From dd56d27d74ad702803818237a2732d1e99b14da1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jelmer Vernooij Date: Sat, 27 Aug 2011 16:07:25 +0200 Subject: testtools: Update to latest upstream snapshot. --- lib/testtools/doc/Makefile | 89 ++ lib/testtools/doc/_static/placeholder.txt | 0 lib/testtools/doc/_templates/placeholder.txt | 0 lib/testtools/doc/conf.py | 194 +++++ lib/testtools/doc/for-framework-folk.rst | 219 +++++ lib/testtools/doc/for-test-authors.rst | 1196 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++ lib/testtools/doc/hacking.rst | 154 ++++ lib/testtools/doc/index.rst | 33 + lib/testtools/doc/make.bat | 113 +++ lib/testtools/doc/overview.rst | 96 +++ 10 files changed, 2094 insertions(+) create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/Makefile create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/_static/placeholder.txt create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/_templates/placeholder.txt create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/conf.py create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/for-framework-folk.rst create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/for-test-authors.rst create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/hacking.rst create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/index.rst create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/make.bat create mode 100644 lib/testtools/doc/overview.rst (limited to 'lib/testtools/doc') diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/Makefile b/lib/testtools/doc/Makefile new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b5d07af57f --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/Makefile @@ -0,0 +1,89 @@ +# Makefile for Sphinx documentation +# + +# You can set these variables from the command line. +SPHINXOPTS = +SPHINXBUILD = sphinx-build +PAPER = +BUILDDIR = _build + +# Internal variables. +PAPEROPT_a4 = -D latex_paper_size=a4 +PAPEROPT_letter = -D latex_paper_size=letter +ALLSPHINXOPTS = -d $(BUILDDIR)/doctrees $(PAPEROPT_$(PAPER)) $(SPHINXOPTS) . + +.PHONY: help clean html dirhtml pickle json htmlhelp qthelp latex changes linkcheck doctest + +help: + @echo "Please use \`make ' where is one of" + @echo " html to make standalone HTML files" + @echo " dirhtml to make HTML files named index.html in directories" + @echo " pickle to make pickle files" + @echo " json to make JSON files" + @echo " htmlhelp to make HTML files and a HTML help project" + @echo " qthelp to make HTML files and a qthelp project" + @echo " latex to make LaTeX files, you can set PAPER=a4 or PAPER=letter" + @echo " changes to make an overview of all changed/added/deprecated items" + @echo " linkcheck to check all external links for integrity" + @echo " doctest to run all doctests embedded in the documentation (if enabled)" + +clean: + -rm -rf $(BUILDDIR)/* + +html: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b html $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/html + @echo + @echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/html." + +dirhtml: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b dirhtml $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/dirhtml + @echo + @echo "Build finished. The HTML pages are in $(BUILDDIR)/dirhtml." + +pickle: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b pickle $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/pickle + @echo + @echo "Build finished; now you can process the pickle files." + +json: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b json $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/json + @echo + @echo "Build finished; now you can process the JSON files." + +htmlhelp: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b htmlhelp $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/htmlhelp + @echo + @echo "Build finished; now you can run HTML Help Workshop with the" \ + ".hhp project file in $(BUILDDIR)/htmlhelp." + +qthelp: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b qthelp $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp + @echo + @echo "Build finished; now you can run "qcollectiongenerator" with the" \ + ".qhcp project file in $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp, like this:" + @echo "# qcollectiongenerator $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp/testtools.qhcp" + @echo "To view the help file:" + @echo "# assistant -collectionFile $(BUILDDIR)/qthelp/testtools.qhc" + +latex: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b latex $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/latex + @echo + @echo "Build finished; the LaTeX files are in $(BUILDDIR)/latex." + @echo "Run \`make all-pdf' or \`make all-ps' in that directory to" \ + "run these through (pdf)latex." + +changes: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b changes $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/changes + @echo + @echo "The overview file is in $(BUILDDIR)/changes." + +linkcheck: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b linkcheck $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/linkcheck + @echo + @echo "Link check complete; look for any errors in the above output " \ + "or in $(BUILDDIR)/linkcheck/output.txt." + +doctest: + $(SPHINXBUILD) -b doctest $(ALLSPHINXOPTS) $(BUILDDIR)/doctest + @echo "Testing of doctests in the sources finished, look at the " \ + "results in $(BUILDDIR)/doctest/output.txt." diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/_static/placeholder.txt b/lib/testtools/doc/_static/placeholder.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/_templates/placeholder.txt b/lib/testtools/doc/_templates/placeholder.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e69de29bb2 diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/conf.py b/lib/testtools/doc/conf.py new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..de5fdd4224 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/conf.py @@ -0,0 +1,194 @@ +# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- +# +# testtools documentation build configuration file, created by +# sphinx-quickstart on Sun Nov 28 13:45:40 2010. +# +# This file is execfile()d with the current directory set to its containing dir. +# +# Note that not all possible configuration values are present in this +# autogenerated file. +# +# All configuration values have a default; values that are commented out +# serve to show the default. + +import sys, os + +# If extensions (or modules to document with autodoc) are in another directory, +# add these directories to sys.path here. If the directory is relative to the +# documentation root, use os.path.abspath to make it absolute, like shown here. +#sys.path.append(os.path.abspath('.')) + +# -- General configuration ----------------------------------------------------- + +# Add any Sphinx extension module names here, as strings. They can be extensions +# coming with Sphinx (named 'sphinx.ext.*') or your custom ones. +extensions = ['sphinx.ext.autodoc'] + +# Add any paths that contain templates here, relative to this directory. +templates_path = ['_templates'] + +# The suffix of source filenames. +source_suffix = '.rst' + +# The encoding of source files. +#source_encoding = 'utf-8' + +# The master toctree document. +master_doc = 'index' + +# General information about the project. +project = u'testtools' +copyright = u'2010, The testtools authors' + +# The version info for the project you're documenting, acts as replacement for +# |version| and |release|, also used in various other places throughout the +# built documents. +# +# The short X.Y version. +version = 'VERSION' +# The full version, including alpha/beta/rc tags. +release = 'VERSION' + +# The language for content autogenerated by Sphinx. Refer to documentation +# for a list of supported languages. +#language = None + +# There are two options for replacing |today|: either, you set today to some +# non-false value, then it is used: +#today = '' +# Else, today_fmt is used as the format for a strftime call. +#today_fmt = '%B %d, %Y' + +# List of documents that shouldn't be included in the build. +#unused_docs = [] + +# List of directories, relative to source directory, that shouldn't be searched +# for source files. +exclude_trees = ['_build'] + +# The reST default role (used for this markup: `text`) to use for all documents. +#default_role = None + +# If true, '()' will be appended to :func: etc. cross-reference text. +#add_function_parentheses = True + +# If true, the current module name will be prepended to all description +# unit titles (such as .. function::). +#add_module_names = True + +# If true, sectionauthor and moduleauthor directives will be shown in the +# output. They are ignored by default. +#show_authors = False + +# The name of the Pygments (syntax highlighting) style to use. +pygments_style = 'sphinx' + +# A list of ignored prefixes for module index sorting. +#modindex_common_prefix = [] + + +# -- Options for HTML output --------------------------------------------------- + +# The theme to use for HTML and HTML Help pages. Major themes that come with +# Sphinx are currently 'default' and 'sphinxdoc'. +html_theme = 'default' + +# Theme options are theme-specific and customize the look and feel of a theme +# further. For a list