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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
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +000011(If you are already familiar with the basic concepts of testing, you might want
12to skip to :ref:`the list of assert methods <assert-methods>`.)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000013
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +010014The :mod:`unittest` unit testing framework was originally inspired by JUnit
15and has a similar flavor as major unit testing frameworks in other
16languages. It supports test automation, sharing of setup and shutdown code
17for tests, aggregation of tests into collections, and independence of the
18tests from the reporting framework.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000019
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +010020To achieve this, :mod:`unittest` supports some important concepts in an
21object-oriented way:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000022
23test fixture
24 A :dfn:`test fixture` represents the preparation needed to perform one or more
25 tests, and any associate cleanup actions. This may involve, for example,
26 creating temporary or proxy databases, directories, or starting a server
27 process.
28
29test case
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +010030 A :dfn:`test case` is the individual unit of testing. It checks for a specific
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000031 response to a particular set of inputs. :mod:`unittest` provides a base class,
32 :class:`TestCase`, which may be used to create new test cases.
33
34test suite
35 A :dfn:`test suite` is a collection of test cases, test suites, or both. It is
36 used to aggregate tests that should be executed together.
37
38test runner
39 A :dfn:`test runner` is a component which orchestrates the execution of tests
40 and provides the outcome to the user. The runner may use a graphical interface,
41 a textual interface, or return a special value to indicate the results of
42 executing the tests.
43
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000044
45.. seealso::
46
47 Module :mod:`doctest`
48 Another test-support module with a very different flavor.
49
50 `Simple Smalltalk Testing: With Patterns <http://www.XProgramming.com/testfram.htm>`_
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000051 Kent Beck's original paper on testing frameworks using the pattern shared
52 by :mod:`unittest`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000053
Berker Peksaga1a14092014-12-28 18:48:33 +020054 `Nose <https://nose.readthedocs.org/en/latest/>`_ and `py.test <http://pytest.org>`_
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000055 Third-party unittest frameworks with a lighter-weight syntax for writing
56 tests. For example, ``assert func(10) == 42``.
Raymond Hettinger6b232cd2009-03-24 00:22:53 +000057
Georg Brandle73778c2014-10-29 08:36:35 +010058 `The Python Testing Tools Taxonomy <https://wiki.python.org/moin/PythonTestingToolsTaxonomy>`_
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +000059 An extensive list of Python testing tools including functional testing
60 frameworks and mock object libraries.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000061
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +000062 `Testing in Python Mailing List <http://lists.idyll.org/listinfo/testing-in-python>`_
63 A special-interest-group for discussion of testing, and testing tools,
64 in Python.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +000065
Michael Foord90efac72011-01-03 15:39:49 +000066 The script :file:`Tools/unittestgui/unittestgui.py` in the Python source distribution is
67 a GUI tool for test discovery and execution. This is intended largely for ease of use
Senthil Kumaran847c33c2012-10-27 11:04:55 -070068 for those new to unit testing. For production environments it is
69 recommended that tests be driven by a continuous integration system such as
Georg Brandl525d3552014-10-29 10:26:56 +010070 `Buildbot <http://buildbot.net/>`_, `Jenkins <http://jenkins-ci.org/>`_
Senthil Kumaran847c33c2012-10-27 11:04:55 -070071 or `Hudson <http://hudson-ci.org/>`_.
Michael Foord90efac72011-01-03 15:39:49 +000072
73
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000074.. _unittest-minimal-example:
75
76Basic example
77-------------
78
79The :mod:`unittest` module provides a rich set of tools for constructing and
80running tests. This section demonstrates that a small subset of the tools
81suffice to meet the needs of most users.
82
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020083Here is a short script to test three string methods::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000084
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020085 import unittest
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000086
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020087 class TestStringMethods(unittest.TestCase):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000088
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020089 def test_upper(self):
90 self.assertEqual('foo'.upper(), 'FOO')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000091
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020092 def test_isupper(self):
93 self.assertTrue('FOO'.isupper())
94 self.assertFalse('Foo'.isupper())
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +000095
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +020096 def test_split(self):
97 s = 'hello world'
98 self.assertEqual(s.split(), ['hello', 'world'])
99 # check that s.split fails when the separator is not a string
100 with self.assertRaises(TypeError):
101 s.split(2)
Benjamin Peterson847a4112010-03-14 15:04:17 +0000102
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +0200103 if __name__ == '__main__':
104 unittest.main()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000105
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000106
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000107A testcase is created by subclassing :class:`unittest.TestCase`. The three
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000108individual tests are defined with methods whose names start with the letters
109``test``. This naming convention informs the test runner about which methods
110represent tests.
111
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000112The crux of each test is a call to :meth:`~TestCase.assertEqual` to check for an
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +0200113expected result; :meth:`~TestCase.assertTrue` or :meth:`~TestCase.assertFalse`
114to verify a condition; or :meth:`~TestCase.assertRaises` to verify that a
115specific exception gets raised. These methods are used instead of the
116:keyword:`assert` statement so the test runner can accumulate all test results
117and produce a report.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000118
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +0200119The :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` and :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` methods allow you
120to define instructions that will be executed before and after each test method.
121They are covered in more details in the section :ref:`organizing-tests`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000122
123The final block shows a simple way to run the tests. :func:`unittest.main`
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000124provides a command-line interface to the test script. When run from the command
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000125line, the above script produces an output that looks like this::
126
127 ...
128 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
129 Ran 3 tests in 0.000s
130
131 OK
132
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100133Passing the ``-v`` option to your test script will instruct :func:`unittest.main`
134to enable a higher level of verbosity, and produce the following output::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000135
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +0200136 test_isupper (__main__.TestStringMethods) ... ok
137 test_split (__main__.TestStringMethods) ... ok
138 test_upper (__main__.TestStringMethods) ... ok
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000139
140 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ezio Melotti2e3998f2015-03-24 12:42:41 +0200141 Ran 3 tests in 0.001s
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000142
143 OK
144
145The above examples show the most commonly used :mod:`unittest` features which
146are sufficient to meet many everyday testing needs. The remainder of the
147documentation explores the full feature set from first principles.
148
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000149
150.. _unittest-command-line-interface:
151
Éric Araujo76338ec2010-11-26 23:46:18 +0000152Command-Line Interface
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000153----------------------
154
155The unittest module can be used from the command line to run tests from
156modules, classes or even individual test methods::
157
158 python -m unittest test_module1 test_module2
159 python -m unittest test_module.TestClass
160 python -m unittest test_module.TestClass.test_method
161
162You can pass in a list with any combination of module names, and fully
163qualified class or method names.
164
Michael Foord37d120a2010-12-04 01:11:21 +0000165Test modules can be specified by file path as well::
166
167 python -m unittest tests/test_something.py
168
169This allows you to use the shell filename completion to specify the test module.
170The file specified must still be importable as a module. The path is converted
171to a module name by removing the '.py' and converting path separators into '.'.
172If you want to execute a test file that isn't importable as a module you should
173execute the file directly instead.
174
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000175You can run tests with more detail (higher verbosity) by passing in the -v flag::
176
177 python -m unittest -v test_module
178
Michael Foord086f3082010-11-21 21:28:01 +0000179When executed without arguments :ref:`unittest-test-discovery` is started::
180
181 python -m unittest
182
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000183For a list of all the command-line options::
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000184
185 python -m unittest -h
186
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +0000187.. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000188 In earlier versions it was only possible to run individual test methods and
189 not modules or classes.
190
191
Éric Araujo76338ec2010-11-26 23:46:18 +0000192Command-line options
193~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000194
Éric Araujod3309df2010-11-21 03:09:17 +0000195:program:`unittest` supports these command-line options:
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000196
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000197.. program:: unittest
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000198
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000199.. cmdoption:: -b, --buffer
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000200
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000201 The standard output and standard error streams are buffered during the test
202 run. Output during a passing test is discarded. Output is echoed normally
203 on test fail or error and is added to the failure messages.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000204
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000205.. cmdoption:: -c, --catch
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000206
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000207 Control-C during the test run waits for the current test to end and then
208 reports all the results so far. A second control-C raises the normal
209 :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` exception.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000210
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000211 See `Signal Handling`_ for the functions that provide this functionality.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000212
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000213.. cmdoption:: -f, --failfast
214
215 Stop the test run on the first error or failure.
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000216
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +1300217.. cmdoption:: --locals
218
219 Show local variables in tracebacks.
220
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000221.. versionadded:: 3.2
Éric Araujod6c5f742010-12-16 00:07:01 +0000222 The command-line options ``-b``, ``-c`` and ``-f`` were added.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000223
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +1300224.. versionadded:: 3.5
225 The command-line option ``--locals``.
226
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000227The command line can also be used for test discovery, for running all of the
228tests in a project or just a subset.
229
230
231.. _unittest-test-discovery:
232
233Test Discovery
234--------------
235
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000236.. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000237
Ezio Melotti3d995842011-03-08 16:17:35 +0200238Unittest supports simple test discovery. In order to be compatible with test
239discovery, all of the test files must be :ref:`modules <tut-modules>` or
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -0700240:ref:`packages <tut-packages>` (including :term:`namespace packages
241<namespace package>`) importable from the top-level directory of
242the project (this means that their filenames must be valid :ref:`identifiers
243<identifiers>`).
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000244
245Test discovery is implemented in :meth:`TestLoader.discover`, but can also be
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000246used from the command line. The basic command-line usage is::
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000247
248 cd project_directory
249 python -m unittest discover
250
Michael Foord086f3082010-11-21 21:28:01 +0000251.. note::
252
253 As a shortcut, ``python -m unittest`` is the equivalent of
254 ``python -m unittest discover``. If you want to pass arguments to test
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +0200255 discovery the ``discover`` sub-command must be used explicitly.
Michael Foord086f3082010-11-21 21:28:01 +0000256
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000257The ``discover`` sub-command has the following options:
258
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000259.. program:: unittest discover
260
261.. cmdoption:: -v, --verbose
262
263 Verbose output
264
Chris Jerdonekd69ad552013-02-21 18:54:43 -0800265.. cmdoption:: -s, --start-directory directory
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000266
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +0200267 Directory to start discovery (``.`` default)
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000268
Chris Jerdonekd69ad552013-02-21 18:54:43 -0800269.. cmdoption:: -p, --pattern pattern
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000270
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +0200271 Pattern to match test files (``test*.py`` default)
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000272
Chris Jerdonekd69ad552013-02-21 18:54:43 -0800273.. cmdoption:: -t, --top-level-directory directory
Éric Araujo713d3032010-11-18 16:38:46 +0000274
275 Top level directory of project (defaults to start directory)
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000276
Benjamin Petersond7c3ed52010-06-27 22:32:30 +0000277The :option:`-s`, :option:`-p`, and :option:`-t` options can be passed in
278as positional arguments in that order. The following two command lines
279are equivalent::
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000280
281 python -m unittest discover -s project_directory -p '*_test.py'
282 python -m unittest discover project_directory '*_test.py'
283
Michael Foord16f3e902010-05-08 15:13:42 +0000284As well as being a path it is possible to pass a package name, for example
285``myproject.subpackage.test``, as the start directory. The package name you
286supply will then be imported and its location on the filesystem will be used
287as the start directory.
