 class or a tuple of classes, as supported by :func:`isinstance`).
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000889
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000890 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000891
892
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000893
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000894 It is also possible to check that exceptions and warnings are raised using
895 the following methods:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000896
897
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000898 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
899 | Method | Checks that | New in |
900 +=========================================================+======================================+============+
901 | :meth:`assertRaises(exc, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises `exc` | |
902 | <TestCase.assertRaises>` | | |
903 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
904 | :meth:`assertRaisesRegexp(exc, re, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises `exc` | 3.1 |
905 | <TestCase.assertRaisesRegexp>` | and the message matches `re` | |
906 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
907 | :meth:`assertWarns(warn, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises `warn` | 3.2 |
908 | <TestCase.assertWarns>` | | |
909 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
910 | :meth:`assertWarnsRegexp(warn, re, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises `warn` | 3.2 |
911 | <TestCase.assertWarnsRegexp>` | and the message matches `re` | |
912 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000913
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000914 .. method:: assertRaises(exception, callable, *args, **kwds)
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000915 assertRaises(exception)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000916
917 Test that an exception is raised when *callable* is called with any
918 positional or keyword arguments that are also passed to
919 :meth:`assertRaises`. The test passes if *exception* is raised, is an
920 error if another exception is raised, or fails if no exception is raised.
921 To catch any of a group of exceptions, a tuple containing the exception
922 classes may be passed as *exception*.
923
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000924 If only the *exception* argument is given, returns a context manager so
925 that the code under test can be written inline rather than as a function::
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000926
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000927 with self.assertRaises(SomeException):
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000928 do_something()
929
Kristján Valur Jónsson92a653a2009-11-13 16:10:13 +0000930 The context manager will store the caught exception object in its
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000931 :attr:`exception` attribute. This can be useful if the intention
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000932 is to perform additional checks on the exception raised::
Kristján Valur Jónsson92a653a2009-11-13 16:10:13 +0000933
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000934 with self.assertRaises(SomeException) as cm:
935 do_something()
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000936
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000937 the_exception = cm.exception
938 self.assertEqual(the_exception.error_code, 3)
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000939
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000940 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000941 Added the ability to use :meth:`assertRaises` as a context manager.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000942
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000943 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
944 Added the :attr:`exception` attribute.
945
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000946
Ezio Melotti327433f2010-11-03 20:51:17 +0000947 .. method:: assertRaisesRegexp(exception, regexp, callable, *args, **kwds)
948 assertRaisesRegexp(exception, regexp)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000949
950 Like :meth:`assertRaises` but also tests that *regexp* matches
951 on the string representation of the raised exception. *regexp* may be
952 a regular expression object or a string containing a regular expression
953 suitable for use by :func:`re.search`. Examples::
954
955 self.assertRaisesRegexp(ValueError, 'invalid literal for.*XYZ$',
956 int, 'XYZ')
957
958 or::
959
960 with self.assertRaisesRegexp(ValueError, 'literal'):
961 int('XYZ')
962
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000963 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000964
965
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000966 .. method:: assertWarns(warning, callable, *args, **kwds)
967 assertWarns(warning)
968
969 Test that a warning is triggered when *callable* is called with any
970 positional or keyword arguments that are also passed to
971 :meth:`assertWarns`. The test passes if *warning* is triggered and
972 fails if it isn't. Also, any unexpected exception is an error.
973 To catch any of a group of warnings, a tuple containing the warning
974 classes may be passed as *warnings*.
975
976 If only the *warning* argument is given, returns a context manager so
977 that the code under test can be written inline rather than as a function::
978
979 with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning):
980 do_something()
981
982 The context manager will store the caught warning object in its
983 :attr:`warning` attribute, and the source line which triggered the
984 warnings in the :attr:`filename` and :attr:`lineno` attributes.
985 This can be useful if the intention is to perform additional checks
986 on the exception raised::
987
988 with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning) as cm:
989 do_something()
990
991 self.assertIn('myfile.py', cm.filename)
992 self.assertEqual(320, cm.lineno)
993
994 This method works regardless of the warning filters in place when it
995 is called.
