From 35b3792ed3598d9cc52160604ed0e4efa2b1af0b Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Michael Foord Date: Thu, 25 Mar 2010 23:56:33 +0000 Subject: [PATCH] Turn unittest tests into a package --- Lib/test/test_unittest.py | 4424 +------------------- Lib/unittest/test/__init__.py | 35 + Lib/unittest/test/support.py | 119 + Lib/unittest/test/test_assertions.py | 258 ++ Lib/unittest/test/test_case.py | 907 ++++ Lib/unittest/test/test_discovery.py | 293 ++ Lib/unittest/test/test_functiontestcase.py | 148 + Lib/unittest/test/test_loader.py | 1294 ++++++ Lib/unittest/test/test_program.py | 78 + Lib/unittest/test/test_result.py | 359 ++ Lib/unittest/test/test_runner.py | 182 + Lib/unittest/test/test_setups.py | 405 ++ Lib/unittest/test/test_skipping.py | 138 + Lib/unittest/test/test_suite.py | 295 ++ 14 files changed, 4515 insertions(+), 4420 deletions(-) create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/__init__.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/support.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_assertions.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_case.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_discovery.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_functiontestcase.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_loader.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_program.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_result.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_runner.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_setups.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_skipping.py create mode 100644 Lib/unittest/test/test_suite.py diff --git a/Lib/test/test_unittest.py b/Lib/test/test_unittest.py index 034a5f0991c..4e3e009d43b 100644 --- a/Lib/test/test_unittest.py +++ b/Lib/test/test_unittest.py @@ -1,4427 +1,11 @@ -"""Test script for unittest. - -By Collin Winter - -Still need testing: - TestCase.{assert,fail}* methods (some are tested implicitly) -""" - -import os -import re -import sys from test import test_support -import unittest -from unittest import TestCase, TestProgram -import types -from copy import deepcopy -from cStringIO import StringIO -import pickle +import unittest.test -### Support code -################################################################ - -def resultFactory(*_): - return unittest.TestResult() - -class LoggingResult(unittest.TestResult): - def __init__(self, log): - self._events = log - super(LoggingResult, self).__init__() - - def startTest(self, test): - self._events.append('startTest') - super(LoggingResult, self).startTest(test) - - def startTestRun(self): - self._events.append('startTestRun') - super(LoggingResult, self).startTestRun() - - def stopTest(self, test): - self._events.append('stopTest') - super(LoggingResult, self).stopTest(test) - - def stopTestRun(self): - self._events.append('stopTestRun') - super(LoggingResult, self).stopTestRun() - - def addFailure(self, *args): - self._events.append('addFailure') - super(LoggingResult, self).addFailure(*args) - - def addSuccess(self, *args): - self._events.append('addSuccess') - super(LoggingResult, self).addSuccess(*args) - - def addError(self, *args): - self._events.append('addError') - super(LoggingResult, self).addError(*args) - - def addSkip(self, *args): - self._events.append('addSkip') - super(LoggingResult, self).addSkip(*args) - - def addExpectedFailure(self, *args): - self._events.append('addExpectedFailure') - super(LoggingResult, self).addExpectedFailure(*args) - - def addUnexpectedSuccess(self, *args): - self._events.append('addUnexpectedSuccess') - super(LoggingResult, self).addUnexpectedSuccess(*args) - - -class TestEquality(object): - """Used as a mixin for TestCase""" - - # Check for a valid __eq__ implementation - def test_eq(self): - for obj_1, obj_2 in self.eq_pairs: - self.assertEqual(obj_1, obj_2) - self.assertEqual(obj_2, obj_1) - - # Check for a valid __ne__ implementation - def test_ne(self): - for obj_1, obj_2 in self.ne_pairs: - self.assertNotEqual(obj_1, obj_2) - self.assertNotEqual(obj_2, obj_1) - -class TestHashing(object): - """Used as a mixin for TestCase""" - - # Check for a valid __hash__ implementation - def test_hash(self): - for obj_1, obj_2 in self.eq_pairs: - try: - if not hash(obj_1) == hash(obj_2): - self.fail("%r and %r do not hash equal" % (obj_1, obj_2)) - except KeyboardInterrupt: - raise - except Exception, e: - self.fail("Problem hashing %r and %r: %s" % (obj_1, obj_2, e)) - - for obj_1, obj_2 in self.ne_pairs: - try: - if hash(obj_1) == hash(obj_2): - self.fail("%s and %s hash equal, but shouldn't" % - (obj_1, obj_2)) - except KeyboardInterrupt: - raise - except Exception, e: - self.fail("Problem hashing %s and %s: %s" % (obj_1, obj_2, e)) - - -# List subclass we can add attributes to. -class MyClassSuite(list): - - def __init__(self, tests): - super(MyClassSuite, self).__init__(tests) - - -################################################################ -### /Support code - -class Test_TestLoader(TestCase): - - ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase - ################################################################ - - # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived - # class testCaseClass" - def test_loadTestsFromTestCase(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - - tests = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) - - # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived - # class testCaseClass" - # - # Make sure it does the right thing even if no tests were found - def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__no_matches(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def foo_bar(self): pass - - empty_suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), empty_suite) - - # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived - # class testCaseClass" - # - # What happens if loadTestsFromTestCase() is given an object - # that isn't a subclass of TestCase? Specifically, what happens - # if testCaseClass is a subclass of TestSuite? - # - # This is checked for specifically in the code, so we better add a - # test for it. - def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__TestSuite_subclass(self): - class NotATestCase(unittest.TestSuite): - pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(NotATestCase) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail('Should raise TypeError') - - # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived - # class testCaseClass" - # - # Make sure loadTestsFromTestCase() picks up the default test method - # name (as specified by TestCase), even though the method name does - # not match the default TestLoader.testMethodPrefix string - def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__default_method_name(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): - pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - # This has to be false for the test to succeed - self.assertFalse('runTest'.startswith(loader.testMethodPrefix)) - - suite = loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [Foo('runTest')]) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase - - ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule - ################################################################ - - # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" - def test_loadTestsFromModule__TestCase_subclass(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - expected = [loader.suiteClass([MyTestCase('test')])] - self.assertEqual(list(suite), expected) - - # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" - # - # What happens if no tests are found (no TestCase instances)? - def test_loadTestsFromModule__no_TestCase_instances(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) - - # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" - # - # What happens if no tests are found (TestCases instances, but no tests)? - def test_loadTestsFromModule__no_TestCase_tests(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [loader.suiteClass()]) - - # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase"s - # - # What happens if loadTestsFromModule() is given something other - # than a module? - # - # XXX Currently, it succeeds anyway. This flexibility - # should either be documented or loadTestsFromModule() should - # raise a TypeError - # - # XXX Certain people are using this behaviour. We'll add a test for it - def test_loadTestsFromModule__not_a_module(self): - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - class NotAModule(object): - test_2 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(NotAModule) - - reference = [unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')])] - self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) - - - # Check that loadTestsFromModule honors (or not) a module - # with a load_tests function. - def test_loadTestsFromModule__load_tests(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - load_tests_args = [] - def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): - self.assertIsInstance(tests, unittest.TestSuite) - load_tests_args.extend((loader, tests, pattern)) - return tests - m.load_tests = load_tests - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, unittest.TestSuite) - self.assertEquals(load_tests_args, [loader, suite, None]) - - load_tests_args = [] - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m, use_load_tests=False) - self.assertEquals(load_tests_args, []) - - def test_loadTestsFromModule__faulty_load_tests(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - - def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): - raise TypeError('some failure') - m.load_tests = load_tests - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, unittest.TestSuite) - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) - test = list(suite)[0] - - self.assertRaisesRegexp(TypeError, "some failure", test.m) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule() - - ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromName() - ################################################################ - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # Is ValueError raised in response to an empty name? - def test_loadTestsFromName__empty_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('') - except ValueError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "Empty module name") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when the name contains invalid characters? - def test_loadTestsFromName__malformed_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - # XXX Should this raise ValueError or ImportError? - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('abc () //') - except ValueError: - pass - except ImportError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to a - # module" - # - # What happens when a module by that name can't be found? - def test_loadTestsFromName__unknown_module_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('sdasfasfasdf') - except ImportError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "No module named sdasfasfasdf") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ImportError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when the module is found, but the attribute can't? - def test_loadTestsFromName__unknown_attr_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('unittest.sdasfasfasdf') - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when we provide the module, but the attribute can't be - # found? - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_unknown_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('sdasfasfasdf', unittest) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # Does loadTestsFromName raise ValueError when passed an empty - # name relative to a provided module? - # - # XXX Should probably raise a ValueError instead of an AttributeError - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_empty_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('', unittest) - except AttributeError, e: - pass - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # What happens when an impossible name is given, relative to the provided - # `module`? - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_malformed_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - # XXX Should this raise AttributeError or ValueError? - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('abc () //', unittest) - except ValueError: - pass - except AttributeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # Does loadTestsFromName raise TypeError when the `module` argument - # isn't a module object? - # - # XXX Accepts the not-a-module object, ignorning the object's type - # This should raise an exception or the method name should be changed - # - # XXX Some people are relying on this, so keep it for now - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_not_a_module(self): - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - class NotAModule(object): - test_2 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('test_2', NotAModule) - - reference = [MyTestCase('test')] - self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # Does it raise an exception if the name resolves to an invalid - # object? - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_bad_object(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - m.testcase_1 = object() - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1', m) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Should have raised TypeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may - # resolve either to ... a test case class" - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_TestCase_subclass(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_TestSuite(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testsuite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testsuite', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a test method within a test case class" - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_testmethod(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.test', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # Does loadTestsFromName() raise the proper exception when trying to - # resolve "a test method within a test case class" that doesn't exist - # for the given name (relative to a provided module)? - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_invalid_testmethod(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.testfoo', m) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "type object 'MyTestCase' has no attribute 'testfoo'") - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a ... TestSuite instance" - def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestSuite(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - testcase_2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - def return_TestSuite(): - return unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) - m.return_TestSuite = return_TestSuite - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestSuite', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1, testcase_2]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" - def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestCase_instance(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - def return_TestCase(): - return testcase_1 - m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestCase', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" - #***************************************************************** - #Override the suiteClass attribute to ensure that the suiteClass - #attribute is used - def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestCase_instance_ProperSuiteClass(self): - class SubTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite): - pass - m = types.ModuleType('m') - testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - def return_TestCase(): - return testcase_1 - m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass = SubTestSuite - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestCase', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a test method within a test case class" - #***************************************************************** - #Override the suiteClass attribute to ensure that the suiteClass - #attribute is used - def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_testmethod_ProperSuiteClass(self): - class SubTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite): - pass - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass=SubTestSuite - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.test', m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" - # - # What happens if the callable returns something else? - def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__wrong_type(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - def return_wrong(): - return 6 - m.return_wrong = return_wrong - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_wrong', m) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise TypeError") - - # "The specifier can refer to modules and packages which have not been - # imported; they will be imported as a side-effect" - def test_loadTestsFromName__module_not_loaded(self): - # We're going to try to load this module as a side-effect, so it - # better not be loaded before we try. - # - # Why pick audioop? Google shows it isn't used very often, so there's - # a good chance that it won't be imported when this test is run - module_name = 'audioop' - - if module_name in sys.modules: - del sys.modules[module_name] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - suite = loader.loadTestsFromName(module_name) - - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) - - # audioop should now be loaded, thanks to loadTestsFromName() - self.assertIn(module_name, sys.modules) - finally: - if module_name in sys.modules: - del sys.modules[module_name] - - ################################################################ - ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromName() - - ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames() - ################################################################ - - # "Similar to loadTestsFromName(), but takes a sequence of names rather - # than a single name." - # - # What happens if that sequence of names is empty? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__empty_name_list(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([]) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) - - # "Similar to loadTestsFromName(), but takes a sequence of names rather - # than a single name." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # What happens if that sequence of names is empty? - # - # XXX Should this raise a ValueError or just return an empty TestSuite? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_empty_name_list(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([], unittest) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # Is ValueError raised in response to an empty name? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__empty_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['']) - except ValueError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "Empty module name") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when presented with an impossible module name? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__malformed_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - # XXX Should this raise ValueError or ImportError? - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['abc () //']) - except ValueError: - pass - except ImportError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when no module can be found for the given name? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_module_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['sdasfasfasdf']) - except ImportError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "No module named sdasfasfasdf") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ImportError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # What happens when the module can be found, but not the attribute? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_attr_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['unittest.sdasfasfasdf', 'unittest']) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # What happens when given an unknown attribute on a specified `module` - # argument? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_name_relative_1(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['sdasfasfasdf'], unittest) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # Do unknown attributes (relative to a provided module) still raise an - # exception even in the presence of valid attribute names? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_name_relative_2(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['TestCase', 'sdasfasfasdf'], unittest) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # What happens when faced with the empty string? - # - # XXX This currently raises AttributeError, though ValueError is probably - # more appropriate - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_empty_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames([''], unittest) - except AttributeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # ... - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # What happens when presented with an impossible attribute name? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_malformed_name(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - # XXX Should this raise AttributeError or ValueError? - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['abc () //'], unittest) - except AttributeError: - pass - except ValueError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") - - # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" - # - # Does loadTestsFromNames() make sure the provided `module` is in fact - # a module? - # - # XXX This validation is currently not done. This flexibility should - # either be documented or a TypeError should be raised. - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_not_a_module(self): - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - class NotAModule(object): - test_2 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['test_2'], NotAModule) - - reference = [unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')])] - self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to - # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method - # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a - # TestCase or TestSuite instance." - # - # Does it raise an exception if the name resolves to an invalid - # object? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_bad_object(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - m.testcase_1 = object() - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1'], m) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Should have raised TypeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a test case class" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_TestCase_subclass(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - expected = loader.suiteClass([MyTestCase('test')]) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [expected]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a TestSuite instance" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_TestSuite(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testsuite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testsuite'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [m.testsuite]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to ... a - # test method within a test case class" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_testmethod(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1.test'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to ... a - # test method within a test case class" - # - # Does the method gracefully handle names that initially look like they - # resolve to "a test method within a test case class" but don't? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_invalid_testmethod(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1.testfoo'], m) - except AttributeError, e: - self.assertEqual(str(e), "type object 'MyTestCase' has no attribute 'testfoo'") - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a ... TestSuite instance" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__TestSuite(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - testcase_2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - def return_TestSuite(): - return unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) - m.return_TestSuite = return_TestSuite - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_TestSuite'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - expected = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [expected]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__TestCase_instance(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - def return_TestCase(): - return testcase_1 - m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_TestCase'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1]) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" - # - # Are staticmethods handled correctly? