============================ 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 ====================== In addition to the ``TestCase`` specific methods, we have extensions for ``TestSuite`` that also apply to ``TestCase`` (because ``TestCase`` and ``TestSuite`` follow the Composite pattern). 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. .. _force_failure: Delayed Test Failure -------------------- Setting the ``testtools.TestCase.force_failure`` instance variable to True will cause ``testtools.RunTest`` to fail the test case after the test has finished. This is useful when you want to cause a test to fail, but don't want to prevent the remainder of the test code from being executed. 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] Test instance decorators ======================== DecorateTestCaseResult ---------------------- This object calls out to your code when ``run`` / ``__call__`` are called and allows the result object that will be used to run the test to be altered. This is very useful when working with a test runner that doesn't know your test case requirements. For instance, it can be used to inject a ``unittest2`` compatible adapter when someone attempts to run your test suite with a ``TestResult`` that does not support ``addSkip`` or other ``unittest2`` methods. Similarly it can aid the migration to ``StreamResult``. e.g.:: >>> suite = TestSuite() >>> suite = DecorateTestCaseResult(suite, ExtendedToOriginalDecorator) Extensions to TestResult ======================== StreamResult ------------ ``StreamResult`` is a new API for dealing with test case progress that supports concurrent and distributed testing without the various issues that ``TestResult`` has such as buffering in multiplexers. The design has several key principles: * Nothing that requires up-front knowledge of all tests. * Deal with tests running in concurrent environments, potentially distributed across multiple processes (or even machines). This implies allowing multiple tests to be active at once, supplying time explicitly, being able to differentiate between tests running in different contexts and removing any assumption that tests are necessarily in the same process. * Make the API as simple as possible - each aspect should do one thing well. The ``TestResult`` API this is intended to replace has three different clients. * Each executing ``TestCase`` notifies the ``TestResult`` about activity. * The testrunner running tests uses the API to find out whether the test run had errors, how many tests ran and so on. * Finally, each ``TestCase`` queries the ``TestResult`` to see whether the test run should be aborted. With ``StreamResult`` we need to be able to provide a ``TestResult`` compatible adapter (``StreamToExtendedDecorator``) to allow incremental migration. However, we don't need to conflate things long term. So - we define three separate APIs, and merely mix them together to provide the ``StreamToExtendedDecorator``. ``StreamResult`` is the first of these APIs - meeting the needs of ``TestCase`` clients. It handles events generated by running tests. See the API documentation for ``testtools.StreamResult`` for details. StreamSummary ------------- Secondly we define the ``StreamSummary`` API which takes responsibility for collating errors, detecting incomplete tests and counting tests. This provides a compatible API with those aspects of ``TestResult``. Again, see the API documentation for ``testtools.StreamSummary``. TestControl ----------- Lastly we define the ``TestControl`` API which is used to provide the ``shouldStop`` and ``stop`` elements from ``TestResult``. Again, see the API documentation for ``testtools.TestControl``. ``TestControl`` can be paired with a ``StreamFailFast`` to trigger aborting a test run when a failure is observed. Aborting multiple workers in a distributed environment requires hooking whatever signalling mechanism the distributed environment has up to a ``TestControl`` in each worker process. StreamTagger ------------ A ``StreamResult`` filter that adds or removes tags from events:: >>> from testtools import StreamTagger >>> sink = StreamResult() >>> result = StreamTagger([sink], set(['add']), set(['discard'])) >>> result.startTestRun() >>> # Run tests against result here. >>> result.stopTestRun() StreamToDict ------------ A simplified API for dealing with ``StreamResult`` streams. Each test is buffered until it completes and then reported as a trivial dict. This makes writing analysers very easy - you can ignore all the plumbing and just work with the result. e.g.:: >>> from testtools import StreamToDict >>> def handle_test(test_dict): ... print(test_dict['id']) >>> result = StreamToDict(handle_test) >>> result.startTestRun() >>> # Run tests against result here. >>> # At stopTestRun() any incomplete buffered tests are announced. >>> result.stopTestRun() ExtendedToStreamDecorator ------------------------- This is a hybrid object that combines both the ``Extended`` and ``Stream`` ``TestResult`` APIs into one class, but only emits ``StreamResult`` events. This is useful when a ``StreamResult`` stream is desired, but you cannot be sure that the tests which will run have been updated to the ``StreamResult`` API. StreamToExtendedDecorator ------------------------- This is a simple converter that emits the ``ExtendedTestResult`` API in response to events from the ``StreamResult`` API. Useful when outputting ``StreamResult`` events from a ``TestCase`` but the supplied ``TestResult`` does not support the ``status`` and ``file`` methods. StreamToQueue ------------- This is a ``StreamResult`` decorator for reporting tests from multiple threads at once. Each method submits an event to a supplied Queue object as a simple dict. See ``ConcurrentStreamTestSuite`` for a convenient way to use this. TimestampingStreamResult ------------------------ This is a ``StreamResult`` decorator for adding timestamps to events that lack them. This allows writing the simplest possible generators of events and passing the events via this decorator to get timestamped data. As long as no buffering/queueing or blocking happen before the timestamper sees the event the timestamp will be as accurate as if the original event had it. StreamResultRouter ------------------ This is a ``StreamResult`` which forwards events to an arbitrary set of target ``StreamResult`` objects. Events that have no forwarding rule are passed onto an fallback ``StreamResult`` for processing. The mapping can be changed at runtime, allowing great flexibility and responsiveness to changes. Because The mapping can change dynamically and there could be the same recipient for two different maps, ``startTestRun`` and ``stopTestRun`` handling is fine grained and up to the user. If no fallback has been supplied, an unroutable event will raise an exception. For instance:: >>> router = StreamResultRouter() >>> sink = doubles.StreamResult() >>> router.add_rule(sink, 'route_code_prefix', route_prefix='0', ... consume_route=True) >>> router.status(test_id='foo', route_code='0/1', test_status='uxsuccess') Would remove the ``0/`` from the route_code and forward the event like so:: >>> sink.status('test_id=foo', route_code='1', test_status='uxsuccess') See ``pydoc testtools.StreamResultRouter`` for details. 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. TestResultDecorator ------------------- Not strictly a ``TestResult``, but something that implements the extended ``TestResult`` interface of testtools. It can be subclassed to create objects that wrap ``TestResults``. 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. ConcurrentStreamTestSuite ------------------------- A variant of ConcurrentTestSuite that uses the new StreamResult API instead of the TestResult API. ConcurrentStreamTestSuite coordinates running some number of test/suites concurrently, with one StreamToQueue per test/suite. Each test/suite gets given its own ExtendedToStreamDecorator + TimestampingStreamResult wrapped StreamToQueue instance, forwarding onto the StreamResult that ConcurrentStreamTestSuite.run was called with. ConcurrentStreamTestSuite is a thin shim and it is easy to implement your own specialised form if that is needed. 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 due to there being no standard channel for suites to pass information to the tests they contain (and we don't have enough data on what such a channel would need to achieve to design a good one yet - or even decide if it is a good idea). sorted_tests ------------ Given the composite structure of TestSuite / TestCase, sorting tests is problematic - you can't tell what functionality is embedded into custom Suite implementations. In order to deliver consistent test orders when using test discovery (see http://bugs.python.org/issue16709), testtools flattens and sorts tests that have the standard TestSuite, and defines a new method sort_tests, which can be used by non-standard TestSuites to know when they should sort their tests. An example implementation can be seen at ``FixtureSuite.sorted_tests``. If there are duplicate test ids in a suite, ValueError will be raised. filter_by_ids ------------- Similarly to ``sorted_tests`` running a subset of tests is problematic - the standard run interface provides no way to limit what runs. Rather than confounding the two problems (selection and execution) we defined a method that filters the tests in a suite (or a case) by their unique test id. If you a writing custom wrapping suites, consider implementing filter_by_ids to support this (though most wrappers that subclass ``unittest.TestSuite`` will work just fine [see ``testtools.testsuite.filter_by_ids`` for details.] Extensions to TestRunner ======================== To facilitate custom listing of tests, ``testtools.run.TestProgram`` attempts to call ``list`` on the ``TestRunner``, falling back to a generic implementation if it is not present. .. _`testtools API docs`: http://mumak.net/testtools/apidocs/ .. _unittest: http://docs.python.org/library/unittest.html .. _fixture: http://pypi.python.org/pypi/fixtures