of options available for each theme, see the +# documentation. +#html_theme_options = {} + +# Add any paths that contain custom themes here, relative to this directory. +#html_theme_path = [] + +# The name for this set of Sphinx documents. If None, it defaults to +# " v documentation". +#html_title = None + +# A shorter title for the navigation bar. Default is the same as html_title. +#html_short_title = None + +# The name of an image file (relative to this directory) to place at the top +# of the sidebar. +#html_logo = None + +# The name of an image file (within the static path) to use as favicon of the +# docs. This file should be a Windows icon file (.ico) being 16x16 or 32x32 +# pixels large. +#html_favicon = None + +# Add any paths that contain custom static files (such as style sheets) here, +# relative to this directory. They are copied after the builtin static files, +# so a file named "default.css" will overwrite the builtin "default.css". +html_static_path = ['_static'] + +# If not '', a 'Last updated on:' timestamp is inserted at every page bottom, +# using the given strftime format. +#html_last_updated_fmt = '%b %d, %Y' + +# If true, SmartyPants will be used to convert quotes and dashes to +# typographically correct entities. +#html_use_smartypants = True + +# Custom sidebar templates, maps document names to template names. +#html_sidebars = {} + +# Additional templates that should be rendered to pages, maps page names to +# template names. +#html_additional_pages = {} + +# If false, no module index is generated. +#html_use_modindex = True + +# If false, no index is generated. +#html_use_index = True + +# If true, the index is split into individual pages for each letter. +#html_split_index = False + +# If true, links to the reST sources are added to the pages. +#html_show_sourcelink = True + +# If true, an OpenSearch description file will be output, and all pages will +# contain a tag referring to it. The value of this option must be the +# base URL from which the finished HTML is served. +#html_use_opensearch = '' + +# If nonempty, this is the file name suffix for HTML files (e.g. ".xhtml"). +#html_file_suffix = '' + +# Output file base name for HTML help builder. +htmlhelp_basename = 'testtoolsdoc' + + +# -- Options for LaTeX output -------------------------------------------------- + +# The paper size ('letter' or 'a4'). +#latex_paper_size = 'letter' + +# The font size ('10pt', '11pt' or '12pt'). +#latex_font_size = '10pt' + +# Grouping the document tree into LaTeX files. List of tuples +# (source start file, target name, title, author, documentclass [howto/manual]). +latex_documents = [ + ('index', 'testtools.tex', u'testtools Documentation', + u'The testtools authors', 'manual'), +] + +# The name of an image file (relative to this directory) to place at the top of +# the title page. +#latex_logo = None + +# For "manual" documents, if this is true, then toplevel headings are parts, +# not chapters. +#latex_use_parts = False + +# Additional stuff for the LaTeX preamble. +#latex_preamble = '' + +# Documents to append as an appendix to all manuals. +#latex_appendices = [] + +# If false, no module index is generated. +#latex_use_modindex = True diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/for-framework-folk.rst b/lib/testtools/doc/for-framework-folk.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..a4b20f64ca --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/for-framework-folk.rst @@ -0,0 +1,219 @@ +============================ +testtools for framework folk +============================ + +Introduction +============ + +In addition to having many features :doc:`for test authors +`, testtools also has many bits and pieces that are useful +for folk who write testing frameworks. + +If you are the author of a test runner, are working on a very large +unit-tested project, are trying to get one testing framework to play nicely +with another or are hacking away at getting your test suite to run in parallel +over a heterogenous cluster of machines, this guide is for you. + +This manual is a summary. You can get details by consulting the `testtools +API docs`_. + + +Extensions to TestCase +====================== + +Custom exception handling +------------------------- + +testtools provides a way to control how test exceptions are handled. To do +this, add a new exception to ``self.exception_handlers`` on a +``testtools.TestCase``. For example:: + + >>> self.exception_handlers.insert(-1, (ExceptionClass, handler)). + +Having done this, if any of ``setUp``, ``tearDown``, or the test method raise +``ExceptionClass``, ``handler`` will be called with the test case, test result +and the raised exception. + +Use this if you want to add a new kind of test result, that is, if you think +that ``addError``, ``addFailure`` and so forth are not enough for your needs. + + +Controlling test execution +-------------------------- + +If you want to control more than just how exceptions are raised, you can +provide a custom ``RunTest`` to a ``TestCase``. The ``RunTest`` object can +change everything about how the test executes. + +To work with ``testtools.TestCase``, a ``RunTest`` must have a factory that +takes a test and an optional list of exception handlers. Instances returned +by the factory must have a ``run()`` method that takes an optional ``TestResult`` +object. + +The default is ``testtools.runtest.RunTest``, which calls ``setUp``, the test +method, ``tearDown`` and clean ups (see :ref:`addCleanup`) in the normal, vanilla +way that Python's standard unittest_ does. + +To specify a ``RunTest`` for all the tests in a ``TestCase`` class, do something +like this:: + + class SomeTests(TestCase): + run_tests_with = CustomRunTestFactory + +To specify a ``RunTest`` for a specific test in a ``TestCase`` class, do:: + + class SomeTests(TestCase): + @run_test_with(CustomRunTestFactory, extra_arg=42, foo='whatever') + def test_something(self): + pass + +In addition, either of these can be overridden by passing a factory in to the +``TestCase`` constructor with the optional ``runTest`` argument. + + +Test renaming +------------- + +``testtools.clone_test_with_new_id`` is a function to copy a test case +instance to one with a new name. This is helpful for implementing test +parameterization. + + +Test placeholders +================= + +Sometimes, it's useful to be able to add things to a test suite that are not +actually tests. For example, you might wish to represents import failures +that occur during test discovery as tests, so that your test result object +doesn't have to do special work to handle them nicely. + +testtools provides two such objects, called "placeholders": ``PlaceHolder`` +and ``ErrorHolder``. ``PlaceHolder`` takes a test id and an optional +description. When it's run, it succeeds. ``ErrorHolder`` takes a test id, +and error and an optional short description. When it's run, it reports that +error. + +These placeholders are best used to log events that occur outside the test +suite proper, but are still very relevant to its results. + +e.g.:: + + >>> suite = TestSuite() + >>> suite.add(PlaceHolder('I record an event')) + >>> suite.run(TextTestResult(verbose=True)) + I record an event [OK] + + +Extensions to TestResult +======================== + +TestResult.addSkip +------------------ + +This method is called on result objects when a test skips. The +``testtools.TestResult`` class records skips in its ``skip_reasons`` instance +dict. The can be reported on in much the same way as succesful tests. + + +TestResult.time +--------------- + +This method controls the time used by a ``TestResult``, permitting accurate +timing of test results gathered on different machines or in different threads. +See pydoc testtools.TestResult.time for more details. + + +ThreadsafeForwardingResult +-------------------------- + +A ``TestResult`` which forwards activity to another test result, but synchronises +on a semaphore to ensure that all the activity for a single test arrives in a +batch. This allows simple TestResults which do not expect concurrent test +reporting to be fed the activity from multiple test threads, or processes. + +Note that when you provide multiple errors for a single test, the target sees +each error as a distinct complete test. + + +MultiTestResult +--------------- + +A test result that dispatches its events to many test results. Use this +to combine multiple different test result objects into one test result object +that can be passed to ``TestCase.run()`` or similar. For example:: + + a = TestResult() + b = TestResult() + combined = MultiTestResult(a, b) + combined.startTestRun() # Calls a.startTestRun() and b.startTestRun() + +Each of the methods on ``MultiTestResult`` will return a tuple of whatever the +component test results return. + + +TextTestResult +-------------- + +A ``TestResult`` that provides a text UI very similar to the Python standard +library UI. Key differences are that its supports the extended outcomes and +details API, and is completely encapsulated into the result object, permitting +it to be used without a 'TestRunner' object. Not all the Python 2.7 outcomes +are displayed (yet). It is also a 'quiet' result with no dots or verbose mode. +These limitations will be corrected soon. + + +ExtendedToOriginalDecorator +--------------------------- + +Adapts legacy ``TestResult`` objects, such as those found in older Pythons, to +meet the testtools ``TestResult`` API. + + +Test Doubles +------------ + +In testtools.testresult.doubles there are three test doubles that testtools +uses for its own testing: ``Python26TestResult``, ``Python27TestResult``, +``ExtendedTestResult``. These TestResult objects implement a single variation of +the TestResult API each, and log activity to a list ``self._events``. These are +made available for the convenience of people writing their own extensions. + + +startTestRun and stopTestRun +---------------------------- + +Python 2.7 added hooks ``startTestRun`` and ``stopTestRun`` which are called +before and after the entire test run. 