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__call_staticmethod(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Test1(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - testcase_1 = Test1('test') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - @staticmethod - def foo(): - return testcase_1 - m.Foo = Foo - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo.foo'], m) - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - - ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1]) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) - - # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to - # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" - # - # What happens when the callable returns something else? - def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__wrong_type(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - def return_wrong(): - return 6 - m.return_wrong = return_wrong - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_wrong'], m) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise TypeError") - - # "The specifier can refer to modules and packages which have not been - # imported; they will be imported as a side-effect" - def test_loadTestsFromNames__module_not_loaded(self): - # We're going to try to load this module as a side-effect, so it - # better not be loaded before we try. - # - # Why pick audioop? Google shows it isn't used very often, so there's - # a good chance that it won't be imported when this test is run - module_name = 'audioop' - - if module_name in sys.modules: - del sys.modules[module_name] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - try: - suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([module_name]) - - self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [unittest.TestSuite()]) - - # audioop should now be loaded, thanks to loadTestsFromName() - self.assertIn(module_name, sys.modules) - finally: - if module_name in sys.modules: - del sys.modules[module_name] - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames() - - ### Tests for TestLoader.getTestCaseNames() - ################################################################ - - # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" - # - # Test.foobar is defined to make sure getTestCaseNames() respects - # loader.testMethodPrefix - def test_getTestCaseNames(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foobar(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Test), ['test_1', 'test_2']) - - # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" - # - # Does getTestCaseNames() behave appropriately if no tests are found? - def test_getTestCaseNames__no_tests(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def foobar(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Test), []) - - # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" - # - # Are not-TestCases handled gracefully? - # - # XXX This should raise a TypeError, not return a list - # - # XXX It's too late in the 2.5 release cycle to fix this, but it should - # probably be revisited for 2.6 - def test_getTestCaseNames__not_a_TestCase(self): - class BadCase(int): - def test_foo(self): - pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - names = loader.getTestCaseNames(BadCase) - - self.assertEqual(names, ['test_foo']) - - # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" - # - # Make sure inherited names are handled. - # - # TestP.foobar is defined to make sure getTestCaseNames() respects - # loader.testMethodPrefix - def test_getTestCaseNames__inheritance(self): - class TestP(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foobar(self): pass - - class TestC(TestP): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_3(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - names = ['test_1', 'test_2', 'test_3'] - self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(TestC), names) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.getTestCaseNames() - - ### Tests for TestLoader.testMethodPrefix - ################################################################ - - # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as - # test methods" - # - # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by - # all loadTestsFrom* methods. - def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - - tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')]) - tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests_1) - - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests_2) - - # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as - # test methods" - # - # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by - # all loadTestsFrom* methods. - def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromModule(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests_1 = [unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')])] - tests_2 = [unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')])] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' - self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests_1) - - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' - self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests_2) - - # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as - # test methods" - # - # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by - # all loadTestsFrom* methods. - def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromName(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')]) - tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests_1) - - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests_2) - - # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as - # test methods" - # - # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by - # all loadTestsFrom* methods. - def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromNames(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')])]) - tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) - tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([tests_2]) - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests_1) - - loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests_2) - - # "The default value is 'test'" - def test_testMethodPrefix__default_value(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - self.assertTrue(loader.testMethodPrefix == 'test') - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.testMethodPrefix - - ### Tests for TestLoader.sortTestMethodsUsing - ################################################################ - - # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in - # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): - def reversed_cmp(x, y): - return -cmp(x, y) - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp - - tests = loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')]) - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) - - # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in - # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromModule(self): - def reversed_cmp(x, y): - return -cmp(x, y) - - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp - - tests = [loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')])] - self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests) - - # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in - # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromName(self): - def reversed_cmp(x, y): - return -cmp(x, y) - - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp - - tests = loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')]) - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests) - - # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in - # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromNames(self): - def reversed_cmp(x, y): - return -cmp(x, y) - - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp - - tests = [loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')])] - self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m)), tests) - - # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in - # getTestCaseNames()" - # - # Does it actually affect getTestCaseNames()? - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__getTestCaseNames(self): - def reversed_cmp(x, y): - return -cmp(x, y) - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp - - test_names = ['test_2', 'test_1'] - self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Foo), test_names) - - # "The default value is the built-in cmp() function" - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__default_value(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - self.assertTrue(loader.sortTestMethodsUsing is cmp) - - # "it can be set to None to disable the sort." - # - # XXX How is this different from reassigning cmp? Are the tests returned - # in a random order or something? This behaviour should die - def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__None(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = None - - test_names = ['test_2', 'test_1'] - self.assertEqual(set(loader.getTestCaseNames(Foo)), set(test_names)) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.sortTestMethodsUsing - - ### Tests for TestLoader.suiteClass - ################################################################ - - # "Callable object that constructs a test suite from a list of tests." - def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - - tests = [Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass = list - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) - - # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that - # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure - def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromModule(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests = [[Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass = list - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m), tests) - - # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that - # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure - def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromName(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests = [Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass = list - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests) - - # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that - # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure - def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromNames(self): - m = types.ModuleType('m') - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def foo_bar(self): pass - m.Foo = Foo - - tests = [[Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]] - - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - loader.suiteClass = list - self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests) - - # "The default value is the TestSuite class" - def test_suiteClass__default_value(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - self.assertTrue(loader.suiteClass is unittest.TestSuite) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestLoader.suiteClass - -### Support code for Test_TestSuite -################################################################ - -class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - def test_3(self): pass - def runTest(self): pass - -def _mk_TestSuite(*names): - return unittest.TestSuite(Foo(n) for n in names) - -################################################################ -### /Support code for Test_TestSuite - -class Test_TestSuite(TestCase, TestEquality): - - ### Set up attributes needed by inherited tests - ################################################################ - - # Used by TestEquality.test_eq - eq_pairs = [(unittest.TestSuite(), unittest.TestSuite()) - ,(unittest.TestSuite(), unittest.TestSuite([])) - ,(_mk_TestSuite('test_1'), _mk_TestSuite('test_1'))] - - # Used by TestEquality.test_ne - ne_pairs = [(unittest.TestSuite(), _mk_TestSuite('test_1')) - ,(unittest.TestSuite([]), _mk_TestSuite('test_1')) - ,(_mk_TestSuite('test_1', 'test_2'), _mk_TestSuite('test_1', 'test_3')) - ,(_mk_TestSuite('test_1'), _mk_TestSuite('test_2'))] - - ################################################################ - ### /Set up attributes needed by inherited tests - - ### Tests for TestSuite.__init__ - ################################################################ - - # "class TestSuite([tests])" - # - # The tests iterable should be optional - def test_init__tests_optional(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) - - # "class TestSuite([tests])" - # ... - # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases - # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" - # - # TestSuite should deal with empty tests iterables by allowing the - # creation of an empty suite - def test_init__empty_tests(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite([]) - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) - - # "class TestSuite([tests])" - # ... - # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases - # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" - # - # TestSuite should allow any iterable to provide tests - def test_init__tests_from_any_iterable(self): - def tests(): - yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - - suite_1 = unittest.TestSuite(tests()) - self.assertEqual(suite_1.countTestCases(), 2) - - suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite(suite_1) - self.assertEqual(suite_2.countTestCases(), 2) - - suite_3 = unittest.TestSuite(set(suite_1)) - self.assertEqual(suite_3.countTestCases(), 2) - - # "class TestSuite([tests])" - # ... - # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases - # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" - # - # Does TestSuite() also allow other TestSuite() instances to be present - # in the tests iterable? - def test_init__TestSuite_instances_in_tests(self): - def tests(): - ftc = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - yield unittest.TestSuite([ftc]) - yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - - suite = unittest.TestSuite(tests()) - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 2) - - ################################################################ - ### /Tests for TestSuite.__init__ - - # Container types should support the iter protocol - def test_iter(self): - test1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - suite = unittest.TestSuite((test1, test2)) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [test1, test2]) - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. - # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can - # return larger [greater than 1] values" - # - # Presumably an empty TestSuite returns 0? - def test_countTestCases_zero_simple(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. - # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can - # return larger [greater than 1] values" - # - # Presumably an empty TestSuite (even if it contains other empty - # TestSuite instances) returns 0? - def test_countTestCases_zero_nested(self): - class Test1(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - suite = unittest.TestSuite([unittest.TestSuite()]) - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. - # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can - # return larger [greater than 1] values" - def test_countTestCases_simple(self): - test1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - suite = unittest.TestSuite((test1, test2)) - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 2) - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. - # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can - # return larger [greater than 1] values" - # - # Make sure this holds for nested TestSuite instances, too - def test_countTestCases_nested(self): - class Test1(unittest.TestCase): - def test1(self): pass - def test2(self): pass - - test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - test3 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - child = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('test2'), test2)) - parent = unittest.TestSuite((test3, child, Test1('test1'))) - - self.assertEqual(parent.countTestCases(), 4) - - # "Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into - # the test result object passed as result." - # - # And if there are no tests? What then? - def test_run__empty_suite(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - suite.run(result) - - self.assertEqual(events, []) - - # "Note that unlike TestCase.run(), TestSuite.run() requires the - # "result object to be passed in." - def test_run__requires_result(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - try: - suite.run() - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise TypeError") - - # "Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into - # the test result object passed as result." - def test_run(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class LoggingCase(unittest.TestCase): - def run(self, result): - events.append('run %s' % self._testMethodName) - - def test1(self): pass - def test2(self): pass - - tests = [LoggingCase('test1'), LoggingCase('test2')] - - unittest.TestSuite(tests).run(result) - - self.assertEqual(events, ['run test1', 'run test2']) - - # "Add a TestCase ... to the suite" - def test_addTest__TestCase(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): pass - - test = Foo('test') - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - suite.addTest(test) - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [test]) - - # "Add a ... TestSuite to the suite" - def test_addTest__TestSuite(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): pass - - suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test')]) - - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - suite.addTest(suite_2) - - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) - self.assertEqual(list(suite), [suite_2]) - - # "Add all the tests from an iterable of TestCase and TestSuite - # instances to this test suite." - # - # "This is equivalent to iterating over tests, calling addTest() for - # each element" - def test_addTests(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): pass - def test_2(self): pass - - test_1 = Foo('test_1') - test_2 = Foo('test_2') - inner_suite = unittest.TestSuite([test_2]) - - def gen(): - yield test_1 - yield test_2 - yield inner_suite - - suite_1 = unittest.TestSuite() - suite_1.addTests(gen()) - - self.assertEqual(list(suite_1), list(gen())) - - # "This is equivalent to iterating over tests, calling addTest() for - # each element" - suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite() - for t in gen(): - suite_2.addTest(t) - - self.assertEqual(suite_1, suite_2) - - # "Add all the tests from an iterable of TestCase and TestSuite - # instances to this test suite." - # - # What happens if it doesn't get an iterable? - def test_addTest__noniterable(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - - try: - suite.addTests(5) - except TypeError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise TypeError") - - def test_addTest__noncallable(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, 5) - - def test_addTest__casesuiteclass(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, Test_TestSuite) - self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, unittest.TestSuite) - - def test_addTests__string(self): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTests, "foo") - - -class Test_FunctionTestCase(TestCase): - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. For - # TestCase instances, this will always be 1" - def test_countTestCases(self): - test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - - self.assertEqual(test.countTestCases(), 1) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if setUp() raises - # an exception. - def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - def setUp(): - events.append('setUp') - raise RuntimeError('raised by setUp') - - def test(): - events.append('test') - - def tearDown(): - events.append('tearDown') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest'] - unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test raises - # an error (as opposed to a failure). - def test_run_call_order__error_in_test(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - def setUp(): - events.append('setUp') - - def test(): - events.append('test') - raise RuntimeError('raised by test') - - def tearDown(): - events.append('tearDown') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', 'tearDown', - 'stopTest'] - unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test signals - # a failure (as opposed to an error). - def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - def setUp(): - events.append('setUp') - - def test(): - events.append('test') - self.fail('raised by test') - - def tearDown(): - events.append('tearDown') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', 'tearDown', - 'stopTest'] - unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if tearDown() raises - # an exception. - def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - def setUp(): - events.append('setUp') - - def test(): - events.append('test') - - def tearDown(): - events.append('tearDown') - raise RuntimeError('raised by tearDown') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', - 'stopTest'] - unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "Return a string identifying the specific test case." - # - # Because of the vague nature of the docs, I'm not going to lock this - # test down too much. Really all that can be asserted is that the id() - # will be a string (either 8-byte or unicode -- again, because the docs - # just say "string") - def test_id(self): - test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - - self.assertIsInstance(test.id(), basestring) - - # "Returns a one-line description of the test, or None if no description - # has been provided. The default implementation of this method returns - # the first line of the test method's docstring, if available, or None." - def test_shortDescription__no_docstring(self): - test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) - - self.assertEqual(test.shortDescription(), None) - - # "Returns a one-line description of the test, or None if no description - # has been provided. The default implementation of this method returns - # the first line of the test method's docstring, if available, or None." - def test_shortDescription__singleline_docstring(self): - desc = "this tests foo" - test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None, description=desc) - - self.assertEqual(test.shortDescription(), "this tests foo") - -class Test_TestResult(TestCase): - # Note: there are not separate tests for TestResult.wasSuccessful(), - # TestResult.errors, TestResult.failures, TestResult.testsRun or - # TestResult.shouldStop because these only have meaning in terms of - # other TestResult methods. - # - # Accordingly, tests for the aforenamed attributes are incorporated - # in with the tests for the defining methods. - ################################################################ - - def test_init(self): - result = unittest.TestResult() - - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - # "This method can be called to signal that the set of tests being - # run should be aborted by setting the TestResult's shouldStop - # attribute to True." - def test_stop(self): - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.stop() - - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, True) - - # "Called when the test case test is about to be run. The default - # implementation simply increments the instance's testsRun counter." - def test_startTest(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - pass - - test = Foo('test_1') - - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.startTest(test) - - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - result.stopTest(test) - - # "Called after the test case test has been executed, regardless of - # the outcome. The default implementation does nothing." - def test_stopTest(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - pass - - test = Foo('test_1') - - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.startTest(test) - - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - result.stopTest(test) - - # Same tests as above; make sure nothing has changed - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - # "Called before and after tests are run. The default implementation does nothing." - def test_startTestRun_stopTestRun(self): - result = unittest.TestResult() - result.startTestRun() - result.stopTestRun() - - # "addSuccess(test)" - # ... - # "Called when the test case test succeeds" - # ... - # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, - # otherwise returns False" - # ... - # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." - # ... - # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an - # unexpected exception. Contains formatted - # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." - # ... - # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was - # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() - # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead - # of sys.exc_info() results." - def test_addSuccess(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - pass - - test = Foo('test_1') - - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.startTest(test) - result.addSuccess(test) - result.stopTest(test) - - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - # "addFailure(test, err)" - # ... - # "Called when the test case test signals a failure. err is a tuple of - # the form returned by sys.exc_info(): (type, value, traceback)" - # ... - # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, - # otherwise returns False" - # ... - # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." - # ... - # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an - # unexpected exception. Contains formatted - # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." - # ... - # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was - # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() - # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead - # of sys.exc_info() results." - def test_addFailure(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - pass - - test = Foo('test_1') - try: - test.fail("foo") - except: - exc_info_tuple = sys.exc_info() - - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.startTest(test) - result.addFailure(test, exc_info_tuple) - result.stopTest(test) - - self.assertFalse(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - test_case, formatted_exc = result.failures[0] - self.assertTrue(test_case is test) - self.assertIsInstance(formatted_exc, str) - - # "addError(test, err)" - # ... - # "Called when the test case test raises an unexpected exception err - # is a tuple of the form returned by sys.exc_info(): - # (type, value, traceback)" - # ... - # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, - # otherwise returns False" - # ... - # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." - # ... - # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an - # unexpected exception. Contains formatted - # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." - # ... - # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and - # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was - # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() - # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead - # of sys.exc_info() results." - def test_addError(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - pass - - test = Foo('test_1') - try: - raise TypeError() - except: - exc_info_tuple = sys.exc_info() - - result = unittest.TestResult() - - result.startTest(test) - result.addError(test, exc_info_tuple) - result.stopTest(test) - - self.assertFalse(result.wasSuccessful()) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) - - test_case, formatted_exc = result.errors[0] - self.assertTrue(test_case is test) - self.assertIsInstance(formatted_exc, str) - - def testGetDescriptionWithoutDocstring(self): - result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) - self.assertEqual( - result.getDescription(self), - 'testGetDescriptionWithoutDocstring (' + __name__ + - '.Test_TestResult)') - - @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, - "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") - def testGetDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring(self): - """Tests getDescription() for a method with a docstring.""" - result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) - self.assertEqual( - result.getDescription(self), - ('testGetDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring ' - '(' + __name__ + '.Test_TestResult)\n' - 'Tests getDescription() for a method with a docstring.')) - - @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, - "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") - def testGetDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring(self): - """Tests getDescription() for a method with a longer docstring. - The second line of the docstring. - """ - result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) - self.assertEqual( - result.getDescription(self), - ('testGetDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring ' - '(' + __name__ + '.Test_TestResult)\n' - 'Tests getDescription() for a method with a longer ' - 'docstring.')) - - def testStackFrameTrimming(self): - class Frame(object): - class tb_frame(object): - f_globals = {} - result = unittest.TestResult() - self.assertFalse(result._is_relevant_tb_level(Frame)) - - Frame.tb_frame.f_globals['__unittest'] = True - self.assertTrue(result._is_relevant_tb_level(Frame)) - - def testFailFast(self): - result = unittest.TestResult() - result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' - result.failfast = True - result.addError(None, None) - self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) - - result = unittest.TestResult() - result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' - result.failfast = True - result.addFailure(None, None) - self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) - - result = unittest.TestResult() - result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' - result.failfast = True - result.addUnexpectedSuccess(None) - self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) - - def testFailFastSetByRunner(self): - runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO(), failfast=True) - def test(result): - self.assertTrue(result.failfast) - result = runner.run(test) - - -classDict = dict(unittest.TestResult.