blob: 19e9715102bf3a5615495ee3695ffedf065b0d01 [file] [log] [blame]
Andrew Svetlov7ea6f702012-10-31 11:29:52 +02001
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01002:mod:`unittest.mock` --- mock object library
3============================================
4
5.. module:: unittest.mock
6 :synopsis: Mock object library.
Terry Jan Reedyfa089b92016-06-11 15:02:54 -04007
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01008.. moduleauthor:: Michael Foord <michael@python.org>
9.. currentmodule:: unittest.mock
10
11.. versionadded:: 3.3
12
Terry Jan Reedyfa089b92016-06-11 15:02:54 -040013**Source code:** :source:`Lib/unittest/mock.py`
14
15--------------
16
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010017:mod:`unittest.mock` is a library for testing in Python. It allows you to
18replace parts of your system under test with mock objects and make assertions
19about how they have been used.
20
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +010021:mod:`unittest.mock` provides a core :class:`Mock` class removing the need to
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010022create a host of stubs throughout your test suite. After performing an
23action, you can make assertions about which methods / attributes were used
24and arguments they were called with. You can also specify return values and
25set needed attributes in the normal way.
26
27Additionally, mock provides a :func:`patch` decorator that handles patching
28module and class level attributes within the scope of a test, along with
29:const:`sentinel` for creating unique objects. See the `quick guide`_ for
30some examples of how to use :class:`Mock`, :class:`MagicMock` and
31:func:`patch`.
32
33Mock is very easy to use and is designed for use with :mod:`unittest`. Mock
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +010034is based on the 'action -> assertion' pattern instead of 'record -> replay'
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010035used by many mocking frameworks.
36
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +010037There is a backport of :mod:`unittest.mock` for earlier versions of Python,
Stéphane Wirtel19177fb2018-05-15 20:58:35 +020038available as `mock on PyPI <https://pypi.org/project/mock>`_.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010039
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010040
41Quick Guide
42-----------
43
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +020044.. testsetup::
45
46 class ProductionClass:
47 def method(self, a, b, c):
48 pass
49
50 class SomeClass:
51 @staticmethod
52 def static_method(args):
53 return args
54
55 @classmethod
56 def class_method(cls, args):
57 return args
58
59
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010060:class:`Mock` and :class:`MagicMock` objects create all attributes and
61methods as you access them and store details of how they have been used. You
62can configure them, to specify return values or limit what attributes are
63available, and then make assertions about how they have been used:
64
65 >>> from unittest.mock import MagicMock
66 >>> thing = ProductionClass()
67 >>> thing.method = MagicMock(return_value=3)
68 >>> thing.method(3, 4, 5, key='value')
69 3
70 >>> thing.method.assert_called_with(3, 4, 5, key='value')
71
72:attr:`side_effect` allows you to perform side effects, including raising an
73exception when a mock is called:
74
75 >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=KeyError('foo'))
76 >>> mock()
77 Traceback (most recent call last):
78 ...
79 KeyError: 'foo'
80
81 >>> values = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
82 >>> def side_effect(arg):
83 ... return values[arg]
84 ...
85 >>> mock.side_effect = side_effect
86 >>> mock('a'), mock('b'), mock('c')
87 (1, 2, 3)
88 >>> mock.side_effect = [5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
89 >>> mock(), mock(), mock()
90 (5, 4, 3)
91
92Mock has many other ways you can configure it and control its behaviour. For
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +010093example the *spec* argument configures the mock to take its specification
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010094from another object. Attempting to access attributes or methods on the mock
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +010095that don't exist on the spec will fail with an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +010096
97The :func:`patch` decorator / context manager makes it easy to mock classes or
98objects in a module under test. The object you specify will be replaced with a
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +020099mock (or other object) during the test and restored when the test ends::
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100100
101 >>> from unittest.mock import patch
102 >>> @patch('module.ClassName2')
103 ... @patch('module.ClassName1')
104 ... def test(MockClass1, MockClass2):
105 ... module.ClassName1()
106 ... module.ClassName2()
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100107 ... assert MockClass1 is module.ClassName1
108 ... assert MockClass2 is module.ClassName2
109 ... assert MockClass1.called
110 ... assert MockClass2.called
111 ...
112 >>> test()
113
114.. note::
115
116 When you nest patch decorators the mocks are passed in to the decorated
Andrés Delfino271818f2018-09-14 14:13:09 -0300117 function in the same order they applied (the normal *Python* order that
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100118 decorators are applied). This means from the bottom up, so in the example
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100119 above the mock for ``module.ClassName1`` is passed in first.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100120
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100121 With :func:`patch` it matters that you patch objects in the namespace where they
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100122 are looked up. This is normally straightforward, but for a quick guide
123 read :ref:`where to patch <where-to-patch>`.
124
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100125As well as a decorator :func:`patch` can be used as a context manager in a with
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100126statement:
127
128 >>> with patch.object(ProductionClass, 'method', return_value=None) as mock_method:
129 ... thing = ProductionClass()
130 ... thing.method(1, 2, 3)
131 ...
132 >>> mock_method.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
133
134
135There is also :func:`patch.dict` for setting values in a dictionary just
136during a scope and restoring the dictionary to its original state when the test
137ends:
138
139 >>> foo = {'key': 'value'}
140 >>> original = foo.copy()
141 >>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}, clear=True):
142 ... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
143 ...
144 >>> assert foo == original
145
146Mock supports the mocking of Python :ref:`magic methods <magic-methods>`. The
147easiest way of using magic methods is with the :class:`MagicMock` class. It
148allows you to do things like:
149
150 >>> mock = MagicMock()
151 >>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'foobarbaz'
152 >>> str(mock)
153 'foobarbaz'
154 >>> mock.__str__.assert_called_with()
155
156Mock allows you to assign functions (or other Mock instances) to magic methods
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100157and they will be called appropriately. The :class:`MagicMock` class is just a Mock
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100158variant that has all of the magic methods pre-created for you (well, all the
159useful ones anyway).
160
161The following is an example of using magic methods with the ordinary Mock
162class:
163
164 >>> mock = Mock()
165 >>> mock.__str__ = Mock(return_value='wheeeeee')
166 >>> str(mock)
167 'wheeeeee'
168
169For ensuring that the mock objects in your tests have the same api as the
170objects they are replacing, you can use :ref:`auto-speccing <auto-speccing>`.
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100171Auto-speccing can be done through the *autospec* argument to patch, or the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100172:func:`create_autospec` function. Auto-speccing creates mock objects that
173have the same attributes and methods as the objects they are replacing, and
174any functions and methods (including constructors) have the same call
175signature as the real object.
176
177This ensures that your mocks will fail in the same way as your production
178code if they are used incorrectly:
179
180 >>> from unittest.mock import create_autospec
181 >>> def function(a, b, c):
182 ... pass
183 ...
184 >>> mock_function = create_autospec(function, return_value='fishy')
185 >>> mock_function(1, 2, 3)
186 'fishy'
187 >>> mock_function.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
188 >>> mock_function('wrong arguments')
189 Traceback (most recent call last):
190 ...
191 TypeError: <lambda>() takes exactly 3 arguments (1 given)
192
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100193:func:`create_autospec` can also be used on classes, where it copies the signature of
194the ``__init__`` method, and on callable objects where it copies the signature of
195the ``__call__`` method.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100196
197
198
199The Mock Class
200--------------
201
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +0200202.. testsetup::
203
Lisa Roach77b3b772019-05-20 09:19:53 -0700204 import asyncio
205 import inspect
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +0200206 import unittest
207 from unittest.mock import sentinel, DEFAULT, ANY
Lisa Roach77b3b772019-05-20 09:19:53 -0700208 from unittest.mock import patch, call, Mock, MagicMock, PropertyMock, AsyncMock
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +0200209 from unittest.mock import mock_open
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100210
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100211:class:`Mock` is a flexible mock object intended to replace the use of stubs and
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100212test doubles throughout your code. Mocks are callable and create attributes as
213new mocks when you access them [#]_. Accessing the same attribute will always
214return the same mock. Mocks record how you use them, allowing you to make
215assertions about what your code has done to them.
216
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100217:class:`MagicMock` is a subclass of :class:`Mock` with all the magic methods
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100218pre-created and ready to use. There are also non-callable variants, useful
219when you are mocking out objects that aren't callable:
220:class:`NonCallableMock` and :class:`NonCallableMagicMock`
221
222The :func:`patch` decorators makes it easy to temporarily replace classes
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100223in a particular module with a :class:`Mock` object. By default :func:`patch` will create
224a :class:`MagicMock` for you. You can specify an alternative class of :class:`Mock` using
225the *new_callable* argument to :func:`patch`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100226
227
Kushal Das8c145342014-04-16 23:32:21 +0530228.. class:: Mock(spec=None, side_effect=None, return_value=DEFAULT, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, unsafe=False, **kwargs)
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100229
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100230 Create a new :class:`Mock` object. :class:`Mock` takes several optional arguments
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100231 that specify the behaviour of the Mock object:
232
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100233 * *spec*: This can be either a list of strings or an existing object (a
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100234 class or instance) that acts as the specification for the mock object. If
235 you pass in an object then a list of strings is formed by calling dir on
236 the object (excluding unsupported magic attributes and methods).
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100237 Accessing any attribute not in this list will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100238
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100239 If *spec* is an object (rather than a list of strings) then
Serhiy Storchakabfdcd432013-10-13 23:09:14 +0300240 :attr:`~instance.__class__` returns the class of the spec object. This
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100241 allows mocks to pass :func:`isinstance` tests.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100242
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100243 * *spec_set*: A stricter variant of *spec*. If used, attempting to *set*
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100244 or get an attribute on the mock that isn't on the object passed as
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100245 *spec_set* will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100246
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100247 * *side_effect*: A function to be called whenever the Mock is called. See
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100248 the :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` attribute. Useful for raising exceptions or
249 dynamically changing return values. The function is called with the same
250 arguments as the mock, and unless it returns :data:`DEFAULT`, the return
251 value of this function is used as the return value.
252
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100253 Alternatively *side_effect* can be an exception class or instance. In
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100254 this case the exception will be raised when the mock is called.
255
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100256 If *side_effect* is an iterable then each call to the mock will return
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100257 the next value from the iterable.
258
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100259 A *side_effect* can be cleared by setting it to ``None``.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100260
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100261 * *return_value*: The value returned when the mock is called. By default
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100262 this is a new Mock (created on first access). See the
263 :attr:`return_value` attribute.
264
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100265 * *unsafe*: By default if any attribute starts with *assert* or
266 *assret* will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`. Passing ``unsafe=True``
267 will allow access to these attributes.
Kushal Das8c145342014-04-16 23:32:21 +0530268
269 .. versionadded:: 3.5
270
Serhiy Storchakaecf41da2016-10-19 16:29:26 +0300271 * *wraps*: Item for the mock object to wrap. If *wraps* is not ``None`` then
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100272 calling the Mock will pass the call through to the wrapped object
Michael Foord0682a0c2012-04-13 20:51:20 +0100273 (returning the real result). Attribute access on the mock will return a
274 Mock object that wraps the corresponding attribute of the wrapped
275 object (so attempting to access an attribute that doesn't exist will
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100276 raise an :exc:`AttributeError`).
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100277
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100278 If the mock has an explicit *return_value* set then calls are not passed
279 to the wrapped object and the *return_value* is returned instead.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100280
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100281 * *name*: If the mock has a name then it will be used in the repr of the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100282 mock. This can be useful for debugging. The name is propagated to child
283 mocks.
284
285 Mocks can also be called with arbitrary keyword arguments. These will be
286 used to set attributes on the mock after it is created. See the
287 :meth:`configure_mock` method for details.
288
Ismail Sf9590ed2019-08-12 07:57:03 +0100289 .. method:: assert_called()
Victor Stinner2c2a4e62016-03-11 22:17:48 +0100290
291 Assert that the mock was called at least once.
292
293 >>> mock = Mock()
294 >>> mock.method()
295 <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'>
296 >>> mock.method.assert_called()
297
298 .. versionadded:: 3.6
299
Ismail Sf9590ed2019-08-12 07:57:03 +0100300 .. method:: assert_called_once()
Victor Stinner2c2a4e62016-03-11 22:17:48 +0100301
302 Assert that the mock was called exactly once.
303
304 >>> mock = Mock()
305 >>> mock.method()
306 <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'>
307 >>> mock.method.assert_called_once()
308 >>> mock.method()
309 <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'>
310 >>> mock.method.assert_called_once()
311 Traceback (most recent call last):
312 ...