288
289.. caution::
290
Senthil Kumaran916bd382010-10-15 12:55:19 +0000291 Test discovery loads tests by importing them. Once test discovery has found
292 all the test files from the start directory you specify it turns the paths
293 into package names to import. For example :file:`foo/bar/baz.py` will be
Michael Foord16f3e902010-05-08 15:13:42 +0000294 imported as ``foo.bar.baz``.
295
296 If you have a package installed globally and attempt test discovery on
297 a different copy of the package then the import *could* happen from the
298 wrong place. If this happens test discovery will warn you and exit.
299
300 If you supply the start directory as a package name rather than a
301 path to a directory then discover assumes that whichever location it
302 imports from is the location you intended, so you will not get the
303 warning.
304
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000305Test modules and packages can customize test loading and discovery by through
306the `load_tests protocol`_.
307
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -0700308.. versionchanged:: 3.4
309 Test discovery supports :term:`namespace packages <namespace package>`.
310
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000311
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000312.. _organizing-tests:
313
314Organizing test code
315--------------------
316
317The basic building blocks of unit testing are :dfn:`test cases` --- single
318scenarios that must be set up and checked for correctness. In :mod:`unittest`,
Raymond Hettinger833ad0e2011-02-06 21:00:38 +0000319test cases are represented by :class:`unittest.TestCase` instances.
320To make your own test cases you must write subclasses of
321:class:`TestCase` or use :class:`FunctionTestCase`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000322
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000323The testing code of a :class:`TestCase` instance should be entirely self
324contained, such that it can be run either in isolation or in arbitrary
325combination with any number of other test cases.
326
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100327The simplest :class:`TestCase` subclass will simply implement a test method
328(i.e. a method whose name starts with ``test``) in order to perform specific
329testing code::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000330
331 import unittest
332
333 class DefaultWidgetSizeTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100334 def test_default_widget_size(self):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000335 widget = Widget('The widget')
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100336 self.assertEqual(widget.size(), (50, 50))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000337
Sandro Tosi41b24042012-01-21 10:59:37 +0100338Note that in order to test something, we use one of the :meth:`assert\*`
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000339methods provided by the :class:`TestCase` base class. If the test fails, an
340exception will be raised, and :mod:`unittest` will identify the test case as a
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100341:dfn:`failure`. Any other exceptions will be treated as :dfn:`errors`.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000342
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100343Tests can be numerous, and their set-up can be repetitive. Luckily, we
344can factor out set-up code by implementing a method called
345:meth:`~TestCase.setUp`, which the testing framework will automatically
346call for every single test we run::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000347
348 import unittest
349
350 class SimpleWidgetTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
351 def setUp(self):
352 self.widget = Widget('The widget')
353
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100354 def test_default_widget_size(self):
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000355 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (50,50),
356 'incorrect default size')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000357
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100358 def test_widget_resize(self):
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000359 self.widget.resize(100,150)
Ezio Melotti2d6c39b2010-02-04 20:27:41 +0000360 self.assertEqual(self.widget.size(), (100,150),
361 'wrong size after resize')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000362
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100363.. note::
364 The order in which the various tests will be run is determined
365 by sorting the test method names with respect to the built-in
366 ordering for strings.
367
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000368If the :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` method raises an exception while the test is
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100369running, the framework will consider the test to have suffered an error, and
370the test method will not be executed.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000371
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000372Similarly, we can provide a :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` method that tidies up
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100373after the test method has been run::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000374
375 import unittest
376
377 class SimpleWidgetTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
378 def setUp(self):
379 self.widget = Widget('The widget')
380
381 def tearDown(self):
382 self.widget.dispose()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000383
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100384If :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` succeeded, :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` will be
385run whether the test method succeeded or not.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000386
387Such a working environment for the testing code is called a :dfn:`fixture`.
388
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000389Test case instances are grouped together according to the features they test.
390:mod:`unittest` provides a mechanism for this: the :dfn:`test suite`,
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100391represented by :mod:`unittest`'s :class:`TestSuite` class. In most cases,
392calling :func:`unittest.main` will do the right thing and collect all the
393module's test cases for you, and then execute them.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000394
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100395However, should you want to customize the building of your test suite,
396you can do it yourself::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000397
398 def suite():
399 suite = unittest.TestSuite()
Ezio Melottid59e44a2010-02-28 03:46:13 +0000400 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_default_size'))
401 suite.addTest(WidgetTestCase('test_resize'))
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000402 return suite
403
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000404You can place the definitions of test cases and test suites in the same modules
405as the code they are to test (such as :file:`widget.py`), but there are several
406advantages to placing the test code in a separate module, such as
407:file:`test_widget.py`:
408
409* The test module can be run standalone from the command line.
410
411* The test code can more easily be separated from shipped code.
412
413* There is less temptation to change test code to fit the code it tests without
414 a good reason.
415
416* Test code should be modified much less frequently than the code it tests.
417
418* Tested code can be refactored more easily.
419
420* Tests for modules written in C must be in separate modules anyway, so why not
421 be consistent?
422
423* If the testing strategy changes, there is no need to change the source code.
424
425
426.. _legacy-unit-tests:
427
428Re-using old test code
429----------------------
430
431Some users will find that they have existing test code that they would like to
432run from :mod:`unittest`, without converting every old test function to a
433:class:`TestCase` subclass.
434
435For this reason, :mod:`unittest` provides a :class:`FunctionTestCase` class.
436This subclass of :class:`TestCase` can be used to wrap an existing test
437function. Set-up and tear-down functions can also be provided.
438
439Given the following test function::
440
441 def testSomething():
442 something = makeSomething()
443 assert something.name is not None
444 # ...
445
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100446one can create an equivalent test case instance as follows, with optional
447set-up and tear-down methods::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000448
449 testcase = unittest.FunctionTestCase(testSomething,
450 setUp=makeSomethingDB,
451 tearDown=deleteSomethingDB)
452
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000453.. note::
454
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000455 Even though :class:`FunctionTestCase` can be used to quickly convert an
456 existing test base over to a :mod:`unittest`\ -based system, this approach is
457 not recommended. Taking the time to set up proper :class:`TestCase`
458 subclasses will make future test refactorings infinitely easier.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000459
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000460In some cases, the existing tests may have been written using the :mod:`doctest`
461module. If so, :mod:`doctest` provides a :class:`DocTestSuite` class that can
462automatically build :class:`unittest.TestSuite` instances from the existing
463:mod:`doctest`\ -based tests.
464
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000465
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000466.. _unittest-skipping:
467
468Skipping tests and expected failures
469------------------------------------
470
Michael Foordf5c851a2010-02-05 21:48:03 +0000471.. versionadded:: 3.1
472
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000473Unittest supports skipping individual test methods and even whole classes of
474tests. In addition, it supports marking a test as a "expected failure," a test
475that is broken and will fail, but shouldn't be counted as a failure on a
476:class:`TestResult`.
477
478Skipping a test is simply a matter of using the :func:`skip` :term:`decorator`
479or one of its conditional variants.
480
Ezio Melottifed69ba2013-03-01 21:26:04 +0200481Basic skipping looks like this::
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000482
483 class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
484
485 @unittest.skip("demonstrating skipping")
486 def test_nothing(self):
487 self.fail("shouldn't happen")
488
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +0000489 @unittest.skipIf(mylib.__version__ < (1, 3),
490 "not supported in this library version")
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000491 def test_format(self):
492 # Tests that work for only a certain version of the library.
493 pass
494
495 @unittest.skipUnless(sys.platform.startswith("win"), "requires Windows")
496 def test_windows_support(self):
497 # windows specific testing code
498 pass
499
Ezio Melottifed69ba2013-03-01 21:26:04 +0200500This is the output of running the example above in verbose mode::
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000501
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000502 test_format (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'not supported in this library version'
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000503 test_nothing (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'demonstrating skipping'
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000504 test_windows_support (__main__.MyTestCase) ... skipped 'requires Windows'
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000505
506 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000507 Ran 3 tests in 0.005s
508
509 OK (skipped=3)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000510
Ezio Melottifed69ba2013-03-01 21:26:04 +0200511Classes can be skipped just like methods::
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000512
Sandro Tosi317075d2012-03-31 18:34:59 +0200513 @unittest.skip("showing class skipping")
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000514 class MySkippedTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
515 def test_not_run(self):
516 pass
517
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000518:meth:`TestCase.setUp` can also skip the test. This is useful when a resource
519that needs to be set up is not available.
520
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000521Expected failures use the :func:`expectedFailure` decorator. ::
522
523 class ExpectedFailureTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
524 @unittest.expectedFailure
525 def test_fail(self):
526 self.assertEqual(1, 0, "broken")
527
528It's easy to roll your own skipping decorators by making a decorator that calls
529:func:`skip` on the test when it wants it to be skipped. This decorator skips
Ezio Melottifed69ba2013-03-01 21:26:04 +0200530the test unless the passed object has a certain attribute::
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000531
532 def skipUnlessHasattr(obj, attr):
533 if hasattr(obj, attr):
534 return lambda func: func
Ezio Melotti265281a2013-03-27 20:11:55 +0200535 return unittest.skip("{!r} doesn't have {!r}".format(obj, attr))
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000536
537The following decorators implement test skipping and expected failures:
538
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000539.. decorator:: skip(reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000540
541 Unconditionally skip the decorated test. *reason* should describe why the
542 test is being skipped.
543
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000544.. decorator:: skipIf(condition, reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000545
546 Skip the decorated test if *condition* is true.
547
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000548.. decorator:: skipUnless(condition, reason)
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000549
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +0000550 Skip the decorated test unless *condition* is true.
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000551
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000552.. decorator:: expectedFailure
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000553
554 Mark the test as an expected failure. If the test fails when run, the test
555 is not counted as a failure.
556
Ezio Melotti265281a2013-03-27 20:11:55 +0200557.. exception:: SkipTest(reason)
558
559 This exception is raised to skip a test.
560
561 Usually you can use :meth:`TestCase.skipTest` or one of the skipping
562 decorators instead of raising this directly.
563
R David Murray42fa1102014-01-03 13:03:36 -0500564Skipped tests will not have :meth:`~TestCase.setUp` or :meth:`~TestCase.tearDown` run around them.
565Skipped classes will not have :meth:`~TestCase.setUpClass` or :meth:`~TestCase.tearDownClass` run.
566Skipped modules will not have :func:`setUpModule` or :func:`tearDownModule` run.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000567
Benjamin Peterson5254c042009-03-23 22:25:03 +0000568
Antoine Pitrouc9b3ef22013-03-20 20:16:47 +0100569.. _subtests:
570
571Distinguishing test iterations using subtests
572---------------------------------------------
573
574.. versionadded:: 3.4
575
576When some of your tests differ only by a some very small differences, for
577instance some parameters, unittest allows you to distinguish them inside
578the body of a test method using the :meth:`~TestCase.subTest` context manager.