__dict__) -for m in ('addSkip', 'addExpectedFailure', 'addUnexpectedSuccess', - '__init__'): - del classDict[m] - -def __init__(self, stream=None, descriptions=None, verbosity=None): - self.failures = [] - self.errors = [] - self.testsRun = 0 - self.shouldStop = False -classDict['__init__'] = __init__ -OldResult = type('OldResult', (object,), classDict) - -class Test_OldTestResult(unittest.TestCase): - - def assertOldResultWarning(self, test, failures): - with test_support.check_warnings(("TestResult has no add.+ method,", - RuntimeWarning)): - result = OldResult() - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), failures) - - def testOldTestResult(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def testSkip(self): - self.skipTest('foobar') - @unittest.expectedFailure - def testExpectedFail(self): - raise TypeError - @unittest.expectedFailure - def testUnexpectedSuccess(self): - pass - - for test_name, should_pass in (('testSkip', True), - ('testExpectedFail', True), - ('testUnexpectedSuccess', False)): - test = Test(test_name) - self.assertOldResultWarning(test, int(not should_pass)) - - def testOldTestTesultSetup(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def setUp(self): - self.skipTest('no reason') - def testFoo(self): - pass - self.assertOldResultWarning(Test('testFoo'), 0) - - def testOldTestResultClass(self): - @unittest.skip('no reason') - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def testFoo(self): - pass - self.assertOldResultWarning(Test('testFoo'), 0) - - def testOldResultWithRunner(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def testFoo(self): - pass - runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(resultclass=OldResult, - stream=StringIO()) - # This will raise an exception if TextTestRunner can't handle old - # test result objects - runner.run(Test('testFoo')) - -### Support code for Test_TestCase -################################################################ - -class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): pass - def test1(self): pass - -class Bar(Foo): - def test2(self): pass - -def getLoggingTestCase(): - class LoggingTestCase(unittest.TestCase): - """A test case which logs its calls.""" - - def __init__(self, events): - super(LoggingTestCase, self).__init__('test') - self.events = events - - def setUp(self): - self.events.append('setUp') - - def test(self): - self.events.append('test') - - def tearDown(self): - self.events.append('tearDown') - return LoggingTestCase - -class ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun(object): - """An object honouring TestResult before startTestRun/stopTestRun.""" - - def __init__(self): - self.failures = [] - self.errors = [] - self.testsRun = 0 - self.skipped = [] - self.expectedFailures = [] - self.unexpectedSuccesses = [] - self.shouldStop = False - - def startTest(self, test): - pass - - def stopTest(self, test): - pass - - def addError(self, test): - pass - - def addFailure(self, test): - pass - - def addSuccess(self, test): - pass - - def wasSuccessful(self): - return True - - -################################################################ -### /Support code for Test_TestCase - -class Test_TestCase(TestCase, TestEquality, TestHashing): - - ### Set up attributes used by inherited tests - ################################################################ - - # Used by TestHashing.test_hash and TestEquality.test_eq - eq_pairs = [(Foo('test1'), Foo('test1'))] - - # Used by TestEquality.test_ne - ne_pairs = [(Foo('test1'), Foo('runTest')) - ,(Foo('test1'), Bar('test1')) - ,(Foo('test1'), Bar('test2'))] - - ################################################################ - ### /Set up attributes used by inherited tests - - - # "class TestCase([methodName])" - # ... - # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the - # method named methodName." - # ... - # "methodName defaults to "runTest"." - # - # Make sure it really is optional, and that it defaults to the proper - # thing. - def test_init__no_test_name(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): raise MyException() - def test(self): pass - - self.assertEqual(Test().id()[-13:], '.Test.runTest') - - # "class TestCase([methodName])" - # ... - # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the - # method named methodName." - def test_init__test_name__valid(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): raise MyException() - def test(self): pass - - self.assertEqual(Test('test').id()[-10:], '.Test.test') - - # "class TestCase([methodName])" - # ... - # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the - # method named methodName." - def test_init__test_name__invalid(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): raise MyException() - def test(self): pass - - try: - Test('testfoo') - except ValueError: - pass - else: - self.fail("Failed to raise ValueError") - - # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. For - # TestCase instances, this will always be 1" - def test_countTestCases(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): pass - - self.assertEqual(Foo('test').countTestCases(), 1) - - # "Return the default type of test result object to be used to run this - # test. For TestCase instances, this will always be - # unittest.TestResult; subclasses of TestCase should - # override this as necessary." - def test_defaultTestResult(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): - pass - - result = Foo().defaultTestResult() - self.assertEqual(type(result), unittest.TestResult) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if setUp() raises - # an exception. - def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def setUp(self): - super(Foo, self).setUp() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') - - Foo(events).run(result) - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "With a temporary result stopTestRun is called when setUp errors. - def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp_default_result(self): - events = [] - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def defaultTestResult(self): - return LoggingResult(self.events) - - def setUp(self): - super(Foo, self).setUp() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') - - Foo(events).run() - expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', - 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test raises - # an error (as opposed to a failure). - def test_run_call_order__error_in_test(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def test(self): - super(Foo, self).test() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', 'tearDown', - 'stopTest'] - Foo(events).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "With a default result, an error in the test still results in stopTestRun - # being called." - def test_run_call_order__error_in_test_default_result(self): - events = [] - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def defaultTestResult(self): - return LoggingResult(self.events) - - def test(self): - super(Foo, self).test() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') - - expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', - 'tearDown', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] - Foo(events).run() - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test signals - # a failure (as opposed to an error). - def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def test(self): - super(Foo, self).test() - self.fail('raised by Foo.test') - - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', 'tearDown', - 'stopTest'] - Foo(events).run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a test fails with a default result stopTestRun is still called." - def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test_default_result(self): - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def defaultTestResult(self): - return LoggingResult(self.events) - def test(self): - super(Foo, self).test() - self.fail('raised by Foo.test') - - expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', - 'tearDown', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] - events = [] - Foo(events).run() - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method - # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the - # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, - # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." - # - # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if tearDown() raises - # an exception. - def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def tearDown(self): - super(Foo, self).tearDown() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') - - Foo(events).run(result) - expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', - 'stopTest'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "When tearDown errors with a default result stopTestRun is still called." - def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown_default_result(self): - - class Foo(getLoggingTestCase()): - def defaultTestResult(self): - return LoggingResult(self.events) - def tearDown(self): - super(Foo, self).tearDown() - raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') - - events = [] - Foo(events).run() - expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', - 'addError', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "TestCase.run() still works when the defaultTestResult is a TestResult - # that does not support startTestRun and stopTestRun. - def test_run_call_order_default_result(self): - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def defaultTestResult(self): - return ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun() - def test(self): - pass - - Foo('test').run() - - # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. - # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to - # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in - # order to ``play fair'' with the framework. The initial value of this - # attribute is AssertionError" - def test_failureException__default(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - pass - - self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is AssertionError) - - # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. - # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to - # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in - # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." - # - # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException - def test_failureException__subclassing__explicit_raise(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - raise RuntimeError() - - failureException = RuntimeError - - self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) - - - Foo('test').run(result) - expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. - # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to - # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in - # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." - # - # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException - def test_failureException__subclassing__implicit_raise(self): - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - self.fail("foo") - - failureException = RuntimeError - - self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) - - - Foo('test').run(result) - expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - # "The default implementation does nothing." - def test_setUp(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): - pass - - # ... and nothing should happen - Foo().setUp() - - # "The default implementation does nothing." - def test_tearDown(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): - pass - - # ... and nothing should happen - Foo().tearDown() - - # "Return a string identifying the specific test case." - # - # Because of the vague nature of the docs, I'm not going to lock this - # test down too much. Really all that can be asserted is that the id() - # will be a string (either 8-byte or unicode -- again, because the docs - # just say "string") - def test_id(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def runTest(self): - pass - - self.assertIsInstance(Foo().id(), basestring) - - # "If result is omitted or None, a temporary result object is created - # and used, but is not made available to the caller. As TestCase owns the - # temporary result startTestRun and stopTestRun are called. - - def test_run__uses_defaultTestResult(self): - events = [] - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test(self): - events.append('test') - - def defaultTestResult(self): - return LoggingResult(events) - - # Make run() find a result object on its own - Foo('test').run() - - expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'test', 'addSuccess', - 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - def testShortDescriptionWithoutDocstring(self): - self.assertIsNone(self.shortDescription()) - - @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, - "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") - def testShortDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring(self): - """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.""" - self.assertEqual( - self.shortDescription(), - 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.') - - @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, - "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") - def testShortDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring(self): - """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer docstring. - - This method ensures that only the first line of a docstring is - returned used in the short description, no matter how long the - whole thing is. - """ - self.assertEqual( - self.shortDescription(), - 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer ' - 'docstring.') - - def testAddTypeEqualityFunc(self): - class SadSnake(object): - """Dummy class for test_addTypeEqualityFunc.""" - s1, s2 = SadSnake(), SadSnake() - self.assertNotEqual(s1, s2) - def AllSnakesCreatedEqual(a, b, msg=None): - return type(a) is type(b) is SadSnake - self.addTypeEqualityFunc(SadSnake, AllSnakesCreatedEqual) - self.assertEqual(s1, s2) - # No this doesn't clean up and remove the SadSnake equality func - # from this TestCase instance but since its a local nothing else - # will ever notice that. - - def testAssertIs(self): - thing = object() - self.assertIs(thing, thing) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIs, thing, object()) - - def testAssertIsNot(self): - thing = object() - self.assertIsNot(thing, object()) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNot, thing, thing) - - def testAssertIsInstance(self): - thing = [] - self.assertIsInstance(thing, list) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsInstance, - thing, dict) - - def testAssertNotIsInstance(self): - thing = [] - self.assertNotIsInstance(thing, dict) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIsInstance, - thing, list) - - def testAssertIn(self): - animals = {'monkey': 'banana', 'cow': 'grass', 'seal': 'fish'} - - self.assertIn('a', 'abc') - self.assertIn(2, [1, 2, 3]) - self.assertIn('monkey', animals) - - self.assertNotIn('d', 'abc') - self.assertNotIn(0, [1, 2, 3]) - self.assertNotIn('otter', animals) - - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'x', 'abc') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 4, [1, 2, 3]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'elephant', - animals) - - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'c', 'abc') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 1, [1, 2, 3]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'cow', - animals) - - def testAssertDictContainsSubset(self): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {}) - self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {'a': 1}) - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1}) - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'b': 2}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) - - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({1: "one"}, {}) - - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 2}, {'a': 1}) - - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) - - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) - - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) - - with test_support.check_warnings(("", UnicodeWarning)): - one = ''.join(chr(i) for i in range(255)) - # this used to cause a UnicodeDecodeError constructing the failure msg - with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): - self.assertDictContainsSubset({'foo': one}, {'foo': u'\uFFFD'}) - - def testAssertEqual(self): - equal_pairs = [ - ((), ()), - ({}, {}), - ([], []), - (set(), set()), - (frozenset(), frozenset())] - for a, b in equal_pairs: - # This mess of try excepts is to test the assertEqual behavior - # itself. - try: - self.assertEqual(a, b) - except self.failureException: - self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) failed' % (a, b)) - try: - self.assertEqual(a, b, msg='foo') - except self.failureException: - self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with msg= failed' % (a, b)) - try: - self.assertEqual(a, b, 'foo') - except self.failureException: - self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with third parameter failed' % - (a, b)) - - unequal_pairs = [ - ((), []), - ({}, set()), - (set([4,1]), frozenset([4,2])), - (frozenset([4,5]), set([2,3])), - (set([3,4]), set([5,4]))] - for a, b in unequal_pairs: - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, - 'foo') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, - msg='foo') - - def testEquality(self): - self.assertListEqual([], []) - self.assertTupleEqual((), ()) - self.assertSequenceEqual([], ()) - - a = [0, 'a', []] - b = [] - self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, - self.assertListEqual, a, b) - self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, - self.assertListEqual, tuple(a), tuple(b)) - self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, - self.assertSequenceEqual, a, tuple(b)) - - b.extend(a) - self.assertListEqual(a, b) - self.assertTupleEqual(tuple(a), tuple(b)) - self.assertSequenceEqual(a, tuple(b)) - self.assertSequenceEqual(tuple(a), b) - - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, - a, tuple(b)) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, - tuple(a), b) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, None, b) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, None, - tuple(b)) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, - None, tuple(b)) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, 1, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, 1, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, - 1, 1) - - self.assertDictEqual({}, {}) - - c = { 'x': 1 } - d = {} - self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, - self.assertDictEqual, c, d) - - d.update(c) - self.assertDictEqual(c, d) - - d['x'] = 0 - self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, - self.assertDictEqual, c, d, 'These are unequal') - - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, None, d) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, [], d) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, 1, 1) - - def testAssertItemsEqual(self): - a = object() - self.assertItemsEqual([1, 2, 3], [3, 2, 1]) - self.assertItemsEqual(['foo', 'bar', 'baz'], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo']) - self.assertItemsEqual([a, a, 2, 2, 3], (a, 2, 3, a, 2)) - self.assertItemsEqual([1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, "a"]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [1, 2] + [3] * 100, [1] * 100 + [2, 3]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, 1]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [10], [10, 11]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [10, 11], [10]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [10, 11, 10], [10, 11]) - - # Test that sequences of unhashable objects can be tested for sameness: - self.assertItemsEqual([[1, 2], [3, 4], 0], [False, [3, 4], [1, 2]]) - with test_support.check_warnings(quiet=True) as w: - # hashable types, but not orderable - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [], [divmod, 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, frozenset()]) - # comparing dicts raises a py3k warning - self.assertItemsEqual([{'a': 1}, {'b': 2}], [{'b': 2}, {'a': 1}]) - # comparing heterogenous non-hashable sequences raises a py3k warning - self.assertItemsEqual([1, 'x', divmod, []], [divmod, [], 'x', 1]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [], [divmod, [], 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, set()]) - # fail the test if warnings are not silenced - if w.warnings: - self.fail('assertItemsEqual raised a warning: ' + - str(w.warnings[0])) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [[1]], [[2]]) - - # Same elements, but not same sequence length - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [1, 1, 2], [2, 1]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [1, 1, "2", "a", "a"], ["2", "2", True, "a"]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, - [1, {'b': 2}, None, True], [{'b': 2}, True, None]) - - - def testAssertSetEqual(self): - set1 = set() - set2 = set() - self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) - - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, None, set2) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, [], set2) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, None) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, []) - - set1 = set(['a']) - set2 = set() - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) - - set1 = set(['a']) - set2 = set(['a']) - self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) - - set1 = set(['a']) - set2 = set(['a', 'b']) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) - - set1 = set(['a']) - set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) - - set1 = set(['a', 'b']) - set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) - self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) - - set1 = set() - set2 = "foo" - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set2, set1) - - # make sure any string formatting is tuple-safe - set1 = set([(0, 1), (2, 3)]) - set2 = set([(4, 5)]) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) - - def testInequality(self): - # Try ints - self.assertGreater(2, 1) - self.assertGreaterEqual(2, 1) - self.assertGreaterEqual(1, 1) - self.assertLess(1, 2) - self.assertLessEqual(1, 2) - self.assertLessEqual(1, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 2) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1, 2) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 2, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1, 1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 2, 1) - - # Try Floats - self.assertGreater(1.1, 1.0) - self.assertGreaterEqual(1.1, 1.0) - self.assertGreaterEqual(1.0, 1.0) - self.assertLess(1.0, 1.1) - self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.1) - self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1.0, 1.1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.1, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.0, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 1.1, 1.0) - - # Try Strings - self.assertGreater('bug', 'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual('bug', 'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual('ant', 'ant') - self.assertLess('ant', 