'stopTestRun' is particularly useful for +test results that wish to produce summary output. + +``testtools.TestResult`` provides default ``startTestRun`` and ``stopTestRun`` +methods, and he default testtools runner will call these methods +appropriately. + +The ``startTestRun`` method will reset any errors, failures and so forth on +the result, making the result object look as if no tests have been run. + + +Extensions to TestSuite +======================= + +ConcurrentTestSuite +------------------- + +A TestSuite for parallel testing. This is used in conjuction with a helper that +runs a single suite in some parallel fashion (for instance, forking, handing +off to a subprocess, to a compute cloud, or simple threads). +ConcurrentTestSuite uses the helper to get a number of separate runnable +objects with a run(result), runs them all in threads using the +ThreadsafeForwardingResult to coalesce their activity. + +FixtureSuite +------------ + +A test suite that sets up a fixture_ before running any tests, and then tears +it down after all of the tests are run. The fixture is *not* made available to +any of the tests. + +.. _`testtools API docs`: http://mumak.net/testtools/apidocs/ +.. _unittest: http://docs.python.org/library/unittest.html +.. _fixture: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/fixtures diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/for-test-authors.rst b/lib/testtools/doc/for-test-authors.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..eec98b14f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/for-test-authors.rst @@ -0,0 +1,1196 @@ +========================== +testtools for test authors +========================== + +If you are writing tests for a Python project and you (rather wisely) want to +use testtools to do so, this is the manual for you. + +We assume that you already know Python and that you know something about +automated testing already. + +If you are a test author of an unusually large or unusually unusual test +suite, you might be interested in :doc:`for-framework-folk`. + +You might also be interested in the `testtools API docs`_. + + +Introduction +============ + +testtools is a set of extensions to Python's standard unittest module. +Writing tests with testtools is very much like writing tests with standard +Python, or with Twisted's "trial_", or nose_, except a little bit easier and +more enjoyable. + +Below, we'll try to give some examples of how to use testtools in its most +basic way, as well as a sort of feature-by-feature breakdown of the cool bits +that you could easily miss. + + +The basics +========== + +Here's what a basic testtools unit tests look like:: + + from testtools import TestCase + from myproject import silly + + class TestSillySquare(TestCase): + """Tests for silly square function.""" + + def test_square(self): + # 'square' takes a number and multiplies it by itself. + result = silly.square(7) + self.assertEqual(result, 49) + + def test_square_bad_input(self): + # 'square' raises a TypeError if it's given bad input, say a + # string. + self.assertRaises(TypeError, silly.square, "orange") + + +Here you have a class that inherits from ``testtools.TestCase`` and bundles +together a bunch of related tests. The tests themselves are methods on that +class that begin with ``test_``. + +Running your tests +------------------ + +You can run these tests in many ways. testtools provides a very basic +mechanism for doing so:: + + $ python -m testtools.run exampletest + Tests running... + Ran 2 tests in 0.000s + + OK + +where 'exampletest' is a module that contains unit tests. By default, +``testtools.run`` will *not* recursively search the module or package for unit +tests. To do this, you will need to either have the discover_ module +installed or have Python 2.7 or later, and then run:: + + $ python -m testtools.run discover packagecontainingtests + +For more information see the Python 2.7 unittest documentation, or:: + + python -m testtools.run --help + +As your testing needs grow and evolve, you will probably want to use a more +sophisticated test runner. There are many of these for Python, and almost all +of them will happily run testtools tests. In particular: + +* testrepository_ +* Trial_ +* nose_ +* unittest2_ +* `zope.testrunner`_ (aka zope.testing) + +From now on, we'll assume that you know how to run your tests. + +Running test with Distutils +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +If you are using Distutils_ to build your Python project, you can use the testtools +Distutils_ command to integrate testtools into your Distutils_ workflow:: + + from distutils.core import setup + from testtools import TestCommand + setup(name='foo', + version='1.0', + py_modules=['foo'], + cmdclass={'test': TestCommand} + ) + +You can then run:: + + $ python setup.py test -m exampletest + Tests running... + Ran 2 tests in 0.000s + + OK + +For more information about the capabilities of the `TestCommand` command see:: + + $ python setup.py test --help + +You can use the `setup configuration`_ to specify the default behavior of the +`TestCommand` command. + +Assertions +========== + +The core of automated testing is making assertions about the way things are, +and getting a nice, helpful, informative error message when things are not as +they ought to be. + +All of the assertions that you can find in Python standard unittest_ can be +found in testtools (remember, testtools extends unittest). testtools changes +the behaviour of some of those assertions slightly and adds some new +assertions that you will almost certainly find useful. + + +Improved assertRaises +--------------------- + +``TestCase.assertRaises`` returns the caught exception. This is useful for +asserting more things about the exception than just the type:: + + def test_square_bad_input(self): + # 'square' raises a TypeError if it's given bad input, say a + # string. + e = self.assertRaises(TypeError, silly.square, "orange") + self.assertEqual("orange", e.bad_value) + self.assertEqual("Cannot square 'orange', not a number.", str(e)) + +Note that this is incompatible with the ``assertRaises`` in unittest2 and +Python2.7. + + +ExpectedException +----------------- + +If you are using a version of Python that supports the ``with`` context +manager syntax, you might prefer to use that syntax to ensure that code raises +particular errors. ``ExpectedException`` does just that. For example:: + + def test_square_root_bad_input_2(self): + # 'square' raises a TypeError if it's given bad input. + with ExpectedException(TypeError, "Cannot square.*"): + silly.square('orange') + +The first argument to ``ExpectedException`` is the type of exception you +expect to see raised. The second argument is optional, and can be either a +regular expression or a matcher. If it is a regular expression, the ``str()`` +of the raised exception must match the regular expression. If it is a matcher, +then the raised exception object must match it. + + +assertIn, assertNotIn +--------------------- + +These two assertions check whether a value is in a sequence and whether a +value is not in a sequence. They are "assert" versions of the ``in`` and +``not in`` operators. For example:: + + def test_assert_in_example(self): + self.assertIn('a', 'cat') + self.assertNotIn('o', 'cat') + self.assertIn(5, list_of_primes_under_ten) + self.assertNotIn(12, list_of_primes_under_ten) + + +assertIs, assertIsNot +--------------------- + +These two assertions check whether values are identical to one another. This +is sometimes useful when you want to test something more strict than mere +equality. For example:: + + def test_assert_is_example(self): + foo = [None] + foo_alias = foo + bar = [None] + self.assertIs(foo, foo_alias) + self.assertIsNot(foo, bar) + self.assertEqual(foo, bar) # They are equal, but not identical + + +assertIsInstance +---------------- + +As much as we love duck-typing and polymorphism, sometimes you need to check +whether or not a value is of a given type. This method does that. For +example:: + + def test_assert_is_instance_example(self): + now = datetime.now() + self.assertIsInstance(now, datetime) + +Note that there is no ``assertIsNotInstance`` in testtools currently. + + +expectFailure +------------- + +Sometimes it's useful to write tests that fail. For example, you might want +to turn a bug report into a unit test, but you don't know how to fix the bug +yet. Or perhaps you want to document a known, temporary deficiency in a +dependency. + +testtools gives you the ``TestCase.expectFailure`` to