313 AssertionError: Expected 'method' to have been called once. Called 2 times.
314
315 .. versionadded:: 3.6
316
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100317
318 .. method:: assert_called_with(*args, **kwargs)
319
320 This method is a convenient way of asserting that calls are made in a
321 particular way:
322
323 >>> mock = Mock()
324 >>> mock.method(1, 2, 3, test='wow')
325 <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'>
326 >>> mock.method.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3, test='wow')
327
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100328 .. method:: assert_called_once_with(*args, **kwargs)
329
Arne de Laat324c5d82017-02-23 15:57:25 +0100330 Assert that the mock was called exactly once and that that call was
331 with the specified arguments.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100332
333 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
334 >>> mock('foo', bar='baz')
335 >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar='baz')
Arne de Laat324c5d82017-02-23 15:57:25 +0100336 >>> mock('other', bar='values')
337 >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('other', bar='values')
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100338 Traceback (most recent call last):
339 ...
Michael Foord28d591c2012-09-28 16:15:22 +0100340 AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100341
342
343 .. method:: assert_any_call(*args, **kwargs)
344
345 assert the mock has been called with the specified arguments.
346
347 The assert passes if the mock has *ever* been called, unlike
348 :meth:`assert_called_with` and :meth:`assert_called_once_with` that
Arne de Laat324c5d82017-02-23 15:57:25 +0100349 only pass if the call is the most recent one, and in the case of
350 :meth:`assert_called_once_with` it must also be the only call.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100351
352 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
353 >>> mock(1, 2, arg='thing')
354 >>> mock('some', 'thing', 'else')
355 >>> mock.assert_any_call(1, 2, arg='thing')
356
357
358 .. method:: assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=False)
359
360 assert the mock has been called with the specified calls.
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100361 The :attr:`mock_calls` list is checked for the calls.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100362
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100363 If *any_order* is false (the default) then the calls must be
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100364 sequential. There can be extra calls before or after the
365 specified calls.
366
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100367 If *any_order* is true then the calls can be in any order, but
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100368 they must all appear in :attr:`mock_calls`.
369
370 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
371 >>> mock(1)
372 >>> mock(2)
373 >>> mock(3)
374 >>> mock(4)
375 >>> calls = [call(2), call(3)]
376 >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls)
377 >>> calls = [call(4), call(2), call(3)]
378 >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=True)
379
Berker Peksagebf9fd32016-07-17 15:26:46 +0300380 .. method:: assert_not_called()
Kushal Das8af9db32014-04-17 01:36:14 +0530381
382 Assert the mock was never called.
383
384 >>> m = Mock()
385 >>> m.hello.assert_not_called()
386 >>> obj = m.hello()
387 >>> m.hello.assert_not_called()
388 Traceback (most recent call last):
389 ...
390 AssertionError: Expected 'hello' to not have been called. Called 1 times.
391
392 .. versionadded:: 3.5
393
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100394
Kushal Das9cd39a12016-06-02 10:20:16 -0700395 .. method:: reset_mock(*, return_value=False, side_effect=False)
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100396
397 The reset_mock method resets all the call attributes on a mock object:
398
399 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
400 >>> mock('hello')
401 >>> mock.called
402 True
403 >>> mock.reset_mock()
404 >>> mock.called
405 False
406
Kushal Das9cd39a12016-06-02 10:20:16 -0700407 .. versionchanged:: 3.6
408 Added two keyword only argument to the reset_mock function.
409
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100410 This can be useful where you want to make a series of assertions that
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100411 reuse the same object. Note that :meth:`reset_mock` *doesn't* clear the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100412 return value, :attr:`side_effect` or any child attributes you have
Kushal Das9cd39a12016-06-02 10:20:16 -0700413 set using normal assignment by default. In case you want to reset
414 *return_value* or :attr:`side_effect`, then pass the corresponding
415 parameter as ``True``. Child mocks and the return value mock
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100416 (if any) are reset as well.
417
Kushal Das9cd39a12016-06-02 10:20:16 -0700418 .. note:: *return_value*, and :attr:`side_effect` are keyword only
419 argument.
420
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100421
422 .. method:: mock_add_spec(spec, spec_set=False)
423
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100424 Add a spec to a mock. *spec* can either be an object or a
425 list of strings. Only attributes on the *spec* can be fetched as
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100426 attributes from the mock.
427
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100428 If *spec_set* is true then only attributes on the spec can be set.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100429
430
431 .. method:: attach_mock(mock, attribute)
432
433 Attach a mock as an attribute of this one, replacing its name and
434 parent. Calls to the attached mock will be recorded in the
435 :attr:`method_calls` and :attr:`mock_calls` attributes of this one.
436
437
438 .. method:: configure_mock(**kwargs)
439
440 Set attributes on the mock through keyword arguments.
441
442 Attributes plus return values and side effects can be set on child
443 mocks using standard dot notation and unpacking a dictionary in the
444 method call:
445
446 >>> mock = Mock()
447 >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
448 >>> mock.configure_mock(**attrs)
449 >>> mock.method()
450 3
451 >>> mock.other()
452 Traceback (most recent call last):
453 ...
454 KeyError
455
456 The same thing can be achieved in the constructor call to mocks:
457
458 >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
459 >>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs)
460 >>> mock.some_attribute
461 'eggs'
462 >>> mock.method()
463 3
464 >>> mock.other()
465 Traceback (most recent call last):
466 ...
467 KeyError
468
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100469 :meth:`configure_mock` exists to make it easier to do configuration
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100470 after the mock has been created.
471
472
473 .. method:: __dir__()
474
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100475 :class:`Mock` objects limit the results of ``dir(some_mock)`` to useful results.
476 For mocks with a *spec* this includes all the permitted attributes
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100477 for the mock.
478
479 See :data:`FILTER_DIR` for what this filtering does, and how to
480 switch it off.
481
482
483 .. method:: _get_child_mock(**kw)
484
485 Create the child mocks for attributes and return value.
486 By default child mocks will be the same type as the parent.
487 Subclasses of Mock may want to override this to customize the way
488 child mocks are made.
489
490 For non-callable mocks the callable variant will be used (rather than
491 any custom subclass).
492
493
494 .. attribute:: called
495
496 A boolean representing whether or not the mock object has been called:
497
498 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
499 >>> mock.called
500 False
501 >>> mock()
502 >>> mock.called
503 True
504
505 .. attribute:: call_count
506
507 An integer telling you how many times the mock object has been called:
508
509 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
510 >>> mock.call_count
511 0
512 >>> mock()
513 >>> mock()
514 >>> mock.call_count
515 2
516
517
518 .. attribute:: return_value
519
520 Set this to configure the value returned by calling the mock:
521
522 >>> mock = Mock()
523 >>> mock.return_value = 'fish'
524 >>> mock()
525 'fish'
526
527 The default return value is a mock object and you can configure it in
528 the normal way:
529
530 >>> mock = Mock()
531 >>> mock.return_value.attribute = sentinel.Attribute
532 >>> mock.return_value()
533 <Mock name='mock()()' id='...'>
534 >>> mock.return_value.assert_called_with()
535
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100536 :attr:`return_value` can also be set in the constructor:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100537
538 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=3)
539 >>> mock.return_value
540 3
541 >>> mock()
542 3
543
544
545 .. attribute:: side_effect
546
547 This can either be a function to be called when the mock is called,
Georg Brandl8ed75cd2014-10-31 10:25:48 +0100548 an iterable or an exception (class or instance) to be raised.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100549
550 If you pass in a function it will be called with same arguments as the
551 mock and unless the function returns the :data:`DEFAULT` singleton the
552 call to the mock will then return whatever the function returns. If the
553 function returns :data:`DEFAULT` then the mock will return its normal
Brett Cannon533f1ed2013-05-25 11:28:20 -0400554 value (from the :attr:`return_value`).
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100555
Georg Brandl8ed75cd2014-10-31 10:25:48 +0100556 If you pass in an iterable, it is used to retrieve an iterator which
557 must yield a value on every call. This value can either be an exception
558 instance to be raised, or a value to be returned from the call to the
559 mock (:data:`DEFAULT` handling is identical to the function case).
560
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100561 An example of a mock that raises an exception (to test exception
562 handling of an API):
563
564 >>> mock = Mock()
565 >>> mock.side_effect = Exception('Boom!')
566 >>> mock()
567 Traceback (most recent call last):
568 ...
569 Exception: Boom!
570
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100571 Using :attr:`side_effect` to return a sequence of values:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100572
573 >>> mock = Mock()
574 >>> mock.side_effect = [3, 2, 1]
575 >>> mock(), mock(), mock()
576 (3, 2, 1)
577
Georg Brandl8ed75cd2014-10-31 10:25:48 +0100578 Using a callable:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100579
580 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=3)
581 >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
582 ... return DEFAULT
583 ...
584 >>> mock.side_effect = side_effect
585 >>> mock()
586 3
587
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100588 :attr:`side_effect` can be set in the constructor. Here's an example that
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100589 adds one to the value the mock is called with and returns it:
590
591 >>> side_effect = lambda value: value + 1
592 >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=side_effect)
593 >>> mock(3)
594 4
595 >>> mock(-8)
596 -7
597
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100598 Setting :attr:`side_effect` to ``None`` clears it:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100599
600 >>> m = Mock(side_effect=KeyError, return_value=3)
601 >>> m()
602 Traceback (most recent call last):
603 ...
604 KeyError
605 >>> m.side_effect = None
606 >>> m()
607 3
608
609
610 .. attribute:: call_args
611
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100612 This is either ``None`` (if the mock hasn't been called), or the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100613 arguments that the mock was last called with. This will be in the
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +0530614 form of a tuple: the first member, which can also be accessed through
615 the ``args`` property, is any ordered arguments the mock was
616 called with (or an empty tuple) and the second member, which can
617 also be accessed through the ``kwargs`` property, is any keyword
618 arguments (or an empty dictionary).
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100619
620 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +0300621 >>> print(mock.call_args)
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100622 None
623 >>> mock()
624 >>> mock.call_args
625 call()
626 >>> mock.call_args == ()
627 True
628 >>> mock(3, 4)
629 >>> mock.call_args
630 call(3, 4)
631 >>> mock.call_args == ((3, 4),)
632 True
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +0530633 >>> mock.call_args.args
634 (3, 4)
635 >>> mock.call_args.kwargs
636 {}
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100637 >>> mock(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!')
638 >>> mock.call_args
639 call(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!')
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +0530640 >>> mock.call_args.args
641 (3, 4, 5)
642 >>> mock.call_args.kwargs
643 {'key': 'fish', 'next': 'w00t!'}
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100644
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100645 :attr:`call_args`, along with members of the lists :attr:`call_args_list`,
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100646 :attr:`method_calls` and :attr:`mock_calls` are :data:`call` objects.
647 These are tuples, so they can be unpacked to get at the individual
648 arguments and make more complex assertions. See
649 :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`.
650
651
652 .. attribute:: call_args_list
653
654 This is a list of all the calls made to the mock object in sequence
655 (so the length of the list is the number of times it has been
656 called). Before any calls have been made it is an empty list. The
657 :data:`call` object can be used for conveniently constructing lists of
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100658 calls to compare with :attr:`call_args_list`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100659
660 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
661 >>> mock()
662 >>> mock(3, 4)
663 >>> mock(key='fish', next='w00t!')
664 >>> mock.call_args_list
665 [call(), call(3, 4), call(key='fish', next='w00t!')]
666 >>> expected = [(), ((3, 4),), ({'key': 'fish', 'next': 'w00t!'},)]
667 >>> mock.call_args_list == expected
668 True
669
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100670 Members of :attr:`call_args_list` are :data:`call` objects. These can be
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100671 unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See
672 :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`.
673
674
675 .. attribute:: method_calls
676
677 As well as tracking calls to themselves, mocks also track calls to
678 methods and attributes, and *their* methods and attributes:
679
680 >>> mock = Mock()
681 >>> mock.method()
682 <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'>
683 >>> mock.property.method.attribute()
684 <Mock name='mock.property.method.attribute()' id='...'>
685 >>> mock.method_calls
686 [call.method(), call.property.method.attribute()]
687
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100688 Members of :attr:`method_calls` are :data:`call` objects. These can be
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100689 unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See
690 :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`.
691
692
693 .. attribute:: mock_calls
694
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100695 :attr:`mock_calls` records *all* calls to the mock object, its methods,
696 magic methods *and* return value mocks.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100697
698 >>> mock = MagicMock()
699 >>> result = mock(1, 2, 3)
700 >>> mock.first(a=3)
701 <MagicMock name='mock.first()' id='...'>
702 >>> mock.second()
703 <MagicMock name='mock.second()' id='...'>
704 >>> int(mock)
705 1
706 >>> result(1)
707 <MagicMock name='mock()()' id='...'>
708 >>> expected = [call(1, 2, 3), call.first(a=3), call.second(),
709 ... call.__int__(), call()(1)]
710 >>> mock.mock_calls == expected
711 True
712
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100713 Members of :attr:`mock_calls` are :data:`call` objects. These can be
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100714 unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See
715 :ref:`calls as tuples <calls-as-tuples>`.