996
997 .. versionadded:: 3.2
998
999
Ezio Melotti327433f2010-11-03 20:51:17 +00001000 .. method:: assertWarnsRegexp(warning, regexp, callable, *args, **kwds)
1001 assertWarnsRegexp(warning, regexp)
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001002
1003 Like :meth:`assertWarns` but also tests that *regexp* matches on the
1004 message of the triggered warning. *regexp* may be a regular expression
1005 object or a string containing a regular expression suitable for use
1006 by :func:`re.search`. Example::
1007
1008 self.assertWarnsRegexp(DeprecationWarning,
1009 r'legacy_function\(\) is deprecated',
1010 legacy_function, 'XYZ')
1011
1012 or::
1013
1014 with self.assertWarnsRegexp(RuntimeWarning, 'unsafe frobnicating'):
1015 frobnicate('/etc/passwd')
1016
1017 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1018
1019
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001020
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001021 There are also other methods used to perform more specific checks, such as:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001022
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001023 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1024 | Method | Checks that | New in |
1025 +=======================================+================================+==============+
1026 | :meth:`assertAlmostEqual(a, b) | ``round(a-b, 7) == 0`` | |
1027 | <TestCase.assertAlmostEqual>` | | |
1028 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1029 | :meth:`assertNotAlmostEqual(a, b) | ``round(a-b, 7) != 0`` | |
1030 | <TestCase.assertNotAlmostEqual>` | | |
1031 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1032 | :meth:`assertGreater(a, b) | ``a > b`` | 3.1 |
1033 | <TestCase.assertGreater>` | | |
1034 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1035 | :meth:`assertGreaterEqual(a, b) | ``a >= b`` | 3.1 |
1036 | <TestCase.assertGreaterEqual>` | | |
1037 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1038 | :meth:`assertLess(a, b) | ``a < b`` | 3.1 |
1039 | <TestCase.assertLess>` | | |
1040 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1041 | :meth:`assertLessEqual(a, b) | ``a <= b`` | 3.1 |
1042 | <TestCase.assertLessEqual>` | | |
1043 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1044 | :meth:`assertRegexpMatches(s, re) | ``regex.search(s)`` | 3.1 |
1045 | <TestCase.assertRegexpMatches>` | | |
1046 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1047 | :meth:`assertNotRegexpMatches(s, re) | ``not regex.search(s)`` | 3.2 |
1048 | <TestCase.assertNotRegexpMatches>` | | |
1049 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1050 | :meth:`assertDictContainsSubset(a, b) | all the key/value pairs | 3.1 |
1051 | <TestCase.assertDictContainsSubset>` | in `a` exist in `b` | |
1052 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1053 | :meth:`assertItemsEqual(a, b) | `a` and `b` have the same | 3.2 |
1054 | <TestCase.assertItemsEqual>` | elements in the same number, | |
1055 | | regardless of their order | |
1056 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001057
1058
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001059 .. method:: assertAlmostEqual(first, second, places=7, msg=None, delta=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001060
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001061 Test that *first* and *second* are approximately equal by computing the
1062 difference, rounding to the given number of decimal *places* (default 7),
1063 and comparing to zero.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001064
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001065 Note that comparing a given number of decimal places is not the same as
1066 comparing a given number of significant digits. If the values do not
1067 compare equal, the test will fail with the explanation given by *msg*, or
1068 :const:`None`.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001069
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001070 If *delta* is supplied instead of *places* then the difference
1071 between *first* and *second* must be less than *delta*.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001072
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001073 Supplying both *delta* and *places* raises a ``TypeError``.
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001074
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001075 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
1076 Objects that compare equal are automatically almost equal.
1077 Added the ``delta`` keyword argument.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001078
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001079
1080 .. method:: assertNotAlmostEqual(first, second, places=7, msg=None, delta=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001081
1082 Test that *first* and *second* are not approximately equal by computing
1083 the difference, rounding to the given number of decimal *places* (default
1084 7), and comparing to zero.
1085
1086 Note that comparing a given number of decimal places is not the same as
1087 comparing a given number of significant digits. If the values do not
1088 compare equal, the test will fail with the explanation given by *msg*, or
1089 :const:`None`.
1090
1091 If *delta* is supplied instead of *places* then the difference
1092 between *first* and *second* must be more than *delta*.
1093
1094 Supplying both *delta* and *places* raises a ``TypeError``.
1095
1096 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
1097 Objects that compare equal automatically fail. Added the ``delta``
1098 keyword argument.
1099
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001100
1101 .. method:: assertGreater(first, second, msg=None)
1102 assertGreaterEqual(first, second, msg=None)
1103 assertLess(first, second, msg=None)
1104 assertLessEqual(first, second, msg=None)
1105
1106 Test that *first* is respectively >, >=, < or <= than *second* depending
1107 on the method name. If not, the test will fail with an explanation
1108 or with the explanation given by *msg*::
1109
1110 >>> self.assertGreaterEqual(3, 4)
1111 AssertionError: "3" unexpectedly not greater than or equal to "4"
1112
1113 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1114
1115
1116 .. method:: assertRegexpMatches(text, regexp, msg=None)
1117
1118 Verifies that a *regexp* search matches *text*. Fails with an error
1119 message including the pattern and the *text*. *regexp* may be
1120 a regular expression object or a string containing a regular expression
1121 suitable for use by :func:`re.search`.
1122
1123 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1124
1125
1126 .. method:: assertNotRegexpMatches(text, regexp, msg=None)
1127
1128 Verifies that a *regexp* search does not match *text*. Fails with an error
1129 message including the pattern and the part of *text* that matches. *regexp*
1130 may be a regular expression object or a string containing a regular
1131 expression suitable for use by :func:`re.search`.
1132
1133 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1134
1135
1136 .. method:: assertDictContainsSubset(expected, actual, msg=None)
1137
1138 Tests whether the key/value pairs in dictionary *actual* are a
1139 superset of those in *expected*. If not, an error message listing
1140 the missing keys and mismatched values is generated.
1141
1142 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1143
1144 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1145
1146
1147 .. method:: assertItemsEqual(actual, expected, msg=None)
1148
1149 Test that sequence *expected* contains the same elements as *actual*,
1150 regardless of their order. When they don't, an error message listing the
1151 differences between the sequences will be generated.
1152
1153 Duplicate elements are *not* ignored when comparing *actual* and
1154 *expected*. It verifies if each element has the same count in both
1155 sequences. It is the equivalent of ``assertEqual(sorted(expected),
1156 sorted(actual))`` but it works with sequences of unhashable objects as
1157 well.
1158
1159 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1160
1161 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1162
1163
1164 .. method:: assertSameElements(actual, expected, msg=None)
1165
1166 Test that sequence *expected* contains the same elements as *actual*,
1167 regardless of their order. When they don't, an error message listing
1168 the differences between the sequences will be generated.
1169
1170 Duplicate elements are ignored when comparing *actual* and *expected*.
1171 It is the equivalent of ``assertEqual(set(expected), set(actual))``
1172 but it works with sequences of unhashable objects as well. Because
1173 duplicates are ignored, this method has been deprecated in favour of
1174 :meth:`assertItemsEqual`.