'bug') - self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'bug') - self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 'ant', 'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'bug', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 'bug', 'ant') - - # Try Unicode - self.assertGreater(u'bug', u'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual(u'bug', u'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual(u'ant', u'ant') - self.assertLess(u'ant', u'bug') - self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', u'bug') - self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', u'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, u'ant', - u'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'bug', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'ant', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, u'bug', u'ant') - - # Try Mixed String/Unicode - self.assertGreater('bug', u'ant') - self.assertGreater(u'bug', 'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual('bug', u'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual(u'bug', 'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual('ant', u'ant') - self.assertGreaterEqual(u'ant', 'ant') - self.assertLess('ant', u'bug') - self.assertLess(u'ant', 'bug') - self.assertLessEqual('ant', u'bug') - self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', 'bug') - self.assertLessEqual('ant', u'ant') - self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', u'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', 'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 'ant', - u'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, u'ant', - 'bug') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'bug', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'bug', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'ant', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'ant', 'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 'bug', u'ant') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, u'bug', 'ant') - - def testAssertMultiLineEqual(self): - sample_text = b"""\ -http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html -test case - A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] -""" - revised_sample_text = b"""\ -http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html -test case - A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your - own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. -""" - sample_text_error = b""" -- http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html -? ^ -+ http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html -? ^^^ - test case -- A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] -+ A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your -? +++++++++++++++++++++ -+ own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. -""" - - for type_changer in (lambda x: x, lambda x: x.decode('utf8')): - try: - self.assertMultiLineEqual(type_changer(sample_text), - type_changer(revised_sample_text)) - except self.failureException, e: - # assertMultiLineEqual is hooked up as the default for - # unicode strings - so we can't use it for this check - self.assertTrue(sample_text_error == str(e).encode('utf8')) - - def testAssertIsNone(self): - self.assertIsNone(None) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNone, False) - self.assertIsNotNone('DjZoPloGears on Rails') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNotNone, None) - - def testAssertRegexpMatches(self): - self.assertRegexpMatches('asdfabasdf', r'ab+') - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertRegexpMatches, - 'saaas', r'aaaa') - - def testAssertRaisesRegexp(self): - class ExceptionMock(Exception): - pass - - def Stub(): - raise ExceptionMock('We expect') - - self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, re.compile('expect$'), Stub) - self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, 'expect$', Stub) - self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, u'expect$', Stub) - - def testAssertNotRaisesRegexp(self): - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, re.compile('x'), - lambda: None) - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, 'x', - lambda: None) - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, u'x', - lambda: None) - - def testAssertRaisesRegexpMismatch(self): - def Stub(): - raise Exception('Unexpected') - - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, - r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, '^Expected$', - Stub) - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, - r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, u'^Expected$', - Stub) - self.assertRaisesRegexp( - self.failureException, - r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', - self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, - re.compile('^Expected$'), Stub) - - def testAssertRaisesExcValue(self): - class ExceptionMock(Exception): - pass - - def Stub(foo): - raise ExceptionMock(foo) - v = "particular value" - - ctx = self.assertRaises(ExceptionMock) - with ctx: - Stub(v) - e = ctx.exception - self.assertIsInstance(e, ExceptionMock) - self.assertEqual(e.args[0], v) - - def testSynonymAssertMethodNames(self): - """Test undocumented method name synonyms. - - Please do not use these methods names in your own code. - - This test confirms their continued existence and functionality - in order to avoid breaking existing code. - """ - self.assertNotEquals(3, 5) - self.assertEquals(3, 3) - self.assertAlmostEquals(2.0, 2.0) - self.assertNotAlmostEquals(3.0, 5.0) - self.assert_(True) - - def testPendingDeprecationMethodNames(self): - """Test fail* methods pending deprecation, they will warn in 3.2. - - Do not use these methods. They will go away in 3.3. - """ - with test_support.check_warnings(): - self.failIfEqual(3, 5) - self.failUnlessEqual(3, 3) - self.failUnlessAlmostEqual(2.0, 2.0) - self.failIfAlmostEqual(3.0, 5.0) - self.failUnless(True) - self.failUnlessRaises(TypeError, lambda _: 3.14 + u'spam') - self.failIf(False) - - def testDeepcopy(self): - # Issue: 5660 - class TestableTest(TestCase): - def testNothing(self): - pass - - test = TestableTest('testNothing') - - # This shouldn't blow up - deepcopy(test) - - -class Test_TestSkipping(TestCase): - - def test_skipping(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_skip_me(self): - self.skipTest("skip") - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - test = Foo("test_skip_me") - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest']) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "skip")]) - - # Try letting setUp skip the test now. - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def setUp(self): - self.skipTest("testing") - def test_nothing(self): pass - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - test = Foo("test_nothing") - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest']) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) - - def test_skipping_decorators(self): - op_table = ((unittest.skipUnless, False, True), - (unittest.skipIf, True, False)) - for deco, do_skip, dont_skip in op_table: - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - @deco(do_skip, "testing") - def test_skip(self): pass - - @deco(dont_skip, "testing") - def test_dont_skip(self): pass - test_do_skip = Foo("test_skip") - test_dont_skip = Foo("test_dont_skip") - suite = unittest.TestSuite([test_do_skip, test_dont_skip]) - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - suite.run(result) - self.assertEqual(len(result.skipped), 1) - expected = ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest', - 'startTest', 'addSuccess', 'stopTest'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test_do_skip, "testing")]) - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - - def test_skip_class(self): - @unittest.skip("testing") - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - def test_1(self): - record.append(1) - record = [] - result = unittest.TestResult() - test = Foo("test_1") - suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) - suite.run(result) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) - self.assertEqual(record, []) - - def test_expected_failure(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - @unittest.expectedFailure - def test_die(self): - self.fail("help me!") - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - test = Foo("test_die") - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, - ['startTest', 'addExpectedFailure', 'stopTest']) - self.assertEqual(result.expectedFailures[0][0], test) - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - - def test_unexpected_success(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - @unittest.expectedFailure - def test_die(self): - pass - events = [] - result = LoggingResult(events) - test = Foo("test_die") - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(events, - ['startTest', 'addUnexpectedSuccess', 'stopTest']) - self.assertFalse(result.failures) - self.assertEqual(result.unexpectedSuccesses, [test]) - self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) - - def test_skip_doesnt_run_setup(self): - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - wasSetUp = False - wasTornDown = False - def setUp(self): - Foo.wasSetUp = True - def tornDown(self): - Foo.wasTornDown = True - @unittest.skip('testing') - def test_1(self): - pass - - result = unittest.TestResult() - test = Foo("test_1") - suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) - suite.run(result) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) - self.assertFalse(Foo.wasSetUp) - self.assertFalse(Foo.wasTornDown) - - def test_decorated_skip(self): - def decorator(func): - def inner(*a): - return func(*a) - return inner - - class Foo(unittest.TestCase): - @decorator - @unittest.skip('testing') - def test_1(self): - pass - - result = unittest.TestResult() - test = Foo("test_1") - suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) - suite.run(result) - self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) - - -class Test_Assertions(TestCase): - def test_AlmostEqual(self): - self.assertAlmostEqual(1.00000001, 1.0) - self.assertNotAlmostEqual(1.0000001, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, - self.assertAlmostEqual, 1.0000001, 1.0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, - self.assertNotAlmostEqual, 1.00000001, 1.0) - - self.assertAlmostEqual(1.1, 1.0, places=0) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, - self.assertAlmostEqual, 1.1, 1.0, places=1) - - self.assertAlmostEqual(0, .1+.1j, places=0) - self.assertNotAlmostEqual(0, .1+.1j, places=1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, - self.assertAlmostEqual, 0, .1+.1j, places=1) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, - self.assertNotAlmostEqual, 0, .1+.1j, places=0) - - self.assertAlmostEqual(float('inf'), float('inf')) - self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotAlmostEqual, - float('inf'), float('inf')) - - - def test_assertRaises(self): - def _raise(e): - raise e - self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, KeyError) - self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, KeyError("key")) - try: - self.assertRaises(KeyError, lambda: None) - except self.failureException as e: - self.assertIn("KeyError not raised", e.args) - else: - self.fail("assertRaises() didn't fail") - try: - self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, ValueError) - except ValueError: - pass - else: - self.fail("assertRaises() didn't let exception pass through") - with self.assertRaises(KeyError) as cm: - try: - raise KeyError - except Exception, e: - raise - self.assertIs(cm.exception, e) - - with self.assertRaises(KeyError): - raise KeyError("key") - try: - with self.assertRaises(KeyError): - pass - except self.failureException as e: - self.assertIn("KeyError not raised", e.args) - else: - self.fail("assertRaises() didn't fail") - try: - with self.assertRaises(KeyError): - raise ValueError - except ValueError: - pass - else: - self.fail("assertRaises() didn't let exception pass through") - - -class TestLongMessage(TestCase): - """Test that the individual asserts honour longMessage. - This actually tests all the message behaviour for - asserts that use longMessage.""" - - def setUp(self): - class TestableTestFalse(TestCase): - longMessage = False - failureException = self.failureException - - def testTest(self): - pass - - class TestableTestTrue(TestCase): - longMessage = True - failureException = self.failureException - - def testTest(self): - pass - - self.testableTrue = TestableTestTrue('testTest') - self.testableFalse = TestableTestFalse('testTest') - - def testDefault(self): - self.assertFalse(TestCase.longMessage) - - def test_formatMsg(self): - self.assertEquals(self.testableFalse._formatMessage(None, "foo"), "foo") - self.assertEquals(self.testableFalse._formatMessage("foo", "bar"), "foo") - - self.assertEquals(self.testableTrue._formatMessage(None, "foo"), "foo") - self.assertEquals(self.testableTrue._formatMessage("foo", "bar"), "bar : foo") - - # This blows up if _formatMessage uses string concatenation - self.testableTrue._formatMessage(object(), 'foo') - - def test_formatMessage_unicode_error(self): - one = ''.join(chr(i) for i in range(255)) - # this used to cause a UnicodeDecodeError constructing msg - self.testableTrue._formatMessage(one, u'\uFFFD') - - def assertMessages(self, methodName, args, errors): - def getMethod(i): - useTestableFalse = i < 2 - if useTestableFalse: - test = self.testableFalse - else: - test = self.testableTrue - return getattr(test, methodName) - - for i, expected_regexp in enumerate(errors): - testMethod = getMethod(i) - kwargs = {} - withMsg = i % 2 - if withMsg: - kwargs = {"msg": "oops"} - - with self.assertRaisesRegexp(self.failureException, - expected_regexp=expected_regexp): - testMethod(*args, **kwargs) - - def testAssertTrue(self): - self.assertMessages('assertTrue', (False,), - ["^False is not True$", "^oops$", "^False is not True$", - "^False is not True : oops$"]) - - def testAssertFalse(self): - self.assertMessages('assertFalse', (True,), - ["^True is not False$", "^oops$", "^True is not False$", - "^True is not False : oops$"]) - - def testNotEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertNotEqual', (1, 1), - ["^1 == 1$", "^oops$", "^1 == 1$", - "^1 == 1 : oops$"]) - - def testAlmostEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertAlmostEqual', (1, 2), - ["^1 != 2 within 7 places$", "^oops$", - "^1 != 2 within 7 places$", "^1 != 2 within 7 places : oops$"]) - - def testNotAlmostEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertNotAlmostEqual', (1, 1), - ["^1 == 1 within 7 places$", "^oops$", - "^1 == 1 within 7 places$", "^1 == 1 within 7 places : oops$"]) - - def test_baseAssertEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('_baseAssertEqual', (1, 2), - ["^1 != 2$", "^oops$", "^1 != 2$", "^1 != 2 : oops$"]) - - def testAssertSequenceEqual(self): - # Error messages are multiline so not testing on full message - # assertTupleEqual and assertListEqual delegate to this method - self.assertMessages('assertSequenceEqual', ([], [None]), - ["\+ \[None\]$", "^oops$", r"\+ \[None\]$", - r"\+ \[None\] : oops$"]) - - def testAssertSetEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertSetEqual', (set(), set([None])), - ["None$", "^oops$", "None$", - "None : oops$"]) - - def testAssertIn(self): - self.assertMessages('assertIn', (None, []), - ['^None not found in \[\]$', "^oops$", - '^None not found in \[\]$', - '^None not found in \[\] : oops$']) - - def testAssertNotIn(self): - self.assertMessages('assertNotIn', (None, [None]), - ['^None unexpectedly found in \[None\]$', "^oops$", - '^None unexpectedly found in \[None\]$', - '^None unexpectedly found in \[None\] : oops$']) - - def testAssertDictEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertDictEqual', ({}, {'key': 'value'}), - [r"\+ \{'key': 'value'\}$", "^oops$", - "\+ \{'key': 'value'\}$", - "\+ \{'key': 'value'\} : oops$"]) - - def testAssertDictContainsSubset(self): - self.assertMessages('assertDictContainsSubset', ({'key': 'value'}, {}), - ["^Missing: 'key'$", "^oops$", - "^Missing: 'key'$", - "^Missing: 'key' : oops$"]) - - def testAssertItemsEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertItemsEqual', ([], [None]), - [r"\[None\]$", "^oops$", - r"\[None\]$", - r"\[None\] : oops$"]) - - def testAssertMultiLineEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertMultiLineEqual', ("", "foo"), - [r"\+ foo$", "^oops$", - r"\+ foo$", - r"\+ foo : oops$"]) - - def testAssertLess(self): - self.assertMessages('assertLess', (2, 1), - ["^2 not less than 1$", "^oops$", - "^2 not less than 1$", "^2 not less than 1 : oops$"]) - - def testAssertLessEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertLessEqual', (2, 1), - ["^2 not less than or equal to 1$", "^oops$", - "^2 not less than or equal to 1$", - "^2 not less than or equal to 1 : oops$"]) - - def testAssertGreater(self): - self.assertMessages('assertGreater', (1, 2), - ["^1 not greater than 2$", "^oops$", - "^1 not greater than 2$", - "^1 not greater than 2 : oops$"]) - - def testAssertGreaterEqual(self): - self.assertMessages('assertGreaterEqual', (1, 2), - ["^1 not greater than or equal to 2$", "^oops$", - "^1 not greater than or equal to 2$", - "^1 not greater than or equal to 2 : oops$"]) - - def testAssertIsNone(self): - self.assertMessages('assertIsNone', ('not None',), - ["^'not None' is not None$", "^oops$", - "^'not None' is not None$", - "^'not None' is not None : oops$"]) - - def testAssertIsNotNone(self): - self.assertMessages('assertIsNotNone', (None,), - ["^unexpectedly None$", "^oops$", - "^unexpectedly None$", - "^unexpectedly None : oops$"]) - - def testAssertIs(self): - self.assertMessages('assertIs', (None, 'foo'), - ["^None is not 'foo'$", "^oops$", - "^None is not 'foo'$", - "^None is not 'foo' : oops$"]) - - def testAssertIsNot(self): - self.assertMessages('assertIsNot', (None, None), - ["^unexpectedly identical: None$", "^oops$", - "^unexpectedly identical: None$", - "^unexpectedly identical: None : oops$"]) - - -class TestCleanUp(TestCase): - - def testCleanUp(self): - class TestableTest(TestCase): - def testNothing(self): - pass - - test = TestableTest('testNothing') - self.assertEqual(test._cleanups, []) - - cleanups = [] - - def cleanup1(*args, **kwargs): - cleanups.append((1, args, kwargs)) - - def cleanup2(*args, **kwargs): - cleanups.append((2, args, kwargs)) - - test.addCleanup(cleanup1, 1, 2, 3, four='hello', five='goodbye') - test.addCleanup(cleanup2) - - self.assertEqual(test._cleanups, - [(cleanup1, (1, 2, 3), dict(four='hello', five='goodbye')), - (cleanup2, (), {})]) - - result = test.doCleanups() - self.assertTrue(result) - - self.assertEqual(cleanups, [(2, (), {}), (1, (1, 2, 3), dict(four='hello', five='goodbye'))]) - - def testCleanUpWithErrors(self): - class TestableTest(TestCase): - def testNothing(self): - pass - - class MockResult(object): - errors = [] - def addError(self, test, exc_info): - self.errors.append((test, exc_info)) - - result = MockResult() - test = TestableTest('testNothing') - test._resultForDoCleanups = result - - exc1 = Exception('foo') - exc2 = Exception('bar') - def cleanup1(): - raise exc1 - - def cleanup2(): - raise exc2 - - test.addCleanup(cleanup1) - test.addCleanup(cleanup2) - - self.assertFalse(test.doCleanups()) - - (test1, (Type1, instance1, _)), (test2, (Type2, instance2, _)) = reversed(MockResult.errors) - self.assertEqual((test1, Type1, instance1), (test, Exception, exc1)) - self.assertEqual((test2, Type2, instance2), (test, Exception, exc2)) - - def testCleanupInRun(self): - blowUp = False - ordering = [] - - class TestableTest(TestCase): - def setUp(self): - ordering.append('setUp') - if blowUp: - raise Exception('foo') - - def testNothing(self): - ordering.append('test') - - def tearDown(self): - ordering.append('tearDown') - - test = TestableTest('testNothing') - - def cleanup1(): - ordering.append('cleanup1') - def cleanup2(): - ordering.append('cleanup2') - test.addCleanup(cleanup1) - test.addCleanup(cleanup2) - - def success(some_test): - self.assertEqual(some_test, test) - ordering.append('success') - - result = unittest.TestResult() - result.addSuccess = success - - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(ordering, ['setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', - 'cleanup2', 'cleanup1', 'success']) - - blowUp = True - ordering = [] - test = TestableTest('testNothing') - test.addCleanup(cleanup1) - test.run(result) - self.assertEqual(ordering, ['setUp', 'cleanup1']) - - -class Test_TestProgram(TestCase): - - # Horrible white box test - def testNoExit(self): - result = object() - test = object() - - class FakeRunner(object): - def run(self, test): - self.test = test - return result - - runner = FakeRunner() - - oldParseArgs = TestProgram.parseArgs - def restoreParseArgs(): - TestProgram.parseArgs = oldParseArgs - TestProgram.parseArgs = lambda *args: None - self.addCleanup(restoreParseArgs) - - def removeTest(): - del TestProgram.test - TestProgram.test = test - self.addCleanup(removeTest) - - program = TestProgram(testRunner=runner, exit=False, verbosity=2) - - self.assertEqual(program.result, result) - self.assertEqual(runner.test, test) - self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) - - class FooBar(unittest.TestCase): - def testPass(self): - assert True - def testFail(self): - assert False - - class FooBarLoader(unittest.TestLoader): - """Test loader that returns a suite containing FooBar.""" - def loadTestsFromModule(self, module): - return self.suiteClass( - [self.loadTestsFromTestCase(Test_TestProgram.FooBar)]) - - - def test_NonExit(self): - program = unittest.main(exit=False, - argv=["foobar"], - testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), - testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) - self.assertTrue(hasattr(program, 'result')) - - - def test_Exit(self): - self.assertRaises( - SystemExit, - unittest.main, - argv=["foobar"], - testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), - exit=True, - testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) - - - def test_ExitAsDefault(self): - self.assertRaises( - SystemExit, - unittest.main, - argv=["foobar"], - testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), - testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) - - -class Test_TextTestRunner(TestCase): - """Tests for TextTestRunner.""" - - def test_works_with_result_without_startTestRun_stopTestRun(self): - class OldTextResult(ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun): - separator2 = '' - def printErrors(self): - pass - - class Runner(unittest.TextTestRunner): - def __init__(self): - super(Runner, self).__init__(StringIO()) - - def _makeResult(self): - return OldTextResult() - - runner = Runner() - runner.run(unittest.TestSuite()) - - def test_startTestRun_stopTestRun_called(self): - class LoggingTextResult(LoggingResult): - separator2 = '' - def printErrors(self): - pass - - class LoggingRunner(unittest.TextTestRunner): - def __init__(self, events): - super(LoggingRunner, self).__init__(StringIO()) - self._events = events - - def _makeResult(self): - return LoggingTextResult(self._events) - - events = [] - runner = LoggingRunner(events) - runner.run(unittest.TestSuite()) - expected = ['startTestRun', 'stopTestRun'] - self.assertEqual(events, expected) - - def test_pickle_unpickle(self): - # Issue #7197: a TextTestRunner should be (un)pickleable. This is - # required by test_multiprocessing under Windows (in verbose mode). - import StringIO - # cStringIO objects are not pickleable, but StringIO objects are. - stream = StringIO.StringIO("foo") - runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(stream) - for protocol in range(pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL + 1): - s = pickle.dumps(runner, protocol=protocol) - obj = pickle.loads(s) - # StringIO objects never compare equal, a cheap test instead. - self.assertEqual(obj.stream.getvalue(), stream.getvalue()) - - def test_resultclass(self): - def MockResultClass(*args): - return args - STREAM = object() - DESCRIPTIONS = object() - VERBOSITY = object() - runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(STREAM, DESCRIPTIONS, VERBOSITY, - resultclass=MockResultClass) - self.assertEqual(runner.resultclass, MockResultClass) - - expectedresult = (runner.stream, DESCRIPTIONS, VERBOSITY) - self.assertEqual(runner._makeResult(), expectedresult) - - -class TestDiscovery(TestCase): - - # Heavily mocked tests so I can avoid hitting the filesystem - def test_get_name_from_path(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' - name = loader._get_name_from_path('/foo/bar/baz.py') - self.assertEqual(name, 'bar.baz') - - if not __debug__: - # asserts are off - return - - with self.assertRaises(AssertionError): - loader._get_name_from_path('/bar/baz.py') - - def test_find_tests(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - original_listdir = os.listdir - def restore_listdir(): - os.listdir = original_listdir - original_isfile = os.path.isfile - def restore_isfile(): - os.path.isfile = original_isfile - original_isdir = os.path.isdir - def restore_isdir(): - os.path.isdir = original_isdir - - path_lists = [['test1.py', 'test2.py', 'not_a_test.py', 'test_dir', - 'test.foo', 'test-not-a-module.py', 'another_dir'], - ['test3.py', 'test4.py', ]] - os.listdir = lambda path: path_lists.pop(0) - self.addCleanup(restore_listdir) - - def isdir(path): - return path.endswith('dir') - os.path.isdir = isdir - self.addCleanup(restore_isdir) - - def isfile(path): - # another_dir is not a package and so shouldn't be recursed into - return not path.endswith('dir') and not 'another_dir' in path - os.path.isfile = isfile - self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) - - loader._get_module_from_name = lambda path: path + ' module' - loader.loadTestsFromModule = lambda module: module + ' tests' - - loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' - suite = list(loader._find_tests('/foo', 'test*.py')) - - expected = [name + ' module tests' for name in - ('test1', 'test2')] - expected.extend([('test_dir.