716
Chris Withers8ca0fa92018-12-03 21:31:37 +0000717 .. note::
718
719 The way :attr:`mock_calls` are recorded means that where nested
720 calls are made, the parameters of ancestor calls are not recorded
721 and so will always compare equal:
722
723 >>> mock = MagicMock()
724 >>> mock.top(a=3).bottom()
725 <MagicMock name='mock.top().bottom()' id='...'>
726 >>> mock.mock_calls
727 [call.top(a=3), call.top().bottom()]
728 >>> mock.mock_calls[-1] == call.top(a=-1).bottom()
729 True
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100730
731 .. attribute:: __class__
732
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100733 Normally the :attr:`__class__` attribute of an object will return its type.
734 For a mock object with a :attr:`spec`, ``__class__`` returns the spec class
735 instead. This allows mock objects to pass :func:`isinstance` tests for the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100736 object they are replacing / masquerading as:
737
738 >>> mock = Mock(spec=3)
739 >>> isinstance(mock, int)
740 True
741
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100742 :attr:`__class__` is assignable to, this allows a mock to pass an
743 :func:`isinstance` check without forcing you to use a spec:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100744
745 >>> mock = Mock()
746 >>> mock.__class__ = dict
747 >>> isinstance(mock, dict)
748 True
749
750.. class:: NonCallableMock(spec=None, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, **kwargs)
751
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100752 A non-callable version of :class:`Mock`. The constructor parameters have the same
753 meaning of :class:`Mock`, with the exception of *return_value* and *side_effect*
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100754 which have no meaning on a non-callable mock.
755
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100756Mock objects that use a class or an instance as a :attr:`spec` or
757:attr:`spec_set` are able to pass :func:`isinstance` tests:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100758
759 >>> mock = Mock(spec=SomeClass)
760 >>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass)
761 True
762 >>> mock = Mock(spec_set=SomeClass())
763 >>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass)
764 True
765
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100766The :class:`Mock` classes have support for mocking magic methods. See :ref:`magic
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100767methods <magic-methods>` for the full details.
768
769The mock classes and the :func:`patch` decorators all take arbitrary keyword
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100770arguments for configuration. For the :func:`patch` decorators the keywords are
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100771passed to the constructor of the mock being created. The keyword arguments
772are for configuring attributes of the mock:
773
774 >>> m = MagicMock(attribute=3, other='fish')
775 >>> m.attribute
776 3
777 >>> m.other
778 'fish'
779
780The return value and side effect of child mocks can be set in the same way,
781using dotted notation. As you can't use dotted names directly in a call you
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100782have to create a dictionary and unpack it using ``**``:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100783
784 >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
785 >>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs)
786 >>> mock.some_attribute
787 'eggs'
788 >>> mock.method()
789 3
790 >>> mock.other()
791 Traceback (most recent call last):
792 ...
793 KeyError
794
Antoine Pitrou5c64df72013-02-03 00:23:58 +0100795A callable mock which was created with a *spec* (or a *spec_set*) will
796introspect the specification object's signature when matching calls to
797the mock. Therefore, it can match the actual call's arguments regardless
798of whether they were passed positionally or by name::
799
800 >>> def f(a, b, c): pass
801 ...
802 >>> mock = Mock(spec=f)
803 >>> mock(1, 2, c=3)
804 <Mock name='mock()' id='140161580456576'>
805 >>> mock.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3)
806 >>> mock.assert_called_with(a=1, b=2, c=3)
807
808This applies to :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with`,
809:meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with`, :meth:`~Mock.assert_has_calls` and
810:meth:`~Mock.assert_any_call`. When :ref:`auto-speccing`, it will also
811apply to method calls on the mock object.
812
813 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
814 Added signature introspection on specced and autospecced mock objects.
815
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100816
817.. class:: PropertyMock(*args, **kwargs)
818
819 A mock intended to be used as a property, or other descriptor, on a class.
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100820 :class:`PropertyMock` provides :meth:`__get__` and :meth:`__set__` methods
821 so you can specify a return value when it is fetched.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100822
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100823 Fetching a :class:`PropertyMock` instance from an object calls the mock, with
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +0200824 no args. Setting it calls the mock with the value being set. ::
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100825
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +0200826 >>> class Foo:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100827 ... @property
828 ... def foo(self):
829 ... return 'something'
830 ... @foo.setter
831 ... def foo(self, value):
832 ... pass
833 ...
834 >>> with patch('__main__.Foo.foo', new_callable=PropertyMock) as mock_foo:
835 ... mock_foo.return_value = 'mockity-mock'
836 ... this_foo = Foo()
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +0300837 ... print(this_foo.foo)
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100838 ... this_foo.foo = 6
839 ...
840 mockity-mock
841 >>> mock_foo.mock_calls
842 [call(), call(6)]
843
Michael Foordc2870622012-04-13 16:57:22 +0100844Because of the way mock attributes are stored you can't directly attach a
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +0100845:class:`PropertyMock` to a mock object. Instead you can attach it to the mock type
Michael Foordc2870622012-04-13 16:57:22 +0100846object::
847
848 >>> m = MagicMock()
849 >>> p = PropertyMock(return_value=3)
850 >>> type(m).foo = p
851 >>> m.foo
852 3
853 >>> p.assert_called_once_with()
854
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +0100855
Lisa Roach77b3b772019-05-20 09:19:53 -0700856.. class:: AsyncMock(spec=None, side_effect=None, return_value=DEFAULT, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, unsafe=False, **kwargs)
857
858 An asynchronous version of :class:`Mock`. The :class:`AsyncMock` object will
859 behave so the object is recognized as an async function, and the result of a
860 call is an awaitable.
861
862 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
863 >>> asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(mock)
864 True
Xtreake7cb23b2019-05-21 14:17:17 +0530865 >>> inspect.isawaitable(mock()) # doctest: +SKIP
Lisa Roach77b3b772019-05-20 09:19:53 -0700866 True
867
868 The result of ``mock()`` is an async function which will have the outcome
869 of ``side_effect`` or ``return_value``:
870
871 - if ``side_effect`` is a function, the async function will return the
872 result of that function,
873 - if ``side_effect`` is an exception, the async function will raise the
874 exception,
875 - if ``side_effect`` is an iterable, the async function will return the
876 next value of the iterable, however, if the sequence of result is
877 exhausted, ``StopIteration`` is raised immediately,
878 - if ``side_effect`` is not defined, the async function will return the
879 value defined by ``return_value``, hence, by default, the async function
880 returns a new :class:`AsyncMock` object.
881
882
883 Setting the *spec* of a :class:`Mock` or :class:`MagicMock` to an async function
884 will result in a coroutine object being returned after calling.
885
886 >>> async def async_func(): pass
887 ...
888 >>> mock = MagicMock(async_func)
889 >>> mock
890 <MagicMock spec='function' id='...'>
Xtreake7cb23b2019-05-21 14:17:17 +0530891 >>> mock() # doctest: +SKIP
Lisa Roach77b3b772019-05-20 09:19:53 -0700892 <coroutine object AsyncMockMixin._mock_call at ...>
893
894 .. method:: assert_awaited()
895
896 Assert that the mock was awaited at least once.
897
898 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
899 >>> async def main():
900 ... await mock()
901 ...
902 >>> asyncio.run(main())
903 >>> mock.assert_awaited()
904 >>> mock_2 = AsyncMock()
905 >>> mock_2.assert_awaited()
906 Traceback (most recent call last):
907 ...
908 AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited.
909
910 .. method:: assert_awaited_once()
911
912 Assert that the mock was awaited exactly once.
913
914 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
915 >>> async def main():
916 ... await mock()
917 ...
918 >>> asyncio.run(main())
919 >>> mock.assert_awaited_once()
920 >>> asyncio.run(main())
921 >>> mock.method.assert_awaited_once()
922 Traceback (most recent call last):
923 ...
924 AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited once. Awaited 2 times.
925
926 .. method:: assert_awaited_with(*args, **kwargs)
927
928 Assert that the last await was with the specified arguments.
929
930 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
931 >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs):
932 ... await mock(*args, **kwargs)
933 ...
934 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar'))
935 >>> mock.assert_awaited_with('foo', bar='bar')
936 >>> mock.assert_awaited_with('other')
937 Traceback (most recent call last):
938 ...
939 AssertionError: expected call not found.
940 Expected: mock('other')
941 Actual: mock('foo', bar='bar')
942
943 .. method:: assert_awaited_once_with(*args, **kwargs)
944
945 Assert that the mock was awaited exactly once and with the specified
946 arguments.
947
948 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
949 >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs):
950 ... await mock(*args, **kwargs)
951 ...
952 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar'))
953 >>> mock.assert_awaited_once_with('foo', bar='bar')
954 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar'))
955 >>> mock.assert_awaited_once_with('foo', bar='bar')
956 Traceback (most recent call last):
957 ...
958 AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited once. Awaited 2 times.
959
960 .. method:: assert_any_await(*args, **kwargs)
961
962 Assert the mock has ever been awaited with the specified arguments.
963
964 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
965 >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs):
966 ... await mock(*args, **kwargs)
967 ...
968 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar'))
969 >>> asyncio.run(main('hello'))
970 >>> mock.assert_any_await('foo', bar='bar')
971 >>> mock.assert_any_await('other')
972 Traceback (most recent call last):
973 ...
974 AssertionError: mock('other') await not found
975
976 .. method:: assert_has_awaits(calls, any_order=False)
977
978 Assert the mock has been awaited with the specified calls.
979 The :attr:`await_args_list` list is checked for the awaits.
980
981 If *any_order* is False (the default) then the awaits must be
982 sequential. There can be extra calls before or after the
983 specified awaits.
984
985 If *any_order* is True then the awaits can be in any order, but
986 they must all appear in :attr:`await_args_list`.
987
988 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
989 >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs):
990 ... await mock(*args, **kwargs)
991 ...
992 >>> calls = [call("foo"), call("bar")]
993 >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls)
994 Traceback (most recent call last):
995 ...
996 AssertionError: Calls not found.
997 Expected: [call('foo'), call('bar')]
998 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo'))
999 >>> asyncio.run(main('bar'))
1000 >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls)
1001
1002 .. method:: assert_not_awaited()
1003
1004 Assert that the mock was never awaited.
1005
1006 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
1007 >>> mock.assert_not_awaited()
1008
1009 .. method:: reset_mock(*args, **kwargs)
1010
1011 See :func:`Mock.reset_mock`. Also sets :attr:`await_count` to 0,
1012 :attr:`await_args` to None, and clears the :attr:`await_args_list`.
1013
1014 .. attribute:: await_count
1015
1016 An integer keeping track of how many times the mock object has been awaited.
1017
1018 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
1019 >>> async def main():
1020 ... await mock()
1021 ...
1022 >>> asyncio.run(main())
1023 >>> mock.await_count
1024 1
1025 >>> asyncio.run(main())
1026 >>> mock.await_count
1027 2
1028
1029 .. attribute:: await_args
1030
1031 This is either ``None`` (if the mock hasn’t been awaited), or the arguments that
1032 the mock was last awaited with. Functions the same as :attr:`Mock.call_args`.
1033
1034 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
1035 >>> async def main(*args):
1036 ... await mock(*args)
1037 ...
1038 >>> mock.await_args
1039 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo'))
1040 >>> mock.await_args
1041 call('foo')
1042 >>> asyncio.run(main('bar'))
1043 >>> mock.await_args
1044 call('bar')
1045
1046
1047 .. attribute:: await_args_list
1048
1049 This is a list of all the awaits made to the mock object in sequence (so the
1050 length of the list is the number of times it has been awaited). Before any
1051 awaits have been made it is an empty list.
1052
1053 >>> mock = AsyncMock()
1054 >>> async def main(*args):
1055 ... await mock(*args)
1056 ...
1057 >>> mock.await_args_list
1058 []
1059 >>> asyncio.run(main('foo'))
1060 >>> mock.await_args_list
1061 [call('foo')]
1062 >>> asyncio.run(main('bar'))
1063 >>> mock.await_args_list
1064 [call('foo'), call('bar')]
1065
1066
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001067Calling
1068~~~~~~~
1069
1070Mock objects are callable. The call will return the value set as the
1071:attr:`~Mock.return_value` attribute. The default return value is a new Mock
1072object; it is created the first time the return value is accessed (either
1073explicitly or by calling the Mock) - but it is stored and the same one
1074returned each time.
1075
1076Calls made to the object will be recorded in the attributes
1077like :attr:`~Mock.call_args` and :attr:`~Mock.call_args_list`.
1078
1079If :attr:`~Mock.side_effect` is set then it will be called after the call has
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001080been recorded, so if :attr:`side_effect` raises an exception the call is still
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001081recorded.
1082
1083The simplest way to make a mock raise an exception when called is to make
1084:attr:`~Mock.side_effect` an exception class or instance:
1085
1086 >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=IndexError)
1087 >>> m(1, 2, 3)
1088 Traceback (most recent call last):
1089 ...
1090 IndexError
1091 >>> m.mock_calls
1092 [call(1, 2, 3)]
1093 >>> m.side_effect = KeyError('Bang!')
1094 >>> m('two', 'three', 'four')
1095 Traceback (most recent call last):
1096 ...