1175
1176 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1177
1178 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1179 .. deprecated:: 3.2
1180
1181
1182
1183 The following methods are used automatically by :meth:`~TestCase.assertEqual`
1184 and usually is not necessary to invoke them directly:
1185
1186 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1187 | Method | Used to compare | New in |
1188 +=========================================+=============================+==============+
1189 | :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual(a, b) | strings | 3.1 |
1190 | <TestCase.assertMultiLineEqual>` | | |
1191 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1192 | :meth:`assertSequenceEqual(a, b) | sequences | 3.1 |
1193 | <TestCase.assertSequenceEqual>` | | |
1194 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1195 | :meth:`assertListEqual(a, b) | lists | 3.1 |
1196 | <TestCase.assertListEqual>` | | |
1197 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1198 | :meth:`assertTupleEqual(a, b) | tuples | 3.1 |
1199 | <TestCase.assertTupleEqual>` | | |
1200 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1201 | :meth:`assertSetEqual(a, b) | sets or frozensets | 3.1 |
1202 | <TestCase.assertSetEqual>` | | |
1203 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1204 | :meth:`assertDictEqual(a, b) | dicts | 3.1 |
1205 | <TestCase.assertDictEqual>` | | |
1206 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1207
1208
1209
Ezio Melotti9c02c2f2010-11-03 20:45:31 +00001210 .. method:: assertMultiLineEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001211
1212 Test that the multiline string *first* is equal to the string *second*.
1213 When not equal a diff of the two strings highlighting the differences
1214 will be included in the error message. This method is used by default
1215 when comparing strings with :meth:`assertEqual`.
1216
1217 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1218
1219 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1220
1221
1222 .. method:: assertSequenceEqual(seq1, seq2, msg=None, seq_type=None)
1223
1224 Tests that two sequences are equal. If a *seq_type* is supplied, both
1225 *seq1* and *seq2* must be instances of *seq_type* or a failure will
1226 be raised. If the sequences are different an error message is
1227 constructed that shows the difference between the two.
1228
1229 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1230
1231 This method is used to implement :meth:`assertListEqual` and
1232 :meth:`assertTupleEqual`.
1233
1234 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1235
1236
1237 .. method:: assertListEqual(list1, list2, msg=None)
1238 assertTupleEqual(tuple1, tuple2, msg=None)
1239
1240 Tests that two lists or tuples are equal. If not an error message is
1241 constructed that shows only the differences between the two. An error
1242 is also raised if either of the parameters are of the wrong type.
1243 These methods are used by default when comparing lists or tuples with
1244 :meth:`assertEqual`.
1245
1246 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1247
1248 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1249
1250
1251 .. method:: assertSetEqual(set1, set2, msg=None)
1252
1253 Tests that two sets are equal. If not, an error message is constructed
1254 that lists the differences between the sets. This method is used by
1255 default when comparing sets or frozensets with :meth:`assertEqual`.
1256
1257 Fails if either of *set1* or *set2* does not have a :meth:`set.difference`
1258 method.
1259
1260 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1261
1262 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1263
1264
1265 .. method:: assertDictEqual(expected, actual, msg=None)
1266
1267 Test that two dictionaries are equal. If not, an error message is
1268 constructed that shows the differences in the dictionaries. This
1269 method will be used by default to compare dictionaries in
1270 calls to :meth:`assertEqual`.
1271
1272 If specified, *msg* will be used as the error message on failure.
1273
1274 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1275
1276
1277
1278 Finally the :class:`TestCase` provides the following methods and attributes:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001279
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001280
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001281 .. method:: fail(msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001282
1283 Signals a test failure unconditionally, with *msg* or :const:`None` for
1284 the error message.
1285
1286
1287 .. attribute:: failureException
1288
1289 This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test method. If a
1290 test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to carry
1291 additional information, it must subclass this exception in order to "play
1292 fair" with the framework. The initial value of this attribute is
1293 :exc:`AssertionError`.
1294
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001295
1296 .. attribute:: longMessage
1297
1298 If set to True then any explicit failure message you pass in to the
1299 assert methods will be appended to the end of the normal failure message.
1300 The normal messages contain useful information about the objects involved,
1301 for example the message from assertEqual shows you the repr of the two
1302 unequal objects. Setting this attribute to True allows you to have a
1303 custom error message in addition to the normal one.
1304
1305 This attribute defaults to False, meaning that a custom message passed
1306 to an assert method will silence the normal message.
1307
1308 The class setting can be overridden in individual tests by assigning an
1309 instance attribute to True or False before calling the assert methods.
1310
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +00001311 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001312
1313
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00001314 .. attribute:: maxDiff
1315
1316 This attribute controls the maximum length of diffs output by assert
1317 methods that report diffs on failure. It defaults to 80*8 characters.
1318 Assert methods affected by this attribute are
1319 :meth:`assertSequenceEqual` (including all the sequence comparison
1320 methods that delegate to it), :meth:`assertDictEqual` and
1321 :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual`.
1322
1323 Setting ``maxDiff`` to None means that there is no maximum length of
1324 diffs.
1325
1326 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1327
1328
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001329 Testing frameworks can use the following methods to collect information on
1330 the test:
1331
1332
1333 .. method:: countTestCases()
1334
1335 Return the number of tests represented by this test object. For
1336 :class:`TestCase` instances, this will always be ``1``.
1337
1338
1339 .. method:: defaultTestResult()
1340
1341 Return an instance of the test result class that should be used for this
1342 test case class (if no other result instance is provided to the
1343 :meth:`run` method).
1344
1345 For :class:`TestCase` instances, this will always be an instance of
1346 :class:`TestResult`; subclasses of :class:`TestCase` should override this
1347 as necessary.
1348
1349
1350 .. method:: id()
1351
1352 Return a string identifying the specific test case. This is usually the
1353 full name of the test method, including the module and class name.
