coveo-testing
A set of test/pytest helpers to facilitate common routines.
Content in a nutshell:
-
Reusable pytest markers (UnitTest, IntegrationTest)
-
Unique ID generation for tests
-
Multiline logging assertions with includes, excludes, levels and comprehensive assertion output
-
Refactorable unittest.mock.patch('this.module')
module references
-
Human-readable (but still customizable) display for parametrized tests
This project is used as the test base for all other projects in this repository.
Therefore, it cannot depend on any of them.
More complex use cases may be implemented in the coveo-testing-extras
project.
That's also where you can depend on projects that depend on coveo-testing
.
pytest markers and auto-registration
This enables code completion on markers.
Three markers are already provided: [UnitTest, Integration, Interactive]
Here's how you can create additional markers:
import pytest
DockerTest = pytest.mark.docker_test
CloudTest = pytest.mark.cloud_test
ALL_MARKERS = [DockerTest, CloudTest]
You can then import these markers and decorate your test functions accordingly:
from coveo_testing.markers import UnitTest, Integration, Interactive
from test_some_module.markers import CloudTest, DockerTest
@UnitTest
def test_unit() -> None:
...
@Integration
def test_integration() -> None:
...
@CloudTest
def test_in_the_cloud() -> None:
...
@DockerTest
@Integration
def test_through_docker() -> None:
...
@Interactive
def test_interactive() -> None:
...
Pytest will issue a warning when markers are not registered.
To register coveo-testing's markers along with your custom markers, use the provided register_markers
method:
from _pytest.config import Config
from coveo_testing.markers import register_markers
from test_some_module.markers import ALL_MARKERS
def pytest_configure(config: Config) -> None:
"""This pytest hook is ran once, before collecting tests."""
register_markers(config, *ALL_MARKERS)
Human-readable unique ID generation
The generated ID has this format:
friendly-name.timestamp.pid.host.executor.sequence
-
friendly-name:
- provided by you, for your own benefit
-
timestamp:
- format "%m%d%H%M%S" (month, day, hour, minutes, seconds)
- computed once, when TestId is imported
-
pid:
- the pid of the python process
-
host:
- the network name of the machine
-
executor:
- the content of the
EXECUTOR_NUMBER
environment variable - returns 'default' when not defined
- historically, this variable comes from jenkins
- conceptually, it can be used to help distribute (and identify) tests and executors
-
sequence:
- Thread-safe
- Each
friendly-name
has an isolated sequence
that starts at 0 - Incremented on each new instance
- Enables support for parallel parametrized tests
from coveo_testing.temporary_resource.unique_id import TestId, unique_test_id
test_id = TestId('friendly-name')
str(test_id)
'friendly-name.0202152243.18836.WORKSTATION.default.0'
str(test_id)
'friendly-name.0202152243.18836.WORKSTATION.default.0'
test_id = TestId('friendly-name')
str(test_id)
'friendly-name.0202152243.18836.WORKSTATION.default.1'
import pytest
@pytest.mark.parametrize('param', (True, False))
def test_param(param: bool, unique_test_id: TestId) -> None:
...
multiline logging assertions
Maybe pytest's caplog
is enough for your needs, or maybe you need more options.
This tool uses in
and not in
to match strings in a case-sensitive way.
import logging
from coveo_testing.logging import assert_logging
with assert_logging(
logging.getLogger('logger-name'),
present=['evidence1', 'evidence2'],
absent=[...],
level=logging.WARN):
...
Human-readable (but still customizable) display for parametrized tests
If you're like me, you typed @pytest.mark.parametrize
wrong a couple of times!
Enable IDE completion by using this one instead:
from coveo_testing.parametrize import parametrize
@parametrize('var', (True, False))
def test_var(var: bool) -> None:
...
It has one difference vs the pytest one, and it's the way it formats the "parameter name" for each iteration of the test.
Pytest will skip a lot of types and will simply name your test "var0", "var1" and so on.
Using this @parametrize
instead, the variable's content will be inspected:
from typing import Any
from coveo_testing.parametrize import parametrize
import pytest
class StrMe:
def __init__(self, var: Any) -> None:
self.var = var
def __str__(self) -> str:
return f"Value: {self.var}"
@parametrize('var', [['list', 'display'], [StrMe('hello')]])
def test_param(var: bool) -> None:
...
@pytest.mark.parametrize('var', [['list', 'display'], [StrMe('hello')]])
def test_param_from_pytest(var: bool) -> None:
...
If you run pytest --collect-only
you will obtain the following:
<Function test_param[list-display]>
<Function test_param[Value: hello]>
<Function test_param_from_pytest[var0]>
<Function test_param_from_pytest[var1]>
Refactorable mock targets
The ref
tool has moved to its own package called coveo-ref.
Backward Compatibility
You can still continue using ref
from coveo-testing
: the backward compatibility patch will not be deprecated.
Migration Guide
If you'd rather use the new package directly:
- Import the
coveo-ref
dependency into your project - Replace
from coveo_testing.mocks import ref
by from coveo_ref import ref
- Exceptions have been moved to
coveo_ref.exceptions