1097 KeyError: 'Bang!'
1098 >>> m.mock_calls
1099 [call(1, 2, 3), call('two', 'three', 'four')]
1100
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001101If :attr:`side_effect` is a function then whatever that function returns is what
1102calls to the mock return. The :attr:`side_effect` function is called with the
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001103same arguments as the mock. This allows you to vary the return value of the
1104call dynamically, based on the input:
1105
1106 >>> def side_effect(value):
1107 ... return value + 1
1108 ...
1109 >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=side_effect)
1110 >>> m(1)
1111 2
1112 >>> m(2)
1113 3
1114 >>> m.mock_calls
1115 [call(1), call(2)]
1116
1117If you want the mock to still return the default return value (a new mock), or
1118any set return value, then there are two ways of doing this. Either return
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001119:attr:`mock.return_value` from inside :attr:`side_effect`, or return :data:`DEFAULT`:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001120
1121 >>> m = MagicMock()
1122 >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
1123 ... return m.return_value
1124 ...
1125 >>> m.side_effect = side_effect
1126 >>> m.return_value = 3
1127 >>> m()
1128 3
1129 >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
1130 ... return DEFAULT
1131 ...
1132 >>> m.side_effect = side_effect
1133 >>> m()
1134 3
1135
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001136To remove a :attr:`side_effect`, and return to the default behaviour, set the
1137:attr:`side_effect` to ``None``:
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001138
1139 >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=6)
1140 >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
1141 ... return 3
1142 ...
1143 >>> m.side_effect = side_effect
1144 >>> m()
1145 3
1146 >>> m.side_effect = None
1147 >>> m()
1148 6
1149
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001150The :attr:`side_effect` can also be any iterable object. Repeated calls to the mock
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001151will return values from the iterable (until the iterable is exhausted and
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001152a :exc:`StopIteration` is raised):
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001153
1154 >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=[1, 2, 3])
1155 >>> m()
1156 1
1157 >>> m()
1158 2
1159 >>> m()
1160 3
1161 >>> m()
1162 Traceback (most recent call last):
1163 ...
1164 StopIteration
1165
Michael Foord2cd48732012-04-21 15:52:11 +01001166If any members of the iterable are exceptions they will be raised instead of
1167returned::
1168
1169 >>> iterable = (33, ValueError, 66)
1170 >>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=iterable)
1171 >>> m()
1172 33
1173 >>> m()
1174 Traceback (most recent call last):
1175 ...
1176 ValueError
1177 >>> m()
1178 66
1179
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001180
1181.. _deleting-attributes:
1182
1183Deleting Attributes
1184~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1185
1186Mock objects create attributes on demand. This allows them to pretend to be
1187objects of any type.
1188
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001189You may want a mock object to return ``False`` to a :func:`hasattr` call, or raise an
1190:exc:`AttributeError` when an attribute is fetched. You can do this by providing
1191an object as a :attr:`spec` for a mock, but that isn't always convenient.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001192
1193You "block" attributes by deleting them. Once deleted, accessing an attribute
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001194will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001195
1196 >>> mock = MagicMock()
1197 >>> hasattr(mock, 'm')
1198 True
1199 >>> del mock.m
1200 >>> hasattr(mock, 'm')
1201 False
1202 >>> del mock.f
1203 >>> mock.f
1204 Traceback (most recent call last):
1205 ...
1206 AttributeError: f
1207
1208
Michael Foordf5752302013-03-18 15:04:03 -07001209Mock names and the name attribute
1210~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1211
1212Since "name" is an argument to the :class:`Mock` constructor, if you want your
1213mock object to have a "name" attribute you can't just pass it in at creation
1214time. There are two alternatives. One option is to use
1215:meth:`~Mock.configure_mock`::
1216
1217 >>> mock = MagicMock()
1218 >>> mock.configure_mock(name='my_name')
1219 >>> mock.name
1220 'my_name'
1221
1222A simpler option is to simply set the "name" attribute after mock creation::
1223
1224 >>> mock = MagicMock()
1225 >>> mock.name = "foo"
1226
1227
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001228Attaching Mocks as Attributes
1229~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1230
1231When you attach a mock as an attribute of another mock (or as the return
1232value) it becomes a "child" of that mock. Calls to the child are recorded in
1233the :attr:`~Mock.method_calls` and :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` attributes of the
1234parent. This is useful for configuring child mocks and then attaching them to
1235the parent, or for attaching mocks to a parent that records all calls to the
1236children and allows you to make assertions about the order of calls between
1237mocks:
1238
1239 >>> parent = MagicMock()
1240 >>> child1 = MagicMock(return_value=None)
1241 >>> child2 = MagicMock(return_value=None)
1242 >>> parent.child1 = child1
1243 >>> parent.child2 = child2
1244 >>> child1(1)
1245 >>> child2(2)
1246 >>> parent.mock_calls
1247 [call.child1(1), call.child2(2)]
1248
1249The exception to this is if the mock has a name. This allows you to prevent
1250the "parenting" if for some reason you don't want it to happen.
1251
1252 >>> mock = MagicMock()
1253 >>> not_a_child = MagicMock(name='not-a-child')
1254 >>> mock.attribute = not_a_child
1255 >>> mock.attribute()
1256 <MagicMock name='not-a-child()' id='...'>
1257 >>> mock.mock_calls
1258 []
1259
1260Mocks created for you by :func:`patch` are automatically given names. To
1261attach mocks that have names to a parent you use the :meth:`~Mock.attach_mock`
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001262method::
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001263
1264 >>> thing1 = object()
1265 >>> thing2 = object()
1266 >>> parent = MagicMock()
1267 >>> with patch('__main__.thing1', return_value=None) as child1:
1268 ... with patch('__main__.thing2', return_value=None) as child2:
1269 ... parent.attach_mock(child1, 'child1')
1270 ... parent.attach_mock(child2, 'child2')
1271 ... child1('one')
1272 ... child2('two')
1273 ...
1274 >>> parent.mock_calls
1275 [call.child1('one'), call.child2('two')]
1276
1277
1278.. [#] The only exceptions are magic methods and attributes (those that have
1279 leading and trailing double underscores). Mock doesn't create these but
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001280 instead raises an :exc:`AttributeError`. This is because the interpreter
Michael Foord944e02d2012-03-25 23:12:55 +01001281 will often implicitly request these methods, and gets *very* confused to
1282 get a new Mock object when it expects a magic method. If you need magic
1283 method support see :ref:`magic methods <magic-methods>`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001284
1285
1286The patchers
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001287------------
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001288
1289The patch decorators are used for patching objects only within the scope of
1290the function they decorate. They automatically handle the unpatching for you,
1291even if exceptions are raised. All of these functions can also be used in with
1292statements or as class decorators.
1293
1294
1295patch
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001296~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001297
1298.. note::
1299
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001300 :func:`patch` is straightforward to use. The key is to do the patching in the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001301 right namespace. See the section `where to patch`_.
1302
1303.. function:: patch(target, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)
1304
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001305 :func:`patch` acts as a function decorator, class decorator or a context
1306 manager. Inside the body of the function or with statement, the *target*
1307 is patched with a *new* object. When the function/with statement exits
Michael Foord54b3db82012-03-28 15:08:08 +01001308 the patch is undone.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001309
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001310 If *new* is omitted, then the target is replaced with a
1311 :class:`MagicMock`. If :func:`patch` is used as a decorator and *new* is
Michael Foord54b3db82012-03-28 15:08:08 +01001312 omitted, the created mock is passed in as an extra argument to the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001313 decorated function. If :func:`patch` is used as a context manager the created
Michael Foord54b3db82012-03-28 15:08:08 +01001314 mock is returned by the context manager.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001315
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001316 *target* should be a string in the form ``'package.module.ClassName'``. The
1317 *target* is imported and the specified object replaced with the *new*
1318 object, so the *target* must be importable from the environment you are
1319 calling :func:`patch` from. The target is imported when the decorated function
Michael Foord54b3db82012-03-28 15:08:08 +01001320 is executed, not at decoration time.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001321
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001322 The *spec* and *spec_set* keyword arguments are passed to the :class:`MagicMock`
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001323 if patch is creating one for you.
1324
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001325 In addition you can pass ``spec=True`` or ``spec_set=True``, which causes
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001326 patch to pass in the object being mocked as the spec/spec_set object.
1327
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001328 *new_callable* allows you to specify a different class, or callable object,
1329 that will be called to create the *new* object. By default :class:`MagicMock` is
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001330 used.
1331
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001332 A more powerful form of *spec* is *autospec*. If you set ``autospec=True``
Georg Brandl8ed75cd2014-10-31 10:25:48 +01001333 then the mock will be created with a spec from the object being replaced.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001334 All attributes of the mock will also have the spec of the corresponding
1335 attribute of the object being replaced. Methods and functions being mocked
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001336 will have their arguments checked and will raise a :exc:`TypeError` if they are
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001337 called with the wrong signature. For mocks
1338 replacing a class, their return value (the 'instance') will have the same
1339 spec as the class. See the :func:`create_autospec` function and
1340 :ref:`auto-speccing`.
1341
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001342 Instead of ``autospec=True`` you can pass ``autospec=some_object`` to use an
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001343 arbitrary object as the spec instead of the one being replaced.
1344
Pablo Galindod6acf172019-01-09 21:43:24 +00001345 By default :func:`patch` will fail to replace attributes that don't exist.
1346 If you pass in ``create=True``, and the attribute doesn't exist, patch will
1347 create the attribute for you when the patched function is called, and delete
1348 it again after the patched function has exited. This is useful for writing
1349 tests against attributes that your production code creates at runtime. It is
1350 off by default because it can be dangerous. With it switched on you can
1351 write passing tests against APIs that don't actually exist!
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001352
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04001353 .. note::
1354
1355 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
1356 If you are patching builtins in a module then you don't
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001357 need to pass ``create=True``, it will be added by default.
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04001358
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001359 Patch can be used as a :class:`TestCase` class decorator. It works by
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001360 decorating each test method in the class. This reduces the boilerplate
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001361 code when your test methods share a common patchings set. :func:`patch` finds
1362 tests by looking for method names that start with ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``.
1363 By default this is ``'test'``, which matches the way :mod:`unittest` finds tests.
1364 You can specify an alternative prefix by setting ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001365
1366 Patch can be used as a context manager, with the with statement. Here the
1367 patching applies to the indented block after the with statement. If you
1368 use "as" then the patched object will be bound to the name after the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001369 "as"; very useful if :func:`patch` is creating a mock object for you.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001370
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001371 :func:`patch` takes arbitrary keyword arguments. These will be passed to
1372 the :class:`Mock` (or *new_callable*) on construction.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001373
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001374 ``patch.dict(...)``, ``patch.multiple(...)`` and ``patch.object(...)`` are
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001375 available for alternate use-cases.
1376
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001377:func:`patch` as function decorator, creating the mock for you and passing it into
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001378the decorated function::
Michael Foord90155362012-03-28 15:32:08 +01001379
1380 >>> @patch('__main__.SomeClass')
Michael Foord324b58b2012-03-28 15:49:08 +01001381 ... def function(normal_argument, mock_class):
Michael Foord90155362012-03-28 15:32:08 +01001382 ... print(mock_class is SomeClass)
1383 ...
Michael Foord324b58b2012-03-28 15:49:08 +01001384 >>> function(None)
Michael Foord90155362012-03-28 15:32:08 +01001385 True
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001386
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001387Patching a class replaces the class with a :class:`MagicMock` *instance*. If the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001388class is instantiated in the code under test then it will be the
1389:attr:`~Mock.return_value` of the mock that will be used.
1390
1391If the class is instantiated multiple times you could use
1392:attr:`~Mock.side_effect` to return a new mock each time. Alternatively you
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001393can set the *return_value* to be anything you want.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001394
1395To configure return values on methods of *instances* on the patched class
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001396you must do this on the :attr:`return_value`. For example::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001397
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02001398 >>> class Class:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001399 ... def method(self):
1400 ... pass
1401 ...
1402 >>> with patch('__main__.Class') as MockClass:
1403 ... instance = MockClass.return_value
1404 ... instance.method.return_value = 'foo'
1405 ... assert Class() is instance
1406 ... assert Class().method() == 'foo'
1407 ...
1408
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001409If you use *spec* or *spec_set* and :func:`patch` is replacing a *class*, then the
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001410return value of the created mock will have the same spec. ::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001411
1412 >>> Original = Class
1413 >>> patcher = patch('__main__.Class', spec=True)
1414 >>> MockClass = patcher.start()
1415 >>> instance = MockClass()
1416 >>> assert isinstance(instance, Original)
1417 >>> patcher.stop()
1418
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001419The *new_callable* argument is useful where you want to use an alternative
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001420class to the default :class:`MagicMock` for the created mock. For example, if
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001421you wanted a :class:`NonCallableMock` to be used::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001422
1423 >>> thing = object()
1424 >>> with patch('__main__.thing', new_callable=NonCallableMock) as mock_thing:
1425 ... assert thing is mock_thing
1426 ... thing()
1427 ...