579
580For example, the following test::
581
582 class NumbersTest(unittest.TestCase):
583
584 def test_even(self):
585 """
586 Test that numbers between 0 and 5 are all even.
587 """
588 for i in range(0, 6):
589 with self.subTest(i=i):
590 self.assertEqual(i % 2, 0)
591
592will produce the following output::
593
594 ======================================================================
595 FAIL: test_even (__main__.NumbersTest) (i=1)
596 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
597 Traceback (most recent call last):
598 File "subtests.py", line 32, in test_even
599 self.assertEqual(i % 2, 0)
600 AssertionError: 1 != 0
601
602 ======================================================================
603 FAIL: test_even (__main__.NumbersTest) (i=3)
604 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
605 Traceback (most recent call last):
606 File "subtests.py", line 32, in test_even
607 self.assertEqual(i % 2, 0)
608 AssertionError: 1 != 0
609
610 ======================================================================
611 FAIL: test_even (__main__.NumbersTest) (i=5)
612 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
613 Traceback (most recent call last):
614 File "subtests.py", line 32, in test_even
615 self.assertEqual(i % 2, 0)
616 AssertionError: 1 != 0
617
618Without using a subtest, execution would stop after the first failure,
619and the error would be less easy to diagnose because the value of ``i``
620wouldn't be displayed::
621
622 ======================================================================
623 FAIL: test_even (__main__.NumbersTest)
624 ----------------------------------------------------------------------
625 Traceback (most recent call last):
626 File "subtests.py", line 32, in test_even
627 self.assertEqual(i % 2, 0)
628 AssertionError: 1 != 0
629
630
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000631.. _unittest-contents:
632
633Classes and functions
634---------------------
635
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000636This section describes in depth the API of :mod:`unittest`.
637
638
639.. _testcase-objects:
640
641Test cases
642~~~~~~~~~~
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000643
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000644.. class:: TestCase(methodName='runTest')
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000645
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100646 Instances of the :class:`TestCase` class represent the logical test units
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000647 in the :mod:`unittest` universe. This class is intended to be used as a base
648 class, with specific tests being implemented by concrete subclasses. This class
649 implements the interface needed by the test runner to allow it to drive the
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100650 tests, and methods that the test code can use to check for and report various
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000651 kinds of failure.
652
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100653 Each instance of :class:`TestCase` will run a single base method: the method
654 named *methodName*. However, the standard implementation of the default
655 *methodName*, ``runTest()``, will run every method starting with ``test``
656 as an individual test, and count successes and failures accordingly.
657 Therefore, in most uses of :class:`TestCase`, you will neither change
658 the *methodName* nor reimplement the default ``runTest()`` method.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +0000659
Michael Foord1341bb02011-03-14 19:01:46 -0400660 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100661 :class:`TestCase` can be instantiated successfully without providing a
662 *methodName*. This makes it easier to experiment with :class:`TestCase`
663 from the interactive interpreter.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000664
665 :class:`TestCase` instances provide three groups of methods: one group used
666 to run the test, another used by the test implementation to check conditions
667 and report failures, and some inquiry methods allowing information about the
668 test itself to be gathered.
669
670 Methods in the first group (running the test) are:
671
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000672 .. method:: setUp()
673
674 Method called to prepare the test fixture. This is called immediately
Terry Jan Reedy7f84d1e2014-04-15 23:44:14 -0400675 before calling the test method; other than :exc:`AssertionError` or :exc:`SkipTest`,
676 any exception raised by this method will be considered an error rather than
Terry Jan Reedy6ac42402014-04-15 23:38:18 -0400677 a test failure. The default implementation does nothing.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000678
679
680 .. method:: tearDown()
681
682 Method called immediately after the test method has been called and the
683 result recorded. This is called even if the test method raised an
684 exception, so the implementation in subclasses may need to be particularly
Terry Jan Reedy7f84d1e2014-04-15 23:44:14 -0400685 careful about checking internal state. Any exception, other than :exc:`AssertionError`
686 or :exc:`SkipTest`, raised by this method will be considered an error rather than a
687 test failure. This method will only be called if the :meth:`setUp` succeeds,
Terry Jan Reedy6ac42402014-04-15 23:38:18 -0400688 regardless of the outcome of the test method. The default implementation does nothing.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000689
690
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000691 .. method:: setUpClass()
692
693 A class method called before tests in an individual class run.
694 ``setUpClass`` is called with the class as the only argument
695 and must be decorated as a :func:`classmethod`::
696
697 @classmethod
698 def setUpClass(cls):
699 ...
700
701 See `Class and Module Fixtures`_ for more details.
702
703 .. versionadded:: 3.2
704
705
706 .. method:: tearDownClass()
707
708 A class method called after tests in an individual class have run.
709 ``tearDownClass`` is called with the class as the only argument
710 and must be decorated as a :meth:`classmethod`::
711
712 @classmethod
713 def tearDownClass(cls):
714 ...
715
716 See `Class and Module Fixtures`_ for more details.
717
718 .. versionadded:: 3.2
719
720
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000721 .. method:: run(result=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000722
Antoine Pitrou2c5e9502013-01-20 01:29:39 +0100723 Run the test, collecting the result into the :class:`TestResult` object
724 passed as *result*. If *result* is omitted or ``None``, a temporary
725 result object is created (by calling the :meth:`defaultTestResult`
726 method) and used. The result object is returned to :meth:`run`'s
727 caller.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000728
729 The same effect may be had by simply calling the :class:`TestCase`
730 instance.
731
Michael Foord1341bb02011-03-14 19:01:46 -0400732 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
733 Previous versions of ``run`` did not return the result. Neither did
734 calling an instance.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000735
Benjamin Petersone549ead2009-03-28 21:42:05 +0000736 .. method:: skipTest(reason)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000737
Stefan Kraha5bf3f52010-05-19 16:09:41 +0000738 Calling this during a test method or :meth:`setUp` skips the current
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000739 test. See :ref:`unittest-skipping` for more information.
740
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +0000741 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson08bf91c2010-04-11 16:12:57 +0000742
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000743
Antoine Pitrouc9b3ef22013-03-20 20:16:47 +0100744 .. method:: subTest(msg=None, **params)
745
746 Return a context manager which executes the enclosed code block as a
747 subtest. *msg* and *params* are optional, arbitrary values which are
748 displayed whenever a subtest fails, allowing you to identify them
749 clearly.
750
751 A test case can contain any number of subtest declarations, and
752 they can be arbitrarily nested.
753
754 See :ref:`subtests` for more information.
755
756 .. versionadded:: 3.4
757
758
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000759 .. 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
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +0000765 .. _assert-methods:
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000766
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
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300810 All the assert methods accept a *msg* argument that, if specified, is used
811 as the error message on failure (see also :data:`longMessage`).
812 Note that the *msg* keyword argument can be passed to :meth:`assertRaises`,
813 :meth:`assertRaisesRegex`, :meth:`assertWarns`, :meth:`assertWarnsRegex`
814 only when they are used as a context manager.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000815
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000816 .. method:: assertEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000817
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000818 Test that *first* and *second* are equal. If the values do not
Ezio Melottiaddc6f52010-12-18 20:00:04 +0000819 compare equal, the test will fail.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000820
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000821 In addition, if *first* and *second* are the exact same type and one of
Michael Foord02834952010-02-08 23:10:39 +0000822 list, tuple, dict, set, frozenset or str or any type that a subclass
Ezio Melotti9ecb6be2012-01-16 08:28:54 +0200823 registers with :meth:`addTypeEqualityFunc` the type-specific equality
Michael Foord02834952010-02-08 23:10:39 +0000824 function will be called in order to generate a more useful default
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +0000825 error message (see also the :ref:`list of type-specific methods
826 <type-specific-methods>`).
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +0000827
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000828 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Ezio Melotti9ecb6be2012-01-16 08:28:54 +0200829 Added the automatic calling of type-specific equality function.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000830
Michael Foord28a817e2010-02-09 00:03:57 +0000831 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
832 :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual` added as the default type equality
833 function for comparing strings.
Michael Foord02834952010-02-08 23:10:39 +0000834
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000835
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000836 .. method:: assertNotEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000837
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000838 Test that *first* and *second* are not equal. If the values do
Ezio Melottiaddc6f52010-12-18 20:00:04 +0000839 compare equal, the test will fail.
Benjamin Peterson70e32c82009-03-24 01:00:11 +0000840
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000841 .. method:: assertTrue(expr, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +0000842 assertFalse(expr, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000843
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +0000844 Test that *expr* is true (or false).
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +0000845
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +0000846 Note that this is equivalent to ``bool(expr) is True`` and not to ``expr
847 is True`` (use ``assertIs(expr, True)`` for the latter). This method
848 should also be avoided when more specific methods are available (e.g.
849 ``assertEqual(a, b)`` instead of ``assertTrue(a == b)``), because they
850 provide a better error message in case of failure.
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +0000851
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000852
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000853 .. method:: assertIs(first, second, msg=None)
854 assertIsNot(first, second, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000855
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +0000856 Test that *first* and *second* evaluate (or don't evaluate) to the
Ezio Melottiaddc6f52010-12-18 20:00:04 +0000857 same object.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000858
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000859 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000860
861
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000862 .. method:: assertIsNone(expr, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000863 assertIsNotNone(expr, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000864
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000865 Test that *expr* is (or is not) None.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000866
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000867 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +0000868
869
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000870 .. method:: assertIn(first, second, msg=None)
871 assertNotIn(first, second, msg=None)
872
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +0000873 Test that *first* is (or is not) in *second*.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000874
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +0000875 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000876
877
Ezio Melotti9c02c2f2010-11-03 20:45:31 +0000878 .. method:: assertIsInstance(obj, cls, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000879 assertNotIsInstance(obj, cls, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000880
Ezio Melotti9794a262010-11-04 14:52:13 +0000881 Test that *obj* is (or is not) an instance of *cls* (which can be a
882 class or a tuple of classes, as supported by :func:`isinstance`).
Ezio Melotti80a61e82011-12-19 07:04:48 +0200883 To check for the exact type, use :func:`assertIs(type(obj), cls) <assertIs>`.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000884
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000885 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000886
887
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000888
Antoine Pitrou7c89ae22013-09-15 02:01:39 +0200889 It is also possible to check the production of exceptions, warnings and
890 log messages using the following methods:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000891
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000892 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
893 | Method | Checks that | New in |
894 +=========================================================+======================================+============+
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +0200895 | :meth:`assertRaises(exc, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises *exc* | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000896 | <TestCase.assertRaises>` | | |
897 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Ezio Melotti560a7782013-09-13 22:17:40 +0300898 | :meth:`assertRaisesRegex(exc, r, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises *exc* | 3.1 |
899 | <TestCase.assertRaisesRegex>` | and the message matches regex *r* | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000900 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +0200901 | :meth:`assertWarns(warn, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises *warn* | 3.2 |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000902 | <TestCase.assertWarns>` | | |
903 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Ezio Melotti560a7782013-09-13 22:17:40 +0300904 | :meth:`assertWarnsRegex(warn, r, fun, *args, **kwds) | ``fun(*args, **kwds)`` raises *warn* | 3.2 |
905 | <TestCase.assertWarnsRegex>` | and the message matches regex *r* | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +0000906 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Georg Brandled007d52013-11-24 16:09:26 +0100907 | :meth:`assertLogs(logger, level) | The ``with`` block logs on *logger* | 3.4 |
908 | <TestCase.assertLogs>` | with minimum *level* | |
Antoine Pitrou7c89ae22013-09-15 02:01:39 +0200909 +---------------------------------------------------------+--------------------------------------+------------+
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000910
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +0000911 .. method:: assertRaises(exception, callable, *args, **kwds)
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300912 assertRaises(exception, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000913
914 Test that an exception is raised when *callable* is called with any
915 positional or keyword arguments that are also passed to
916 :meth:`assertRaises`. The test passes if *exception* is raised, is an
917 error if another exception is raised, or fails if no exception is raised.