%s' % name) + ' module tests' for name in - ('test3', 'test4')]) - self.assertEqual(suite, expected) - - def test_find_tests_with_package(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - original_listdir = os.listdir - def restore_listdir(): - os.listdir = original_listdir - original_isfile = os.path.isfile - def restore_isfile(): - os.path.isfile = original_isfile - original_isdir = os.path.isdir - def restore_isdir(): - os.path.isdir = original_isdir - - directories = ['a_directory', 'test_directory', 'test_directory2'] - path_lists = [directories, [], [], []] - os.listdir = lambda path: path_lists.pop(0) - self.addCleanup(restore_listdir) - - os.path.isdir = lambda path: True - self.addCleanup(restore_isdir) - - os.path.isfile = lambda path: os.path.basename(path) not in directories - self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) - - class Module(object): - paths = [] - load_tests_args = [] - - def __init__(self, path): - self.path = path - self.paths.append(path) - if os.path.basename(path) == 'test_directory': - def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): - self.load_tests_args.append((loader, tests, pattern)) - return 'load_tests' - self.load_tests = load_tests - - def __eq__(self, other): - return self.path == other.path - - # Silence py3k warning - __hash__ = None - - loader._get_module_from_name = lambda name: Module(name) - def loadTestsFromModule(module, use_load_tests): - if use_load_tests: - raise self.failureException('use_load_tests should be False for packages') - return module.path + ' module tests' - loader.loadTestsFromModule = loadTestsFromModule - - loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' - # this time no '.py' on the pattern so that it can match - # a test package - suite = list(loader._find_tests('/foo', 'test*')) - - # We should have loaded tests from the test_directory package by calling load_tests - # and directly from the test_directory2 package - self.assertEqual(suite, - ['load_tests', 'test_directory2' + ' module tests']) - self.assertEqual(Module.paths, ['test_directory', 'test_directory2']) - - # load_tests should have been called once with loader, tests and pattern - self.assertEqual(Module.load_tests_args, - [(loader, 'test_directory' + ' module tests', 'test*')]) - - def test_discover(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - original_isfile = os.path.isfile - def restore_isfile(): - os.path.isfile = original_isfile - - os.path.isfile = lambda path: False - self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) - - orig_sys_path = sys.path[:] - def restore_path(): - sys.path[:] = orig_sys_path - self.addCleanup(restore_path) - - full_path = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo')) - with self.assertRaises(ImportError): - loader.discover('/foo/bar', top_level_dir='/foo') - - self.assertEqual(loader._top_level_dir, full_path) - self.assertIn(full_path, sys.path) - - os.path.isfile = lambda path: True - _find_tests_args = [] - def _find_tests(start_dir, pattern): - _find_tests_args.append((start_dir, pattern)) - return ['tests'] - loader._find_tests = _find_tests - loader.suiteClass = str - - suite = loader.discover('/foo/bar/baz', 'pattern', '/foo/bar') - - top_level_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo/bar')) - start_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo/bar/baz')) - self.assertEqual(suite, "['tests']") - self.assertEqual(loader._top_level_dir, top_level_dir) - self.assertEqual(_find_tests_args, [(start_dir, 'pattern')]) - self.assertIn(top_level_dir, sys.path) - - def test_discover_with_modules_that_fail_to_import(self): - loader = unittest.TestLoader() - - listdir = os.listdir - os.listdir = lambda _: ['test_this_does_not_exist.py'] - isfile = os.path.isfile - os.path.isfile = lambda _: True - orig_sys_path = sys.path[:] - def restore(): - os.path.isfile = isfile - os.listdir = listdir - sys.path[:] = orig_sys_path - self.addCleanup(restore) - - suite = loader.discover('.') - self.assertIn(os.getcwd(), sys.path) - self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) - test = list(list(suite)[0])[0] # extract test from suite - - with self.assertRaises(ImportError): - test.test_this_does_not_exist() - - def test_command_line_handling_parseArgs(self): - # Haha - take that uninstantiable class - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - - args = [] - def do_discovery(argv): - args.extend(argv) - program._do_discovery = do_discovery - program.parseArgs(['something', 'discover']) - self.assertEqual(args, []) - - program.parseArgs(['something', 'discover', 'foo', 'bar']) - self.assertEqual(args, ['foo', 'bar']) - - def test_command_line_handling_do_discovery_too_many_arguments(self): - class Stop(Exception): - pass - def usageExit(): - raise Stop - - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program.usageExit = usageExit - - with self.assertRaises(Stop): - # too many args - program._do_discovery(['one', 'two', 'three', 'four']) - - - def test_command_line_handling_do_discovery_calls_loader(self): - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - - class Loader(object): - args = [] - def discover(self, start_dir, pattern, top_level_dir): - self.args.append((start_dir, pattern, top_level_dir)) - return 'tests' - - program._do_discovery(['-v'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['--verbose'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery([], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['fish'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'test*.py', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['fish', 'eggs'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['fish', 'eggs', 'ham'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', 'ham')]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['-s', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'test*.py', None)]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['-t', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', 'fish')]) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['-p', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'fish', None)]) - self.assertFalse(program.failfast) - - Loader.args = [] - program = object.__new__(TestProgram) - program._do_discovery(['-p', 'eggs', '-s', 'fish', '-v', '-f'], Loader=Loader) - self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') - self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', None)]) - self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) - self.assertTrue(program.failfast) - - -class TestSetups(unittest.TestCase): - - def getRunner(self): - return unittest.TextTestRunner(resultclass=resultFactory, - stream=StringIO()) - def runTests(self, *cases): - suite = unittest.TestSuite() - for case in cases: - tests = unittest.defaultTestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase(case) - suite.addTests(tests) - - runner = self.getRunner() - - # creating a nested suite exposes some potential bugs - realSuite = unittest.TestSuite() - realSuite.addTest(suite) - # adding empty suites to the end exposes potential bugs - suite.addTest(unittest.TestSuite()) - realSuite.addTest(unittest.TestSuite()) - return runner.run(realSuite) - - def test_setup_class(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - setUpCalled = 0 - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - Test.setUpCalled += 1 - unittest.TestCase.setUpClass() - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - result = self.runTests(Test) - - self.assertEqual(Test.setUpCalled, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - def test_teardown_class(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - tearDownCalled = 0 - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.tearDownCalled += 1 - unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - result = self.runTests(Test) - - self.assertEqual(Test.tearDownCalled, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - def test_teardown_class_two_classes(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - tearDownCalled = 0 - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.tearDownCalled += 1 - unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - class Test2(unittest.TestCase): - tearDownCalled = 0 - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test2.tearDownCalled += 1 - unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) - - self.assertEqual(Test.tearDownCalled, 1) - self.assertEqual(Test2.tearDownCalled, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - def test_error_in_setupclass(self): - class BrokenTest(unittest.TestCase): - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - raise TypeError('foo') - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - result = self.runTests(BrokenTest) - - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) - error, _ = result.errors[0] - self.assertEqual(str(error), - 'classSetUp (%s.BrokenTest)' % __name__) - - def test_error_in_teardown_class(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - tornDown = 0 - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.tornDown += 1 - raise TypeError('foo') - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - class Test2(unittest.TestCase): - tornDown = 0 - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test2.tornDown += 1 - raise TypeError('foo') - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 2) - self.assertEqual(Test.tornDown, 1) - self.assertEqual(Test2.tornDown, 1) - - error, _ = result.errors[0] - self.assertEqual(str(error), - 'classTearDown (%s.Test)' % __name__) - - def test_class_not_torndown_when_setup_fails(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - tornDown = False - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - raise TypeError - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.tornDown = True - raise TypeError('foo') - def test_one(self): - pass - - self.runTests(Test) - self.assertFalse(Test.tornDown) - - def test_class_not_setup_or_torndown_when_skipped(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - classSetUp = False - tornDown = False - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - Test.classSetUp = True - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.tornDown = True - def test_one(self): - pass - - Test = unittest.skip("hop")(Test) - self.runTests(Test) - self.assertFalse(Test.classSetUp) - self.assertFalse(Test.tornDown) - - def test_setup_teardown_order_with_pathological_suite(self): - results = [] - - class Module1(object): - @staticmethod - def setUpModule(): - results.append('Module1.setUpModule') - @staticmethod - def tearDownModule(): - results.append('Module1.tearDownModule') - - class Module2(object): - @staticmethod - def setUpModule(): - results.append('Module2.setUpModule') - @staticmethod - def tearDownModule(): - results.append('Module2.tearDownModule') - - class Test1(unittest.TestCase): - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - results.append('setup 1') - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - results.append('teardown 1') - def testOne(self): - results.append('Test1.testOne') - def testTwo(self): - results.append('Test1.testTwo') - - class Test2(unittest.TestCase): - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - results.append('setup 2') - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - results.append('teardown 2') - def testOne(self): - results.append('Test2.testOne') - def testTwo(self): - results.append('Test2.testTwo') - - class Test3(unittest.TestCase): - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - results.append('setup 3') - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - results.append('teardown 3') - def testOne(self): - results.append('Test3.testOne') - def testTwo(self): - results.append('Test3.testTwo') - - Test1.__module__ = Test2.__module__ = 'Module' - Test3.__module__ = 'Module2' - sys.modules['Module'] = Module1 - sys.modules['Module2'] = Module2 - - first = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('testOne'),)) - second = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('testTwo'),)) - third = unittest.TestSuite((Test2('testOne'),)) - fourth = unittest.TestSuite((Test2('testTwo'),)) - fifth = unittest.TestSuite((Test3('testOne'),)) - sixth = unittest.TestSuite((Test3('testTwo'),)) - suite = unittest.TestSuite((first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth)) - - runner = self.getRunner() - result = runner.run(suite) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 6) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - self.assertEqual(results, - ['Module1.setUpModule', 'setup 1', - 'Test1.testOne', 'Test1.testTwo', 'teardown 1', - 'setup 2', 'Test2.testOne', 'Test2.testTwo', - 'teardown 2', 'Module1.tearDownModule', - 'Module2.setUpModule', 'setup 3', - 'Test3.testOne', 'Test3.testTwo', - 'teardown 3', 'Module2.tearDownModule']) - - def test_setup_module(self): - class Module(object): - moduleSetup = 0 - @staticmethod - def setUpModule(): - Module.moduleSetup += 1 - - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - Test.__module__ = 'Module' - sys.modules['Module'] = Module - - result = self.runTests(Test) - self.assertEqual(Module.moduleSetup, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - def test_error_in_setup_module(self): - class Module(object): - moduleSetup = 0 - moduleTornDown = 0 - @staticmethod - def setUpModule(): - Module.moduleSetup += 1 - raise TypeError('foo') - @staticmethod - def tearDownModule(): - Module.moduleTornDown += 1 - - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - classSetUp = False - classTornDown = False - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - Test.classSetUp = True - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.classTornDown = True - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - class Test2(unittest.TestCase): - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - Test.__module__ = 'Module' - Test2.__module__ = 'Module' - sys.modules['Module'] = Module - - result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) - self.assertEqual(Module.moduleSetup, 1) - self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 0) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) - self.assertFalse(Test.classSetUp) - self.assertFalse(Test.classTornDown) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) - error, _ = result.errors[0] - self.assertEqual(str(error), 'setUpModule (Module)') - - def test_testcase_with_missing_module(self): - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - Test.__module__ = 'Module' - sys.modules.pop('Module', None) - - result = self.runTests(Test) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - - def test_teardown_module(self): - class Module(object): - moduleTornDown = 0 - @staticmethod - def tearDownModule(): - Module.moduleTornDown += 1 - - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - Test.__module__ = 'Module' - sys.modules['Module'] = Module - - result = self.runTests(Test) - self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) - - def test_error_in_teardown_module(self): - class Module(object): - moduleTornDown = 0 - @staticmethod - def tearDownModule(): - Module.moduleTornDown += 1 - raise TypeError('foo') - - class Test(unittest.TestCase): - classSetUp = False - classTornDown = False - @classmethod - def setUpClass(cls): - Test.classSetUp = True - @classmethod - def tearDownClass(cls): - Test.classTornDown = True - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - - class Test2(unittest.TestCase): - def test_one(self): - pass - def test_two(self): - pass - Test.__module__ = 'Module' - Test2.__module__ = 'Module' - sys.modules['Module'] = Module - - result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) - self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 1) - self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) - self.assertTrue(Test.classSetUp) - self.assertTrue(Test.classTornDown) - self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) - error, _ = result.errors[0] - self.assertEqual(str(error), 'tearDownModule (Module)') - -###################################################################### -## Main -###################################################################### - def test_main(): - test_support.run_unittest(Test_TestCase, Test_TestLoader, - Test_TestSuite, Test_TestResult, Test_FunctionTestCase, - Test_TestSkipping, Test_Assertions, TestLongMessage, - Test_TestProgram, TestCleanUp, TestDiscovery, Test_TextTestRunner, - Test_OldTestResult, TestSetups) + test_support.run_unittest(unittest.test.test_suite()) + test_support.reap_children() + if __name__ == "__main__": test_main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/__init__.py b/Lib/unittest/test/__init__.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..51bd0dda9ac --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/__init__.py @@ -0,0 +1,35 @@ +"""Test suite for distutils. + +This test suite consists of a collection of test modules in the +distutils.tests package. Each test module has a name starting with +'test' and contains a function test_suite(). The function is expected +to return an initialized unittest.TestSuite instance. + +Tests for the command classes in the distutils.command package are +included in distutils.tests as well, instead of using a separate +distutils.command.tests package, since command identification is done +by import rather than matching pre-defined names. + +""" + +import os +import sys +import unittest + + +here = os.path.dirname(__file__) +loader = unittest.defaultTestLoader + +def test_suite(): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + for fn in os.listdir(here): + if fn.startswith("test") and fn.endswith(".py"): + modname = "unittest.test." + fn[:-3] + __import__(modname) + module = sys.modules[modname] + suite.addTest(loader.loadTestsFromModule(module)) + return suite + + +if __name__ == "__main__": + unittest.main(defaultTest="test_suite") diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/support.py b/Lib/unittest/test/support.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..f1cf03b1420 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/support.py @@ -0,0 +1,119 @@ +import unittest + + +class TestHashing(object): + """Used as a mixin for TestCase""" + + # Check for a valid __hash__ implementation + def test_hash(self): + for obj_1, obj_2 in self.eq_pairs: + try: + if not hash(obj_1) == hash(obj_2): + self.fail("%r and %r do not hash equal" % (obj_1, obj_2)) + except KeyboardInterrupt: + raise + except Exception, e: + self.fail("Problem hashing %r and %r: %s" % (obj_1, obj_2, e)) + + for obj_1, obj_2 in self.ne_pairs: + try: + if hash(obj_1) == hash(obj_2): + self.fail("%s and %s hash equal, but shouldn't" % + (obj_1, obj_2)) + except KeyboardInterrupt: + raise + except Exception, e: + self.fail("Problem hashing %s and %s: %s" % (obj_1, obj_2, e)) + + +class TestEquality(object): + """Used as a mixin for TestCase""" + + # Check for a valid __eq__ implementation + def test_eq(self): + for obj_1, obj_2 in self.eq_pairs: + self.assertEqual(obj_1, obj_2) + self.assertEqual(obj_2, obj_1) + + # Check for a valid __ne__ implementation + def test_ne(self): + for obj_1, obj_2 in self.ne_pairs: + self.assertNotEqual(obj_1, obj_2) + self.assertNotEqual(obj_2, obj_1) + + +class LoggingResult(unittest.TestResult): + def __init__(self, log): + self._events = log + super(LoggingResult, self).__init__() + + def startTest(self, test): + self._events.append('startTest') + super(LoggingResult, self).startTest(test) + + def startTestRun(self): + self._events.append('startTestRun') + super(LoggingResult, self).startTestRun() + + def stopTest(self, test): + self._events.append('stopTest') + super(LoggingResult, self).stopTest(test) + + def stopTestRun(self): + self._events.append('stopTestRun') + super(LoggingResult, self).stopTestRun() + + def addFailure(self, *args): + self._events.append('addFailure') + super(LoggingResult, self).addFailure(*args) + + def addSuccess(self, *args): + self._events.append('addSuccess') + super(LoggingResult, self).addSuccess(*args) + + def addError(self, *args): + self._events.append('addError') + super(LoggingResult, self).addError(*args) + + def addSkip(self, *args): + self._events.append('addSkip') + super(LoggingResult, self).addSkip(*args) + + def addExpectedFailure(self, *args): + self._events.append('addExpectedFailure') + super(LoggingResult, self).addExpectedFailure(*args) + + def addUnexpectedSuccess(self, *args): + self._events.append('addUnexpectedSuccess') + super(LoggingResult, self).addUnexpectedSuccess(*args) + + +class ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun(object): + """An object honouring TestResult before startTestRun/stopTestRun.""" + + def __init__(self): + self.failures = [] + self.errors = [] + self.testsRun = 0 + self.skipped = [] + self.expectedFailures = [] + self.unexpectedSuccesses = [] + self.shouldStop = False + + def startTest(self, test): + pass + + def stopTest(self, test): + pass + + def addError(self, test): + pass + + def addFailure(self, test): + pass + + def addSuccess(self, test): + pass + + def wasSuccessful(self): + return True diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_assertions.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_assertions.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..4b4e03ae84d --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_assertions.py @@ -0,0 +1,258 @@ +import unittest + + +class Test_Assertions(unittest.TestCase): + def test_AlmostEqual(self): + self.assertAlmostEqual(1.00000001, 1.0) + self.assertNotAlmostEqual(1.0000001, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, + self.assertAlmostEqual, 1.0000001, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, + self.assertNotAlmostEqual, 1.00000001, 1.0) + + self.assertAlmostEqual(1.1, 1.0, places=0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, + self.assertAlmostEqual, 1.1, 1.0, places=1) + + self.assertAlmostEqual(0, .1+.1j, places=0) + self.assertNotAlmostEqual(0, .1+.1j, places=1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, + self.assertAlmostEqual, 0, .1+.1j, places=1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, + self.assertNotAlmostEqual, 0, .1+.1j, places=0) + + self.assertAlmostEqual(float('inf'), float('inf')) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotAlmostEqual, + float('inf'), float('inf')) + + + def test_assertRaises(self): + def _raise(e): + raise e + self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, KeyError) + self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, KeyError("key")) + try: + self.assertRaises(KeyError, lambda: None) + except self.failureException as e: + self.assertIn("KeyError not raised", e.args) + else: + self.fail("assertRaises() didn't fail") + try: + self.assertRaises(KeyError, _raise, ValueError) + except ValueError: + pass + else: + self.fail("assertRaises() didn't let exception pass through") + with self.assertRaises(KeyError) as cm: + try: + raise KeyError + except Exception, e: + raise + self.assertIs(cm.exception, e) + + with self.assertRaises(KeyError): + raise KeyError("key") + try: + with self.assertRaises(KeyError): + pass + except self.failureException as e: + self.assertIn("KeyError not raised", e.args) + else: + self.fail("assertRaises() didn't fail") + try: + with self.assertRaises(KeyError): + raise ValueError + except ValueError: + pass + else: + self.fail("assertRaises() didn't let exception pass through") + + +class TestLongMessage(unittest.TestCase): + """Test that the individual asserts honour longMessage. + This actually tests all the message behaviour for + asserts that use longMessage.""" + + def setUp(self): + class TestableTestFalse(unittest.TestCase): + longMessage = False + failureException = self.failureException + + def testTest(self): + pass + + class TestableTestTrue(unittest.TestCase): + longMessage = True + failureException = self.failureException + + def testTest(self): + pass + + self.testableTrue = TestableTestTrue('testTest') + self.testableFalse = TestableTestFalse('testTest') + + def testDefault(self): + self.assertFalse(unittest.TestCase.longMessage) + + def test_formatMsg(self): + self.assertEquals(self.testableFalse._formatMessage(None, "foo"), "foo") + self.assertEquals(self.testableFalse._formatMessage("foo", "bar"), "foo") + + self.assertEquals(self.testableTrue._formatMessage(None, "foo"), "foo") + self.assertEquals(self.testableTrue._formatMessage("foo", "bar"), "bar : foo") + + # This blows up if _formatMessage uses string concatenation + self.testableTrue._formatMessage(object(), 'foo') + + def test_formatMessage_unicode_error(self): + one = ''.join(chr(i) for i in range(255)) + # this used to cause a UnicodeDecodeError constructing msg + self.testableTrue._formatMessage(one, u'\uFFFD') + + def assertMessages(self, methodName, args, errors): + def getMethod(i): + useTestableFalse = i < 2 + if useTestableFalse: + test = self.testableFalse + else: + test = self.testableTrue + return getattr(test, methodName) + + for i, expected_regexp in enumerate(errors): + testMethod = getMethod(i) + kwargs = {} + withMsg = i % 2 + if withMsg: + kwargs = {"msg": "oops"} + + with self.assertRaisesRegexp(self.failureException, + expected_regexp=expected_regexp): + testMethod(*args, **kwargs) + + def testAssertTrue(self): + self.assertMessages('assertTrue', (False,), + ["^False is not True$", "^oops$", "^False is not True$", + "^False is not True : oops$"]) + + def testAssertFalse(self): + self.assertMessages('assertFalse', (True,), + ["^True is not False$", "^oops$", "^True is not False$", + "^True is not False : oops$"]) + + def testNotEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertNotEqual', (1, 1), + ["^1 == 1$", "^oops$", "^1 == 1$", + "^1 == 1 : oops$"]) + + def testAlmostEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertAlmostEqual', (1, 2), + ["^1 != 2 within 7 places$", "^oops$", + "^1 != 2 within 7 places$", "^1 != 2 within 7 places : oops$"]) + + def testNotAlmostEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertNotAlmostEqual', (1, 1), + ["^1 == 1 within 7 places$", "^oops$", + "^1 == 1 within 7 places$", "^1 == 1 within 7 places : oops$"]) + + def test_baseAssertEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('_baseAssertEqual', (1, 2), + ["^1 != 2$", "^oops$", "^1 != 2$", "^1 != 2 : oops$"]) + + def testAssertSequenceEqual(self): + # Error messages are multiline so not testing on full message + # assertTupleEqual and assertListEqual delegate to this method + self.assertMessages('assertSequenceEqual', ([], [None]), + ["\+ \[None\]$", "^oops$", r"\+ \[None\]$", + r"\+ \[None\] : oops$"]) + + def testAssertSetEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertSetEqual', (set(), set([None])), + ["None$", "^oops$", "None$", + "None : oops$"]) + + def testAssertIn(self): + self.assertMessages('assertIn', (None, []), + ['^None not found in \[\]$', "^oops$", + '^None not found in \[\]$', + '^None not found in \[\] : oops$']) + + def testAssertNotIn(self): + self.assertMessages('assertNotIn', (None, [None]), + ['^None unexpectedly found in \[None\]$', "^oops$", + '^None unexpectedly found in \[None\]$', + '^None unexpectedly found in \[None\] : oops$']) + + def testAssertDictEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertDictEqual', ({}, {'key': 'value'}), + [r"\+ \{'key': 'value'\}$", "^oops$", + "\+ \{'key': 'value'\}$", + "\+ \{'key': 'value'\} : oops$"]) + + def testAssertDictContainsSubset(self): + self.assertMessages('assertDictContainsSubset', ({'key': 'value'}, {}), + ["^Missing: 'key'$", "^oops$", + "^Missing: 'key'$", + "^Missing: 'key' : oops$"]) + + def testAssertItemsEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertItemsEqual', ([], [None]), + [r"\[None\]$", "^oops$", + r"\[None\]$", + r"\[None\] : oops$"]) + + def testAssertMultiLineEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertMultiLineEqual', ("", "foo"), + [r"\+ foo$", "^oops$", + r"\+ foo$", + r"\+ foo : oops$"]) + + def testAssertLess(self): + self.assertMessages('assertLess', (2, 1), + ["^2 not less than 1$", "^oops$", + "^2 not less than 1$", "^2 not less than 1 : oops$"]) + + def testAssertLessEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertLessEqual', (2, 1), + ["^2 not less than or equal to 1$", "^oops$", + "^2 not less than or equal to 1$", + "^2 not less than or equal to 1 : oops$"]) + + def testAssertGreater(self): + self.assertMessages('assertGreater', (1, 2), + ["^1 not greater than 2$", "^oops$", + "^1 not greater than 2$", + "^1 not greater than 2 : oops$"]) + + def testAssertGreaterEqual(self): + self.assertMessages('assertGreaterEqual', (1, 2), + ["^1 not greater than or equal to 2$", "^oops$", + "^1 not greater than or equal to 2$", + "^1 not greater than or equal to 2 : oops$"]) + + def testAssertIsNone(self): + self.assertMessages('assertIsNone', ('not None',), + ["^'not None' is not None$", "^oops$", + "^'not None' is not None$", + "^'not None' is not None : oops$"]) + + def testAssertIsNotNone(self): + self.assertMessages('assertIsNotNone', (None,), + ["^unexpectedly None$", "^oops$", + "^unexpectedly None$", + "^unexpectedly None : oops$"]) + + def testAssertIs(self): + self.assertMessages('assertIs', (None, 'foo'), + ["^None is not 'foo'$", "^oops$", + "^None is not 'foo'$", + "^None is not 'foo' : oops$"]) + + def testAssertIsNot(self): + self.assertMessages('assertIsNot', (None, None), + ["^unexpectedly identical: None$", "^oops$", + "^unexpectedly identical: None$", + "^unexpectedly identical: None : oops$"]) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_case.