1428 Traceback (most recent call last):
1429 ...
1430 TypeError: 'NonCallableMock' object is not callable
1431
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001432Another use case might be to replace an object with an :class:`io.StringIO` instance::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001433
Serhiy Storchakae79be872013-08-17 00:09:55 +03001434 >>> from io import StringIO
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001435 >>> def foo():
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +03001436 ... print('Something')
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001437 ...
1438 >>> @patch('sys.stdout', new_callable=StringIO)
1439 ... def test(mock_stdout):
1440 ... foo()
1441 ... assert mock_stdout.getvalue() == 'Something\n'
1442 ...
1443 >>> test()
1444
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001445When :func:`patch` is creating a mock for you, it is common that the first thing
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001446you need to do is to configure the mock. Some of that configuration can be done
1447in the call to patch. Any arbitrary keywords you pass into the call will be
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001448used to set attributes on the created mock::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001449
1450 >>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', first='one', second='two')
1451 >>> mock_thing = patcher.start()
1452 >>> mock_thing.first
1453 'one'
1454 >>> mock_thing.second
1455 'two'
1456
1457As well as attributes on the created mock attributes, like the
1458:attr:`~Mock.return_value` and :attr:`~Mock.side_effect`, of child mocks can
1459also be configured. These aren't syntactically valid to pass in directly as
1460keyword arguments, but a dictionary with these as keys can still be expanded
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001461into a :func:`patch` call using ``**``::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001462
1463 >>> config = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
1464 >>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', **config)
1465 >>> mock_thing = patcher.start()
1466 >>> mock_thing.method()
1467 3
1468 >>> mock_thing.other()
1469 Traceback (most recent call last):
1470 ...
1471 KeyError
1472
Pablo Galindod6acf172019-01-09 21:43:24 +00001473By default, attempting to patch a function in a module (or a method or an
1474attribute in a class) that does not exist will fail with :exc:`AttributeError`::
1475
1476 >>> @patch('sys.non_existing_attribute', 42)
1477 ... def test():
1478 ... assert sys.non_existing_attribute == 42
1479 ...
1480 >>> test()
1481 Traceback (most recent call last):
1482 ...
1483 AttributeError: <module 'sys' (built-in)> does not have the attribute 'non_existing'
1484
1485but adding ``create=True`` in the call to :func:`patch` will make the previous example
1486work as expected::
1487
1488 >>> @patch('sys.non_existing_attribute', 42, create=True)
1489 ... def test(mock_stdout):
1490 ... assert sys.non_existing_attribute == 42
1491 ...
1492 >>> test()
1493
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001494
1495patch.object
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001496~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001497
1498.. function:: patch.object(target, attribute, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)
1499
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001500 patch the named member (*attribute*) on an object (*target*) with a mock
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001501 object.
1502
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001503 :func:`patch.object` can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context
1504 manager. Arguments *new*, *spec*, *create*, *spec_set*, *autospec* and
1505 *new_callable* have the same meaning as for :func:`patch`. Like :func:`patch`,
1506 :func:`patch.object` takes arbitrary keyword arguments for configuring the mock
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001507 object it creates.
1508
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001509 When used as a class decorator :func:`patch.object` honours ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001510 for choosing which methods to wrap.
1511
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001512You can either call :func:`patch.object` with three arguments or two arguments. The
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001513three argument form takes the object to be patched, the attribute name and the
1514object to replace the attribute with.
1515
1516When calling with the two argument form you omit the replacement object, and a
1517mock is created for you and passed in as an extra argument to the decorated
1518function:
1519
1520 >>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method')
1521 ... def test(mock_method):
1522 ... SomeClass.class_method(3)
1523 ... mock_method.assert_called_with(3)
1524 ...
1525 >>> test()
1526
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001527*spec*, *create* and the other arguments to :func:`patch.object` have the same
1528meaning as they do for :func:`patch`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001529
1530
1531patch.dict
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001532~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001533
1534.. function:: patch.dict(in_dict, values=(), clear=False, **kwargs)
1535
1536 Patch a dictionary, or dictionary like object, and restore the dictionary
1537 to its original state after the test.
1538
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001539 *in_dict* can be a dictionary or a mapping like container. If it is a
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001540 mapping then it must at least support getting, setting and deleting items
1541 plus iterating over keys.
1542
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001543 *in_dict* can also be a string specifying the name of the dictionary, which
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001544 will then be fetched by importing it.
1545
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001546 *values* can be a dictionary of values to set in the dictionary. *values*
1547 can also be an iterable of ``(key, value)`` pairs.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001548
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001549 If *clear* is true then the dictionary will be cleared before the new
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001550 values are set.
1551
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001552 :func:`patch.dict` can also be called with arbitrary keyword arguments to set
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001553 values in the dictionary.
1554
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001555 :func:`patch.dict` can be used as a context manager, decorator or class
1556 decorator. When used as a class decorator :func:`patch.dict` honours
1557 ``patch.TEST_PREFIX`` for choosing which methods to wrap.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001558
Mario Corchero04530812019-05-28 13:53:31 +01001559 .. versionchanged:: 3.8
1560
1561 :func:`patch.dict` now returns the patched dictionary when used as a context
1562 manager.
1563
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001564:func:`patch.dict` can be used to add members to a dictionary, or simply let a test
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001565change a dictionary, and ensure the dictionary is restored when the test
1566ends.
1567
1568 >>> foo = {}
Mario Corchero04530812019-05-28 13:53:31 +01001569 >>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}) as patched_foo:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001570 ... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
Mario Corchero04530812019-05-28 13:53:31 +01001571 ... assert patched_foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
1572 ... # You can add, update or delete keys of foo (or patched_foo, it's the same dict)
1573 ... patched_foo['spam'] = 'eggs'
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001574 ...
1575 >>> assert foo == {}
Mario Corchero04530812019-05-28 13:53:31 +01001576 >>> assert patched_foo == {}
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001577
1578 >>> import os
1579 >>> with patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'}):
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +03001580 ... print(os.environ['newkey'])
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001581 ...
1582 newvalue
1583 >>> assert 'newkey' not in os.environ
1584
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001585Keywords can be used in the :func:`patch.dict` call to set values in the dictionary:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001586
1587 >>> mymodule = MagicMock()
1588 >>> mymodule.function.return_value = 'fish'
1589 >>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', mymodule=mymodule):
1590 ... import mymodule
1591 ... mymodule.function('some', 'args')
1592 ...
1593 'fish'
1594
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001595:func:`patch.dict` can be used with dictionary like objects that aren't actually
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001596dictionaries. At the very minimum they must support item getting, setting,
1597deleting and either iteration or membership test. This corresponds to the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001598magic methods :meth:`__getitem__`, :meth:`__setitem__`, :meth:`__delitem__` and either
1599:meth:`__iter__` or :meth:`__contains__`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001600
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02001601 >>> class Container:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001602 ... def __init__(self):
1603 ... self.values = {}
1604 ... def __getitem__(self, name):
1605 ... return self.values[name]
1606 ... def __setitem__(self, name, value):
1607 ... self.values[name] = value
1608 ... def __delitem__(self, name):
1609 ... del self.values[name]
1610 ... def __iter__(self):
1611 ... return iter(self.values)
1612 ...
1613 >>> thing = Container()
1614 >>> thing['one'] = 1
1615 >>> with patch.dict(thing, one=2, two=3):
1616 ... assert thing['one'] == 2
1617 ... assert thing['two'] == 3
1618 ...
1619 >>> assert thing['one'] == 1
1620 >>> assert list(thing) == ['one']
1621
1622
1623patch.multiple
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001624~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001625
1626.. function:: patch.multiple(target, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)
1627
1628 Perform multiple patches in a single call. It takes the object to be
1629 patched (either as an object or a string to fetch the object by importing)
1630 and keyword arguments for the patches::
1631
1632 with patch.multiple(settings, FIRST_PATCH='one', SECOND_PATCH='two'):
1633 ...
1634
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001635 Use :data:`DEFAULT` as the value if you want :func:`patch.multiple` to create
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001636 mocks for you. In this case the created mocks are passed into a decorated
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001637 function by keyword, and a dictionary is returned when :func:`patch.multiple` is
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001638 used as a context manager.
1639
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001640 :func:`patch.multiple` can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context
1641 manager. The arguments *spec*, *spec_set*, *create*, *autospec* and
1642 *new_callable* have the same meaning as for :func:`patch`. These arguments will
1643 be applied to *all* patches done by :func:`patch.multiple`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001644
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001645 When used as a class decorator :func:`patch.multiple` honours ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001646 for choosing which methods to wrap.
1647
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001648If you want :func:`patch.multiple` to create mocks for you, then you can use
1649:data:`DEFAULT` as the value. If you use :func:`patch.multiple` as a decorator
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001650then the created mocks are passed into the decorated function by keyword. ::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001651
1652 >>> thing = object()
1653 >>> other = object()
1654
1655 >>> @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT)
1656 ... def test_function(thing, other):
1657 ... assert isinstance(thing, MagicMock)
1658 ... assert isinstance(other, MagicMock)
1659 ...
1660 >>> test_function()
1661
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001662:func:`patch.multiple` can be nested with other ``patch`` decorators, but put arguments
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001663passed by keyword *after* any of the standard arguments created by :func:`patch`::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001664
1665 >>> @patch('sys.exit')
1666 ... @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT)
1667 ... def test_function(mock_exit, other, thing):
1668 ... assert 'other' in repr(other)
1669 ... assert 'thing' in repr(thing)
1670 ... assert 'exit' in repr(mock_exit)
1671 ...
1672 >>> test_function()
1673
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001674If :func:`patch.multiple` is used as a context manager, the value returned by the
Joan Massichdc69f692019-03-18 00:34:22 +01001675context manager is a dictionary where created mocks are keyed by name::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001676
1677 >>> with patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT) as values:
1678 ... assert 'other' in repr(values['other'])
1679 ... assert 'thing' in repr(values['thing'])
1680 ... assert values['thing'] is thing
1681 ... assert values['other'] is other
1682 ...
1683
1684
1685.. _start-and-stop:
1686
1687patch methods: start and stop
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001688~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001689
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001690All the patchers have :meth:`start` and :meth:`stop` methods. These make it simpler to do
1691patching in ``setUp`` methods or where you want to do multiple patches without
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001692nesting decorators or with statements.
1693
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001694To use them call :func:`patch`, :func:`patch.object` or :func:`patch.dict` as
1695normal and keep a reference to the returned ``patcher`` object. You can then
1696call :meth:`start` to put the patch in place and :meth:`stop` to undo it.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001697
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001698If you are using :func:`patch` to create a mock for you then it will be returned by
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001699the call to ``patcher.start``. ::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001700
1701 >>> patcher = patch('package.module.ClassName')
1702 >>> from package import module
1703 >>> original = module.ClassName
1704 >>> new_mock = patcher.start()
1705 >>> assert module.ClassName is not original
1706 >>> assert module.ClassName is new_mock
1707 >>> patcher.stop()
1708 >>> assert module.ClassName is original
1709 >>> assert module.ClassName is not new_mock
1710
1711
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001712A typical use case for this might be for doing multiple patches in the ``setUp``
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001713method of a :class:`TestCase`::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001714
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001715 >>> class MyTest(unittest.TestCase):
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001716 ... def setUp(self):
1717 ... self.patcher1 = patch('package.module.Class1')
1718 ... self.patcher2 = patch('package.module.Class2')
1719 ... self.MockClass1 = self.patcher1.start()
1720 ... self.MockClass2 = self.patcher2.start()
1721 ...
1722 ... def tearDown(self):
1723 ... self.patcher1.stop()
1724 ... self.patcher2.stop()
1725 ...
1726 ... def test_something(self):
1727 ... assert package.module.Class1 is self.MockClass1
1728 ... assert package.module.Class2 is self.MockClass2
1729 ...
1730 >>> MyTest('test_something').run()
1731
1732.. caution::
1733
1734 If you use this technique you must ensure that the patching is "undone" by
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001735 calling ``stop``. This can be fiddlier than you might think, because if an
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001736 exception is raised in the ``setUp`` then ``tearDown`` is not called.
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001737 :meth:`unittest.TestCase.addCleanup` makes this easier::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001738
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001739 >>> class MyTest(unittest.TestCase):
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001740 ... def setUp(self):
1741 ... patcher = patch('package.module.Class')
1742 ... self.MockClass = patcher.start()
1743 ... self.addCleanup(patcher.stop)
1744 ...
1745 ... def test_something(self):
1746 ... assert package.module.Class is self.MockClass
1747 ...
1748
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001749 As an added bonus you no longer need to keep a reference to the ``patcher``
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001750 object.
1751
Michael Foordf7c41582012-06-10 20:36:32 +01001752It is also possible to stop all patches which have been started by using
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001753:func:`patch.stopall`.