918 To catch any of a group of exceptions, a tuple containing the exception
919 classes may be passed as *exception*.
920
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300921 If only the *exception* and possibly the *msg* arguments are given,
922 return a context manager so that the code under test can be written
923 inline rather than as a function::
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000924
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000925 with self.assertRaises(SomeException):
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000926 do_something()
927
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300928 When used as a context manager, :meth:`assertRaises` accepts the
929 additional keyword argument *msg*.
930
Kristján Valur Jónsson92a653a2009-11-13 16:10:13 +0000931 The context manager will store the caught exception object in its
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000932 :attr:`exception` attribute. This can be useful if the intention
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000933 is to perform additional checks on the exception raised::
Kristján Valur Jónsson92a653a2009-11-13 16:10:13 +0000934
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000935 with self.assertRaises(SomeException) as cm:
936 do_something()
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000937
Georg Brandl8a1caa22010-07-29 16:01:11 +0000938 the_exception = cm.exception
939 self.assertEqual(the_exception.error_code, 3)
Michael Foord41531f22010-02-05 21:13:40 +0000940
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000941 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Benjamin Petersonded31c42009-03-30 15:04:16 +0000942 Added the ability to use :meth:`assertRaises` as a context manager.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000943
Ezio Melotti49008232010-02-08 21:57:48 +0000944 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
945 Added the :attr:`exception` attribute.
946
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300947 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
948 Added the *msg* keyword argument when used as a context manager.
949
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +0000950
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +0000951 .. method:: assertRaisesRegex(exception, regex, callable, *args, **kwds)
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300952 assertRaisesRegex(exception, regex, msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000953
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +0000954 Like :meth:`assertRaises` but also tests that *regex* matches
955 on the string representation of the raised exception. *regex* may be
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000956 a regular expression object or a string containing a regular expression
957 suitable for use by :func:`re.search`. Examples::
958
Terry Jan Reedyc4565a92013-06-29 13:15:43 -0400959 self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, "invalid literal for.*XYZ'$",
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +0000960 int, 'XYZ')
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000961
962 or::
963
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +0000964 with self.assertRaisesRegex(ValueError, 'literal'):
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000965 int('XYZ')
966
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +0000967 .. versionadded:: 3.1
968 under the name ``assertRaisesRegexp``.
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300969
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +0000970 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +0000971 Renamed to :meth:`assertRaisesRegex`.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000972
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300973 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
974 Added the *msg* keyword argument when used as a context manager.
975
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +0000976
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000977 .. method:: assertWarns(warning, callable, *args, **kwds)
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300978 assertWarns(warning, msg=None)
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000979
980 Test that a warning is triggered when *callable* is called with any
981 positional or keyword arguments that are also passed to
982 :meth:`assertWarns`. The test passes if *warning* is triggered and
Terry Jan Reedy778cba72013-07-30 22:31:06 -0400983 fails if it isn't. Any exception is an error.
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000984 To catch any of a group of warnings, a tuple containing the warning
985 classes may be passed as *warnings*.
986
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300987 If only the *warning* and possibly the *msg* arguments are given,
Terry Jan Reedy778cba72013-07-30 22:31:06 -0400988 return a context manager so that the code under test can be written
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300989 inline rather than as a function::
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000990
991 with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning):
992 do_something()
993
Terry Jan Reedy9eda66d2013-07-27 16:15:29 -0400994 When used as a context manager, :meth:`assertWarns` accepts the
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +0300995 additional keyword argument *msg*.
996
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +0000997 The context manager will store the caught warning object in its
998 :attr:`warning` attribute, and the source line which triggered the
999 warnings in the :attr:`filename` and :attr:`lineno` attributes.
1000 This can be useful if the intention is to perform additional checks
Terry Jan Reedy778cba72013-07-30 22:31:06 -04001001 on the warning caught::
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001002
1003 with self.assertWarns(SomeWarning) as cm:
1004 do_something()
1005
1006 self.assertIn('myfile.py', cm.filename)
1007 self.assertEqual(320, cm.lineno)
1008
1009 This method works regardless of the warning filters in place when it
1010 is called.
1011
1012 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1013
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +03001014 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
1015 Added the *msg* keyword argument when used as a context manager.
1016
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001017
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001018 .. method:: assertWarnsRegex(warning, regex, callable, *args, **kwds)
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +03001019 assertWarnsRegex(warning, regex, msg=None)
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001020
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001021 Like :meth:`assertWarns` but also tests that *regex* matches on the
1022 message of the triggered warning. *regex* may be a regular expression
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001023 object or a string containing a regular expression suitable for use
1024 by :func:`re.search`. Example::
1025
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001026 self.assertWarnsRegex(DeprecationWarning,
1027 r'legacy_function\(\) is deprecated',
1028 legacy_function, 'XYZ')
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001029
1030 or::
1031
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001032 with self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, 'unsafe frobnicating'):
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001033 frobnicate('/etc/passwd')
1034
1035 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1036
Ezio Melottib4dc2502011-05-06 15:01:41 +03001037 .. versionchanged:: 3.3
1038 Added the *msg* keyword argument when used as a context manager.
Antoine Pitrou4bc12ef2010-09-06 19:25:46 +00001039
Antoine Pitrou0715b9f2013-09-14 19:45:47 +02001040 .. method:: assertLogs(logger=None, level=None)
1041
1042 A context manager to test that at least one message is logged on
1043 the *logger* or one of its children, with at least the given
1044 *level*.
1045
1046 If given, *logger* should be a :class:`logging.Logger` object or a
1047 :class:`str` giving the name of a logger. The default is the root
1048 logger, which will catch all messages.
1049
1050 If given, *level* should be either a numeric logging level or
1051 its string equivalent (for example either ``"ERROR"`` or
1052 :attr:`logging.ERROR`). The default is :attr:`logging.INFO`.
1053
1054 The test passes if at least one message emitted inside the ``with``
1055 block matches the *logger* and *level* conditions, otherwise it fails.
1056
1057 The object returned by the context manager is a recording helper
1058 which keeps tracks of the matching log messages. It has two
1059 attributes:
1060
1061 .. attribute:: records
1062
1063 A list of :class:`logging.LogRecord` objects of the matching
1064 log messages.
1065
1066 .. attribute:: output
1067
1068 A list of :class:`str` objects with the formatted output of
1069 matching messages.
1070
1071 Example::
1072
1073 with self.assertLogs('foo', level='INFO') as cm:
1074 logging.getLogger('foo').info('first message')
1075 logging.getLogger('foo.bar').error('second message')
1076 self.assertEqual(cm.output, ['INFO:foo:first message',
1077 'ERROR:foo.bar:second message'])
1078
1079 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1080
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001081
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001082 There are also other methods used to perform more specific checks, such as:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001083
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001084 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1085 | Method | Checks that | New in |
1086 +=======================================+================================+==============+
1087 | :meth:`assertAlmostEqual(a, b) | ``round(a-b, 7) == 0`` | |
1088 | <TestCase.assertAlmostEqual>` | | |
1089 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1090 | :meth:`assertNotAlmostEqual(a, b) | ``round(a-b, 7) != 0`` | |
1091 | <TestCase.assertNotAlmostEqual>` | | |
1092 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1093 | :meth:`assertGreater(a, b) | ``a > b`` | 3.1 |
1094 | <TestCase.assertGreater>` | | |
1095 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1096 | :meth:`assertGreaterEqual(a, b) | ``a >= b`` | 3.1 |
1097 | <TestCase.assertGreaterEqual>` | | |
1098 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1099 | :meth:`assertLess(a, b) | ``a < b`` | 3.1 |
1100 | <TestCase.assertLess>` | | |
1101 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
1102 | :meth:`assertLessEqual(a, b) | ``a <= b`` | 3.1 |
1103 | <TestCase.assertLessEqual>` | | |
1104 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
Ezio Melotti560a7782013-09-13 22:17:40 +03001105 | :meth:`assertRegex(s, r) | ``r.search(s)`` | 3.1 |
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001106 | <TestCase.assertRegex>` | | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001107 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
Ezio Melotti560a7782013-09-13 22:17:40 +03001108 | :meth:`assertNotRegex(s, r) | ``not r.search(s)`` | 3.2 |
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001109 | <TestCase.assertNotRegex>` | | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001110 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +02001111 | :meth:`assertCountEqual(a, b) | *a* and *b* have the same | 3.2 |
Raymond Hettinger6e165b32010-11-27 09:31:37 +00001112 | <TestCase.assertCountEqual>` | elements in the same number, | |
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001113 | | regardless of their order | |
1114 +---------------------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------+
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001115
1116
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001117 .. method:: assertAlmostEqual(first, second, places=7, msg=None, delta=None)
1118 assertNotAlmostEqual(first, second, places=7, msg=None, delta=None)
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001119
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001120 Test that *first* and *second* are approximately (or not approximately)
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +00001121 equal by computing the difference, rounding to the given number of
1122 decimal *places* (default 7), and comparing to zero. Note that these
1123 methods round the values to the given number of *decimal places* (i.e.
1124 like the :func:`round` function) and not *significant digits*.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001125
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001126 If *delta* is supplied instead of *places* then the difference
Ezio Melottid51914c2013-08-11 13:04:50 +03001127 between *first* and *second* must be less or equal to (or greater than) *delta*.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001128
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001129 Supplying both *delta* and *places* raises a ``TypeError``.
Benjamin Petersonf47ed4a2009-04-11 20:45:40 +00001130
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001131 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001132 :meth:`assertAlmostEqual` automatically considers almost equal objects
1133 that compare equal. :meth:`assertNotAlmostEqual` automatically fails
1134 if the objects compare equal. Added the *delta* keyword argument.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001135
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001136
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001137 .. method:: assertGreater(first, second, msg=None)
1138 assertGreaterEqual(first, second, msg=None)
1139 assertLess(first, second, msg=None)
1140 assertLessEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001141
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001142 Test that *first* is respectively >, >=, < or <= than *second* depending
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +00001143 on the method name. If not, the test will fail::
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001144
1145 >>> self.assertGreaterEqual(3, 4)
1146 AssertionError: "3" unexpectedly not greater than or equal to "4"
1147
1148 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1149
1150
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001151 .. method:: assertRegex(text, regex, msg=None)
1152 assertNotRegex(text, regex, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001153
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001154 Test that a *regex* search matches (or does not match) *text*. In case
Ezio Melotti4841fd62010-11-05 15:43:40 +00001155 of failure, the error message will include the pattern and the *text* (or
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001156 the pattern and the part of *text* that unexpectedly matched). *regex*
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001157 may be a regular expression object or a string containing a regular
1158 expression suitable for use by :func:`re.search`.
1159
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001160 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1161 under the name ``assertRegexpMatches``.
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001162 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001163 The method ``assertRegexpMatches()`` has been renamed to
1164 :meth:`.assertRegex`.
1165 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1166 :meth:`.assertNotRegex`.