1354
1355
1356 .. method:: shortDescription()
1357
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001358 Returns a description of the test, or :const:`None` if no description
1359 has been provided. The default implementation of this method
1360 returns the first line of the test method's docstring, if available,
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001361 or :const:`None`.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001362
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001363 .. versionchanged:: 3.1,3.2
1364 In 3.1 this was changed to add the test name to the short description
1365 even in the presence of a docstring. This caused compatibility issues
1366 with unittest extensions and adding the test name was moved to the
1367 :class:`TextTestResult`.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001368
1369 .. method:: addTypeEqualityFunc(typeobj, function)
1370
1371 Registers a type specific :meth:`assertEqual` equality checking
1372 function to be called by :meth:`assertEqual` when both objects it has
1373 been asked to compare are exactly *typeobj* (not subclasses).
1374 *function* must take two positional arguments and a third msg=None
1375 keyword argument just as :meth:`assertEqual` does. It must raise
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001376 ``self.failureException`` when inequality between the first two
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001377 parameters is detected.
1378
1379 One good use of custom equality checking functions for a type
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001380 is to raise ``self.failureException`` with an error message useful
1381 for debugging the problem by explaining the inequalities in detail.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001382
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +00001383 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001384
1385
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001386 .. method:: addCleanup(function, *args, **kwargs)
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001387
1388 Add a function to be called after :meth:`tearDown` to cleanup resources
1389 used during the test. Functions will be called in reverse order to the
1390 order they are added (LIFO). They are called with any arguments and
1391 keyword arguments passed into :meth:`addCleanup` when they are
1392 added.
1393
1394 If :meth:`setUp` fails, meaning that :meth:`tearDown` is not called,
1395 then any cleanup functions added will still be called.
1396
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001397 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001398
1399
1400 .. method:: doCleanups()
1401
Barry Warsaw0c9fd632010-04-12 14:50:57 +00001402 This method is called unconditionally after :meth:`tearDown`, or
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001403 after :meth:`setUp` if :meth:`setUp` raises an exception.
1404
1405 It is responsible for calling all the cleanup functions added by
1406 :meth:`addCleanup`. If you need cleanup functions to be called
1407 *prior* to :meth:`tearDown` then you can call :meth:`doCleanups`
1408 yourself.
1409
1410 :meth:`doCleanups` pops methods off the stack of cleanup
1411 functions one at a time, so it can be called at any time.
1412
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001413 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001414
1415
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001416.. class:: FunctionTestCase(testFunc, setUp=None, tearDown=None, description=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001417
1418 This class implements the portion of the :class:`TestCase` interface which
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001419 allows the test runner to drive the test, but does not provide the methods
1420 which test code can use to check and report errors. This is used to create
1421 test cases using legacy test code, allowing it to be integrated into a
1422 :mod:`unittest`-based test framework.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001423
1424
Ezio Melotti8f2e07b2010-11-04 19:09:28 +00001425Deprecated aliases
1426##################
1427
1428For historical reasons, some of the :class:`TestCase` methods had one or more
1429aliases that are now deprecated. The following table lists the correct names
1430along with their deprecated aliases:
1431
1432 ============================== ===============================
1433 Method Name Deprecated alias(es)
1434 ============================== ===============================
1435 :meth:`.assertEqual` failUnlessEqual, assertEquals
1436 :meth:`.assertNotEqual` failIfEqual
1437 :meth:`.assertTrue` failUnless, assert\_
1438 :meth:`.assertFalse` failIf
1439 :meth:`.assertRaises` failUnlessRaises
1440 :meth:`.assertAlmostEqual` failUnlessAlmostEqual
1441 :meth:`.assertNotAlmostEqual` failIfAlmostEqual
1442 ============================== ===============================
1443
1444 .. deprecated:: 3.1
1445 the aliases listed in the second column
1446
1447
1448
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001449.. _testsuite-objects:
1450
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001451Grouping tests
1452~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1453
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001454.. class:: TestSuite(tests=())
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001455
1456 This class represents an aggregation of individual tests cases and test suites.
1457 The class presents the interface needed by the test runner to allow it to be run
1458 as any other test case. Running a :class:`TestSuite` instance is the same as
1459 iterating over the suite, running each test individually.
1460
1461 If *tests* is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases or other
1462 test suites that will be used to build the suite initially. Additional methods
1463 are provided to add test cases and suites to the collection later on.
1464
Benjamin Peterson14a3dd72009-05-25 00:51:58 +00001465 :class:`TestSuite` objects behave much like :class:`TestCase` objects, except
1466 they do not actually implement a test. Instead, they are used to aggregate
1467 tests into groups of tests that should be run together. Some additional
1468 methods are available to add tests to :class:`TestSuite` instances:
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001469
1470
1471 .. method:: TestSuite.addTest(test)
1472
1473 Add a :class:`TestCase` or :class:`TestSuite` to the suite.
1474
1475
1476 .. method:: TestSuite.addTests(tests)
1477
1478 Add all the tests from an iterable of :class:`TestCase` and :class:`TestSuite`
1479 instances to this test suite.
1480
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001481 This is equivalent to iterating over *tests*, calling :meth:`addTest` for
1482 each element.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001483
1484 :class:`TestSuite` shares the following methods with :class:`TestCase`:
1485
1486
1487 .. method:: run(result)
1488
1489 Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into the
1490 test result object passed as *result*. Note that unlike
1491 :meth:`TestCase.run`, :meth:`TestSuite.run` requires the result object to
1492 be passed in.
1493
1494
1495 .. method:: debug()
1496
1497 Run the tests associated with this suite without collecting the
1498 result. This allows exceptions raised by the test to be propagated to the
1499 caller and can be used to support running tests under a debugger.