help with this. You use +it to say that you expect this assertion to fail. When the test runs and the +assertion fails, testtools will report it as an "expected failure". + +Here's an example:: + + def test_expect_failure_example(self): + self.expectFailure( + "cats should be dogs", self.assertEqual, 'cats', 'dogs') + +As long as 'cats' is not equal to 'dogs', the test will be reported as an +expected failure. + +If ever by some miracle 'cats' becomes 'dogs', then testtools will report an +"unexpected success". Unlike standard unittest, testtools treats this as +something that fails the test suite, like an error or a failure. + + +Matchers +======== + +The built-in assertion methods are very useful, they are the bread and butter +of writing tests. However, soon enough you will probably want to write your +own assertions. Perhaps there are domain specific things that you want to +check (e.g. assert that two widgets are aligned parallel to the flux grid), or +perhaps you want to check something that could almost but not quite be found +in some other standard library (e.g. assert that two paths point to the same +file). + +When you are in such situations, you could either make a base class for your +project that inherits from ``testtools.TestCase`` and make sure that all of +your tests derive from that, *or* you could use the testtools ``Matcher`` +system. + + +Using Matchers +-------------- + +Here's a really basic example using stock matchers found in testtools:: + + import testtools + from testtools.matchers import Equals + + class TestSquare(TestCase): + def test_square(self): + result = square(7) + self.assertThat(result, Equals(49)) + +The line ``self.assertThat(result, Equals(49))`` is equivalent to +``self.assertEqual(result, 49)`` and means "assert that ``result`` equals 49". +The difference is that ``assertThat`` is a more general method that takes some +kind of observed value (in this case, ``result``) and any matcher object +(here, ``Equals(49)``). + +The matcher object could be absolutely anything that implements the Matcher +protocol. This means that you can make more complex matchers by combining +existing ones:: + + def test_square_silly(self): + result = square(7) + self.assertThat(result, Not(Equals(50))) + +Which is roughly equivalent to:: + + def test_square_silly(self): + result = square(7) + self.assertNotEqual(result, 50) + + +Stock matchers +-------------- + +testtools comes with many matchers built in. They can all be found in and +imported from the ``testtools.matchers`` module. + +Equals +~~~~~~ + +Matches if two items are equal. For example:: + + def test_equals_example(self): + self.assertThat([42], Equals([42])) + + +Is +~~~ + +Matches if two items are identical. For example:: + + def test_is_example(self): + foo = object() + self.assertThat(foo, Is(foo)) + + +IsInstance +~~~~~~~~~~ + +Adapts isinstance() to use as a matcher. For example:: + + def test_isinstance_example(self): + class MyClass:pass + self.assertThat(MyClass(), IsInstance(MyClass)) + self.assertThat(MyClass(), IsInstance(MyClass, str)) + + +The raises helper +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches if a callable raises a particular type of exception. For example:: + + def test_raises_example(self): + self.assertThat(lambda: 1/0, raises(ZeroDivisionError)) + +This is actually a convenience function that combines two other matchers: +Raises_ and MatchesException_. + + +DocTestMatches +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches a string as if it were the output of a doctest_ example. Very useful +for making assertions about large chunks of text. For example:: + + import doctest + + def test_doctest_example(self): + output = "Colorless green ideas" + self.assertThat( + output, + DocTestMatches("Colorless ... ideas", doctest.ELLIPSIS)) + +We highly recommend using the following flags:: + + doctest.ELLIPSIS | doctest.NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE | doctest.REPORT_NDIFF + + +GreaterThan +~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches if the given thing is greater than the thing in the matcher. For +example:: + + def test_greater_than_example(self): + self.assertThat(3, GreaterThan(2)) + + +LessThan +~~~~~~~~ + +Matches if the given thing is less than the thing in the matcher. For +example:: + + def test_less_than_example(self): + self.assertThat(2, LessThan(3)) + + +StartsWith, EndsWith +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +These matchers check to see if a string starts with or ends with a particular +substring. For example:: + + def test_starts_and_ends_with_example(self): + self.assertThat('underground', StartsWith('und')) + self.assertThat('underground', EndsWith('und')) + + +Contains +~~~~~~~~ + +This matcher checks to see if the given thing contains the thing in the +matcher. For example:: + + def test_contains_example(self): + self.assertThat('abc', Contains('b')) + + +MatchesException +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches an exc_info tuple if the exception is of the correct type. For +example:: + + def test_matches_exception_example(self): + try: + raise RuntimeError('foo') + except RuntimeError: + exc_info = sys.exc_info() + self.assertThat(exc_info, MatchesException(RuntimeError)) + self.assertThat(exc_info, MatchesException(RuntimeError('bar')) + +Most of the time, you will want to uses `The raises helper`_ instead. + + +NotEquals +~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches if something is not equal to something else. Note that this is subtly +different to ``Not(Equals(x))``. ``NotEquals(x)`` will match if ``y != x``, +``Not(Equals(x))`` will match if ``not y == x``. + +You only need to worry about this distinction if you are testing code that +relies on badly written overloaded equality operators. + + +KeysEqual +~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches if the keys of one dict are equal to the keys of another dict. For +example:: + + def test_keys_equal(self): + x = {'a': 1, 'b': 2} + y = {'a': 2, 'b': 3} + self.assertThat(a, KeysEqual(b)) + + +MatchesRegex +~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Matches a string against a regular expression, which is a wonderful thing to +be able to do, if you think about it:: + + def test_matches_regex_example(self): + self.assertThat('foo', MatchesRegex('fo+')) + + +Combining matchers +------------------ + +One great thing about matchers is that you can readily combine existing +matchers to get variations on their behaviour or to quickly build more complex +assertions. + +Below are a few of the combining matchers that come with testtools. + + +Not +~~~ + +Negates another matcher. For example:: + + def test_not_example(self): + self.assertThat([42], Not(Equals("potato"))) + self.assertThat([42], Not(Is([42]))) + +If you find yourself using ``Not`` frequently, you may wish to create a custom +matcher for it. For example:: + + IsNot = lambda x: Not(Is(x)) + + def test_not_example_2(self): + self.assertThat([42], IsNot([42])) + + +Annotate +~~~~~~~~ + +Used to add custom notes to a matcher. For example:: + + def test_annotate_example(self): + result = 43 + self.assertThat( + result, Annotate("Not the answer to the Question!", Equals(42)) + +Since the annotation is only ever displayed when there is a mismatch +(e.g. when ``result`` does not equal 42), it's a good idea to phrase the note +negatively, so that it describes what a mismatch actually means. + +As with Not_, you may wish to create a custom matcher that describes a +common operation. For example:: + + PoliticallyEquals = lambda x: Annotate("Death to the aristos!", Equals(x)) + + def test_annotate_example_2(self): + self.assertThat("orange", PoliticallyEquals("yellow")) + +You can have assertThat perform the annotation for you as a convenience:: + + def test_annotate_example_3(self): + self.assertThat("orange", Equals("yellow"), "Death to the aristos!") + + +AfterPreprocessing +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Used to make a matcher that applies a function to the matched object before +matching. This can be used to aid in creating trivial matchers as functions, for +example:: + + def test_after_preprocessing_example(self): + def HasFileContent(content): + def _read(path): + return open(path).read() + return AfterPreprocessing(_read, Equals(content)) + self.assertThat('/tmp/foo.txt', PathHasFileContent("Hello world!")) + + +MatchesAll +~~~~~~~~~~ + +Combines many matchers to make a new matcher. The new matcher will only match +things that match every single one of the component matchers. + +It's much easier to understand in Python than in English:: + + def test_matches_all_example(self): + has_und_at_both_ends = MatchesAll(StartsWith("und"), EndsWith("und")) + # This will succeed. + self.assertThat("underground", has_und_at_both_ends) + # This will fail. + self.assertThat("found", has_und_at_both_ends) + # So will this. + self.assertThat("undead", has_und_at_both_ends) + +At this point some people ask themselves, "why bother doing this at all? why +not just have two separate assertions?". It's a good question. + +The first reason is that when a ``MatchesAll`` gets a mismatch, the error will +include information about all of the bits that mismatched. When you have two +separate