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001167
1168
Raymond Hettinger57bd00a2010-12-24 21:51:48 +00001169 .. method:: assertCountEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001170
Raymond Hettinger57bd00a2010-12-24 21:51:48 +00001171 Test that sequence *first* contains the same elements as *second*,
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001172 regardless of their order. When they don't, an error message listing the
1173 differences between the sequences will be generated.
1174
Raymond Hettinger57bd00a2010-12-24 21:51:48 +00001175 Duplicate elements are *not* ignored when comparing *first* and
1176 *second*. It verifies whether each element has the same count in both
Raymond Hettinger6e165b32010-11-27 09:31:37 +00001177 sequences. Equivalent to:
Raymond Hettinger57bd00a2010-12-24 21:51:48 +00001178 ``assertEqual(Counter(list(first)), Counter(list(second)))``
Raymond Hettinger6e165b32010-11-27 09:31:37 +00001179 but works with sequences of unhashable objects as well.
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001180
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001181 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1182
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001183
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001184 .. _type-specific-methods:
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001185
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001186 The :meth:`assertEqual` method dispatches the equality check for objects of
1187 the same type to different type-specific methods. These methods are already
1188 implemented for most of the built-in types, but it's also possible to
1189 register new methods using :meth:`addTypeEqualityFunc`:
1190
1191 .. method:: addTypeEqualityFunc(typeobj, function)
1192
1193 Registers a type-specific method called by :meth:`assertEqual` to check
1194 if two objects of exactly the same *typeobj* (not subclasses) compare
1195 equal. *function* must take two positional arguments and a third msg=None
1196 keyword argument just as :meth:`assertEqual` does. It must raise
1197 :data:`self.failureException(msg) <failureException>` when inequality
1198 between the first two parameters is detected -- possibly providing useful
1199 information and explaining the inequalities in details in the error
1200 message.
1201
1202 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1203
1204 The list of type-specific methods automatically used by
1205 :meth:`~TestCase.assertEqual` are summarized in the following table. Note
1206 that it's usually not necessary to invoke these methods directly.
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001207
1208 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1209 | Method | Used to compare | New in |
1210 +=========================================+=============================+==============+
1211 | :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual(a, b) | strings | 3.1 |
1212 | <TestCase.assertMultiLineEqual>` | | |
1213 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1214 | :meth:`assertSequenceEqual(a, b) | sequences | 3.1 |
1215 | <TestCase.assertSequenceEqual>` | | |
1216 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1217 | :meth:`assertListEqual(a, b) | lists | 3.1 |
1218 | <TestCase.assertListEqual>` | | |
1219 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1220 | :meth:`assertTupleEqual(a, b) | tuples | 3.1 |
1221 | <TestCase.assertTupleEqual>` | | |
1222 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1223 | :meth:`assertSetEqual(a, b) | sets or frozensets | 3.1 |
1224 | <TestCase.assertSetEqual>` | | |
1225 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1226 | :meth:`assertDictEqual(a, b) | dicts | 3.1 |
1227 | <TestCase.assertDictEqual>` | | |
1228 +-----------------------------------------+-----------------------------+--------------+
1229
1230
1231
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001232 .. method:: assertMultiLineEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001233
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001234 Test that the multiline string *first* is equal to the string *second*.
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001235 When not equal a diff of the two strings highlighting the differences
1236 will be included in the error message. This method is used by default
1237 when comparing strings with :meth:`assertEqual`.
1238
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001239 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1240
1241
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001242 .. method:: assertSequenceEqual(first, second, msg=None, seq_type=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001243
1244 Tests that two sequences are equal. If a *seq_type* is supplied, both
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001245 *first* and *second* must be instances of *seq_type* or a failure will
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001246 be raised. If the sequences are different an error message is
1247 constructed that shows the difference between the two.
1248
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001249 This method is not called directly by :meth:`assertEqual`, but
1250 it's used to implement :meth:`assertListEqual` and
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001251 :meth:`assertTupleEqual`.
1252
1253 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1254
1255
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001256 .. method:: assertListEqual(first, second, msg=None)
1257 assertTupleEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001258
Ezio Melotti49ccd512012-08-29 17:50:42 +03001259 Tests that two lists or tuples are equal. If not, an error message is
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001260 constructed that shows only the differences between the two. An error
1261 is also raised if either of the parameters are of the wrong type.
1262 These methods are used by default when comparing lists or tuples with
1263 :meth:`assertEqual`.
1264
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001265 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1266
1267
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001268 .. method:: assertSetEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001269
1270 Tests that two sets are equal. If not, an error message is constructed
1271 that lists the differences between the sets. This method is used by
1272 default when comparing sets or frozensets with :meth:`assertEqual`.
1273
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001274 Fails if either of *first* or *second* does not have a :meth:`set.difference`
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001275 method.
1276
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001277 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1278
1279
Michael Foorde180d392011-01-28 19:51:48 +00001280 .. method:: assertDictEqual(first, second, msg=None)
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001281
1282 Test that two dictionaries are equal. If not, an error message is
1283 constructed that shows the differences in the dictionaries. This
1284 method will be used by default to compare dictionaries in
1285 calls to :meth:`assertEqual`.
1286
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001287 .. versionadded:: 3.1
1288
1289
1290
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001291 .. _other-methods-and-attrs:
1292
Ezio Melotti4370b302010-11-03 20:39:14 +00001293 Finally the :class:`TestCase` provides the following methods and attributes:
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001294
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001295
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001296 .. method:: fail(msg=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001297
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001298 Signals a test failure unconditionally, with *msg* or ``None`` for
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001299 the error message.
1300
1301
1302 .. attribute:: failureException
1303
1304 This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test method. If a
1305 test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to carry
1306 additional information, it must subclass this exception in order to "play
1307 fair" with the framework. The initial value of this attribute is
1308 :exc:`AssertionError`.
1309
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001310
1311 .. attribute:: longMessage
1312
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001313 If set to ``True`` then any explicit failure message you pass in to the
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001314 :ref:`assert methods <assert-methods>` will be appended to the end of the
1315 normal failure message. The normal messages contain useful information
1316 about the objects involved, for example the message from assertEqual
1317 shows you the repr of the two unequal objects. Setting this attribute
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001318 to ``True`` allows you to have a custom error message in addition to the
Ezio Melotti22170ed2010-11-20 09:57:27 +00001319 normal one.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001320
Michael Foord5074df62010-12-03 00:53:09 +00001321 This attribute defaults to ``True``. If set to False then a custom message
1322 passed to an assert method will silence the normal message.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001323
1324 The class setting can be overridden in individual tests by assigning an
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001325 instance attribute to ``True`` or ``False`` before calling the assert methods.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001326
Raymond Hettinger35a88362009-04-09 00:08:24 +00001327 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001328
1329
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00001330 .. attribute:: maxDiff
1331
1332 This attribute controls the maximum length of diffs output by assert
1333 methods that report diffs on failure. It defaults to 80*8 characters.
1334 Assert methods affected by this attribute are
1335 :meth:`assertSequenceEqual` (including all the sequence comparison
1336 methods that delegate to it), :meth:`assertDictEqual` and
1337 :meth:`assertMultiLineEqual`.
1338
1339 Setting ``maxDiff`` to None means that there is no maximum length of
1340 diffs.
1341
1342 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1343
1344
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001345 Testing frameworks can use the following methods to collect information on
1346 the test:
1347
1348
1349 .. method:: countTestCases()
1350
1351 Return the number of tests represented by this test object. For
1352 :class:`TestCase` instances, this will always be ``1``.
1353
1354
1355 .. method:: defaultTestResult()
1356
1357 Return an instance of the test result class that should be used for this
1358 test case class (if no other result instance is provided to the
1359 :meth:`run` method).
1360
1361 For :class:`TestCase` instances, this will always be an instance of
1362 :class:`TestResult`; subclasses of :class:`TestCase` should override this
1363 as necessary.
1364
1365
1366 .. method:: id()
1367
1368 Return a string identifying the specific test case. This is usually the
1369 full name of the test method, including the module and class name.
1370
1371
1372 .. method:: shortDescription()
1373
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001374 Returns a description of the test, or ``None`` if no description
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001375 has been provided. The default implementation of this method
1376 returns the first line of the test method's docstring, if available,
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001377 or ``None``.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001378
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001379 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001380 In 3.1 this was changed to add the test name to the short description
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001381 even in the presence of a docstring. This caused compatibility issues
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001382 with unittest extensions and adding the test name was moved to the
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00001383 :class:`TextTestResult` in Python 3.2.
Benjamin Peterson7fe73a12009-04-04 16:35:46 +00001384
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001385
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
Ezio Melotti2d1e88a2011-03-10 12:16:35 +02001397 .. versionadded:: 3.1
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
Ezio Melotti2d1e88a2011-03-10 12:16:35 +02001413 .. versionadded:: 3.1
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 Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001425.. _deprecated-aliases:
1426
Ezio Melotti8f2e07b2010-11-04 19:09:28 +00001427Deprecated aliases
1428##################
1429
1430For historical reasons, some of the :class:`TestCase` methods had one or more
1431aliases that are now deprecated. The following table lists the correct names
1432along with their deprecated aliases:
1433
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001434 ============================== ====================== ======================
1435 Method Name Deprecated alias Deprecated alias
1436 ============================== ====================== ======================
1437 :meth:`.assertEqual` failUnlessEqual assertEquals
1438 :meth:`.assertNotEqual` failIfEqual assertNotEquals
1439 :meth:`.assertTrue` failUnless assert\_
Ezio Melotti8f2e07b2010-11-04 19:09:28 +00001440 :meth:`.assertFalse` failIf
1441 :meth:`.assertRaises` failUnlessRaises
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001442 :meth:`.assertAlmostEqual` failUnlessAlmostEqual assertAlmostEquals
1443 :meth:`.assertNotAlmostEqual` failIfAlmostEqual assertNotAlmostEquals
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001444 :meth:`.assertRegex` assertRegexpMatches
1445 :meth:`.assertRaisesRegex` assertRaisesRegexp
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001446 ============================== ====================== ======================
Ezio Melotti8f2e07b2010-11-04 19:09:28 +00001447
Ezio Melotti361467e2011-04-03 17:37:58 +03001448 .. deprecated:: 3.1
Ezio Melotti2baf1a62010-11-22 12:56:58 +00001449 the fail* aliases listed in the second column.
1450 .. deprecated:: 3.2
1451 the assert* aliases listed in the third column.
Ezio Melottied3a7d22010-12-01 02:32:32 +00001452 .. deprecated:: 3.2
1453 ``assertRegexpMatches`` and ``assertRaisesRegexp`` have been renamed to
1454 :meth:`.assertRegex` and :meth:`.assertRaisesRegex`
Ezio Melotti8f2e07b2010-11-04 19:09:28 +00001455
1456
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001457.. _testsuite-objects:
1458
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001459Grouping tests
1460~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1461
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001462.. class:: TestSuite(tests=())
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001463
1464 This class represents an aggregation of individual tests cases and test suites.
1465 The class presents the interface needed by the test runner to allow it to be run
1466 as any other test case. Running a :class:`TestSuite` instance is the same as
1467 iterating over the suite, running each test individually.
1468
1469 If *tests* is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases or other
1470 test suites that will be used to build the suite initially. Additional methods
1471 are provided to add test cases and suites to the collection later on.