1500
1501
1502 .. method:: countTestCases()
1503
1504 Return the number of tests represented by this test object, including all
1505 individual tests and sub-suites.
1506
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001507
1508 .. method:: __iter__()
1509
1510 Tests grouped by a :class:`TestSuite` are always accessed by iteration.
1511 Subclasses can lazily provide tests by overriding :meth:`__iter__`. Note
1512 that this method maybe called several times on a single suite
1513 (for example when counting tests or comparing for equality)
1514 so the tests returned must be the same for repeated iterations.
1515
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001516 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001517 In earlier versions the :class:`TestSuite` accessed tests directly rather
1518 than through iteration, so overriding :meth:`__iter__` wasn't sufficient
1519 for providing tests.
1520
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001521 In the typical usage of a :class:`TestSuite` object, the :meth:`run` method
1522 is invoked by a :class:`TestRunner` rather than by the end-user test harness.
1523
1524
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001525Loading and running tests
1526~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1527
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001528.. class:: TestLoader()
1529
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001530 The :class:`TestLoader` class is used to create test suites from classes and
1531 modules. Normally, there is no need to create an instance of this class; the
1532 :mod:`unittest` module provides an instance that can be shared as
1533 ``unittest.defaultTestLoader``. Using a subclass or instance, however, allows
1534 customization of some configurable properties.
1535
1536 :class:`TestLoader` objects have the following methods:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001537
Ezio Melotti9c02c2f2010-11-03 20:45:31 +00001538
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001539 .. method:: loadTestsFromTestCase(testCaseClass)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001540
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001541 Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the :class:`TestCase`\ -derived
1542 :class:`testCaseClass`.
1543
1544
1545 .. method:: loadTestsFromModule(module)
1546
1547 Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the given module. This
1548 method searches *module* for classes derived from :class:`TestCase` and
1549 creates an instance of the class for each test method defined for the
1550 class.
1551
Georg Brandle720c0a2009-04-27 16:20:50 +00001552 .. note::
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001553
1554 While using a hierarchy of :class:`TestCase`\ -derived classes can be
1555 convenient in sharing fixtures and helper functions, defining test
1556 methods on base classes that are not intended to be instantiated
1557 directly does not play well with this method. Doing so, however, can
1558 be useful when the fixtures are different and defined in subclasses.
1559
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001560 If a module provides a ``load_tests`` function it will be called to
1561 load the tests. This allows modules to customize test loading.
1562 This is the `load_tests protocol`_.
1563
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001564 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001565 Support for ``load_tests`` added.
1566
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001567
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001568 .. method:: loadTestsFromName(name, module=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001569
1570 Return a suite of all tests cases given a string specifier.
1571
1572 The specifier *name* is a "dotted name" that may resolve either to a
1573 module, a test case class, a test method within a test case class, a
1574 :class:`TestSuite` instance, or a callable object which returns a
1575 :class:`TestCase` or :class:`TestSuite` instance. These checks are
1576 applied in the order listed here; that is, a method on a possible test
1577 case class will be picked up as "a test method within a test case class",
1578 rather than "a callable object".
1579
1580 For example, if you have a module :mod:`SampleTests` containing a
1581 :class:`TestCase`\ -derived class :class:`SampleTestCase` with three test
1582 methods (:meth:`test_one`, :meth:`test_two`, and :meth:`test_three`), the
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001583 specifier ``'SampleTests.SampleTestCase'`` would cause this method to
1584 return a suite which will run all three test methods. Using the specifier
1585 ``'SampleTests.SampleTestCase.test_two'`` would cause it to return a test
1586 suite which will run only the :meth:`test_two` test method. The specifier
1587 can refer to modules and packages which have not been imported; they will
1588 be imported as a side-effect.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001589
1590 The method optionally resolves *name* relative to the given *module*.
1591
1592
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001593 .. method:: loadTestsFromNames(names, module=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001594
1595 Similar to :meth:`loadTestsFromName`, but takes a sequence of names rather
1596 than a single name. The return value is a test suite which supports all
1597 the tests defined for each name.
1598
1599
1600 .. method:: getTestCaseNames(testCaseClass)
1601
1602 Return a sorted sequence of method names found within *testCaseClass*;
1603 this should be a subclass of :class:`TestCase`.
1604
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001605
1606 .. method:: discover(start_dir, pattern='test*.py', top_level_dir=None)
1607
1608 Find and return all test modules from the specified start directory,
1609 recursing into subdirectories to find them. Only test files that match
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001610 *pattern* will be loaded. (Using shell style pattern matching.) Only
1611 module names that are importable (i.e. are valid Python identifiers) will
1612 be loaded.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001613
1614 All test modules must be importable from the top level of the project. If
1615 the start directory is not the top level directory then the top level
1616 directory must be specified separately.
1617
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001618 If importing a module fails, for example due to a syntax error, then this
1619 will be recorded as a single error and discovery will continue.
1620
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001621 If a test package name (directory with :file:`__init__.py`) matches the
1622 pattern then the package will be checked for a ``load_tests``
1623 function. If this exists then it will be called with *loader*, *tests*,
1624 *pattern*.
1625
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001626 If load_tests exists then discovery does *not* recurse into the package,
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001627 ``load_tests`` is responsible for loading all tests in the package.
1628
1629 The pattern is deliberately not stored as a loader attribute so that
1630 packages can continue discovery themselves. *top_level_dir* is stored so
1631 ``load_tests`` does not need to pass this argument in to
1632 ``loader.discover()``.
1633
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001634 *start_dir* can be a dotted module name as well as a directory.