assertions, as below:: + + def test_two_separate_assertions(self): + self.assertThat("foo", StartsWith("und")) + self.assertThat("foo", EndsWith("und")) + +Then you get absolutely no information from the second assertion if the first +assertion fails. Tests are largely there to help you debug code, so having +more information in error messages is a big help. + +The second reason is that it is sometimes useful to give a name to a set of +matchers. ``has_und_at_both_ends`` is a bit contrived, of course, but it is +clear. + + +MatchesAny +~~~~~~~~~~ + +Like MatchesAll_, ``MatchesAny`` combines many matchers to make a new +matcher. The difference is that the new matchers will match a thing if it +matches *any* of the component matchers. + +For example:: + + def test_matches_any_example(self): + self.assertThat(42, MatchesAny(Equals(5), Not(Equals(6)))) + + +AllMatch +~~~~~~~~ + +Matches many values against a single matcher. Can be used to make sure that +many things all meet the same condition:: + + def test_all_match_example(self): + self.assertThat([2, 3, 5, 7], AllMatch(LessThan(10))) + +If the match fails, then all of the values that fail to match will be included +in the error message. + +In some ways, this is the converse of MatchesAll_. + + +MatchesListwise +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Where ``MatchesAny`` and ``MatchesAll`` combine many matchers to match a +single value, ``MatchesListwise`` combines many matches to match many values. + +For example:: + + def test_matches_listwise_example(self): + self.assertThat( + [1, 2, 3], MatchesListwise(map(Equals, [1, 2, 3]))) + +This is useful for writing custom, domain-specific matchers. + + +MatchesSetwise +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Combines many matchers to match many values, without regard to their order. + +Here's an example:: + + def test_matches_setwise_example(self): + self.assertThat( + [1, 2, 3], MatchesSetwise(Equals(2), Equals(3), Equals(1))) + +Much like ``MatchesListwise``, best used for writing custom, domain-specific +matchers. + + +MatchesStructure +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Creates a matcher that matches certain attributes of an object against a +pre-defined set of matchers. + +It's much easier to understand in Python than in English:: + + def test_matches_structure_example(self): + foo = Foo() + foo.a = 1 + foo.b = 2 + matcher = MatchesStructure(a=Equals(1), b=Equals(2)) + self.assertThat(foo, matcher) + +Since all of the matchers used were ``Equals``, we could also write this using +the ``byEquality`` helper:: + + def test_matches_structure_example(self): + foo = Foo() + foo.a = 1 + foo.b = 2 + matcher = MatchesStructure.byEquality(a=1, b=2) + self.assertThat(foo, matcher) + +``MatchesStructure.fromExample`` takes an object and a list of attributes and +creates a ``MatchesStructure`` matcher where each attribute of the matched +object must equal each attribute of the example object. For example:: + + matcher = MatchesStructure.fromExample(foo, 'a', 'b') + +is exactly equivalent to ``matcher`` in the previous example. + + +Raises +~~~~~~ + +Takes whatever the callable raises as an exc_info tuple and matches it against +whatever matcher it was given. For example, if you want to assert that a +callable raises an exception of a given type:: + + def test_raises_example(self): + self.assertThat( + lambda: 1/0, Raises(MatchesException(ZeroDivisionError))) + +Although note that this could also be written as:: + + def test_raises_example_convenient(self): + self.assertThat(lambda: 1/0, raises(ZeroDivisionError)) + +See also MatchesException_ and `the raises helper`_ + + +Writing your own matchers +------------------------- + +Combining matchers is fun and can get you a very long way indeed, but +sometimes you will have to write your own. Here's how. + +You need to make two closely-linked objects: a ``Matcher`` and a +``Mismatch``. The ``Matcher`` knows how to actually make the comparison, and +the ``Mismatch`` knows how to describe a failure to match. + +Here's an example matcher:: + + class IsDivisibleBy(object): + """Match if a number is divisible by another number.""" + def __init__(self, divider): + self.divider = divider + def __str__(self): + return 'IsDivisibleBy(%s)' % (self.divider,) + def match(self, actual): + remainder = actual % self.divider + if remainder != 0: + return IsDivisibleByMismatch(actual, self.divider, remainder) + else: + return None + +The matcher has a constructor that takes parameters that describe what you +actually *expect*, in this case a number that other numbers ought to be +divisible by. It has a ``__str__`` method, the result of which is displayed +on failure by ``assertThat`` and a ``match`` method that does the actual +matching. + +``match`` takes something to match against, here ``actual``, and decides +whether or not it matches. If it does match, then ``match`` must return +``None``. If it does *not* match, then ``match`` must return a ``Mismatch`` +object. ``assertThat`` will call ``match`` and then fail the test if it +returns a non-None value. For example:: + + def test_is_divisible_by_example(self): + # This succeeds, since IsDivisibleBy(5).match(10) returns None. + self.assertThat(10, IsDivisbleBy(5)) + # This fails, since IsDivisibleBy(7).match(10) returns a mismatch. + self.assertThat(10, IsDivisbleBy(7)) + +The mismatch is responsible for what sort of error message the failing test +generates. Here's an example mismatch:: + + class IsDivisibleByMismatch(object): + def __init__(self, number, divider, remainder): + self.number = number + self.divider = divider + self.remainder = remainder + + def describe(self): + return "%s is not divisible by %s, %s remains" % ( + self.number, self.divider, self.remainder) + + def get_details(self): + return {} + +The mismatch takes information about the mismatch, and provides a ``describe`` +method that assembles all of that into a nice error message for end users. +You can use the ``get_details`` method to provide extra, arbitrary data with +the mismatch (e.g. the contents of a log file). Most of the time it's fine to +just return an empty dict. You can read more about Details_ elsewhere in this +document. + +Sometimes you don't need to create a custom mismatch class. In particular, if +you don't care *when* the description is calculated, then you can just do that +in the Matcher itself like this:: + + def match(self, actual): + remainder = actual % self.divider + if remainder != 0: + return Mismatch( + "%s is not divisible by %s, %s remains" % ( + actual, self.divider, remainder)) + else: + return None + + +Details +======= + +As we may have mentioned once or twice already, one of the great benefits of +automated tests is that they help find, isolate and debug errors in your +system. + +Frequently however, the information provided by a mere assertion failure is +not enough. It's often useful to have other information: the contents of log +files; what queries were run; benchmark timing information; what state certain +subsystem components are in and so forth. + +testtools calls all of these things "details" and provides a single, powerful +mechanism for including this information in your test run. + +Here's an example of how to add them:: + + from testtools import TestCase + from testtools.content import text_content + + class TestSomething(TestCase): + + def test_thingy(self): + self.addDetail('arbitrary-color-name', text_content("blue")) + 1 / 0 # Gratuitous error! + +A detail an arbitrary piece of content given a name that's unique within the +test. Here the name is ``arbitrary-color-name`` and the content is +``text_content("blue")``. The name can be any text string, and the content +can be any ``testtools.content.Content`` object. + +When the test runs, testtools will show you something like this:: + + ====================================================================== + ERROR: exampletest.TestSomething.test_thingy + ---------------------------------------------------------------------- + arbitrary-color-name: {{{blue}}} + + Traceback (most recent call last): + File "exampletest.py", line 8, in test_thingy + 1 / 0 # Gratuitous error! + ZeroDivisionError: integer division or modulo by zero + ------------ + Ran 1 test in 0.030s + +As you can see, the detail is included as an attachment, here saying +that our arbitrary-color-name is "blue". + + +Content +------- + +For the actual content of details, testtools uses its own MIME-based Content +object. This allows you to attach any information that you could possibly +conceive of to a test, and allows testtools to use or serialize that +information. + +The basic ``testtools.content.Content`` object is constructed from a +``testtools.content.ContentType`` and a nullary callable that must return an +iterator of chunks of bytes that the content is made from. + +So, to make a Content object that is just a simple string of text, you can +do:: + + from testtools.content import Content + from testtools.content_type import ContentType + + text = Content(ContentType('text', 'plain'), lambda: ["some text"]) + +Because adding small bits of text content is very common, there's also a +convenience method:: + + text = text_content("some text") + +To make content out of an image stored on disk, you