1472
Benjamin Peterson14a3dd72009-05-25 00:51:58 +00001473 :class:`TestSuite` objects behave much like :class:`TestCase` objects, except
1474 they do not actually implement a test. Instead, they are used to aggregate
1475 tests into groups of tests that should be run together. Some additional
1476 methods are available to add tests to :class:`TestSuite` instances:
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001477
1478
1479 .. method:: TestSuite.addTest(test)
1480
1481 Add a :class:`TestCase` or :class:`TestSuite` to the suite.
1482
1483
1484 .. method:: TestSuite.addTests(tests)
1485
1486 Add all the tests from an iterable of :class:`TestCase` and :class:`TestSuite`
1487 instances to this test suite.
1488
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001489 This is equivalent to iterating over *tests*, calling :meth:`addTest` for
1490 each element.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001491
1492 :class:`TestSuite` shares the following methods with :class:`TestCase`:
1493
1494
1495 .. method:: run(result)
1496
1497 Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into the
1498 test result object passed as *result*. Note that unlike
1499 :meth:`TestCase.run`, :meth:`TestSuite.run` requires the result object to
1500 be passed in.
1501
1502
1503 .. method:: debug()
1504
1505 Run the tests associated with this suite without collecting the
1506 result. This allows exceptions raised by the test to be propagated to the
1507 caller and can be used to support running tests under a debugger.
1508
1509
1510 .. method:: countTestCases()
1511
1512 Return the number of tests represented by this test object, including all
1513 individual tests and sub-suites.
1514
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001515
1516 .. method:: __iter__()
1517
1518 Tests grouped by a :class:`TestSuite` are always accessed by iteration.
1519 Subclasses can lazily provide tests by overriding :meth:`__iter__`. Note
Andrew Svetloveb973682013-08-28 21:28:38 +03001520 that this method may be called several times on a single suite (for
1521 example when counting tests or comparing for equality) so the tests
1522 returned by repeated iterations before :meth:`TestSuite.run` must be the
1523 same for each call iteration. After :meth:`TestSuite.run`, callers should
1524 not rely on the tests returned by this method unless the caller uses a
1525 subclass that overrides :meth:`TestSuite._removeTestAtIndex` to preserve
1526 test references.
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001527
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001528 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001529 In earlier versions the :class:`TestSuite` accessed tests directly rather
1530 than through iteration, so overriding :meth:`__iter__` wasn't sufficient
1531 for providing tests.
1532
Andrew Svetloveb973682013-08-28 21:28:38 +03001533 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
1534 In earlier versions the :class:`TestSuite` held references to each
1535 :class:`TestCase` after :meth:`TestSuite.run`. Subclasses can restore
1536 that behavior by overriding :meth:`TestSuite._removeTestAtIndex`.
1537
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001538 In the typical usage of a :class:`TestSuite` object, the :meth:`run` method
1539 is invoked by a :class:`TestRunner` rather than by the end-user test harness.
1540
1541
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001542Loading and running tests
1543~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1544
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001545.. class:: TestLoader()
1546
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001547 The :class:`TestLoader` class is used to create test suites from classes and
1548 modules. Normally, there is no need to create an instance of this class; the
1549 :mod:`unittest` module provides an instance that can be shared as
Ezio Melottib8e336b2012-04-29 10:52:18 +03001550 :data:`unittest.defaultTestLoader`. Using a subclass or instance, however,
1551 allows customization of some configurable properties.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001552
Robert Collinsf920c212014-10-20 13:24:05 +13001553 :class:`TestLoader` objects have the following attributes:
1554
1555
1556 .. attribute:: errors
1557
1558 A list of the non-fatal errors encountered while loading tests. Not reset
1559 by the loader at any point. Fatal errors are signalled by the relevant
1560 a method raising an exception to the caller. Non-fatal errors are also
1561 indicated by a synthetic test that will raise the original error when
1562 run.
1563
1564 .. versionadded:: 3.5
1565
1566
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001567 :class:`TestLoader` objects have the following methods:
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001568
Ezio Melotti9c02c2f2010-11-03 20:45:31 +00001569
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001570 .. method:: loadTestsFromTestCase(testCaseClass)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001571
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001572 Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the :class:`TestCase`\ -derived
1573 :class:`testCaseClass`.
1574
1575
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001576 .. method:: loadTestsFromModule(module, pattern=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001577
1578 Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the given module. This
1579 method searches *module* for classes derived from :class:`TestCase` and
1580 creates an instance of the class for each test method defined for the
1581 class.
1582
Georg Brandle720c0a2009-04-27 16:20:50 +00001583 .. note::
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001584
1585 While using a hierarchy of :class:`TestCase`\ -derived classes can be
1586 convenient in sharing fixtures and helper functions, defining test
1587 methods on base classes that are not intended to be instantiated
1588 directly does not play well with this method. Doing so, however, can
1589 be useful when the fixtures are different and defined in subclasses.
1590
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001591 If a module provides a ``load_tests`` function it will be called to
1592 load the tests. This allows modules to customize test loading.
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001593 This is the `load_tests protocol`_. The *pattern* argument is passed as
1594 the third argument to ``load_tests``.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001595
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001596 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001597 Support for ``load_tests`` added.
1598
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001599 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1600 The undocumented and unofficial *use_load_tests* default argument is
1601 deprecated and ignored, although it is still accepted for backward
1602 compatibility. The method also now accepts a keyword-only argument
1603 *pattern* which is passed to ``load_tests`` as the third argument.
1604
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001605
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001606 .. method:: loadTestsFromName(name, module=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001607
1608 Return a suite of all tests cases given a string specifier.
1609
1610 The specifier *name* is a "dotted name" that may resolve either to a
1611 module, a test case class, a test method within a test case class, a
1612 :class:`TestSuite` instance, or a callable object which returns a
1613 :class:`TestCase` or :class:`TestSuite` instance. These checks are
1614 applied in the order listed here; that is, a method on a possible test
1615 case class will be picked up as "a test method within a test case class",
1616 rather than "a callable object".
1617
1618 For example, if you have a module :mod:`SampleTests` containing a
1619 :class:`TestCase`\ -derived class :class:`SampleTestCase` with three test
1620 methods (:meth:`test_one`, :meth:`test_two`, and :meth:`test_three`), the
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001621 specifier ``'SampleTests.SampleTestCase'`` would cause this method to
1622 return a suite which will run all three test methods. Using the specifier
1623 ``'SampleTests.SampleTestCase.test_two'`` would cause it to return a test
1624 suite which will run only the :meth:`test_two` test method. The specifier
1625 can refer to modules and packages which have not been imported; they will
1626 be imported as a side-effect.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001627
1628 The method optionally resolves *name* relative to the given *module*.
1629
Robert Collins659dd622014-10-30 08:27:27 +13001630 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1631 If an :exc:`ImportError` or :exc:`AttributeError` occurs while traversing
1632 *name* then a synthetic test that raises that error when run will be
1633 returned. These errors are included in the errors accumulated by
1634 self.errors.
1635
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001636
Georg Brandl7f01a132009-09-16 15:58:14 +00001637 .. method:: loadTestsFromNames(names, module=None)
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001638
1639 Similar to :meth:`loadTestsFromName`, but takes a sequence of names rather
1640 than a single name. The return value is a test suite which supports all
1641 the tests defined for each name.
1642
1643
1644 .. method:: getTestCaseNames(testCaseClass)
1645
1646 Return a sorted sequence of method names found within *testCaseClass*;
1647 this should be a subclass of :class:`TestCase`.
1648
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001649
1650 .. method:: discover(start_dir, pattern='test*.py', top_level_dir=None)
1651
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001652 Find all the test modules by recursing into subdirectories from the
1653 specified start directory, and return a TestSuite object containing them.
1654 Only test files that match *pattern* will be loaded. (Using shell style
1655 pattern matching.) Only module names that are importable (i.e. are valid
1656 Python identifiers) will be loaded.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001657
1658 All test modules must be importable from the top level of the project. If
1659 the start directory is not the top level directory then the top level
1660 directory must be specified separately.
1661
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001662 If importing a module fails, for example due to a syntax error, then
1663 this will be recorded as a single error and discovery will continue. If
1664 the import failure is due to :exc:`SkipTest` being raised, it will be
1665 recorded as a skip instead of an error.
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00001666
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001667 If a package (a directory containing a file named :file:`__init__.py`) is
1668 found, the package will be checked for a ``load_tests`` function. If this
Robert Collinsbf2bda32014-11-05 03:09:01 +13001669 exists then it will be called
1670 ``package.load_tests(loader, tests, pattern)``. Test discovery takes care
1671 to ensure that a package is only checked for tests once during an
1672 invocation, even if the load_tests function itself calls
1673 ``loader.discover``.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001674
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001675 If ``load_tests`` exists then discovery does *not* recurse into the
1676 package, ``load_tests`` is responsible for loading all tests in the
1677 package.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001678
1679 The pattern is deliberately not stored as a loader attribute so that
1680 packages can continue discovery themselves. *top_level_dir* is stored so
1681 ``load_tests`` does not need to pass this argument in to
1682 ``loader.discover()``.
1683
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001684 *start_dir* can be a dotted module name as well as a directory.
1685
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00001686 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1687
Ezio Melottieae2b382013-03-01 14:47:50 +02001688 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
Ezio Melotti67ddcca2013-03-27 20:13:59 +02001689 Modules that raise :exc:`SkipTest` on import are recorded as skips,
Larry Hastings3732ed22014-03-15 21:13:56 -07001690 not errors.
1691 Discovery works for :term:`namespace packages <namespace package>`.
1692 Paths are sorted before being imported so that execution order is
1693 the same even if the underlying file system's ordering is not
1694 dependent on file name.
Michael Foord80cbc9e2013-03-18 17:50:12 -07001695
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04001696 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1697 Found packages are now checked for ``load_tests`` regardless of
1698 whether their path matches *pattern*, because it is impossible for
1699 a package name to match the default pattern.
1700
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001701
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001702 The following attributes of a :class:`TestLoader` can be configured either by
1703 subclassing or assignment on an instance:
1704
1705
1706 .. attribute:: testMethodPrefix
1707
1708 String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as test
1709 methods. The default value is ``'test'``.
1710
1711 This affects :meth:`getTestCaseNames` and all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*`
1712 methods.
1713
1714
1715 .. attribute:: sortTestMethodsUsing
1716
1717 Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in
1718 :meth:`getTestCaseNames` and all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*` methods.
1719
1720
1721 .. attribute:: suiteClass
1722
1723 Callable object that constructs a test suite from a list of tests. No
1724 methods on the resulting object are needed. The default value is the
1725 :class:`TestSuite` class.
1726
1727 This affects all the :meth:`loadTestsFrom\*` methods.
1728
1729
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001730.. class:: TestResult
1731
1732 This class is used to compile information about which tests have succeeded
1733 and which have failed.
1734
1735 A :class:`TestResult` object stores the results of a set of tests. The
1736 :class:`TestCase` and :class:`TestSuite` classes ensure that results are
1737 properly recorded; test authors do not need to worry about recording the
1738 outcome of tests.
1739
1740 Testing frameworks built on top of :mod:`unittest` may want access to the
1741 :class:`TestResult` object generated by running a set of tests for reporting
1742 purposes; a :class:`TestResult` instance is returned by the
1743 :meth:`TestRunner.run` method for this purpose.