1635
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001636 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1637
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001638
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001639 The following attributes of a :class:`TestLoader` can be configured either by
1640 subclassing or assignment on an instance:
1641
1642
1643 .. attribute:: testMethodPrefix
1644
1645 String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as test
1646 methods. The default value is ``'test'``.
1647
1648 This affects :meth:`getTestCaseNames` and all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*`
1649 methods.
1650
1651
1652 .. attribute:: sortTestMethodsUsing
1653
1654 Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in
1655 :meth:`getTestCaseNames` and all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*` methods.
1656
1657
1658 .. attribute:: suiteClass
1659
1660 Callable object that constructs a test suite from a list of tests. No
1661 methods on the resulting object are needed. The default value is the
1662 :class:`TestSuite` class.
1663
1664 This affects all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*` methods.
1665
1666
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001667.. class:: TestResult
1668
1669 This class is used to compile information about which tests have succeeded
1670 and which have failed.
1671
1672 A :class:`TestResult` object stores the results of a set of tests. The
1673 :class:`TestCase` and :class:`TestSuite` classes ensure that results are
1674 properly recorded; test authors do not need to worry about recording the
1675 outcome of tests.
1676
1677 Testing frameworks built on top of :mod:`unittest` may want access to the
1678 :class:`TestResult` object generated by running a set of tests for reporting
1679 purposes; a :class:`TestResult` instance is returned by the
1680 :meth:`TestRunner.run` method for this purpose.
1681
1682 :class:`TestResult` instances have the following attributes that will be of
1683 interest when inspecting the results of running a set of tests:
1684
1685
1686 .. attribute:: errors
1687
1688 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1689 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an
1690 unexpected exception.
1691
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001692 .. attribute:: failures
1693
1694 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1695 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure
1696 was explicitly signalled using the :meth:`TestCase.fail\*` or
1697 :meth:`TestCase.assert\*` methods.
1698
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001699 .. attribute:: skipped
1700
1701 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1702 holding the reason for skipping the test.
1703
Benjamin Peterson70e32c82009-03-24 01:00:11 +00001704 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001705
1706 .. attribute:: expectedFailures
1707
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +00001708 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1709 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents an expected failure
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001710 of the test case.
1711
1712 .. attribute:: unexpectedSuccesses
1713
1714 A list containing :class:`TestCase` instances that were marked as expected
1715 failures, but succeeded.
1716
1717 .. attribute:: shouldStop
1718
1719 Set to ``True`` when the execution of tests should stop by :meth:`stop`.
1720
1721
1722 .. attribute:: testsRun
1723
1724 The total number of tests run so far.
1725
1726
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001727 .. attribute:: buffer
1728
1729 If set to true, ``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr`` will be buffered in between
1730 :meth:`startTest` and :meth:`stopTest` being called. Collected output will
1731 only be echoed onto the real ``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr`` if the test
1732 fails or errors. Any output is also attached to the failure / error message.
1733
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +00001734 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001735
1736
1737 .. attribute:: failfast
1738
1739 If set to true :meth:`stop` will be called on the first failure or error,
1740 halting the test run.
1741
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +00001742 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001743
1744
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001745 .. method:: wasSuccessful()
1746
1747 Return :const:`True` if all tests run so far have passed, otherwise returns
1748 :const:`False`.
1749
1750
1751 .. method:: stop()
1752
1753 This method can be called to signal that the set of tests being run should
1754 be aborted by setting the :attr:`shouldStop` attribute to :const:`True`.
1755 :class:`TestRunner` objects should respect this flag and return without
1756 running any additional tests.
1757
1758 For example, this feature is used by the :class:`TextTestRunner` class to
1759 stop the test framework when the user signals an interrupt from the
1760 keyboard. Interactive tools which provide :class:`TestRunner`
1761 implementations can use this in a similar manner.
1762
1763 The following methods of the :class:`TestResult` class are used to maintain
1764 the internal data structures, and may be extended in subclasses to support
1765 additional reporting requirements. This is particularly useful in building
1766 tools which support interactive reporting while tests are being run.
1767
1768
1769 .. method:: startTest(test)
1770
1771 Called when the test case *test* is about to be run.
1772
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001773 .. method:: stopTest(test)
1774
1775 Called after the test case *test* has been executed, regardless of the
1776 outcome.
1777
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001778 .. method:: startTestRun(test)
1779
1780 Called once before any tests are executed.
1781
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001782 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001783
1784
1785 .. method:: stopTestRun(test)
1786
Ezio Melotti176d6c42010-01-27 20:58:07 +00001787 Called once after all tests are executed.
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001788
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001789 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001790
1791
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001792 .. method:: addError(test, err)
1793
1794 Called when the test case *test* raises an unexpected exception *err* is a
1795 tuple of the form returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`: ``(type, value,
1796 traceback)``.
1797
1798 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1799 the instance's :attr:`errors` attribute, where *formatted_err* is a
1800 formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1801
1802
1803 .. method:: addFailure(test, err)
1804
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001805 Called when the test case *test* signals a failure. *err* is a tuple of
1806 the form returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`: ``(type, value, traceback)``.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001807
1808 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1809 the instance's :attr:`failures` attribute, where *formatted_err* is a
1810 formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1811
1812
1813 .. method:: addSuccess(test)
1814
1815 Called when the test case *test* succeeds.
1816
1817 The default implementation does nothing.
1818
1819
1820 .. method:: addSkip(test, reason)
1821
1822 Called when the test case *test* is skipped. *reason* is the reason the
1823 test gave for skipping.
1824
1825 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, reason)`` to the
1826 instance's :attr:`skipped` attribute.
1827
1828
1829 .. method:: addExpectedFailure(test, err)
1830
1831 Called when the test case *test* fails, but was marked with the
1832 :func:`expectedFailure` decorator.