could do something like:: + + image = Content(ContentType('image', 'png'), lambda: open('foo.png').read()) + +Or you could use the convenience function:: + + image = content_from_file('foo.png', ContentType('image', 'png')) + +The ``lambda`` helps make sure that the file is opened and the actual bytes +read only when they are needed – by default, when the test is finished. This +means that tests can construct and add Content objects freely without worrying +too much about how they affect run time. + + +A realistic example +------------------- + +A very common use of details is to add a log file to failing tests. Say your +project has a server represented by a class ``SomeServer`` that you can start +up and shut down in tests, but runs in another process. You want to test +interaction with that server, and whenever the interaction fails, you want to +see the client-side error *and* the logs from the server-side. Here's how you +might do it:: + + from testtools import TestCase + from testtools.content import attach_file, Content + from testtools.content_type import UTF8_TEXT + + from myproject import SomeServer + + class SomeTestCase(TestCase): + + def setUp(self): + super(SomeTestCase, self).setUp() + self.server = SomeServer() + self.server.start_up() + self.addCleanup(self.server.shut_down) + self.addCleanup(attach_file, self.server.logfile, self) + + def attach_log_file(self): + self.addDetail( + 'log-file', + Content(UTF8_TEXT, + lambda: open(self.server.logfile, 'r').readlines())) + + def test_a_thing(self): + self.assertEqual("cool", self.server.temperature) + +This test will attach the log file of ``SomeServer`` to each test that is +run. testtools will only display the log file for failing tests, so it's not +such a big deal. + +If the act of adding at detail is expensive, you might want to use +addOnException_ so that you only do it when a test actually raises an +exception. + + +Controlling test execution +========================== + +.. _addCleanup: + +addCleanup +---------- + +``TestCase.addCleanup`` is a robust way to arrange for a clean up function to +be called before ``tearDown``. This is a powerful and simple alternative to +putting clean up logic in a try/finally block or ``tearDown`` method. For +example:: + + def test_foo(self): + foo.lock() + self.addCleanup(foo.unlock) + ... + +This is particularly useful if you have some sort of factory in your test:: + + def make_locked_foo(self): + foo = Foo() + foo.lock() + self.addCleanup(foo.unlock) + return foo + + def test_frotz_a_foo(self): + foo = self.make_locked_foo() + foo.frotz() + self.assertEqual(foo.frotz_count, 1) + +Any extra arguments or keyword arguments passed to ``addCleanup`` are passed +to the callable at cleanup time. + +Cleanups can also report multiple errors, if appropriate by wrapping them in +a ``testtools.MultipleExceptions`` object:: + + raise MultipleExceptions(exc_info1, exc_info2) + + +Fixtures +-------- + +Tests often depend on a system being set up in a certain way, or having +certain resources available to them. Perhaps a test needs a connection to the +database or access to a running external server. + +One common way of doing this is to do:: + + class SomeTest(TestCase): + def setUp(self): + super(SomeTest, self).setUp() + self.server = Server() + self.server.setUp() + self.addCleanup(self.server.tearDown) + +testtools provides a more convenient, declarative way to do the same thing:: + + class SomeTest(TestCase): + def setUp(self): + super(SomeTest, self).setUp() + self.server = self.useFixture(Server()) + +``useFixture(fixture)`` calls ``setUp`` on the fixture, schedules a clean up +to clean it up, and schedules a clean up to attach all details_ held by the +fixture to the test case. The fixture object must meet the +``fixtures.Fixture`` protocol (version 0.3.4 or newer, see fixtures_). + +If you have anything beyond the most simple test set up, we recommend that +you put this set up into a ``Fixture`` class. Once there, the fixture can be +easily re-used by other tests and can be combined with other fixtures to make +more complex resources. + + +Skipping tests +-------------- + +Many reasons exist to skip a test: a dependency might be missing; a test might +be too expensive and thus should not berun while on battery power; or perhaps +the test is testing an incomplete feature. + +``TestCase.skipTest`` is a simple way to have a test stop running and be +reported as a skipped test, rather than a success, error or failure. For +example:: + + def test_make_symlink(self): + symlink = getattr(os, 'symlink', None) + if symlink is None: + self.skipTest("No symlink support") + symlink(whatever, something_else) + +Using ``skipTest`` means that you can make decisions about what tests to run +as late as possible, and close to the actual tests. Without it, you might be +forced to use convoluted logic during test loading, which is a bit of a mess. + + +Legacy skip support +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +If you are using this feature when running your test suite with a legacy +``TestResult`` object that is missing the ``addSkip`` method, then the +``addError`` method will be invoked instead. If you are using a test result +from testtools, you do not have to worry about this. + +In older versions of testtools, ``skipTest`` was known as ``skip``. Since +Python 2.7 added ``skipTest`` support, the ``skip`` name is now deprecated. +No warning is emitted yet – some time in the future we may do so. + + +addOnException +-------------- + +Sometimes, you might wish to do something only when a test fails. Perhaps you +need to run expensive diagnostic routines or some such. +``TestCase.addOnException`` allows you to easily do just this. For example:: + + class SomeTest(TestCase): + def setUp(self): + super(SomeTest, self).setUp() + self.server = self.useFixture(SomeServer()) + self.addOnException(self.attach_server_diagnostics) + + def attach_server_diagnostics(self, exc_info): + self.server.prep_for_diagnostics() # Expensive! + self.addDetail('server-diagnostics', self.server.get_diagnostics) + + def test_a_thing(self): + self.assertEqual('cheese', 'chalk') + +In this example, ``attach_server_diagnostics`` will only be called when a test +fails. It is given the exc_info tuple of the error raised by the test, just +in case it is needed. + + +Twisted support +--------------- + +testtools provides *highly experimental* support for running Twisted tests – +tests that return a Deferred_ and rely on the Twisted reactor. You should not +use this feature right now. We reserve the right to change the API and +behaviour without telling you first. + +However, if you are going to, here's how you do it:: + + from testtools import TestCase + from testtools.deferredruntest import AsynchronousDeferredRunTest + + class MyTwistedTests(TestCase): + + run_tests_with = AsynchronousDeferredRunTest + + def test_foo(self): + # ... + return d + +In particular, note that you do *not* have to use a special base ``TestCase`` +in order to run Twisted tests. + +You can also run individual tests within a test case class using the Twisted +test runner:: + + class MyTestsSomeOfWhichAreTwisted(TestCase): + + def test_normal(self): + pass + + @run_test_with(AsynchronousDeferredRunTest) + def test_twisted(self): + # ... + return d + +Here are some tips for converting your Trial tests into testtools tests. + +* Use the ``AsynchronousDeferredRunTest`` runner +* Make sure to upcall to ``setUp`` and ``tearDown`` +* Don't use ``setUpClass`` or ``tearDownClass`` +* Don't expect setting .todo, .timeout or .skip attributes to do anything +* ``flushLoggedErrors`` is ``testtools.deferredruntest.flush_logged_errors`` +* ``assertFailure`` is ``testtools.deferredruntest.assert_fails_with`` +* Trial spins the reactor a couple of times before cleaning it up, + ``AsynchronousDeferredRunTest`` does not. If you rely on this behavior, use + ``AsynchronousDeferredRunTestForBrokenTwisted``. + + +Test helpers +============ + +testtools comes with a few little things that make it a little bit easier to +write tests. + + +TestCase.patch +-------------- + +``patch`` is a convenient way to monkey-patch a Python object for the duration +of your test. It's especially useful for testing legacy code. e.g.:: + + def test_foo(self): + my_stream = StringIO() + self.patch(sys, 'stderr', my_stream) + run_some_code_that_prints_to_stderr() + self.assertEqual('', my_stream.getvalue()) + +The call to ``patch`` above masks ``sys.stderr`` with ``my_stream`` so that +anything printed to stderr will be captured in a StringIO variable that can be +actually tested. Once the test is done, the real ``sys.stderr`` is restored to +its rightful place. + + +Creation methods +---------------- + +Often when writing unit tests, you want to create an object that is a +completely normal instance of its type. You don't want there to be anything +special about its properties, because you are testing generic behaviour rather +than specific conditions. + +A lot of the time, test authors do this by making up silly strings and numbers +and passing them to constructors (e.g. 42, 'foo', "bar" etc), and that's +fine. However, sometimes it's useful to be able to create arbitrary objects +at will, without having to make up silly sample data. + +To help with