1744
1745 :class:`TestResult` instances have the following attributes that will be of
1746 interest when inspecting the results of running a set of tests:
1747
1748
1749 .. attribute:: errors
1750
1751 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1752 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an
1753 unexpected exception.
1754
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001755 .. attribute:: failures
1756
1757 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1758 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure
Ezio Melottie2202362013-09-07 15:19:30 +03001759 was explicitly signalled using the :meth:`TestCase.assert\*` methods.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001760
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001761 .. attribute:: skipped
1762
1763 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1764 holding the reason for skipping the test.
1765
Benjamin Peterson70e32c82009-03-24 01:00:11 +00001766 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001767
1768 .. attribute:: expectedFailures
1769
Georg Brandl6faee4e2010-09-21 14:48:28 +00001770 A list containing 2-tuples of :class:`TestCase` instances and strings
1771 holding formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents an expected failure
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001772 of the test case.
1773
1774 .. attribute:: unexpectedSuccesses
1775
1776 A list containing :class:`TestCase` instances that were marked as expected
1777 failures, but succeeded.
1778
1779 .. attribute:: shouldStop
1780
1781 Set to ``True`` when the execution of tests should stop by :meth:`stop`.
1782
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001783 .. attribute:: testsRun
1784
1785 The total number of tests run so far.
1786
Georg Brandl12037202010-12-02 22:35:25 +00001787 .. attribute:: buffer
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001788
1789 If set to true, ``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr`` will be buffered in between
1790 :meth:`startTest` and :meth:`stopTest` being called. Collected output will
1791 only be echoed onto the real ``sys.stdout`` and ``sys.stderr`` if the test
1792 fails or errors. Any output is also attached to the failure / error message.
1793
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +00001794 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001795
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001796 .. attribute:: failfast
1797
1798 If set to true :meth:`stop` will be called on the first failure or error,
1799 halting the test run.
1800
Ezio Melotti7afd3f52010-04-20 09:32:54 +00001801 .. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001802
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +13001803 .. attribute:: tb_locals
1804
1805 If set to true then local variables will be shown in tracebacks.
1806
1807 .. versionadded:: 3.5
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001808
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001809 .. method:: wasSuccessful()
1810
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001811 Return ``True`` if all tests run so far have passed, otherwise returns
1812 ``False``.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001813
Gregory P. Smith5a6d4bf2014-01-20 01:11:18 -08001814 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
1815 Returns ``False`` if there were any :attr:`unexpectedSuccesses`
1816 from tests marked with the :func:`expectedFailure` decorator.
1817
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001818 .. method:: stop()
1819
1820 This method can be called to signal that the set of tests being run should
Ezio Melotti75b2a5e2010-11-20 10:13:45 +00001821 be aborted by setting the :attr:`shouldStop` attribute to ``True``.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001822 :class:`TestRunner` objects should respect this flag and return without
1823 running any additional tests.
1824
1825 For example, this feature is used by the :class:`TextTestRunner` class to
1826 stop the test framework when the user signals an interrupt from the
1827 keyboard. Interactive tools which provide :class:`TestRunner`
1828 implementations can use this in a similar manner.
1829
1830 The following methods of the :class:`TestResult` class are used to maintain
1831 the internal data structures, and may be extended in subclasses to support
1832 additional reporting requirements. This is particularly useful in building
1833 tools which support interactive reporting while tests are being run.
1834
1835
1836 .. method:: startTest(test)
1837
1838 Called when the test case *test* is about to be run.
1839
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001840 .. method:: stopTest(test)
1841
1842 Called after the test case *test* has been executed, regardless of the
1843 outcome.
1844
Terry Jan Reedyf98021c2014-04-11 14:11:11 -04001845 .. method:: startTestRun()
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001846
1847 Called once before any tests are executed.
1848
Ezio Melotti2d1e88a2011-03-10 12:16:35 +02001849 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001850
1851
Terry Jan Reedyf98021c2014-04-11 14:11:11 -04001852 .. method:: stopTestRun()
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001853
Ezio Melotti176d6c42010-01-27 20:58:07 +00001854 Called once after all tests are executed.
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001855
Ezio Melotti2d1e88a2011-03-10 12:16:35 +02001856 .. versionadded:: 3.1
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001857
1858
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001859 .. method:: addError(test, err)
1860
Ezio Melottie64a91a2013-09-07 15:23:36 +03001861 Called when the test case *test* raises an unexpected exception. *err* is a
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001862 tuple of the form returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`: ``(type, value,
1863 traceback)``.
1864
1865 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1866 the instance's :attr:`errors` attribute, where *formatted_err* is a
1867 formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1868
1869
1870 .. method:: addFailure(test, err)
1871
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00001872 Called when the test case *test* signals a failure. *err* is a tuple of
1873 the form returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`: ``(type, value, traceback)``.
Benjamin Peterson52baa292009-03-24 00:56:30 +00001874
1875 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1876 the instance's :attr:`failures` attribute, where *formatted_err* is a
1877 formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1878
1879
1880 .. method:: addSuccess(test)
1881
1882 Called when the test case *test* succeeds.
1883
1884 The default implementation does nothing.
1885
1886
1887 .. method:: addSkip(test, reason)
1888
1889 Called when the test case *test* is skipped. *reason* is the reason the
1890 test gave for skipping.
1891
1892 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, reason)`` to the
1893 instance's :attr:`skipped` attribute.
1894
1895
1896 .. method:: addExpectedFailure(test, err)
1897
1898 Called when the test case *test* fails, but was marked with the
1899 :func:`expectedFailure` decorator.
1900
1901 The default implementation appends a tuple ``(test, formatted_err)`` to
1902 the instance's :attr:`expectedFailures` attribute, where *formatted_err*
1903 is a formatted traceback derived from *err*.
1904
1905
1906 .. method:: addUnexpectedSuccess(test)
1907
1908 Called when the test case *test* was marked with the
1909 :func:`expectedFailure` decorator, but succeeded.
1910
1911 The default implementation appends the test to the instance's
1912 :attr:`unexpectedSuccesses` attribute.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001913
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001914
Antoine Pitrouc9b3ef22013-03-20 20:16:47 +01001915 .. method:: addSubTest(test, subtest, outcome)
1916
1917 Called when a subtest finishes. *test* is the test case
1918 corresponding to the test method. *subtest* is a custom
1919 :class:`TestCase` instance describing the subtest.
1920
1921 If *outcome* is :const:`None`, the subtest succeeded. Otherwise,
1922 it failed with an exception where *outcome* is a tuple of the form
1923 returned by :func:`sys.exc_info`: ``(type, value, traceback)``.
1924
1925 The default implementation does nothing when the outcome is a
1926 success, and records subtest failures as normal failures.
1927
1928 .. versionadded:: 3.4
1929
1930
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001931.. class:: TextTestResult(stream, descriptions, verbosity)
1932
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001933 A concrete implementation of :class:`TestResult` used by the
1934 :class:`TextTestRunner`.
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001935
Georg Brandl67b21b72010-08-17 15:07:14 +00001936 .. versionadded:: 3.2
1937 This class was previously named ``_TextTestResult``. The old name still
1938 exists as an alias but is deprecated.
1939
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001940
1941.. data:: defaultTestLoader
1942
1943 Instance of the :class:`TestLoader` class intended to be shared. If no
1944 customization of the :class:`TestLoader` is needed, this instance can be used
1945 instead of repeatedly creating new instances.
1946
1947
Ezio Melotti9c939bc2013-05-07 09:46:30 +03001948.. class:: TextTestRunner(stream=None, descriptions=True, verbosity=1, failfast=False, \
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +13001949 buffer=False, resultclass=None, warnings=None, *, tb_locals=False)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001950
Michael Foordd218e952011-01-03 12:55:11 +00001951 A basic test runner implementation that outputs results to a stream. If *stream*
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +02001952 is ``None``, the default, :data:`sys.stderr` is used as the output stream. This class
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001953 has a few configurable parameters, but is essentially very simple. Graphical
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +13001954 applications which run test suites should provide alternate implementations. Such
1955 implementations should accept ``**kwargs`` as the interface to construct runners
1956 changes when features are added to unittest.
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001957
Ezio Melotti60901872010-12-01 00:56:10 +00001958 By default this runner shows :exc:`DeprecationWarning`,
Senthil Kumaran409ea5d2014-02-08 14:28:03 -08001959 :exc:`PendingDeprecationWarning`, :exc:`ResourceWarning` and
Larry Hastingsad88d7a2014-02-10 04:26:10 -08001960 :exc:`ImportWarning` even if they are :ref:`ignored by default
1961 <warning-ignored>`. Deprecation warnings caused by :ref:`deprecated unittest
1962 methods <deprecated-aliases>` are also special-cased and, when the warning
1963 filters are ``'default'`` or ``'always'``, they will appear only once
1964 per-module, in order to avoid too many warning messages. This behavior can
1965 be overridden using the :option:`-Wd` or :option:`-Wa` options and leaving
1966 *warnings* to ``None``.
Ezio Melotti60901872010-12-01 00:56:10 +00001967
Michael Foordd218e952011-01-03 12:55:11 +00001968 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
1969 Added the ``warnings`` argument.
1970
1971 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Éric Araujo941afed2011-09-01 02:47:34 +02001972 The default stream is set to :data:`sys.stderr` at instantiation time rather
Michael Foordd218e952011-01-03 12:55:11 +00001973 than import time.
1974
Robert Collinsf0c819a2015-03-06 13:46:35 +13001975 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1976 Added the tb_locals parameter.
1977
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001978 .. method:: _makeResult()
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00001979
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001980 This method returns the instance of ``TestResult`` used by :meth:`run`.
1981 It is not intended to be called directly, but can be overridden in
1982 subclasses to provide a custom ``TestResult``.
1983
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001984 ``_makeResult()`` instantiates the class or callable passed in the
1985 ``TextTestRunner`` constructor as the ``resultclass`` argument. It
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00001986 defaults to :class:`TextTestResult` if no ``resultclass`` is provided.
Michael Foord34c94622010-02-10 15:51:42 +00001987 The result class is instantiated with the following arguments::
1988
1989 stream, descriptions, verbosity
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00001990
Michael Foord4d1639f2013-12-29 23:38:55 +00001991 .. method:: run(test)
1992
1993 This method is the main public interface to the `TextTestRunner`. This
1994 method takes a :class:`TestSuite` or :class:`TestCase` instance. A
1995 :class:`TestResult` is created by calling
1996 :func:`_makeResult` and the test(s) are run and the
1997 results printed to stdout.
1998
Ezio Melotti60901872010-12-01 00:56:10 +00001999
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00002000.. function:: main(module='__main__', defaultTest=None, argv=None, testRunner=None, \
Ezio Melotti40dcb1d2011-03-10 13:46:50 +02002001 testLoader=unittest.defaultTestLoader, exit=True, verbosity=1, \
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00002002 failfast=None, catchbreak=None, buffer=None, warnings=None)
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002003
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002004 A command-line program that loads a set of tests from *module* and runs them;
2005 this is primarily for making test modules conveniently executable.