Michael Foordf7c41582012-06-10 20:36:32 +01001754
1755.. function:: patch.stopall
1756
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001757 Stop all active patches. Only stops patches started with ``start``.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001758
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001759
1760.. _patch-builtins:
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04001761
1762patch builtins
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001763~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04001764You can patch any builtins within a module. The following example patches
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001765builtin :func:`ord`::
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04001766
1767 >>> @patch('__main__.ord')
1768 ... def test(mock_ord):
1769 ... mock_ord.return_value = 101
1770 ... print(ord('c'))
1771 ...
1772 >>> test()
1773 101
1774
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001775
1776TEST_PREFIX
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001777~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001778
1779All of the patchers can be used as class decorators. When used in this way
1780they wrap every test method on the class. The patchers recognise methods that
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001781start with ``'test'`` as being test methods. This is the same way that the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001782:class:`unittest.TestLoader` finds test methods by default.
1783
1784It is possible that you want to use a different prefix for your tests. You can
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02001785inform the patchers of the different prefix by setting ``patch.TEST_PREFIX``::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001786
1787 >>> patch.TEST_PREFIX = 'foo'
1788 >>> value = 3
1789 >>>
1790 >>> @patch('__main__.value', 'not three')
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02001791 ... class Thing:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001792 ... def foo_one(self):
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +03001793 ... print(value)
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001794 ... def foo_two(self):
Berker Peksag920f6db2015-09-10 21:41:15 +03001795 ... print(value)
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001796 ...
1797 >>>
1798 >>> Thing().foo_one()
1799 not three
1800 >>> Thing().foo_two()
1801 not three
1802 >>> value
1803 3
1804
1805
1806Nesting Patch Decorators
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001807~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001808
1809If you want to perform multiple patches then you can simply stack up the
1810decorators.
1811
1812You can stack up multiple patch decorators using this pattern:
1813
1814 >>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method')
1815 ... @patch.object(SomeClass, 'static_method')
1816 ... def test(mock1, mock2):
1817 ... assert SomeClass.static_method is mock1
1818 ... assert SomeClass.class_method is mock2
1819 ... SomeClass.static_method('foo')
1820 ... SomeClass.class_method('bar')
1821 ... return mock1, mock2
1822 ...
1823 >>> mock1, mock2 = test()
1824 >>> mock1.assert_called_once_with('foo')
1825 >>> mock2.assert_called_once_with('bar')
1826
1827
1828Note that the decorators are applied from the bottom upwards. This is the
1829standard way that Python applies decorators. The order of the created mocks
1830passed into your test function matches this order.
1831
1832
1833.. _where-to-patch:
1834
1835Where to patch
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001836~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001837
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001838:func:`patch` works by (temporarily) changing the object that a *name* points to with
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001839another one. There can be many names pointing to any individual object, so
1840for patching to work you must ensure that you patch the name used by the system
1841under test.
1842
1843The basic principle is that you patch where an object is *looked up*, which
1844is not necessarily the same place as where it is defined. A couple of
1845examples will help to clarify this.
1846
1847Imagine we have a project that we want to test with the following structure::
1848
1849 a.py
1850 -> Defines SomeClass
1851
1852 b.py
1853 -> from a import SomeClass
1854 -> some_function instantiates SomeClass
1855
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001856Now we want to test ``some_function`` but we want to mock out ``SomeClass`` using
1857:func:`patch`. The problem is that when we import module b, which we will have to
1858do then it imports ``SomeClass`` from module a. If we use :func:`patch` to mock out
1859``a.SomeClass`` then it will have no effect on our test; module b already has a
1860reference to the *real* ``SomeClass`` and it looks like our patching had no
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001861effect.
1862
Ben Lloyd15033d12017-05-22 12:06:56 +01001863The key is to patch out ``SomeClass`` where it is used (or where it is looked up).
1864In this case ``some_function`` will actually look up ``SomeClass`` in module b,
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001865where we have imported it. The patching should look like::
1866
1867 @patch('b.SomeClass')
1868
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001869However, consider the alternative scenario where instead of ``from a import
1870SomeClass`` module b does ``import a`` and ``some_function`` uses ``a.SomeClass``. Both
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001871of these import forms are common. In this case the class we want to patch is
Benjamin Peterson82f34ad2015-01-13 09:17:24 -05001872being looked up in the module and so we have to patch ``a.SomeClass`` instead::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001873
1874 @patch('a.SomeClass')
1875
1876
1877Patching Descriptors and Proxy Objects
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001878~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001879
1880Both patch_ and patch.object_ correctly patch and restore descriptors: class
1881methods, static methods and properties. You should patch these on the *class*
1882rather than an instance. They also work with *some* objects
Zachary Ware5ea5d2c2014-02-26 09:34:43 -06001883that proxy attribute access, like the `django settings object
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01001884<http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/weblog/arch_d7_2010_12_04.shtml#e1198>`_.
1885
1886
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001887MagicMock and magic method support
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001888----------------------------------
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001889
1890.. _magic-methods:
1891
1892Mocking Magic Methods
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001893~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001894
1895:class:`Mock` supports mocking the Python protocol methods, also known as
1896"magic methods". This allows mock objects to replace containers or other
1897objects that implement Python protocols.
1898
1899Because magic methods are looked up differently from normal methods [#]_, this
1900support has been specially implemented. This means that only specific magic
1901methods are supported. The supported list includes *almost* all of them. If
1902there are any missing that you need please let us know.
1903
1904You mock magic methods by setting the method you are interested in to a function
1905or a mock instance. If you are using a function then it *must* take ``self`` as
1906the first argument [#]_.
1907
1908 >>> def __str__(self):
1909 ... return 'fooble'
1910 ...
1911 >>> mock = Mock()
1912 >>> mock.__str__ = __str__
1913 >>> str(mock)
1914 'fooble'
1915
1916 >>> mock = Mock()
1917 >>> mock.__str__ = Mock()
1918 >>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'fooble'
1919 >>> str(mock)
1920 'fooble'
1921
1922 >>> mock = Mock()
1923 >>> mock.__iter__ = Mock(return_value=iter([]))
1924 >>> list(mock)
1925 []
1926
1927One use case for this is for mocking objects used as context managers in a
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001928:keyword:`with` statement:
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001929
1930 >>> mock = Mock()
1931 >>> mock.__enter__ = Mock(return_value='foo')
1932 >>> mock.__exit__ = Mock(return_value=False)
1933 >>> with mock as m:
1934 ... assert m == 'foo'
1935 ...
1936 >>> mock.__enter__.assert_called_with()
1937 >>> mock.__exit__.assert_called_with(None, None, None)
1938
1939Calls to magic methods do not appear in :attr:`~Mock.method_calls`, but they
1940are recorded in :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls`.
1941
1942.. note::
1943
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001944 If you use the *spec* keyword argument to create a mock then attempting to
1945 set a magic method that isn't in the spec will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001946
1947The full list of supported magic methods is:
1948
1949* ``__hash__``, ``__sizeof__``, ``__repr__`` and ``__str__``
1950* ``__dir__``, ``__format__`` and ``__subclasses__``
John Reese6c4fab02018-05-22 13:01:10 -07001951* ``__round__``, ``__floor__``, ``__trunc__`` and ``__ceil__``
Serhiy Storchakaa60c2fe2015-03-12 21:56:08 +02001952* Comparisons: ``__lt__``, ``__gt__``, ``__le__``, ``__ge__``,
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001953 ``__eq__`` and ``__ne__``
1954* Container methods: ``__getitem__``, ``__setitem__``, ``__delitem__``,
Serhiy Storchakaa60c2fe2015-03-12 21:56:08 +02001955 ``__contains__``, ``__len__``, ``__iter__``, ``__reversed__``
1956 and ``__missing__``
Xtreak0ae022c2019-05-29 12:32:26 +05301957* Context manager: ``__enter__``, ``__exit__``, ``__aenter__`` and ``__aexit__``
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001958* Unary numeric methods: ``__neg__``, ``__pos__`` and ``__invert__``
1959* The numeric methods (including right hand and in-place variants):
Serhiy Storchakac2ccce72015-03-12 22:01:30 +02001960 ``__add__``, ``__sub__``, ``__mul__``, ``__matmul__``, ``__div__``, ``__truediv__``,
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001961 ``__floordiv__``, ``__mod__``, ``__divmod__``, ``__lshift__``,
1962 ``__rshift__``, ``__and__``, ``__xor__``, ``__or__``, and ``__pow__``
Serhiy Storchakaa60c2fe2015-03-12 21:56:08 +02001963* Numeric conversion methods: ``__complex__``, ``__int__``, ``__float__``
1964 and ``__index__``
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001965* Descriptor methods: ``__get__``, ``__set__`` and ``__delete__``
1966* Pickling: ``__reduce__``, ``__reduce_ex__``, ``__getinitargs__``,
1967 ``__getnewargs__``, ``__getstate__`` and ``__setstate__``
Max Bélanger6c83d9f2018-10-25 14:48:58 -07001968* File system path representation: ``__fspath__``
Xtreakff6b2e62019-05-27 18:26:23 +05301969* Asynchronous iteration methods: ``__aiter__`` and ``__anext__``
Max Bélanger6c83d9f2018-10-25 14:48:58 -07001970
1971.. versionchanged:: 3.8
1972 Added support for :func:`os.PathLike.__fspath__`.
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001973
Xtreakff6b2e62019-05-27 18:26:23 +05301974.. versionchanged:: 3.8
1975 Added support for ``__aenter__``, ``__aexit__``, ``__aiter__`` and ``__anext__``.
1976
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001977
1978The following methods exist but are *not* supported as they are either in use
1979by mock, can't be set dynamically, or can cause problems:
1980
1981* ``__getattr__``, ``__setattr__``, ``__init__`` and ``__new__``
1982* ``__prepare__``, ``__instancecheck__``, ``__subclasscheck__``, ``__del__``
1983
1984
1985
1986Magic Mock
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01001987~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001988
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01001989There are two ``MagicMock`` variants: :class:`MagicMock` and :class:`NonCallableMagicMock`.
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01001990
1991
1992.. class:: MagicMock(*args, **kw)
1993
1994 ``MagicMock`` is a subclass of :class:`Mock` with default implementations
1995 of most of the magic methods. You can use ``MagicMock`` without having to
1996 configure the magic methods yourself.
1997
1998 The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for :class:`Mock`.
1999
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002000 If you use the *spec* or *spec_set* arguments then *only* magic methods
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002001 that exist in the spec will be created.
2002
2003
2004.. class:: NonCallableMagicMock(*args, **kw)
2005
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002006 A non-callable version of :class:`MagicMock`.
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002007
2008 The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002009 :class:`MagicMock`, with the exception of *return_value* and
2010 *side_effect* which have no meaning on a non-callable mock.
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002011
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002012The magic methods are setup with :class:`MagicMock` objects, so you can configure them
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002013and use them in the usual way:
2014
2015 >>> mock = MagicMock()
2016 >>> mock[3] = 'fish'
2017 >>> mock.__setitem__.assert_called_with(3, 'fish')
2018 >>> mock.__getitem__.return_value = 'result'
2019 >>> mock[2]
2020 'result'
2021
2022By default many of the protocol methods are required to return objects of a
2023specific type. These methods are preconfigured with a default return value, so
2024that they can be used without you having to do anything if you aren't interested
2025in the return value. You can still *set* the return value manually if you want
2026to change the default.
2027
2028Methods and their defaults:
2029
2030* ``__lt__``: NotImplemented
2031* ``__gt__``: NotImplemented
2032* ``__le__``: NotImplemented
2033* ``__ge__``: NotImplemented
Serhiy Storchakaf47036c2013-12-24 11:04:36 +02002034* ``__int__``: 1
2035* ``__contains__``: False
Berker Peksag8fafc742016-04-11 12:23:04 +03002036* ``__len__``: 0
Serhiy Storchakaf47036c2013-12-24 11:04:36 +02002037* ``__iter__``: iter([])
2038* ``__exit__``: False
Xtreak0ae022c2019-05-29 12:32:26 +05302039* ``__aexit__``: False
Serhiy Storchakaf47036c2013-12-24 11:04:36 +02002040* ``__complex__``: 1j
2041* ``__float__``: 1.0
2042* ``__bool__``: True
2043* ``__index__``: 1
2044* ``__hash__``: default hash for the mock
2045* ``__str__``: default str for the mock
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002046* ``__sizeof__``: default sizeof for the mock
2047
2048For example:
2049
2050 >>> mock = MagicMock()
2051 >>> int(mock)
2052 1
2053 >>> len(mock)
2054 0
2055 >>> list(mock)
2056 []
2057 >>> object() in mock
2058 False
2059
Berker Peksag283f1aa2015-01-07 21:15:02 +02002060The two equality methods, :meth:`__eq__` and :meth:`__ne__`, are special.
