Remove the undocumented private float.__set_format__() method,
previously known as float.__set_format__() in Python 3.7. Its
docstring said: "You probably don't want to use this function. It
exists mainly to be used in Python's test suite."
Revert "bpo-45162: Remove many old deprecated unittest features (GH-28268)"
This reverts commit b0a6ede3d0.
We're deferring this change until 3.12 while upstream projects that use
the legacy assertion method names are fixed. See the issue for links
to the discussion. Many upstream projects now have issues and PRs
filed.
TestResult methods addFailure(), addError(), addSkip() and
addSubTest() are now called immediately after raising an exception
in test or finishing a subtest. Previously they were called only
after finishing the test clean up.
unittest.TestCase.debug() raises now a SkipTest if the class or
the test method are decorated with the skipping decorator.
Previously it only raised a SkipTest if the test method was decorated
with other decorator in addition to the skipping decorator, or
if SkipTest was explicitly raised in the test or setup methods.
* "fail*" and "assert*" aliases of TestCase methods.
* Broken from start TestCase method assertDictContainsSubset().
* Ignored TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule() parameter use_load_tests.
* Old alias _TextTestResult of TextTestResult.
* In default mode output separate characters for skipped and failed subtests.
* In verbose mode output separate lines (including description) for skipped
and failed subtests.
* In verbose mode output test description for errors in test cleanup.
* Functions registered with addModuleCleanup() were not called unless
the user defines tearDownModule() in their test module.
* Functions registered with addClassCleanup() were not called if
tearDownClass is set to None.
* Buffering in TestResult did not work with functions registered
with addClassCleanup() and addModuleCleanup().
* Errors in functions registered with addClassCleanup() and
addModuleCleanup() were not handled correctly in buffered and
debug modes.
* Errors in setUpModule() and functions registered with
addModuleCleanup() were reported in wrong order.
* And several lesser bugs.
Previously it returned None if the test class or method was
decorated with a skipping decorator.
Co-authored-by: Iman Tabrizian <iman.tabrizian@gmail.com>
Method stopTestRun() is now always called in pair with method startTestRun()
for TestResult objects implicitly created in TestCase.run().
Previously it was not called for test methods and classes decorated with
a skipping decorator.
* Restrict using Mock objects as specs as this is always a test bug where the resulting mock is misleadingly useless.
* Skip a broken test that exposes a bug elsewhere in mock (noted in the original issue).
patch, patch.object and create_autospec silently ignore misspelled
arguments such as autospect, auto_spec and set_spec. This can lead
to tests failing to check what they are supposed to check.
This change adds a check causing a RuntimeError if the above
functions get any of the above misspellings as arguments. It also
adds a new argument, "unsafe", which can be set to True to disable
this check.
Also add "!r" to format specifiers in added error messages.
This is a follow-up to
4662fa9bfe.
That original commit expanded guards against misspelling assertions on
mocks. This follow-up updates the documentation and improves the error
message by pointing out the potential cause and solution.
Automerge-Triggered-By: GH:gpshead
Currently, a Mock object which is not unsafe will raise an
AttributeError if an attribute with the prefix assert or assret is
accessed on it. This protects against misspellings of real assert
method calls, which lead to tests passing silently even if the tested
code does not satisfy the intended assertion.
Recently a check was done in a large code base (Google) and three
more frequent ways of misspelling assert were found causing harm:
asert, aseert, assrt. These are now added to the existing check.
unittest.TestCase.assertWarns no longer raises a RuntimeException
when accessing a module's ``__warningregistry__`` causes importation of a new
module, or when a new module is imported in another thread.
Patch by Kernc.