1833
1834 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1835 the instance's :attr:`expectedFailures` attribute, where *formatted_err*
1836 is a formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1837
1838
1839 .. method:: addUnexpectedSuccess(test)
1840
1841 Called when the test case *test* was marked with the
1842 :func:`expectedFailure` decorator, but succeeded.
1843
1844 The default implementation appends the test to the instance's
1845 :attr:`unexpectedSuccesses` attribute.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001846
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001847
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001848.. class:: TextTestResult(stream, descriptions, verbosity)
1849
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001850 A concrete implementation of :class:`TestResult` used by the
1851 :class:`TextTestRunner`.
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001852
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001853 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1854 This class was previously named ``_TextTestResult``. The old name still
1855 exists as an alias but is deprecated.
1856
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001857
1858.. data:: defaultTestLoader
1859
1860 Instance of the :class:`TestLoader` class intended to be shared. If no
1861 customization of the :class:`TestLoader` is needed, this instance can be used
1862 instead of repeatedly creating new instances.
1863
1864
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001865.. class:: TextTestRunner(stream=sys.stderr, descriptions=True, verbosity=1, runnerclass=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001866
1867 A basic test runner implementation which prints results on standard error. It
1868 has a few configurable parameters, but is essentially very simple. Graphical
1869 applications which run test suites should provide alternate implementations.
1870
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001871 .. method:: _makeResult()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001872
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001873 This method returns the instance of ``TestResult`` used by :meth:`run`.
1874 It is not intended to be called directly, but can be overridden in
1875 subclasses to provide a custom ``TestResult``.
1876
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001877 ``_makeResult()`` instantiates the class or callable passed in the
1878 ``TextTestRunner`` constructor as the ``resultclass`` argument. It
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001879 defaults to :class:`TextTestResult` if no ``resultclass`` is provided.
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001880 The result class is instantiated with the following arguments::
1881
1882 stream, descriptions, verbosity
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001883
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001884.. function:: main(module='__main__', defaultTest=None, argv=None, testRunner=None, testLoader=unittest.loader.defaultTestLoader, exit=True, verbosity=1, failfast=None, catchbreak=None, buffer=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001885
1886 A command-line program that runs a set of tests; this is primarily for making
1887 test modules conveniently executable. The simplest use for this function is to
1888 include the following line at the end of a test script::
1889
1890 if __name__ == '__main__':
1891 unittest.main()
1892
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001893 You can run tests with more detailed information by passing in the verbosity
1894 argument::
1895
1896 if __name__ == '__main__':
1897 unittest.main(verbosity=2)
1898
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001899 The *testRunner* argument can either be a test runner class or an already
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001900 created instance of it. By default ``main`` calls :func:`sys.exit` with
1901 an exit code indicating success or failure of the tests run.
1902
1903 ``main`` supports being used from the interactive interpreter by passing in the
1904 argument ``exit=False``. This displays the result on standard output without
1905 calling :func:`sys.exit`::
1906
1907 >>> from unittest import main
1908 >>> main(module='test_module', exit=False)
1909
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001910 The ``failfast``, ``catchbreak`` and ``buffer`` parameters have the same
1911 effect as the `failfast, catch and buffer command line options`_.
1912
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001913 Calling ``main`` actually returns an instance of the ``TestProgram`` class.
1914 This stores the result of the tests run as the ``result`` attribute.
1915
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001916 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001917 The ``exit``, ``verbosity``, ``failfast``, ``catchbreak`` and ``buffer``
1918 parameters were added.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001919
1920
1921load_tests Protocol
1922###################
1923
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001924
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001925.. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001926
1927
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001928Modules or packages can customize how tests are loaded from them during normal
1929test runs or test discovery by implementing a function called ``load_tests``.
1930
1931If a test module defines ``load_tests`` it will be called by
1932:meth:`TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule` with the following arguments::
1933
1934 load_tests(loader, standard_tests, None)
1935
1936It should return a :class:`TestSuite`.
1937
1938*loader* is the instance of :class:`TestLoader` doing the loading.
1939*standard_tests* are the tests that would be loaded by default from the
1940module. It is common for test modules to only want to add or remove tests
1941from the standard set of tests.
1942The third argument is used when loading packages as part of test discovery.
1943
1944A typical ``load_tests`` function that loads tests from a specific set of
1945:class:`TestCase` classes may look like::
1946
1947 test_cases = (TestCase1, TestCase2, TestCase3)
1948
1949 def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern):
1950 suite = TestSuite()
1951 for test_class in test_cases:
1952 tests = loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(test_class)
1953 suite.addTests(tests)
1954 return suite
1955
1956If discovery is started, either from the command line or by calling
1957:meth:`TestLoader.discover`, with a pattern that matches a package
1958name then the package :file:`__init__.py` will be checked for ``load_tests``.
1959
1960.. note::
1961
Ezio Melotti0639d5a2009-12-19 23:26:38 +00001962 The default pattern is 'test*.py'. This matches all Python files
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001963 that start with 'test' but *won't* match any test directories.
1964
1965 A pattern like 'test*' will match test packages as well as
1966 modules.
1967
1968If the package :file:`__init__.py` defines ``load_tests`` then it will be
1969called and discovery not continued into the package. ``load_tests``
1970is called with the following arguments::
1971
1972 load_tests(loader, standard_tests, pattern)
1973
1974This should return a :class:`TestSuite` representing all the tests
1975from the package. (``standard_tests`` will only contain tests
1976collected from :file:`__init__.py`.)