this, ``testtools.TestCase`` implements creation methods called +``getUniqueString`` and ``getUniqueInteger``. They return strings and +integers that are unique within the context of the test that can be used to +assemble more complex objects. Here's a basic example where +``getUniqueString`` is used instead of saying "foo" or "bar" or whatever:: + + class SomeTest(TestCase): + + def test_full_name(self): + first_name = self.getUniqueString() + last_name = self.getUniqueString() + p = Person(first_name, last_name) + self.assertEqual(p.full_name, "%s %s" % (first_name, last_name)) + + +And here's how it could be used to make a complicated test:: + + class TestCoupleLogic(TestCase): + + def make_arbitrary_person(self): + return Person(self.getUniqueString(), self.getUniqueString()) + + def test_get_invitation(self): + a = self.make_arbitrary_person() + b = self.make_arbitrary_person() + couple = Couple(a, b) + event_name = self.getUniqueString() + invitation = couple.get_invitation(event_name) + self.assertEqual( + invitation, + "We invite %s and %s to %s" % ( + a.full_name, b.full_name, event_name)) + +Essentially, creation methods like these are a way of reducing the number of +assumptions in your tests and communicating to test readers that the exact +details of certain variables don't actually matter. + +See pages 419-423 of `xUnit Test Patterns`_ by Gerard Meszaros for a detailed +discussion of creation methods. + + +General helpers +=============== + +Conditional imports +------------------- + +Lots of the time we would like to conditionally import modules. testtools +needs to do this itself, and graciously extends the ability to its users. + +Instead of:: + + try: + from twisted.internet import defer + except ImportError: + defer = None + +You can do:: + + defer = try_import('twisted.internet.defer') + + +Instead of:: + + try: + from StringIO import StringIO + except ImportError: + from io import StringIO + +You can do:: + + StringIO = try_imports(['StringIO.StringIO', 'io.StringIO']) + + +Safe attribute testing +---------------------- + +``hasattr`` is broken_ on many versions of Python. testtools provides +``safe_hasattr``, which can be used to safely test whether an object has a +particular attribute. + + +.. _testrepository: https://launchpad.net/testrepository +.. _Trial: http://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/core/howto/testing.html +.. _nose: http://somethingaboutorange.com/mrl/projects/nose/ +.. _unittest2: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/unittest2 +.. _zope.testrunner: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/zope.testrunner/ +.. _xUnit test patterns: http://xunitpatterns.com/ +.. _fixtures: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/fixtures +.. _unittest: http://docs.python.org/library/unittest.html +.. _doctest: http://docs.python.org/library/doctest.html +.. _Deferred: http://twistedmatrix.com/documents/current/core/howto/defer.html +.. _discover: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/discover +.. _`testtools API docs`: http://mumak.net/testtools/apidocs/ +.. _Distutils: http://docs.python.org/library/distutils.html +.. _`setup configuration`: http://docs.python.org/distutils/configfile.html +.. _broken: http://chipaca.com/post/3210673069/hasattr-17-less-harmful diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/hacking.rst b/lib/testtools/doc/hacking.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b9f5ff22c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/hacking.rst @@ -0,0 +1,154 @@ +========================= +Contributing to testtools +========================= + +Coding style +------------ + +In general, follow `PEP 8`_ except where consistency with the standard +library's unittest_ module would suggest otherwise. + +testtools supports Python 2.4 and later, including Python 3, so avoid any +2.5-only features like the ``with`` statement. + + +Copyright assignment +-------------------- + +Part of testtools raison d'etre is to provide Python with improvements to the +testing code it ships. For that reason we require all contributions (that are +non-trivial) to meet one of the following rules: + +* be inapplicable for inclusion in Python. +* be able to be included in Python without further contact with the contributor. +* be copyright assigned to Jonathan M. Lange. + +Please pick one of these and specify it when contributing code to testtools. + + +Licensing +--------- + +All code that is not copyright assigned to Jonathan M. Lange (see Copyright +Assignment above) needs to be licensed under the `MIT license`_ that testtools +uses, so that testtools can ship it. + + +Testing +------- + +Please write tests for every feature. This project ought to be a model +example of well-tested Python code! + +Take particular care to make sure the *intent* of each test is clear. + +You can run tests with ``make check``. + +By default, testtools hides many levels of its own stack when running tests. +This is for the convenience of users, who do not care about how, say, assert +methods are implemented. However, when writing tests for testtools itself, it +is often useful to see all levels of the stack. To do this, add +``run_tests_with = FullStackRunTest`` to the top of a test's class definition. + + +Documentation +------------- + +Documents are written using the Sphinx_ variant of reStructuredText_. All +public methods, functions, classes and modules must have API documentation. +When changing code, be sure to check the API documentation to see if it could +be improved. Before submitting changes to trunk, look over them and see if +the manuals ought to be updated. + + +Source layout +------------- + +The top-level directory contains the ``testtools/`` package directory, and +miscellaneous files like ``README`` and ``setup.py``. + +The ``testtools/`` directory is the Python package itself. It is separated +into submodules for internal clarity, but all public APIs should be “promoted” +into the top-level package by importing them in ``testtools/__init__.py``. +Users of testtools should never import a submodule in order to use a stable +API. Unstable APIs like ``testtools.matchers`` and +``testtools.deferredruntest`` should be exported as submodules. + +Tests belong in ``testtools/tests/``. + + +Committing to trunk +------------------- + +Testtools is maintained using bzr, with its trunk at lp:testtools. This gives +every contributor the ability to commit their work to their own branches. +However permission must be granted to allow contributors to commit to the trunk +branch. + +Commit access to trunk is obtained by joining the testtools-committers +Launchpad team. Membership in this team is contingent on obeying the testtools +contribution policy, see `Copyright Assignment`_ above. + + +Code Review +----------- + +All code must be reviewed before landing on trunk. The process is to create a +branch in launchpad, and submit it for merging to lp:testtools. It will then +be reviewed before it can be merged to trunk. It will be reviewed by someone: + +* not the author +* a committer (member of the `~testtools-committers`_ team) + +As a special exception, while the testtools committers team is small and prone +to blocking, a merge request from a committer that has not been reviewed after +24 hours may be merged by that committer. When the team is larger this policy +will be revisited. + +Code reviewers should look for the quality of what is being submitted, +including conformance with this HACKING file. + +Changes which all users should be made aware of should be documented in NEWS. + + +NEWS management +--------------- + +The file NEWS is structured as a sorted list of releases. Each release can have +a free form description and more or more sections with bullet point items. +Sections in use today are 'Improvements' and 'Changes'. To ease merging between +branches, the bullet points are kept alphabetically sorted. The release NEXT is +permanently present at the top of the list. + + +Release tasks +------------- + +#. Choose a version number, say X.Y.Z +#. Branch from trunk to testtools-X.Y.Z +#. In testtools-X.Y.Z, ensure __init__ has version ``(X, Y, Z, 'final', 0)`` +#. Replace NEXT in NEWS with the version number X.Y.Z, adjusting the reST. +#. Possibly write a blurb into NEWS. +#. Replace any additional references to NEXT with the version being + released. (There should be none other than the ones in these release tasks + which should not be replaced). +#. Commit the changes. +#. Tag the release, bzr tag testtools-X.Y.Z +#. Run 'make release', this: + #. Creates a source distribution and uploads to PyPI + #. Ensures all Fix Committed bugs are in the release milestone + #. Makes a release on Launchpad and uploads the tarball + #. Marks all the Fix Committed bugs as Fix Released + #. Creates a new milestone +#. Merge the release branch testtools-X.Y.Z into trunk. Before the commit, + add a NEXT heading to the top of NEWS and bump the version in __init__.py. + Push trunk to Launchpad +#. If a new series has been created (e.g. 0.10.0), make the series on Launchpad. + +.. _PEP 8: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/ +.. _unittest: http://docs.python.org/library/unittest.html +.. _~testtools-dev: https://launchpad.net/~testtools-dev +.. _MIT license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php +.. _Sphinx: http://sphinx.pocoo.org/ +.. _restructuredtext: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/rst.html + diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/index.rst b/lib/testtools/doc/index.