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_case.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..25beab737c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_case.py @@ -0,0 +1,907 @@ +import re +import sys + +from copy import deepcopy +from test import test_support + +import unittest + +from .support import ( + TestEquality, TestHashing, LoggingResult, ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun +) + + +class Test(object): + "Keep these TestCase classes out of the main namespace" + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): pass + def test1(self): pass + + class Bar(Foo): + def test2(self): pass + + class LoggingTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + """A test case which logs its calls.""" + + def __init__(self, events): + super(Test.LoggingTestCase, self).__init__('test') + self.events = events + + def setUp(self): + self.events.append('setUp') + + def test(self): + self.events.append('test') + + def tearDown(self): + self.events.append('tearDown') + + +class Test_TestCase(unittest.TestCase, TestEquality, TestHashing): + + ### Set up attributes used by inherited tests + ################################################################ + + # Used by TestHashing.test_hash and TestEquality.test_eq + eq_pairs = [(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Foo('test1'))] + + # Used by TestEquality.test_ne + ne_pairs = [(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Foo('runTest')) + ,(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Bar('test1')) + ,(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Bar('test2'))] + + ################################################################ + ### /Set up attributes used by inherited tests + + + # "class TestCase([methodName])" + # ... + # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the + # method named methodName." + # ... + # "methodName defaults to "runTest"." + # + # Make sure it really is optional, and that it defaults to the proper + # thing. + def test_init__no_test_name(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): raise TypeError() + def test(self): pass + + self.assertEqual(Test().id()[-13:], '.Test.runTest') + + # "class TestCase([methodName])" + # ... + # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the + # method named methodName." + def test_init__test_name__valid(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): raise TypeError() + def test(self): pass + + self.assertEqual(Test('test').id()[-10:], '.Test.test') + + # "class TestCase([methodName])" + # ... + # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the + # method named methodName." + def test_init__test_name__invalid(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): raise TypeError() + def test(self): pass + + try: + Test('testfoo') + except ValueError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise ValueError") + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. For + # TestCase instances, this will always be 1" + def test_countTestCases(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): pass + + self.assertEqual(Foo('test').countTestCases(), 1) + + # "Return the default type of test result object to be used to run this + # test. For TestCase instances, this will always be + # unittest.TestResult; subclasses of TestCase should + # override this as necessary." + def test_defaultTestResult(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): + pass + + result = Foo().defaultTestResult() + self.assertEqual(type(result), unittest.TestResult) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if setUp() raises + # an exception. + def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def setUp(self): + super(Foo, self).setUp() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') + + Foo(events).run(result) + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "With a temporary result stopTestRun is called when setUp errors. + def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp_default_result(self): + events = [] + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def defaultTestResult(self): + return LoggingResult(self.events) + + def setUp(self): + super(Foo, self).setUp() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') + + Foo(events).run() + expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', + 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test raises + # an error (as opposed to a failure). + def test_run_call_order__error_in_test(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def test(self): + super(Foo, self).test() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', 'tearDown', + 'stopTest'] + Foo(events).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "With a default result, an error in the test still results in stopTestRun + # being called." + def test_run_call_order__error_in_test_default_result(self): + events = [] + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def defaultTestResult(self): + return LoggingResult(self.events) + + def test(self): + super(Foo, self).test() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') + + expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', + 'tearDown', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] + Foo(events).run() + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test signals + # a failure (as opposed to an error). + def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def test(self): + super(Foo, self).test() + self.fail('raised by Foo.test') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', 'tearDown', + 'stopTest'] + Foo(events).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a test fails with a default result stopTestRun is still called." + def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test_default_result(self): + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def defaultTestResult(self): + return LoggingResult(self.events) + def test(self): + super(Foo, self).test() + self.fail('raised by Foo.test') + + expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', + 'tearDown', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] + events = [] + Foo(events).run() + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if tearDown() raises + # an exception. + def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def tearDown(self): + super(Foo, self).tearDown() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') + + Foo(events).run(result) + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', + 'stopTest'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When tearDown errors with a default result stopTestRun is still called." + def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown_default_result(self): + + class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): + def defaultTestResult(self): + return LoggingResult(self.events) + def tearDown(self): + super(Foo, self).tearDown() + raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') + + events = [] + Foo(events).run() + expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', + 'addError', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "TestCase.run() still works when the defaultTestResult is a TestResult + # that does not support startTestRun and stopTestRun. + def test_run_call_order_default_result(self): + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def defaultTestResult(self): + return ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun() + def test(self): + pass + + Foo('test').run() + + # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. + # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to + # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in + # order to ``play fair'' with the framework. The initial value of this + # attribute is AssertionError" + def test_failureException__default(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is AssertionError) + + # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. + # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to + # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in + # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." + # + # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException + def test_failureException__subclassing__explicit_raise(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + raise RuntimeError() + + failureException = RuntimeError + + self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) + + + Foo('test').run(result) + expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. + # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to + # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in + # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." + # + # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException + def test_failureException__subclassing__implicit_raise(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + self.fail("foo") + + failureException = RuntimeError + + self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) + + + Foo('test').run(result) + expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "The default implementation does nothing." + def test_setUp(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): + pass + + # ... and nothing should happen + Foo().setUp() + + # "The default implementation does nothing." + def test_tearDown(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): + pass + + # ... and nothing should happen + Foo().tearDown() + + # "Return a string identifying the specific test case." + # + # Because of the vague nature of the docs, I'm not going to lock this + # test down too much. Really all that can be asserted is that the id() + # will be a string (either 8-byte or unicode -- again, because the docs + # just say "string") + def test_id(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): + pass + + self.assertIsInstance(Foo().id(), basestring) + + # "If result is omitted or None, a temporary result object is created + # and used, but is not made available to the caller. As TestCase owns the + # temporary result startTestRun and stopTestRun are called. + + def test_run__uses_defaultTestResult(self): + events = [] + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + events.append('test') + + def defaultTestResult(self): + return LoggingResult(events) + + # Make run() find a result object on its own + Foo('test').run() + + expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'test', 'addSuccess', + 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + def testShortDescriptionWithoutDocstring(self): + self.assertIsNone(self.shortDescription()) + + @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, + "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") + def testShortDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring(self): + """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.""" + self.assertEqual( + self.shortDescription(), + 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.') + + @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, + "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") + def testShortDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring(self): + """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer docstring. + + This method ensures that only the first line of a docstring is + returned used in the short description, no matter how long the + whole thing is. + """ + self.assertEqual( + self.shortDescription(), + 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer ' + 'docstring.') + + def testAddTypeEqualityFunc(self): + class SadSnake(object): + """Dummy class for test_addTypeEqualityFunc.""" + s1, s2 = SadSnake(), SadSnake() + self.assertNotEqual(s1, s2) + def AllSnakesCreatedEqual(a, b, msg=None): + return type(a) is type(b) is SadSnake + self.addTypeEqualityFunc(SadSnake, AllSnakesCreatedEqual) + self.assertEqual(s1, s2) + # No this doesn't clean up and remove the SadSnake equality func + # from this TestCase instance but since its a local nothing else + # will ever notice that. + + def testAssertIs(self): + thing = object() + self.assertIs(thing, thing) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIs, thing, object()) + + def testAssertIsNot(self): + thing = object() + self.assertIsNot(thing, object()) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNot, thing, thing) + + def testAssertIsInstance(self): + thing = [] + self.assertIsInstance(thing, list) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsInstance, + thing, dict) + + def testAssertNotIsInstance(self): + thing = [] + self.assertNotIsInstance(thing, dict) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIsInstance, + thing, list) + + def testAssertIn(self): + animals = {'monkey': 'banana', 'cow': 'grass', 'seal': 'fish'} + + self.assertIn('a', 'abc') + self.assertIn(2, [1, 2, 3]) + self.assertIn('monkey', animals) + + self.assertNotIn('d', 'abc') + self.assertNotIn(0, [1, 2, 3]) + self.assertNotIn('otter', animals) + + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'x', 'abc') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 4, [1, 2, 3]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'elephant', + animals) + + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'c', 'abc') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 1, [1, 2, 3]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'cow', + animals) + + def testAssertDictContainsSubset(self): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {}) + self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {'a': 1}) + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1}) + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'b': 2}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) + + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({1: "one"}, {}) + + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 2}, {'a': 1}) + + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) + + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) + + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) + + with test_support.check_warnings(("", UnicodeWarning)): + one = ''.join(chr(i) for i in range(255)) + # this used to cause a UnicodeDecodeError constructing the failure msg + with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): + self.assertDictContainsSubset({'foo': one}, {'foo': u'\uFFFD'}) + + def testAssertEqual(self): + equal_pairs = [ + ((), ()), + ({}, {}), + ([], []), + (set(), set()), + (frozenset(), frozenset())] + for a, b in equal_pairs: + # This mess of try excepts is to test the assertEqual behavior + # itself. + try: + self.assertEqual(a, b) + except self.failureException: + self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) failed' % (a, b)) + try: + self.assertEqual(a, b, msg='foo') + except self.failureException: + self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with msg= failed' % (a, b)) + try: + self.assertEqual(a, b, 'foo') + except self.failureException: + self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with third parameter failed' % + (a, b)) + + unequal_pairs = [ + ((), []), + ({}, set()), + (set([4,1]), frozenset([4,2])), + (frozenset([4,5]), set([2,3])), + (set([3,4]), set([5,4]))] + for a, b in unequal_pairs: + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, + 'foo') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, + msg='foo') + + def testEquality(self): + self.assertListEqual([], []) + self.assertTupleEqual((), ()) + self.assertSequenceEqual([], ()) + + a = [0, 'a', []] + b = [] + self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, + self.assertListEqual, a, b) + self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, + self.assertListEqual, tuple(a), tuple(b)) + self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, + self.assertSequenceEqual, a, tuple(b)) + + b.extend(a) + self.assertListEqual(a, b) + self.assertTupleEqual(tuple(a), tuple(b)) + self.assertSequenceEqual(a, tuple(b)) + self.assertSequenceEqual(tuple(a), b) + + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, + a, tuple(b)) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, + tuple(a), b) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, None, b) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, None, + tuple(b)) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, + None, tuple(b)) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, 1, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, 1, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, + 1, 1) + + self.assertDictEqual({}, {}) + + c = { 'x': 1 } + d = {} + self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, + self.assertDictEqual, c, d) + + d.update(c) + self.assertDictEqual(c, d) + + d['x'] = 0 + self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, + self.assertDictEqual, c, d, 'These are unequal') + + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, None, d) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, [], d) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, 1, 1) + + def testAssertItemsEqual(self): + a = object() + self.assertItemsEqual([1, 2, 3], [3, 2, 1]) + self.assertItemsEqual(['foo', 'bar', 'baz'], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo']) + self.assertItemsEqual([a, a, 2, 2, 3], (a, 2, 3, a, 2)) + self.assertItemsEqual([1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, "a"]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [1, 2] + [3] * 100, [1] * 100 + [2, 3]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, 1]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [10], [10, 11]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [10, 11], [10]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [10, 11, 10], [10, 11]) + + # Test that sequences of unhashable objects can be tested for sameness: + self.assertItemsEqual([[1, 2], [3, 4], 0], [False, [3, 4], [1, 2]]) + with test_support.check_warnings(quiet=True) as w: + # hashable types, but not orderable + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [], [divmod, 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, frozenset()]) + # comparing dicts raises a py3k warning + self.assertItemsEqual([{'a': 1}, {'b': 2}], [{'b': 2}, {'a': 1}]) + # comparing heterogenous non-hashable sequences raises a py3k warning + self.assertItemsEqual([1, 'x', divmod, []], [divmod, [], 'x', 1]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [], [divmod, [], 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, set()]) + # fail the test if warnings are not silenced + if w.warnings: + self.fail('assertItemsEqual raised a warning: ' + + str(w.warnings[0])) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [[1]], [[2]]) + + # Same elements, but not same sequence length + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [1, 1, 2], [2, 1]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [1, 1, "2", "a", "a"], ["2", "2", True, "a"]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertItemsEqual, + [1, {'b': 2}, None, True], [{'b': 2}, True, None]) + + + def testAssertSetEqual(self): + set1 = set() + set2 = set() + self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) + + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, None, set2) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, [], set2) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, None) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, []) + + set1 = set(['a']) + set2 = set() + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) + + set1 = set(['a']) + set2 = set(['a']) + self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) + + set1 = set(['a']) + set2 = set(['a', 'b']) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) + + set1 = set(['a']) + set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) + + set1 = set(['a', 'b']) + set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) + self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) + + set1 = set() + set2 = "foo" + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set2, set1) + + # make sure any string formatting is tuple-safe + set1 = set([(0, 1), (2, 3)]) + set2 = set([(4, 5)]) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) + + def testInequality(self): + # Try ints + self.assertGreater(2, 1) + self.assertGreaterEqual(2, 1) + self.assertGreaterEqual(1, 1) + self.assertLess(1, 2) + self.assertLessEqual(1, 2) + self.assertLessEqual(1, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 2) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1, 2) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 2, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1, 1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 2, 1) + + # Try Floats + self.assertGreater(1.1, 1.0) + self.assertGreaterEqual(1.1, 1.0) + self.assertGreaterEqual(1.0, 1.0) + self.assertLess(1.0, 1.1) + self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.1) + self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1.0, 1.1) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.1, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.0, 1.0) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 1.1, 1.0) + + # Try Strings + self.assertGreater('bug', 'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual('bug', 'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual('ant', 'ant') + self.assertLess('ant', 'bug') + self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'bug') + self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 'ant', 'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'bug', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 'bug', 'ant') + + # Try Unicode + self.assertGreater(u'bug', u'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual(u'bug', u'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual(u'ant', u'ant') + self.assertLess(u'ant', u'bug') + self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', u'bug') + self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', u'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, u'ant', + u'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'bug', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'ant', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, u'bug', u'ant') + + # Try Mixed String/Unicode + self.assertGreater('bug', u'ant') + self.assertGreater(u'bug', 'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual('bug', u'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual(u'bug', 'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual('ant', u'ant') + self.assertGreaterEqual(u'ant', 'ant') + self.assertLess('ant', u'bug') + self.assertLess(u'ant', 'bug') + self.assertLessEqual('ant', u'bug') + self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', 'bug') + self.assertLessEqual('ant', u'ant') + self.assertLessEqual(u'ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', u'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', 'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, u'ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 'ant', + u'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, u'ant', + 'bug') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'bug', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'bug', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'ant', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, u'ant', 'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 'bug', u'ant') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, u'bug', 'ant') + + def testAssertMultiLineEqual(self): + sample_text = b"""\ +http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html +test case + A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] +""" + revised_sample_text = b"""\ +http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html +test case + A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your + own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. +""" + sample_text_error = b""" +- http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html +? ^ ++ http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html +? ^^^ + test case +- A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] ++ A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your +? +++++++++++++++++++++ ++ own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. +""" + + for type_changer in (lambda x: x, lambda x: x.decode('utf8')): + try: + self.assertMultiLineEqual(type_changer(sample_text), + type_changer(revised_sample_text)) + except self.failureException, e: + # assertMultiLineEqual is hooked up as the default for + # unicode strings - so we can't use it for this check + self.assertTrue(sample_text_error == str(e).encode('utf8')) + + def testAssertIsNone(self): + self.assertIsNone(None) + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNone, False) + self.assertIsNotNone('DjZoPloGears on Rails') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNotNone, None) + + def testAssertRegexpMatches(self): + self.assertRegexpMatches('asdfabasdf', r'ab+') + self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertRegexpMatches, + 'saaas', r'aaaa') + + def testAssertRaisesRegexp(self): + class ExceptionMock(Exception): + pass + + def Stub(): + raise ExceptionMock('We expect') + + self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, re.compile('expect$'), Stub) + self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, 'expect$', Stub) + self.assertRaisesRegexp(ExceptionMock, u'expect$', Stub) + + def testAssertNotRaisesRegexp(self): + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, re.compile('x'), + lambda: None) + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, 'x', + lambda: None) + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, '^Exception not raised$', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, u'x', + lambda: None) + + def testAssertRaisesRegexpMismatch(self): + def Stub(): + raise Exception('Unexpected') + + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, + r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, '^Expected$', + Stub) + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, + r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, u'^Expected$', + Stub) + self.assertRaisesRegexp( + self.failureException, + r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', + self.assertRaisesRegexp, Exception, + re.compile('^Expected$'), Stub) + + def testAssertRaisesExcValue(self): + class ExceptionMock(Exception): + pass + + def Stub(foo): + raise ExceptionMock(foo) + v = "particular value" + + ctx = self.assertRaises(ExceptionMock) + with ctx: + Stub(v) + e = ctx.exception + self.assertIsInstance(e, ExceptionMock) + self.assertEqual(e.args[0], v) + + def testSynonymAssertMethodNames(self): + """Test undocumented method name synonyms. + + Please do not use these methods names in your own code. + + This test confirms their continued existence and functionality + in order to avoid breaking existing code. + """ + self.assertNotEquals(3, 5) + self.assertEquals(3, 3) + self.assertAlmostEquals(2.0, 2.0) + self.assertNotAlmostEquals(3.0, 5.0) + self.assert_(True) + + def testPendingDeprecationMethodNames(self): + """Test fail* methods pending deprecation, they will warn in 3.2. + + Do not use these methods. They will go away in 3.3. + """ + with test_support.check_warnings(): + self.failIfEqual(3, 5) + self.failUnlessEqual(3, 3) + self.failUnlessAlmostEqual(2.0, 2.0) + self.failIfAlmostEqual(3.0, 5.0) + self.failUnless(True) + self.failUnlessRaises(TypeError, lambda _: 3.14 + u'spam') + self.failIf(False) + + def testDeepcopy(self): + # Issue: 5660 + class TestableTest(unittest.TestCase): + def testNothing(self): + pass + + test = TestableTest('testNothing') + + # This shouldn't blow up + deepcopy(test) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_discovery.