1977
1978Because the pattern is passed into ``load_tests`` the package is free to
1979continue (and potentially modify) test discovery. A 'do nothing'
1980``load_tests`` function for a test package would look like::
1981
1982 def load_tests(loader, standard_tests, pattern):
1983 # top level directory cached on loader instance
1984 this_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
1985 package_tests = loader.discover(start_dir=this_dir, pattern=pattern)
1986 standard_tests.addTests(package_tests)
1987 return standard_tests
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001988
1989
1990Class and Module Fixtures
1991-------------------------
1992
1993Class and module level fixtures are implemented in :class:`TestSuite`. When
1994the test suite encounters a test from a new class then :meth:`tearDownClass`
1995from the previous class (if there is one) is called, followed by
1996:meth:`setUpClass` from the new class.
1997
1998Similarly if a test is from a different module from the previous test then
1999``tearDownModule`` from the previous module is run, followed by
2000``setUpModule`` from the new module.
2001
2002After all the tests have run the final ``tearDownClass`` and
2003``tearDownModule`` are run.
2004
2005Note that shared fixtures do not play well with [potential] features like test
2006parallelization and they break test isolation. They should be used with care.
2007
2008The default ordering of tests created by the unittest test loaders is to group
2009all tests from the same modules and classes together. This will lead to
2010``setUpClass`` / ``setUpModule`` (etc) being called exactly once per class and
2011module. If you randomize the order, so that tests from different modules and
2012classes are adjacent to each other, then these shared fixture functions may be
2013called multiple times in a single test run.
2014
2015Shared fixtures are not intended to work with suites with non-standard
2016ordering. A ``BaseTestSuite`` still exists for frameworks that don't want to
2017support shared fixtures.
2018
2019If there are any exceptions raised during one of the shared fixture functions
2020the test is reported as an error. Because there is no corresponding test
2021instance an ``_ErrorHolder`` object (that has the same interface as a
2022:class:`TestCase`) is created to represent the error. If you are just using
2023the standard unittest test runner then this detail doesn't matter, but if you
2024are a framework author it may be relevant.
2025
2026
2027setUpClass and tearDownClass
2028~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2029
2030These must be implemented as class methods::
2031
2032 import unittest
2033
2034 class Test(unittest.TestCase):
2035 @classmethod
2036 def setUpClass(cls):
2037 cls._connection = createExpensiveConnectionObject()
2038
2039 @classmethod
2040 def tearDownClass(cls):
2041 cls._connection.destroy()
2042
2043If you want the ``setUpClass`` and ``tearDownClass`` on base classes called
2044then you must call up to them yourself. The implementations in
2045:class:`TestCase` are empty.
2046
2047If an exception is raised during a ``setUpClass`` then the tests in the class
2048are not run and the ``tearDownClass`` is not run. Skipped classes will not
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002049have ``setUpClass`` or ``tearDownClass`` run. If the exception is a
2050``SkipTest`` exception then the class will be reported as having been skipped
2051instead of as an error.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002052
2053
2054setUpModule and tearDownModule
2055~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2056
2057These should be implemented as functions::
2058
2059 def setUpModule():
2060 createConnection()
2061
2062 def tearDownModule():
2063 closeConnection()
2064
2065If an exception is raised in a ``setUpModule`` then none of the tests in the
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002066module will be run and the ``tearDownModule`` will not be run. If the exception is a
2067``SkipTest`` exception then the module will be reported as having been skipped
2068instead of as an error.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002069
2070
2071Signal Handling
2072---------------
2073
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002074The :option:`-c`/:option:`--catch` command line option to unittest, along with the ``catchbreak``
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002075parameter to :func:`unittest.main()`, provide more friendly handling of
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002076control-C during a test run. With catch break behavior enabled control-C will
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002077allow the currently running test to complete, and the test run will then end
2078and report all the results so far. A second control-c will raise a
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +00002079:exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` in the usual way.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002080
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002081The control-c handling signal handler attempts to remain compatible with code or
2082tests that install their own :const:`signal.SIGINT` handler. If the ``unittest``
2083handler is called but *isn't* the installed :const:`signal.SIGINT` handler,
2084i.e. it has been replaced by the system under test and delegated to, then it
2085calls the default handler. This will normally be the expected behavior by code
2086that replaces an installed handler and delegates to it. For individual tests
2087that need ``unittest`` control-c handling disabled the :func:`removeHandler`
2088decorator can be used.
2089
2090There are a few utility functions for framework authors to enable control-c
2091handling functionality within test frameworks.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002092
2093.. function:: installHandler()
2094
2095 Install the control-c handler. When a :const:`signal.SIGINT` is received
2096 (usually in response to the user pressing control-c) all registered results
2097 have :meth:`~TestResult.stop` called.
2098
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002099 .. versionadded:: 3.2
2100
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002101.. function:: registerResult(result)
2102
2103 Register a :class:`TestResult` object for control-c handling. Registering a
2104 result stores a weak reference to it, so it doesn't prevent the result from
2105 being garbage collected.
2106
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002107 Registering a :class:`TestResult` object has no side-effects if control-c
2108 handling is not enabled, so test frameworks can unconditionally register
2109 all results they create independently of whether or not handling is enabled.
2110
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002111 .. versionadded:: 3.2
2112
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002113.. function:: removeResult(result)
2114
2115 Remove a registered result. Once a result has been removed then
2116 :meth:`~TestResult.stop` will no longer be called on that result object in
2117 response to a control-c.
2118
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002119 .. versionadded:: 3.2
2120
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002121.. function:: removeHandler(function=None)
2122
2123 When called without arguments this function removes the control-c handler
2124 if it has been installed. This function can also be used as a test decorator
2125 to temporarily remove the handler whilst the test is being executed::
2126
2127 @unittest.removeHandler
2128 def test_signal_handling(self):
2129 ...
2130
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002131 .. versionadded:: 3.2
2132