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..4687cebb62 --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/index.rst @@ -0,0 +1,33 @@ +.. testtools documentation master file, created by + sphinx-quickstart on Sun Nov 28 13:45:40 2010. + You can adapt this file completely to your liking, but it should at least + contain the root `toctree` directive. + +testtools: tasteful testing for Python +====================================== + +testtools is a set of extensions to the Python standard library's unit testing +framework. These extensions have been derived from many years of experience +with unit testing in Python and come from many different sources. testtools +also ports recent unittest changes all the way back to Python 2.4. + + +Contents: + +.. toctree:: + :maxdepth: 1 + + overview + for-test-authors + for-framework-folk + hacking + Changes to testtools + API reference documentation + +Indices and tables +================== + +* :ref:`genindex` +* :ref:`modindex` +* :ref:`search` + diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/make.bat b/lib/testtools/doc/make.bat new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..f8c1fd520a --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/make.bat @@ -0,0 +1,113 @@ +@ECHO OFF + +REM Command file for Sphinx documentation + +set SPHINXBUILD=sphinx-build +set BUILDDIR=_build +set ALLSPHINXOPTS=-d %BUILDDIR%/doctrees %SPHINXOPTS% . +if NOT "%PAPER%" == "" ( + set ALLSPHINXOPTS=-D latex_paper_size=%PAPER% %ALLSPHINXOPTS% +) + +if "%1" == "" goto help + +if "%1" == "help" ( + :help + echo.Please use `make ^` where ^ is one of + echo. html to make standalone HTML files + echo. dirhtml to make HTML files named index.html in directories + echo. pickle to make pickle files + echo. json to make JSON files + echo. htmlhelp to make HTML files and a HTML help project + echo. qthelp to make HTML files and a qthelp project + echo. latex to make LaTeX files, you can set PAPER=a4 or PAPER=letter + echo. changes to make an overview over all changed/added/deprecated items + echo. linkcheck to check all external links for integrity + echo. doctest to run all doctests embedded in the documentation if enabled + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "clean" ( + for /d %%i in (%BUILDDIR%\*) do rmdir /q /s %%i + del /q /s %BUILDDIR%\* + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "html" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b html %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/html + echo. + echo.Build finished. The HTML pages are in %BUILDDIR%/html. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "dirhtml" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b dirhtml %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/dirhtml + echo. + echo.Build finished. The HTML pages are in %BUILDDIR%/dirhtml. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "pickle" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b pickle %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/pickle + echo. + echo.Build finished; now you can process the pickle files. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "json" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b json %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/json + echo. + echo.Build finished; now you can process the JSON files. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "htmlhelp" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b htmlhelp %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/htmlhelp + echo. + echo.Build finished; now you can run HTML Help Workshop with the ^ +.hhp project file in %BUILDDIR%/htmlhelp. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "qthelp" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b qthelp %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/qthelp + echo. + echo.Build finished; now you can run "qcollectiongenerator" with the ^ +.qhcp project file in %BUILDDIR%/qthelp, like this: + echo.^> qcollectiongenerator %BUILDDIR%\qthelp\testtools.qhcp + echo.To view the help file: + echo.^> assistant -collectionFile %BUILDDIR%\qthelp\testtools.ghc + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "latex" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b latex %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/latex + echo. + echo.Build finished; the LaTeX files are in %BUILDDIR%/latex. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "changes" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b changes %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/changes + echo. + echo.The overview file is in %BUILDDIR%/changes. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "linkcheck" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b linkcheck %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/linkcheck + echo. + echo.Link check complete; look for any errors in the above output ^ +or in %BUILDDIR%/linkcheck/output.txt. + goto end +) + +if "%1" == "doctest" ( + %SPHINXBUILD% -b doctest %ALLSPHINXOPTS% %BUILDDIR%/doctest + echo. + echo.Testing of doctests in the sources finished, look at the ^ +results in %BUILDDIR%/doctest/output.txt. + goto end +) + +:end diff --git a/lib/testtools/doc/overview.rst b/lib/testtools/doc/overview.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..e43265fd1e --- /dev/null +++ b/lib/testtools/doc/overview.rst @@ -0,0 +1,96 @@ +====================================== +testtools: tasteful testing for Python +====================================== + +testtools is a set of extensions to the Python standard library's unit testing +framework. These extensions have been derived from many years of experience +with unit testing in Python and come from many different sources. testtools +also ports recent unittest changes all the way back to Python 2.4. + +What better way to start than with a contrived code snippet?:: + + from testtools import TestCase + from testtools.content import Content + from testtools.content_type import UTF8_TEXT + from testtools.matchers import Equals + + from myproject import SillySquareServer + + class TestSillySquareServer(TestCase): + + def setUp(self): + super(TestSillySquare, self).setUp() + self.server = self.useFixture(SillySquareServer()) + self.addCleanup(self.attach_log_file) + + def attach_log_file(self): + self.addDetail( + 'log-file', + Content(UTF8_TEXT + lambda: open(self.server.logfile, 'r').readlines())) + + def test_server_is_cool(self): + self.assertThat(self.server.temperature, Equals("cool")) + + def test_square(self): + self.assertThat(self.server.silly_square_of(7), Equals(49)) + + +Why use testtools? +================== + +Better assertion methods +------------------------ + +The standard assertion methods that come with unittest aren't as helpful as +they could be, and there aren't quite enough of them. testtools adds +``assertIn``, ``assertIs``, ``assertIsInstance`` and their negatives. + + +Matchers: better than assertion methods +--------------------------------------- + +Of course, in any serious project you want to be able to have assertions that +are specific to that project and the particular problem that it is addressing. +Rather than forcing you to define your own assertion methods and maintain your +own inheritance hierarchy of ``TestCase`` classes, testtools lets you write +your own "matchers", custom predicates that can be plugged into a unit test:: + + def test_response_has_bold(self): + # The response has bold text. + response = self.server.getResponse() + self.assertThat(response, HTMLContains(Tag('bold', 'b'))) + + +More debugging info, when you need it +-------------------------------------- + +testtools makes it easy to add arbitrary data to your test result. If you +want to know what's in a log file when a test fails, or what the load was on +the computer when a test started, or what files were open, you can add that +information with ``TestCase.addDetail``, and it will appear in the test +results if that test fails. + + +Extend unittest, but stay compatible and re-usable +-------------------------------------------------- + +testtools goes to great lengths to allow serious test authors and test +*framework* authors to do whatever they like with their tests and their +extensions while staying compatible with the standard library's unittest. + +testtools has completely parametrized how exceptions raised in tests are +mapped to ``TestResult`` methods and how tests are actually executed (ever +wanted ``tearDown`` to be called regardless of whether ``setUp`` succeeds?) + +It also provides many simple but handy utilities, like the ability to clone a +test, a ``MultiTestResult`` object that lets many result objects get the +results from one test suite, adapters to bring legacy ``TestResult`` objects +into our new golden age. + + +Cross-Python compatibility +-------------------------- + +testtools gives you the very latest in unit testing technology in a way that +will work with Python 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7 and 3.1. -- cgit