2061They do the default equality comparison on identity, using the
2062:attr:`~Mock.side_effect` attribute, unless you change their return value to
2063return something else::
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002064
2065 >>> MagicMock() == 3
2066 False
2067 >>> MagicMock() != 3
2068 True
2069 >>> mock = MagicMock()
2070 >>> mock.__eq__.return_value = True
2071 >>> mock == 3
2072 True
2073
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002074The return value of :meth:`MagicMock.__iter__` can be any iterable object and isn't
Michael Foord2309ed82012-03-28 15:38:36 +01002075required to be an iterator:
2076
2077 >>> mock = MagicMock()
2078 >>> mock.__iter__.return_value = ['a', 'b', 'c']
2079 >>> list(mock)
2080 ['a', 'b', 'c']
2081 >>> list(mock)
2082 ['a', 'b', 'c']
2083
2084If the return value *is* an iterator, then iterating over it once will consume
2085it and subsequent iterations will result in an empty list:
2086
2087 >>> mock.__iter__.return_value = iter(['a', 'b', 'c'])
2088 >>> list(mock)
2089 ['a', 'b', 'c']
2090 >>> list(mock)
2091 []
2092
2093``MagicMock`` has all of the supported magic methods configured except for some
2094of the obscure and obsolete ones. You can still set these up if you want.
2095
2096Magic methods that are supported but not setup by default in ``MagicMock`` are:
2097
2098* ``__subclasses__``
2099* ``__dir__``
2100* ``__format__``
2101* ``__get__``, ``__set__`` and ``__delete__``
2102* ``__reversed__`` and ``__missing__``
2103* ``__reduce__``, ``__reduce_ex__``, ``__getinitargs__``, ``__getnewargs__``,
2104 ``__getstate__`` and ``__setstate__``
2105* ``__getformat__`` and ``__setformat__``
2106
2107
2108
2109.. [#] Magic methods *should* be looked up on the class rather than the
2110 instance. Different versions of Python are inconsistent about applying this
2111 rule. The supported protocol methods should work with all supported versions
2112 of Python.
2113.. [#] The function is basically hooked up to the class, but each ``Mock``
2114 instance is kept isolated from the others.
2115
2116
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002117Helpers
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002118-------
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002119
2120sentinel
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002121~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002122
2123.. data:: sentinel
2124
Andrés Delfinof85af032018-07-08 21:28:51 -03002125 The ``sentinel`` object provides a convenient way of providing unique
2126 objects for your tests.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002127
Andrés Delfinof85af032018-07-08 21:28:51 -03002128 Attributes are created on demand when you access them by name. Accessing
2129 the same attribute will always return the same object. The objects
2130 returned have a sensible repr so that test failure messages are readable.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002131
Serhiy Storchakad9c956f2017-01-11 20:13:03 +02002132 .. versionchanged:: 3.7
2133 The ``sentinel`` attributes now preserve their identity when they are
2134 :mod:`copied <copy>` or :mod:`pickled <pickle>`.
2135
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002136Sometimes when testing you need to test that a specific object is passed as an
2137argument to another method, or returned. It can be common to create named
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002138sentinel objects to test this. :data:`sentinel` provides a convenient way of
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002139creating and testing the identity of objects like this.
2140
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002141In this example we monkey patch ``method`` to return ``sentinel.some_object``:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002142
2143 >>> real = ProductionClass()
2144 >>> real.method = Mock(name="method")
2145 >>> real.method.return_value = sentinel.some_object
2146 >>> result = real.method()
2147 >>> assert result is sentinel.some_object
2148 >>> sentinel.some_object
2149 sentinel.some_object
2150
2151
2152DEFAULT
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002153~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002154
2155
2156.. data:: DEFAULT
2157
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002158 The :data:`DEFAULT` object is a pre-created sentinel (actually
2159 ``sentinel.DEFAULT``). It can be used by :attr:`~Mock.side_effect`
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002160 functions to indicate that the normal return value should be used.
2161
2162
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002163call
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002164~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002165
2166.. function:: call(*args, **kwargs)
2167
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002168 :func:`call` is a helper object for making simpler assertions, for comparing with
Georg Brandl24891672012-04-01 13:48:26 +02002169 :attr:`~Mock.call_args`, :attr:`~Mock.call_args_list`,
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002170 :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` and :attr:`~Mock.method_calls`. :func:`call` can also be
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002171 used with :meth:`~Mock.assert_has_calls`.
2172
2173 >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None)
2174 >>> m(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar')
2175 >>> m()
2176 >>> m.call_args_list == [call(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar'), call()]
2177 True
2178
2179.. method:: call.call_list()
2180
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002181 For a call object that represents multiple calls, :meth:`call_list`
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002182 returns a list of all the intermediate calls as well as the
2183 final call.
2184
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002185``call_list`` is particularly useful for making assertions on "chained calls". A
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002186chained call is multiple calls on a single line of code. This results in
2187multiple entries in :attr:`~Mock.mock_calls` on a mock. Manually constructing
2188the sequence of calls can be tedious.
2189
2190:meth:`~call.call_list` can construct the sequence of calls from the same
2191chained call:
2192
2193 >>> m = MagicMock()
2194 >>> m(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0)
2195 <MagicMock name='mock().method().other()()' id='...'>
2196 >>> kall = call(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0)
2197 >>> kall.call_list()
2198 [call(1),
2199 call().method(arg='foo'),
2200 call().method().other('bar'),
2201 call().method().other()(2.0)]
2202 >>> m.mock_calls == kall.call_list()
2203 True
2204
2205.. _calls-as-tuples:
2206
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002207A ``call`` object is either a tuple of (positional args, keyword args) or
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002208(name, positional args, keyword args) depending on how it was constructed. When
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002209you construct them yourself this isn't particularly interesting, but the ``call``
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002210objects that are in the :attr:`Mock.call_args`, :attr:`Mock.call_args_list` and
2211:attr:`Mock.mock_calls` attributes can be introspected to get at the individual
2212arguments they contain.
2213
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002214The ``call`` objects in :attr:`Mock.call_args` and :attr:`Mock.call_args_list`
2215are two-tuples of (positional args, keyword args) whereas the ``call`` objects
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002216in :attr:`Mock.mock_calls`, along with ones you construct yourself, are
2217three-tuples of (name, positional args, keyword args).
2218
2219You can use their "tupleness" to pull out the individual arguments for more
2220complex introspection and assertions. The positional arguments are a tuple
2221(an empty tuple if there are no positional arguments) and the keyword
2222arguments are a dictionary:
2223
2224 >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None)
2225 >>> m(1, 2, 3, arg='one', arg2='two')
2226 >>> kall = m.call_args
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +05302227 >>> kall.args
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002228 (1, 2, 3)
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +05302229 >>> kall.kwargs
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002230 {'arg': 'one', 'arg2': 'two'}
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +05302231 >>> kall.args is kall[0]
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002232 True
Kumar Akshayb0df45e2019-03-22 13:40:40 +05302233 >>> kall.kwargs is kall[1]
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002234 True
2235
2236 >>> m = MagicMock()
2237 >>> m.foo(4, 5, 6, arg='two', arg2='three')
2238 <MagicMock name='mock.foo()' id='...'>
2239 >>> kall = m.mock_calls[0]
2240 >>> name, args, kwargs = kall
2241 >>> name
2242 'foo'
2243 >>> args
2244 (4, 5, 6)
2245 >>> kwargs
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002246 {'arg': 'two', 'arg2': 'three'}
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002247 >>> name is m.mock_calls[0][0]
2248 True
2249
2250
2251create_autospec
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002252~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002253
2254.. function:: create_autospec(spec, spec_set=False, instance=False, **kwargs)
2255
2256 Create a mock object using another object as a spec. Attributes on the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002257 mock will use the corresponding attribute on the *spec* object as their
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002258 spec.
2259
2260 Functions or methods being mocked will have their arguments checked to
2261 ensure that they are called with the correct signature.
2262
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002263 If *spec_set* is ``True`` then attempting to set attributes that don't exist
2264 on the spec object will raise an :exc:`AttributeError`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002265
2266 If a class is used as a spec then the return value of the mock (the
2267 instance of the class) will have the same spec. You can use a class as the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002268 spec for an instance object by passing ``instance=True``. The returned mock
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002269 will only be callable if instances of the mock are callable.
2270
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002271 :func:`create_autospec` also takes arbitrary keyword arguments that are passed to
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002272 the constructor of the created mock.
2273
2274See :ref:`auto-speccing` for examples of how to use auto-speccing with
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002275:func:`create_autospec` and the *autospec* argument to :func:`patch`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002276
2277
2278ANY
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002279~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002280
2281.. data:: ANY
2282
2283Sometimes you may need to make assertions about *some* of the arguments in a
2284call to mock, but either not care about some of the arguments or want to pull
2285them individually out of :attr:`~Mock.call_args` and make more complex
2286assertions on them.
2287
2288To ignore certain arguments you can pass in objects that compare equal to
2289*everything*. Calls to :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` and
2290:meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with` will then succeed no matter what was
2291passed in.
2292
2293 >>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
2294 >>> mock('foo', bar=object())
2295 >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar=ANY)
2296
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002297:data:`ANY` can also be used in comparisons with call lists like
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002298:attr:`~Mock.mock_calls`:
2299
2300 >>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None)
2301 >>> m(1)
2302 >>> m(1, 2)
2303 >>> m(object())
2304 >>> m.mock_calls == [call(1), call(1, 2), ANY]
2305 True
2306
2307
2308
2309FILTER_DIR
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002310~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002311
2312.. data:: FILTER_DIR
2313
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002314:data:`FILTER_DIR` is a module level variable that controls the way mock objects
2315respond to :func:`dir` (only for Python 2.6 or more recent). The default is ``True``,
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002316which uses the filtering described below, to only show useful members. If you
2317dislike this filtering, or need to switch it off for diagnostic purposes, then
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002318set ``mock.FILTER_DIR = False``.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002319
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002320With filtering on, ``dir(some_mock)`` shows only useful attributes and will
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002321include any dynamically created attributes that wouldn't normally be shown.
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002322If the mock was created with a *spec* (or *autospec* of course) then all the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002323attributes from the original are shown, even if they haven't been accessed
2324yet:
2325
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002326.. doctest::
2327 :options: +ELLIPSIS,+NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
2328
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002329 >>> dir(Mock())
2330 ['assert_any_call',
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002331 'assert_called',
2332 'assert_called_once',
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002333 'assert_called_once_with',
2334 'assert_called_with',
2335 'assert_has_calls',
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002336 'assert_not_called',
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002337 'attach_mock',
2338 ...
2339 >>> from urllib import request
2340 >>> dir(Mock(spec=request))
2341 ['AbstractBasicAuthHandler',
2342 'AbstractDigestAuthHandler',
2343 'AbstractHTTPHandler',
2344 'BaseHandler',
2345 ...
2346
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002347Many of the not-very-useful (private to :class:`Mock` rather than the thing being
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002348mocked) underscore and double underscore prefixed attributes have been
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002349filtered from the result of calling :func:`dir` on a :class:`Mock`. If you dislike this
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002350behaviour you can switch it off by setting the module level switch
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002351:data:`FILTER_DIR`:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002352
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002353.. doctest::
2354 :options: +ELLIPSIS,+NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE
2355
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002356 >>> from unittest import mock
2357 >>> mock.FILTER_DIR = False
2358 >>> dir(mock.Mock())
2359 ['_NonCallableMock__get_return_value',
2360 '_NonCallableMock__get_side_effect',
2361 '_NonCallableMock__return_value_doc',
2362 '_NonCallableMock__set_return_value',
2363 '_NonCallableMock__set_side_effect',
2364 '__call__',
2365 '__class__',
2366 ...
2367
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002368Alternatively you can just use ``vars(my_mock)`` (instance members) and
2369``dir(type(my_mock))`` (type members) to bypass the filtering irrespective of
2370:data:`mock.FILTER_DIR`.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002371
2372
2373mock_open
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002374~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002375
2376.. function:: mock_open(mock=None, read_data=None)
2377
Andrés Delfinof85af032018-07-08 21:28:51 -03002378 A helper function to create a mock to replace the use of :func:`open`. It works
2379 for :func:`open` called directly or used as a context manager.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002380
Andrés Delfinof85af032018-07-08 21:28:51 -03002381 The *mock* argument is the mock object to configure. If ``None`` (the
2382 default) then a :class:`MagicMock` will be created for you, with the API limited
2383 to methods or attributes available on standard file handles.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002384
Andrés Delfinof85af032018-07-08 21:28:51 -03002385 *read_data* is a string for the :meth:`~io.IOBase.read`,
2386 :meth:`~io.IOBase.readline`, and :meth:`~io.IOBase.readlines` methods
2387 of the file handle to return. Calls to those methods will take data from
2388 *read_data* until it is depleted. The mock of these methods is pretty
2389 simplistic: every time the *mock* is called, the *read_data* is rewound to
2390 the start. If you need more control over the data that you are feeding to
2391 the tested code you will need to customize this mock for yourself. When that
2392 is insufficient, one of the in-memory filesystem packages on `PyPI
2393 <https://pypi.org>`_ can offer a realistic filesystem for testing.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002394
Robert Collinsf79dfe32015-07-24 04:09:59 +12002395 .. versionchanged:: 3.4
2396 Added :meth:`~io.IOBase.readline` and :meth:`~io.IOBase.readlines` support.
2397 The mock of :meth:`~io.IOBase.read` changed to consume *read_data* rather
2398 than returning it on each call.