2006 The simplest use for this function is to include the following line at the
2007 end of a test script::
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002008
2009 if __name__ == '__main__':
2010 unittest.main()
2011
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002012 You can run tests with more detailed information by passing in the verbosity
2013 argument::
2014
2015 if __name__ == '__main__':
2016 unittest.main(verbosity=2)
2017
R David Murray6e731b02014-01-02 13:43:02 -05002018 The *defaultTest* argument is either the name of a single test or an
2019 iterable of test names to run if no test names are specified via *argv*. If
2020 not specified or ``None`` and no test names are provided via *argv*, all
2021 tests found in *module* are run.
R David Murray12e930f2014-01-02 13:37:26 -05002022
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002023 The *argv* argument can be a list of options passed to the program, with the
2024 first element being the program name. If not specified or ``None``,
2025 the values of :data:`sys.argv` are used.
2026
Georg Brandl116aa622007-08-15 14:28:22 +00002027 The *testRunner* argument can either be a test runner class or an already
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002028 created instance of it. By default ``main`` calls :func:`sys.exit` with
2029 an exit code indicating success or failure of the tests run.
2030
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002031 The *testLoader* argument has to be a :class:`TestLoader` instance,
2032 and defaults to :data:`defaultTestLoader`.
2033
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002034 ``main`` supports being used from the interactive interpreter by passing in the
2035 argument ``exit=False``. This displays the result on standard output without
2036 calling :func:`sys.exit`::
2037
2038 >>> from unittest import main
2039 >>> main(module='test_module', exit=False)
2040
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002041 The *failfast*, *catchbreak* and *buffer* parameters have the same
Éric Araujo76338ec2010-11-26 23:46:18 +00002042 effect as the same-name `command-line options`_.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002043
Ezio Melotti60901872010-12-01 00:56:10 +00002044 The *warning* argument specifies the :ref:`warning filter <warning-filter>`
2045 that should be used while running the tests. If it's not specified, it will
2046 remain ``None`` if a :option:`-W` option is passed to :program:`python`,
2047 otherwise it will be set to ``'default'``.
2048
Benjamin Peterson25c95f12009-05-08 20:42:26 +00002049 Calling ``main`` actually returns an instance of the ``TestProgram`` class.
2050 This stores the result of the tests run as the ``result`` attribute.
2051
Éric Araujo971dc012010-12-16 03:13:05 +00002052 .. versionchanged:: 3.1
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002053 The *exit* parameter was added.
Éric Araujo971dc012010-12-16 03:13:05 +00002054
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00002055 .. versionchanged:: 3.2
Ezio Melotti3d6d7a52012-04-30 19:10:28 +03002056 The *verbosity*, *failfast*, *catchbreak*, *buffer*
2057 and *warnings* parameters were added.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002058
Chris Jerdonekccbc26a2013-02-23 15:44:46 -08002059 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
2060 The *defaultTest* parameter was changed to also accept an iterable of
2061 test names.
2062
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002063
2064load_tests Protocol
2065###################
2066
Georg Brandl853947a2010-01-31 18:53:23 +00002067.. versionadded:: 3.2
Benjamin Peterson4ac9ce42009-10-04 14:49:41 +00002068
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002069Modules or packages can customize how tests are loaded from them during normal
2070test runs or test discovery by implementing a function called ``load_tests``.
2071
2072If a test module defines ``load_tests`` it will be called by
2073:meth:`TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule` with the following arguments::
2074
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04002075 load_tests(loader, standard_tests, pattern)
2076
2077where *pattern* is passed straight through from ``loadTestsFromModule``. It
2078defaults to ``None``.
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002079
2080It should return a :class:`TestSuite`.
2081
2082*loader* is the instance of :class:`TestLoader` doing the loading.
2083*standard_tests* are the tests that would be loaded by default from the
2084module. It is common for test modules to only want to add or remove tests
2085from the standard set of tests.
2086The third argument is used when loading packages as part of test discovery.
2087
2088A typical ``load_tests`` function that loads tests from a specific set of
2089:class:`TestCase` classes may look like::
2090
2091 test_cases = (TestCase1, TestCase2, TestCase3)
2092
2093 def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern):
2094 suite = TestSuite()
2095 for test_class in test_cases:
2096 tests = loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(test_class)
2097 suite.addTests(tests)
2098 return suite
2099
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04002100If discovery is started in a directory containing a package, either from the
2101command line or by calling :meth:`TestLoader.discover`, then the package
2102:file:`__init__.py` will be checked for ``load_tests``. If that function does
2103not exist, discovery will recurse into the package as though it were just
2104another directory. Otherwise, discovery of the package's tests will be left up
2105to ``load_tests`` which is called with the following arguments::
Benjamin Petersond2397752009-06-27 23:45:02 +00002106
2107 load_tests(loader, standard_tests, pattern)
2108
2109This should return a :class:`TestSuite` representing all the tests
2110from the package. (``standard_tests`` will only contain tests
2111collected from :file:`__init__.py`.)
2112
2113Because the pattern is passed into ``load_tests`` the package is free to
2114continue (and potentially modify) test discovery. A 'do nothing'
2115``load_tests`` function for a test package would look like::
2116
2117 def load_tests(loader, standard_tests, pattern):
2118 # top level directory cached on loader instance
2119 this_dir = os.path.dirname(__file__)
2120 package_tests = loader.discover(start_dir=this_dir, pattern=pattern)
2121 standard_tests.addTests(package_tests)
2122 return standard_tests
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002123
Barry Warsawd78742a2014-09-08 14:21:37 -04002124.. versionchanged:: 3.5
2125 Discovery no longer checks package names for matching *pattern* due to the
2126 impossibility of package names matching the default pattern.
2127
2128
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002129
2130Class and Module Fixtures
2131-------------------------
2132
2133Class and module level fixtures are implemented in :class:`TestSuite`. When
2134the test suite encounters a test from a new class then :meth:`tearDownClass`
2135from the previous class (if there is one) is called, followed by
2136:meth:`setUpClass` from the new class.
2137
2138Similarly if a test is from a different module from the previous test then
2139``tearDownModule`` from the previous module is run, followed by
2140``setUpModule`` from the new module.
2141
2142After all the tests have run the final ``tearDownClass`` and
2143``tearDownModule`` are run.
2144
2145Note that shared fixtures do not play well with [potential] features like test
2146parallelization and they break test isolation. They should be used with care.
2147
2148The default ordering of tests created by the unittest test loaders is to group
2149all tests from the same modules and classes together. This will lead to
2150``setUpClass`` / ``setUpModule`` (etc) being called exactly once per class and
2151module. If you randomize the order, so that tests from different modules and
2152classes are adjacent to each other, then these shared fixture functions may be
2153called multiple times in a single test run.
2154
2155Shared fixtures are not intended to work with suites with non-standard
2156ordering. A ``BaseTestSuite`` still exists for frameworks that don't want to
2157support shared fixtures.
2158
2159If there are any exceptions raised during one of the shared fixture functions
2160the test is reported as an error. Because there is no corresponding test
2161instance an ``_ErrorHolder`` object (that has the same interface as a
2162:class:`TestCase`) is created to represent the error. If you are just using
2163the standard unittest test runner then this detail doesn't matter, but if you
2164are a framework author it may be relevant.
2165
2166
2167setUpClass and tearDownClass
2168~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2169
2170These must be implemented as class methods::
2171
2172 import unittest
2173
2174 class Test(unittest.TestCase):
2175 @classmethod
2176 def setUpClass(cls):
2177 cls._connection = createExpensiveConnectionObject()
2178
2179 @classmethod
2180 def tearDownClass(cls):
2181 cls._connection.destroy()
2182
2183If you want the ``setUpClass`` and ``tearDownClass`` on base classes called
2184then you must call up to them yourself. The implementations in
2185:class:`TestCase` are empty.
2186
2187If an exception is raised during a ``setUpClass`` then the tests in the class
2188are not run and the ``tearDownClass`` is not run. Skipped classes will not
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002189have ``setUpClass`` or ``tearDownClass`` run. If the exception is a
Ezio Melotti265281a2013-03-27 20:11:55 +02002190:exc:`SkipTest` exception then the class will be reported as having been skipped
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002191instead of as an error.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002192
2193
2194setUpModule and tearDownModule
2195~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2196
2197These should be implemented as functions::
2198
2199 def setUpModule():
2200 createConnection()
2201
2202 def tearDownModule():
2203 closeConnection()
2204
2205If an exception is raised in a ``setUpModule`` then none of the tests in the
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002206module will be run and the ``tearDownModule`` will not be run. If the exception is a
Ezio Melotti265281a2013-03-27 20:11:55 +02002207:exc:`SkipTest` exception then the module will be reported as having been skipped
Michael Foord98b3e762010-06-05 21:59:55 +00002208instead of as an error.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002209
2210
2211Signal Handling
2212---------------
2213
Georg Brandl419e3de2010-12-01 15:44:25 +00002214.. versionadded:: 3.2
2215
Éric Araujo8acb67c2010-11-26 23:31:07 +00002216The :option:`-c/--catch <unittest -c>` command-line option to unittest,
Éric Araujo76338ec2010-11-26 23:46:18 +00002217along with the ``catchbreak`` parameter to :func:`unittest.main()`, provide
2218more friendly handling of control-C during a test run. With catch break
2219behavior enabled control-C will allow the currently running test to complete,
2220and the test run will then end and report all the results so far. A second
2221control-c will raise a :exc:`KeyboardInterrupt` in the usual way.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002222
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002223The control-c handling signal handler attempts to remain compatible with code or
2224tests that install their own :const:`signal.SIGINT` handler. If the ``unittest``
2225handler is called but *isn't* the installed :const:`signal.SIGINT` handler,
2226i.e. it has been replaced by the system under test and delegated to, then it
2227calls the default handler. This will normally be the expected behavior by code
2228that replaces an installed handler and delegates to it. For individual tests
2229that need ``unittest`` control-c handling disabled the :func:`removeHandler`
2230decorator can be used.
2231
2232There are a few utility functions for framework authors to enable control-c
2233handling functionality within test frameworks.
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002234
2235.. function:: installHandler()
2236
2237 Install the control-c handler. When a :const:`signal.SIGINT` is received
2238 (usually in response to the user pressing control-c) all registered results
2239 have :meth:`~TestResult.stop` called.
2240
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002241
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002242.. function:: registerResult(result)
2243
2244 Register a :class:`TestResult` object for control-c handling. Registering a
2245 result stores a weak reference to it, so it doesn't prevent the result from
2246 being garbage collected.
2247
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002248 Registering a :class:`TestResult` object has no side-effects if control-c
2249 handling is not enabled, so test frameworks can unconditionally register
2250 all results they create independently of whether or not handling is enabled.
2251
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002252
Benjamin Petersonb48af542010-04-11 20:43:16 +00002253.. function:: removeResult(result)
2254
2255 Remove a registered result. Once a result has been removed then
2256 :meth:`~TestResult.stop` will no longer be called on that result object in
2257 response to a control-c.
2258
Michael Foord469b1f02010-04-26 23:41:26 +00002259
Michael Foordde4ceab2010-04-25 19:53:49 +00002260.. function:: removeHandler(function=None)
2261
2262 When called without arguments this function removes the control-c handler
2263 if it has been installed. This function can also be used as a test decorator
2264 to temporarily remove the handler whilst the test is being executed::
2265
2266 @unittest.removeHandler
2267 def test_signal_handling(self):
2268 ...