2399
Robert Collins70398392015-07-24 04:10:27 +12002400 .. versionchanged:: 3.5
Robert Collinsf79dfe32015-07-24 04:09:59 +12002401 *read_data* is now reset on each call to the *mock*.
2402
Tony Flury20870232018-09-12 23:21:16 +01002403 .. versionchanged:: 3.8
2404 Added :meth:`__iter__` to implementation so that iteration (such as in for
2405 loops) correctly consumes *read_data*.
2406
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002407Using :func:`open` as a context manager is a great way to ensure your file handles
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002408are closed properly and is becoming common::
2409
2410 with open('/some/path', 'w') as f:
2411 f.write('something')
2412
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002413The issue is that even if you mock out the call to :func:`open` it is the
2414*returned object* that is used as a context manager (and has :meth:`__enter__` and
2415:meth:`__exit__` called).
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002416
2417Mocking context managers with a :class:`MagicMock` is common enough and fiddly
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002418enough that a helper function is useful. ::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002419
2420 >>> m = mock_open()
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04002421 >>> with patch('__main__.open', m):
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002422 ... with open('foo', 'w') as h:
2423 ... h.write('some stuff')
2424 ...
2425 >>> m.mock_calls
2426 [call('foo', 'w'),
2427 call().__enter__(),
2428 call().write('some stuff'),
2429 call().__exit__(None, None, None)]
2430 >>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo', 'w')
2431 >>> handle = m()
2432 >>> handle.write.assert_called_once_with('some stuff')
2433
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002434And for reading files::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002435
Michael Foordfddcfa22014-04-14 16:25:20 -04002436 >>> with patch('__main__.open', mock_open(read_data='bibble')) as m:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002437 ... with open('foo') as h:
2438 ... result = h.read()
2439 ...
2440 >>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo')
2441 >>> assert result == 'bibble'
2442
2443
2444.. _auto-speccing:
2445
2446Autospeccing
Georg Brandlfb134382013-02-03 11:47:49 +01002447~~~~~~~~~~~~
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002448
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002449Autospeccing is based on the existing :attr:`spec` feature of mock. It limits the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002450api of mocks to the api of an original object (the spec), but it is recursive
2451(implemented lazily) so that attributes of mocks only have the same api as
2452the attributes of the spec. In addition mocked functions / methods have the
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002453same call signature as the original so they raise a :exc:`TypeError` if they are
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002454called incorrectly.
2455
2456Before I explain how auto-speccing works, here's why it is needed.
2457
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002458:class:`Mock` is a very powerful and flexible object, but it suffers from two flaws
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002459when used to mock out objects from a system under test. One of these flaws is
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002460specific to the :class:`Mock` api and the other is a more general problem with using
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002461mock objects.
2462
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002463First the problem specific to :class:`Mock`. :class:`Mock` has two assert methods that are
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002464extremely handy: :meth:`~Mock.assert_called_with` and
2465:meth:`~Mock.assert_called_once_with`.
2466
2467 >>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None)
2468 >>> mock(1, 2, 3)
2469 >>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
2470 >>> mock(1, 2, 3)
2471 >>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
2472 Traceback (most recent call last):
2473 ...
Michael Foord28d591c2012-09-28 16:15:22 +01002474 AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002475
2476Because mocks auto-create attributes on demand, and allow you to call them
2477with arbitrary arguments, if you misspell one of these assert methods then
2478your assertion is gone:
2479
2480.. code-block:: pycon
2481
2482 >>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None)
2483 >>> mock(1, 2, 3)
2484 >>> mock.assret_called_once_with(4, 5, 6)
2485
2486Your tests can pass silently and incorrectly because of the typo.
2487
2488The second issue is more general to mocking. If you refactor some of your
2489code, rename members and so on, any tests for code that is still using the
2490*old api* but uses mocks instead of the real objects will still pass. This
2491means your tests can all pass even though your code is broken.
2492
2493Note that this is another reason why you need integration tests as well as
2494unit tests. Testing everything in isolation is all fine and dandy, but if you
2495don't test how your units are "wired together" there is still lots of room
2496for bugs that tests might have caught.
2497
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002498:mod:`mock` already provides a feature to help with this, called speccing. If you
2499use a class or instance as the :attr:`spec` for a mock then you can only access
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002500attributes on the mock that exist on the real class:
2501
2502 >>> from urllib import request
2503 >>> mock = Mock(spec=request.Request)
2504 >>> mock.assret_called_with
2505 Traceback (most recent call last):
2506 ...
2507 AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with'
2508
2509The spec only applies to the mock itself, so we still have the same issue
2510with any methods on the mock:
2511
2512.. code-block:: pycon
2513
2514 >>> mock.has_data()
2515 <mock.Mock object at 0x...>
2516 >>> mock.has_data.assret_called_with()
2517
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002518Auto-speccing solves this problem. You can either pass ``autospec=True`` to
2519:func:`patch` / :func:`patch.object` or use the :func:`create_autospec` function to create a
2520mock with a spec. If you use the ``autospec=True`` argument to :func:`patch` then the
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002521object that is being replaced will be used as the spec object. Because the
2522speccing is done "lazily" (the spec is created as attributes on the mock are
2523accessed) you can use it with very complex or deeply nested objects (like
2524modules that import modules that import modules) without a big performance
2525hit.
2526
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002527Here's an example of it in use::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002528
2529 >>> from urllib import request
2530 >>> patcher = patch('__main__.request', autospec=True)
2531 >>> mock_request = patcher.start()
2532 >>> request is mock_request
2533 True
2534 >>> mock_request.Request
2535 <MagicMock name='request.Request' spec='Request' id='...'>
2536
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002537You can see that :class:`request.Request` has a spec. :class:`request.Request` takes two
2538arguments in the constructor (one of which is *self*). Here's what happens if
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002539we try to call it incorrectly::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002540
2541 >>> req = request.Request()
2542 Traceback (most recent call last):
2543 ...
2544 TypeError: <lambda>() takes at least 2 arguments (1 given)
2545
2546The spec also applies to instantiated classes (i.e. the return value of
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002547specced mocks)::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002548
2549 >>> req = request.Request('foo')
2550 >>> req
2551 <NonCallableMagicMock name='request.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'>
2552
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002553:class:`Request` objects are not callable, so the return value of instantiating our
2554mocked out :class:`request.Request` is a non-callable mock. With the spec in place
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002555any typos in our asserts will raise the correct error::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002556
2557 >>> req.add_header('spam', 'eggs')
2558 <MagicMock name='request.Request().add_header()' id='...'>
2559 >>> req.add_header.assret_called_with
2560 Traceback (most recent call last):
2561 ...
2562 AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with'
2563 >>> req.add_header.assert_called_with('spam', 'eggs')
2564
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002565In many cases you will just be able to add ``autospec=True`` to your existing
2566:func:`patch` calls and then be protected against bugs due to typos and api
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002567changes.
2568
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002569As well as using *autospec* through :func:`patch` there is a
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002570:func:`create_autospec` for creating autospecced mocks directly:
2571
2572 >>> from urllib import request
2573 >>> mock_request = create_autospec(request)
2574 >>> mock_request.Request('foo', 'bar')
2575 <NonCallableMagicMock name='mock.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'>
2576
2577This isn't without caveats and limitations however, which is why it is not
2578the default behaviour. In order to know what attributes are available on the
2579spec object, autospec has to introspect (access attributes) the spec. As you
2580traverse attributes on the mock a corresponding traversal of the original
2581object is happening under the hood. If any of your specced objects have
2582properties or descriptors that can trigger code execution then you may not be
2583able to use autospec. On the other hand it is much better to design your
2584objects so that introspection is safe [#]_.
2585
2586A more serious problem is that it is common for instance attributes to be
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002587created in the :meth:`__init__` method and not to exist on the class at all.
2588*autospec* can't know about any dynamically created attributes and restricts
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002589the api to visible attributes. ::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002590
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02002591 >>> class Something:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002592 ... def __init__(self):
2593 ... self.a = 33
2594 ...
2595 >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True):
2596 ... thing = Something()
2597 ... thing.a
2598 ...
2599 Traceback (most recent call last):
2600 ...
2601 AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a'
2602
2603There are a few different ways of resolving this problem. The easiest, but
2604not necessarily the least annoying, way is to simply set the required
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002605attributes on the mock after creation. Just because *autospec* doesn't allow
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002606you to fetch attributes that don't exist on the spec it doesn't prevent you
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002607setting them::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002608
2609 >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True):
2610 ... thing = Something()
2611 ... thing.a = 33
2612 ...
2613
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002614There is a more aggressive version of both *spec* and *autospec* that *does*
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002615prevent you setting non-existent attributes. This is useful if you want to
2616ensure your code only *sets* valid attributes too, but obviously it prevents
2617this particular scenario:
2618
2619 >>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True, spec_set=True):
2620 ... thing = Something()
2621 ... thing.a = 33
2622 ...
2623 Traceback (most recent call last):
2624 ...
2625 AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a'
2626
2627Probably the best way of solving the problem is to add class attributes as
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002628default values for instance members initialised in :meth:`__init__`. Note that if
2629you are only setting default attributes in :meth:`__init__` then providing them via
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002630class attributes (shared between instances of course) is faster too. e.g.
2631
2632.. code-block:: python
2633
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02002634 class Something:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002635 a = 33
2636
2637This brings up another issue. It is relatively common to provide a default
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002638value of ``None`` for members that will later be an object of a different type.
2639``None`` would be useless as a spec because it wouldn't let you access *any*
2640attributes or methods on it. As ``None`` is *never* going to be useful as a
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002641spec, and probably indicates a member that will normally of some other type,
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002642autospec doesn't use a spec for members that are set to ``None``. These will
2643just be ordinary mocks (well - MagicMocks):
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002644
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02002645 >>> class Something:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002646 ... member = None
2647 ...
2648 >>> mock = create_autospec(Something)
2649 >>> mock.member.foo.bar.baz()
2650 <MagicMock name='mock.member.foo.bar.baz()' id='...'>
2651
2652If modifying your production classes to add defaults isn't to your liking
2653then there are more options. One of these is simply to use an instance as the
2654spec rather than the class. The other is to create a subclass of the
2655production class and add the defaults to the subclass without affecting the
2656production class. Both of these require you to use an alternative object as
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002657the spec. Thankfully :func:`patch` supports this - you can simply pass the
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002658alternative object as the *autospec* argument::
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002659
Ezio Melottic9cfcf12013-03-11 09:42:40 +02002660 >>> class Something:
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002661 ... def __init__(self):
2662 ... self.a = 33
2663 ...
2664 >>> class SomethingForTest(Something):
2665 ... a = 33
2666 ...
2667 >>> p = patch('__main__.Something', autospec=SomethingForTest)
2668 >>> mock = p.start()
2669 >>> mock.a
2670 <NonCallableMagicMock name='Something.a' spec='int' id='...'>
2671
2672
2673.. [#] This only applies to classes or already instantiated objects. Calling
2674 a mocked class to create a mock instance *does not* create a real instance.
Georg Brandl7ad3df62014-10-31 07:59:37 +01002675 It is only attribute lookups - along with calls to :func:`dir` - that are done.
Michael Foorda9e6fb22012-03-28 14:36:02 +01002676
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002677Sealing mocks
2678~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2679
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002680
2681.. testsetup::
2682
2683 from unittest.mock import seal
2684
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002685.. function:: seal(mock)
2686
Mario Corchero96200eb2018-10-19 22:57:37 +01002687 Seal will disable the automatic creation of mocks when accessing an attribute of
2688 the mock being sealed or any of its attributes that are already mocks recursively.
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002689
Mario Corchero96200eb2018-10-19 22:57:37 +01002690 If a mock instance with a name or a spec is assigned to an attribute
Paul Ganssle85ac7262018-01-06 08:25:34 -05002691 it won't be considered in the sealing chain. This allows one to prevent seal from
Stéphane Wirtel859c0682018-10-12 09:51:05 +02002692 fixing part of the mock object. ::
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002693
2694 >>> mock = Mock()
2695 >>> mock.submock.attribute1 = 2
Mario Corchero96200eb2018-10-19 22:57:37 +01002696 >>> mock.not_submock = mock.Mock(name="sample_name")
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002697 >>> seal(mock)
Mario Corchero96200eb2018-10-19 22:57:37 +01002698 >>> mock.new_attribute # This will raise AttributeError.
Mario Corchero552be9d2017-10-17 12:35:11 +01002699 >>> mock.submock.attribute2 # This will raise AttributeError.
2700 >>> mock.not_submock.attribute2 # This won't raise.
2701
2702 .. versionadded:: 3.7