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_discovery.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..2fa78095c79 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_discovery.py @@ -0,0 +1,293 @@ +import os +import sys + +import unittest + + +class TestDiscovery(unittest.TestCase): + + # Heavily mocked tests so I can avoid hitting the filesystem + def test_get_name_from_path(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' + name = loader._get_name_from_path('/foo/bar/baz.py') + self.assertEqual(name, 'bar.baz') + + if not __debug__: + # asserts are off + return + + with self.assertRaises(AssertionError): + loader._get_name_from_path('/bar/baz.py') + + def test_find_tests(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + original_listdir = os.listdir + def restore_listdir(): + os.listdir = original_listdir + original_isfile = os.path.isfile + def restore_isfile(): + os.path.isfile = original_isfile + original_isdir = os.path.isdir + def restore_isdir(): + os.path.isdir = original_isdir + + path_lists = [['test1.py', 'test2.py', 'not_a_test.py', 'test_dir', + 'test.foo', 'test-not-a-module.py', 'another_dir'], + ['test3.py', 'test4.py', ]] + os.listdir = lambda path: path_lists.pop(0) + self.addCleanup(restore_listdir) + + def isdir(path): + return path.endswith('dir') + os.path.isdir = isdir + self.addCleanup(restore_isdir) + + def isfile(path): + # another_dir is not a package and so shouldn't be recursed into + return not path.endswith('dir') and not 'another_dir' in path + os.path.isfile = isfile + self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) + + loader._get_module_from_name = lambda path: path + ' module' + loader.loadTestsFromModule = lambda module: module + ' tests' + + loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' + suite = list(loader._find_tests('/foo', 'test*.py')) + + expected = [name + ' module tests' for name in + ('test1', 'test2')] + expected.extend([('test_dir.%s' % name) + ' module tests' for name in + ('test3', 'test4')]) + self.assertEqual(suite, expected) + + def test_find_tests_with_package(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + original_listdir = os.listdir + def restore_listdir(): + os.listdir = original_listdir + original_isfile = os.path.isfile + def restore_isfile(): + os.path.isfile = original_isfile + original_isdir = os.path.isdir + def restore_isdir(): + os.path.isdir = original_isdir + + directories = ['a_directory', 'test_directory', 'test_directory2'] + path_lists = [directories, [], [], []] + os.listdir = lambda path: path_lists.pop(0) + self.addCleanup(restore_listdir) + + os.path.isdir = lambda path: True + self.addCleanup(restore_isdir) + + os.path.isfile = lambda path: os.path.basename(path) not in directories + self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) + + class Module(object): + paths = [] + load_tests_args = [] + + def __init__(self, path): + self.path = path + self.paths.append(path) + if os.path.basename(path) == 'test_directory': + def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): + self.load_tests_args.append((loader, tests, pattern)) + return 'load_tests' + self.load_tests = load_tests + + def __eq__(self, other): + return self.path == other.path + + # Silence py3k warning + __hash__ = None + + loader._get_module_from_name = lambda name: Module(name) + def loadTestsFromModule(module, use_load_tests): + if use_load_tests: + raise self.failureException('use_load_tests should be False for packages') + return module.path + ' module tests' + loader.loadTestsFromModule = loadTestsFromModule + + loader._top_level_dir = '/foo' + # this time no '.py' on the pattern so that it can match + # a test package + suite = list(loader._find_tests('/foo', 'test*')) + + # We should have loaded tests from the test_directory package by calling load_tests + # and directly from the test_directory2 package + self.assertEqual(suite, + ['load_tests', 'test_directory2' + ' module tests']) + self.assertEqual(Module.paths, ['test_directory', 'test_directory2']) + + # load_tests should have been called once with loader, tests and pattern + self.assertEqual(Module.load_tests_args, + [(loader, 'test_directory' + ' module tests', 'test*')]) + + def test_discover(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + original_isfile = os.path.isfile + def restore_isfile(): + os.path.isfile = original_isfile + + os.path.isfile = lambda path: False + self.addCleanup(restore_isfile) + + orig_sys_path = sys.path[:] + def restore_path(): + sys.path[:] = orig_sys_path + self.addCleanup(restore_path) + + full_path = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo')) + with self.assertRaises(ImportError): + loader.discover('/foo/bar', top_level_dir='/foo') + + self.assertEqual(loader._top_level_dir, full_path) + self.assertIn(full_path, sys.path) + + os.path.isfile = lambda path: True + _find_tests_args = [] + def _find_tests(start_dir, pattern): + _find_tests_args.append((start_dir, pattern)) + return ['tests'] + loader._find_tests = _find_tests + loader.suiteClass = str + + suite = loader.discover('/foo/bar/baz', 'pattern', '/foo/bar') + + top_level_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo/bar')) + start_dir = os.path.abspath(os.path.normpath('/foo/bar/baz')) + self.assertEqual(suite, "['tests']") + self.assertEqual(loader._top_level_dir, top_level_dir) + self.assertEqual(_find_tests_args, [(start_dir, 'pattern')]) + self.assertIn(top_level_dir, sys.path) + + def test_discover_with_modules_that_fail_to_import(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + listdir = os.listdir + os.listdir = lambda _: ['test_this_does_not_exist.py'] + isfile = os.path.isfile + os.path.isfile = lambda _: True + orig_sys_path = sys.path[:] + def restore(): + os.path.isfile = isfile + os.listdir = listdir + sys.path[:] = orig_sys_path + self.addCleanup(restore) + + suite = loader.discover('.') + self.assertIn(os.getcwd(), sys.path) + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) + test = list(list(suite)[0])[0] # extract test from suite + + with self.assertRaises(ImportError): + test.test_this_does_not_exist() + + def test_command_line_handling_parseArgs(self): + # Haha - take that uninstantiable class + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + + args = [] + def do_discovery(argv): + args.extend(argv) + program._do_discovery = do_discovery + program.parseArgs(['something', 'discover']) + self.assertEqual(args, []) + + program.parseArgs(['something', 'discover', 'foo', 'bar']) + self.assertEqual(args, ['foo', 'bar']) + + def test_command_line_handling_do_discovery_too_many_arguments(self): + class Stop(Exception): + pass + def usageExit(): + raise Stop + + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program.usageExit = usageExit + + with self.assertRaises(Stop): + # too many args + program._do_discovery(['one', 'two', 'three', 'four']) + + + def test_command_line_handling_do_discovery_calls_loader(self): + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + + class Loader(object): + args = [] + def discover(self, start_dir, pattern, top_level_dir): + self.args.append((start_dir, pattern, top_level_dir)) + return 'tests' + + program._do_discovery(['-v'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['--verbose'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery([], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['fish'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'test*.py', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['fish', 'eggs'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['fish', 'eggs', 'ham'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', 'ham')]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['-s', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'test*.py', None)]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['-t', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'test*.py', 'fish')]) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['-p', 'fish'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('.', 'fish', None)]) + self.assertFalse(program.failfast) + + Loader.args = [] + program = object.__new__(unittest.TestProgram) + program._do_discovery(['-p', 'eggs', '-s', 'fish', '-v', '-f'], Loader=Loader) + self.assertEqual(program.test, 'tests') + self.assertEqual(Loader.args, [('fish', 'eggs', None)]) + self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) + self.assertTrue(program.failfast) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_functiontestcase.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_functiontestcase.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..63dd8781509 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_functiontestcase.py @@ -0,0 +1,148 @@ +import unittest + +from .support import LoggingResult + + +class Test_FunctionTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. For + # TestCase instances, this will always be 1" + def test_countTestCases(self): + test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + + self.assertEqual(test.countTestCases(), 1) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if setUp() raises + # an exception. + def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + def setUp(): + events.append('setUp') + raise RuntimeError('raised by setUp') + + def test(): + events.append('test') + + def tearDown(): + events.append('tearDown') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest'] + unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test raises + # an error (as opposed to a failure). + def test_run_call_order__error_in_test(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + def setUp(): + events.append('setUp') + + def test(): + events.append('test') + raise RuntimeError('raised by test') + + def tearDown(): + events.append('tearDown') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addError', 'tearDown', + 'stopTest'] + unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test signals + # a failure (as opposed to an error). + def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + def setUp(): + events.append('setUp') + + def test(): + events.append('test') + self.fail('raised by test') + + def tearDown(): + events.append('tearDown') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'addFailure', 'tearDown', + 'stopTest'] + unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method + # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the + # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, + # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." + # + # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if tearDown() raises + # an exception. + def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + def setUp(): + events.append('setUp') + + def test(): + events.append('test') + + def tearDown(): + events.append('tearDown') + raise RuntimeError('raised by tearDown') + + expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', + 'stopTest'] + unittest.FunctionTestCase(test, setUp, tearDown).run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + # "Return a string identifying the specific test case." + # + # Because of the vague nature of the docs, I'm not going to lock this + # test down too much. Really all that can be asserted is that the id() + # will be a string (either 8-byte or unicode -- again, because the docs + # just say "string") + def test_id(self): + test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + + self.assertIsInstance(test.id(), basestring) + + # "Returns a one-line description of the test, or None if no description + # has been provided. The default implementation of this method returns + # the first line of the test method's docstring, if available, or None." + def test_shortDescription__no_docstring(self): + test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + + self.assertEqual(test.shortDescription(), None) + + # "Returns a one-line description of the test, or None if no description + # has been provided. The default implementation of this method returns + # the first line of the test method's docstring, if available, or None." + def test_shortDescription__singleline_docstring(self): + desc = "this tests foo" + test = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None, description=desc) + + self.assertEqual(test.shortDescription(), "this tests foo") + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_loader.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_loader.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..7a3a59dc0a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_loader.py @@ -0,0 +1,1294 @@ +import sys +import types + + +import unittest + + +class Test_TestLoader(unittest.TestCase): + + ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase + ################################################################ + + # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived + # class testCaseClass" + def test_loadTestsFromTestCase(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + + tests = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) + + # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived + # class testCaseClass" + # + # Make sure it does the right thing even if no tests were found + def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__no_matches(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def foo_bar(self): pass + + empty_suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), empty_suite) + + # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived + # class testCaseClass" + # + # What happens if loadTestsFromTestCase() is given an object + # that isn't a subclass of TestCase? Specifically, what happens + # if testCaseClass is a subclass of TestSuite? + # + # This is checked for specifically in the code, so we better add a + # test for it. + def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__TestSuite_subclass(self): + class NotATestCase(unittest.TestSuite): + pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(NotATestCase) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail('Should raise TypeError') + + # "Return a suite of all tests cases contained in the TestCase-derived + # class testCaseClass" + # + # Make sure loadTestsFromTestCase() picks up the default test method + # name (as specified by TestCase), even though the method name does + # not match the default TestLoader.testMethodPrefix string + def test_loadTestsFromTestCase__default_method_name(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def runTest(self): + pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + # This has to be false for the test to succeed + self.assertFalse('runTest'.startswith(loader.testMethodPrefix)) + + suite = loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [Foo('runTest')]) + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase + + ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule + ################################################################ + + # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" + def test_loadTestsFromModule__TestCase_subclass(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + expected = [loader.suiteClass([MyTestCase('test')])] + self.assertEqual(list(suite), expected) + + # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" + # + # What happens if no tests are found (no TestCase instances)? + def test_loadTestsFromModule__no_TestCase_instances(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) + + # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase" + # + # What happens if no tests are found (TestCases instances, but no tests)? + def test_loadTestsFromModule__no_TestCase_tests(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [loader.suiteClass()]) + + # "This method searches `module` for classes derived from TestCase"s + # + # What happens if loadTestsFromModule() is given something other + # than a module? + # + # XXX Currently, it succeeds anyway. This flexibility + # should either be documented or loadTestsFromModule() should + # raise a TypeError + # + # XXX Certain people are using this behaviour. We'll add a test for it + def test_loadTestsFromModule__not_a_module(self): + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + class NotAModule(object): + test_2 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(NotAModule) + + reference = [unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')])] + self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) + + + # Check that loadTestsFromModule honors (or not) a module + # with a load_tests function. + def test_loadTestsFromModule__load_tests(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + load_tests_args = [] + def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): + self.assertIsInstance(tests, unittest.TestSuite) + load_tests_args.extend((loader, tests, pattern)) + return tests + m.load_tests = load_tests + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, unittest.TestSuite) + self.assertEquals(load_tests_args, [loader, suite, None]) + + load_tests_args = [] + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m, use_load_tests=False) + self.assertEquals(load_tests_args, []) + + def test_loadTestsFromModule__faulty_load_tests(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + + def load_tests(loader, tests, pattern): + raise TypeError('some failure') + m.load_tests = load_tests + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromModule(m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, unittest.TestSuite) + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) + test = list(suite)[0] + + self.assertRaisesRegexp(TypeError, "some failure", test.m) + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromModule() + + ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromName() + ################################################################ + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # Is ValueError raised in response to an empty name? + def test_loadTestsFromName__empty_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('') + except ValueError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "Empty module name") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when the name contains invalid characters? + def test_loadTestsFromName__malformed_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + # XXX Should this raise ValueError or ImportError? + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('abc () //') + except ValueError: + pass + except ImportError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to a + # module" + # + # What happens when a module by that name can't be found? + def test_loadTestsFromName__unknown_module_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('sdasfasfasdf') + except ImportError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "No module named sdasfasfasdf") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ImportError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when the module is found, but the attribute can't? + def test_loadTestsFromName__unknown_attr_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('unittest.sdasfasfasdf') + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when we provide the module, but the attribute can't be + # found? + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_unknown_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('sdasfasfasdf', unittest) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # Does loadTestsFromName raise ValueError when passed an empty + # name relative to a provided module? + # + # XXX Should probably raise a ValueError instead of an AttributeError + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_empty_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('', unittest) + except AttributeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # What happens when an impossible name is given, relative to the provided + # `module`? + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_malformed_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + # XXX Should this raise AttributeError or ValueError? + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('abc () //', unittest) + except ValueError: + pass + except AttributeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # Does loadTestsFromName raise TypeError when the `module` argument + # isn't a module object? + # + # XXX Accepts the not-a-module object, ignorning the object's type + # This should raise an exception or the method name should be changed + # + # XXX Some people are relying on this, so keep it for now + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_not_a_module(self): + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + class NotAModule(object): + test_2 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('test_2', NotAModule) + + reference = [MyTestCase('test')] + self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # Does it raise an exception if the name resolves to an invalid + # object? + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_bad_object(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + m.testcase_1 = object() + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1', m) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Should have raised TypeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may + # resolve either to ... a test case class" + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_TestCase_subclass(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_TestSuite(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testsuite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testsuite', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a test method within a test case class" + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_testmethod(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.test', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # Does loadTestsFromName() raise the proper exception when trying to + # resolve "a test method within a test case class" that doesn't exist + # for the given name (relative to a provided module)? + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_invalid_testmethod(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.testfoo', m) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "type object 'MyTestCase' has no attribute 'testfoo'") + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a ... TestSuite instance" + def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestSuite(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + testcase_2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + def return_TestSuite(): + return unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) + m.return_TestSuite = return_TestSuite + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestSuite', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1, testcase_2]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" + def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestCase_instance(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + def return_TestCase(): + return testcase_1 + m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestCase', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" + #***************************************************************** + #Override the suiteClass attribute to ensure that the suiteClass + #attribute is used + def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__TestCase_instance_ProperSuiteClass(self): + class SubTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite): + pass + m = types.ModuleType('m') + testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + def return_TestCase(): + return testcase_1 + m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass = SubTestSuite + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('return_TestCase', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [testcase_1]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a test method within a test case class" + #***************************************************************** + #Override the suiteClass attribute to ensure that the suiteClass + #attribute is used + def test_loadTestsFromName__relative_testmethod_ProperSuiteClass(self): + class SubTestSuite(unittest.TestSuite): + pass + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass=SubTestSuite + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName('testcase_1.test', m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [MyTestCase('test')]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" + # + # What happens if the callable returns something else? + def test_loadTestsFromName__callable__wrong_type(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + def return_wrong(): + return 6 + m.return_wrong = return_wrong + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromName('return_wrong', m) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise TypeError") + + # "The specifier can refer to modules and packages which have not been + # imported; they will be imported as a side-effect" + def test_loadTestsFromName__module_not_loaded(self): + # We're going to try to load this module as a side-effect, so it + # better not be loaded before we try. + # + # Why pick audioop? Google shows it isn't used very often, so there's + # a good chance that it won't be imported when this test is run + module_name = 'audioop' + + if module_name in sys.modules: + del sys.modules[module_name] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + suite = loader.loadTestsFromName(module_name) + + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) + + # audioop should now be loaded, thanks to loadTestsFromName() + self.assertIn(module_name, sys.modules) + finally: + if module_name in sys.modules: + del sys.modules[module_name] + + ################################################################ + ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromName() + + ### Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames() + ################################################################ + + # "Similar to loadTestsFromName(), but takes a sequence of names rather + # than a single name." + # + # What happens if that sequence of names is empty? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__empty_name_list(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([]) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) + + # "Similar to loadTestsFromName(), but takes a sequence of names rather + # than a single name." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # What happens if that sequence of names is empty? + # + # XXX Should this raise a ValueError or just return an empty TestSuite? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_empty_name_list(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([], unittest) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), []) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # Is ValueError raised in response to an empty name? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__empty_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['']) + except ValueError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "Empty module name") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when presented with an impossible module name? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__malformed_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + # XXX Should this raise ValueError or ImportError? + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['abc () //']) + except ValueError: + pass + except ImportError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when no module can be found for the given name? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_module_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['sdasfasfasdf']) + except ImportError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "No module named sdasfasfasdf") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ImportError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # What happens when the module can be found, but not the attribute? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_attr_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['unittest.sdasfasfasdf', 'unittest']) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # What happens when given an unknown attribute on a specified `module` + # argument? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_name_relative_1(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['sdasfasfasdf'], unittest) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # Do unknown attributes (relative to a provided module) still raise an + # exception even in the presence of valid attribute names? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__unknown_name_relative_2(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['TestCase', 'sdasfasfasdf'], unittest) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "'module' object has no attribute 'sdasfasfasdf'") + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromName failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # What happens when faced with the empty string? + # + # XXX This currently raises AttributeError, though ValueError is probably + # more appropriate + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_empty_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames([''], unittest) + except AttributeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # ... + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # What happens when presented with an impossible attribute name? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_malformed_name(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + # XXX Should this raise AttributeError or ValueError? + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['abc () //'], unittest) + except AttributeError: + pass + except ValueError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise ValueError") + + # "The method optionally resolves name relative to the given module" + # + # Does loadTestsFromNames() make sure the provided `module` is in fact + # a module? + # + # XXX This validation is currently not done. This flexibility should + # either be documented or a TypeError should be raised. + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_not_a_module(self): + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + class NotAModule(object): + test_2 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['test_2'], NotAModule) + + reference = [unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')])] + self.assertEqual(list(suite), reference) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve either to + # a module, a test case class, a TestSuite instance, a test method + # within a test case class, or a callable object which returns a + # TestCase or TestSuite instance." + # + # Does it raise an exception if the name resolves to an invalid + # object? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_bad_object(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + m.testcase_1 = object() + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1'], m) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Should have raised TypeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a test case class" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_TestCase_subclass(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + expected = loader.suiteClass([MyTestCase('test')]) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [expected]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a TestSuite instance" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_TestSuite(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testsuite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testsuite'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [m.testsuite]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to ... a + # test method within a test case class" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_testmethod(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1.test'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([MyTestCase('test')]) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to ... a + # test method within a test case class" + # + # Does the method gracefully handle names that initially look like they + # resolve to "a test method within a test case class" but don't? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__relative_invalid_testmethod(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class MyTestCase(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + m.testcase_1 = MyTestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['testcase_1.testfoo'], m) + except AttributeError, e: + self.assertEqual(str(e), "type object 'MyTestCase' has no attribute 'testfoo'") + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise AttributeError") + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a ... TestSuite instance" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__TestSuite(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + testcase_2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + def return_TestSuite(): + return unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) + m.return_TestSuite = return_TestSuite + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_TestSuite'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + expected = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1, testcase_2]) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [expected]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase ... instance" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__TestCase_instance(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + testcase_1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + def return_TestCase(): + return testcase_1 + m.return_TestCase = return_TestCase + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_TestCase'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1]) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" + # + # Are staticmethods handled correctly? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__call_staticmethod(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Test1(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + testcase_1 = Test1('test') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + @staticmethod + def foo(): + return testcase_1 + m.Foo = Foo + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo.foo'], m) + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + + ref_suite = unittest.TestSuite([testcase_1]) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [ref_suite]) + + # "The specifier name is a ``dotted name'' that may resolve ... to + # ... a callable object which returns a TestCase or TestSuite instance" + # + # What happens when the callable returns something else? + def test_loadTestsFromNames__callable__wrong_type(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + def return_wrong(): + return 6 + m.return_wrong = return_wrong + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + loader.loadTestsFromNames(['return_wrong'], m) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames failed to raise TypeError") + + # "The specifier can refer to modules and packages which have not been + # imported; they will be imported as a side-effect" + def test_loadTestsFromNames__module_not_loaded(self): + # We're going to try to load this module as a side-effect, so it + # better not be loaded before we try. + # + # Why pick audioop? Google shows it isn't used very often, so there's + # a good chance that it won't be imported when this test is run + module_name = 'audioop' + + if module_name in sys.modules: + del sys.modules[module_name] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + try: + suite = loader.loadTestsFromNames([module_name]) + + self.assertIsInstance(suite, loader.suiteClass) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [unittest.TestSuite()]) + + # audioop should now be loaded, thanks to loadTestsFromName() + self.assertIn(module_name, sys.modules) + finally: + if module_name in sys.modules: + del sys.modules[module_name] + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.loadTestsFromNames() + + ### Tests for TestLoader.getTestCaseNames() + ################################################################ + + # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" + # + # Test.foobar is defined to make sure getTestCaseNames() respects + # loader.testMethodPrefix + def test_getTestCaseNames(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foobar(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Test), ['test_1', 'test_2']) + + # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" + # + # Does getTestCaseNames() behave appropriately if no tests are found? + def test_getTestCaseNames__no_tests(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def foobar(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Test), []) + + # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" + # + # Are not-TestCases handled gracefully? + # + # XXX This should raise a TypeError, not return a list + # + # XXX It's too late in the 2.5 release cycle to fix this, but it should + # probably be revisited for 2.6 + def test_getTestCaseNames__not_a_TestCase(self): + class BadCase(int): + def test_foo(self): + pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + names = loader.getTestCaseNames(BadCase) + + self.assertEqual(names, ['test_foo']) + + # "Return a sorted sequence of method names found within testCaseClass" + # + # Make sure inherited names are handled. + # + # TestP.foobar is defined to make sure getTestCaseNames() respects + # loader.testMethodPrefix + def test_getTestCaseNames__inheritance(self): + class TestP(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foobar(self): pass + + class TestC(TestP): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_3(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + + names = ['test_1', 'test_2', 'test_3'] + self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(TestC), names) + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.getTestCaseNames() + + ### Tests for TestLoader.testMethodPrefix + ################################################################ + + # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as + # test methods" + # + # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by + # all loadTestsFrom* methods. + def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + + tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')]) + tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests_1) + + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests_2) + + # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as + # test methods" + # + # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by + # all loadTestsFrom* methods. + def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromModule(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests_1 = [unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')])] + tests_2 = [unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')])] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' + self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests_1) + + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' + self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests_2) + + # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as + # test methods" + # + # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by + # all loadTestsFrom* methods. + def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromName(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')]) + tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests_1) + + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests_2) + + # "String giving the prefix of method names which will be interpreted as + # test methods" + # + # Implicit in the documentation is that testMethodPrefix is respected by + # all loadTestsFrom* methods. + def test_testMethodPrefix__loadTestsFromNames(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests_1 = unittest.TestSuite([unittest.TestSuite([Foo('foo_bar')])]) + tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]) + tests_2 = unittest.TestSuite([tests_2]) + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'foo' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests_1) + + loader.testMethodPrefix = 'test' + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests_2) + + # "The default value is 'test'" + def test_testMethodPrefix__default_value(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + self.assertTrue(loader.testMethodPrefix == 'test') + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.testMethodPrefix + + ### Tests for TestLoader.sortTestMethodsUsing + ################################################################ + + # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in + # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): + def reversed_cmp(x, y): + return -cmp(x, y) + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp + + tests = loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')]) + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) + + # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in + # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromModule(self): + def reversed_cmp(x, y): + return -cmp(x, y) + + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp + + tests = [loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')])] + self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m)), tests) + + # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in + # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromName(self): + def reversed_cmp(x, y): + return -cmp(x, y) + + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp + + tests = loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')]) + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests) + + # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in + # getTestCaseNames() and all the loadTestsFromX() methods" + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__loadTestsFromNames(self): + def reversed_cmp(x, y): + return -cmp(x, y) + + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp + + tests = [loader.suiteClass([Foo('test_2'), Foo('test_1')])] + self.assertEqual(list(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m)), tests) + + # "Function to be used to compare method names when sorting them in + # getTestCaseNames()" + # + # Does it actually affect getTestCaseNames()? + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__getTestCaseNames(self): + def reversed_cmp(x, y): + return -cmp(x, y) + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = reversed_cmp + + test_names = ['test_2', 'test_1'] + self.assertEqual(loader.getTestCaseNames(Foo), test_names) + + # "The default value is the built-in cmp() function" + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__default_value(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + self.assertTrue(loader.sortTestMethodsUsing is cmp) + + # "it can be set to None to disable the sort." + # + # XXX How is this different from reassigning cmp? Are the tests returned + # in a random order or something? This behaviour should die + def test_sortTestMethodsUsing__None(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.sortTestMethodsUsing = None + + test_names = ['test_2', 'test_1'] + self.assertEqual(set(loader.getTestCaseNames(Foo)), set(test_names)) + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestLoader.sortTestMethodsUsing + + ### Tests for TestLoader.suiteClass + ################################################################ + + # "Callable object that constructs a test suite from a list of tests." + def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromTestCase(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + + tests = [Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass = list + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(Foo), tests) + + # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that + # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure + def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromModule(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests = [[Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass = list + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromModule(m), tests) + + # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that + # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure + def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromName(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests = [Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass = list + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromName('Foo', m), tests) + + # It is implicit in the documentation for TestLoader.suiteClass that + # all TestLoader.loadTestsFrom* methods respect it. Let's make sure + def test_suiteClass__loadTestsFromNames(self): + m = types.ModuleType('m') + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def foo_bar(self): pass + m.Foo = Foo + + tests = [[Foo('test_1'), Foo('test_2')]] + + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + loader.suiteClass = list + self.assertEqual(loader.loadTestsFromNames(['Foo'], m), tests) + + # "The default value is the TestSuite class" + def test_suiteClass__default_value(self): + loader = unittest.TestLoader() + self.assertTrue(loader.suiteClass is unittest.TestSuite) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_program.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_program.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..a3934dd2ce1 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_program.py @@ -0,0 +1,78 @@ +from cStringIO import StringIO + +import unittest + + +class Test_TestProgram(unittest.TestCase): + + # Horrible white box test + def testNoExit(self): + result = object() + test = object() + + class FakeRunner(object): + def run(self, test): + self.test = test + return result + + runner = FakeRunner() + + oldParseArgs = unittest.TestProgram.parseArgs + def restoreParseArgs(): + unittest.TestProgram.parseArgs = oldParseArgs + unittest.TestProgram.parseArgs = lambda *args: None + self.addCleanup(restoreParseArgs) + + def removeTest(): + del unittest.TestProgram.test + unittest.TestProgram.test = test + self.addCleanup(removeTest) + + program = unittest.TestProgram(testRunner=runner, exit=False, verbosity=2) + + self.assertEqual(program.result, result) + self.assertEqual(runner.test, test) + self.assertEqual(program.verbosity, 2) + + class FooBar(unittest.TestCase): + def testPass(self): + assert True + def testFail(self): + assert False + + class FooBarLoader(unittest.TestLoader): + """Test loader that returns a suite containing FooBar.""" + def loadTestsFromModule(self, module): + return self.suiteClass( + [self.loadTestsFromTestCase(Test_TestProgram.FooBar)]) + + + def test_NonExit(self): + program = unittest.main(exit=False, + argv=["foobar"], + testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), + testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) + self.assertTrue(hasattr(program, 'result')) + + + def test_Exit(self): + self.assertRaises( + SystemExit, + unittest.main, + argv=["foobar"], + testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), + exit=True, + testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) + + + def test_ExitAsDefault(self): + self.assertRaises( + SystemExit, + unittest.main, + argv=["foobar"], + testRunner=unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO()), + testLoader=self.FooBarLoader()) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_result.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_result.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..cf944b0216a --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_result.py @@ -0,0 +1,359 @@ +import sys +from cStringIO import StringIO +from test import test_support + +import unittest + + +class Test_TestResult(unittest.TestCase): + # Note: there are not separate tests for TestResult.wasSuccessful(), + # TestResult.errors, TestResult.failures, TestResult.testsRun or + # TestResult.shouldStop because these only have meaning in terms of + # other TestResult methods. + # + # Accordingly, tests for the aforenamed attributes are incorporated + # in with the tests for the defining methods. + ################################################################ + + def test_init(self): + result = unittest.TestResult() + + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + # "This method can be called to signal that the set of tests being + # run should be aborted by setting the TestResult's shouldStop + # attribute to True." + def test_stop(self): + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.stop() + + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, True) + + # "Called when the test case test is about to be run. The default + # implementation simply increments the instance's testsRun counter." + def test_startTest(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + pass + + test = Foo('test_1') + + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.startTest(test) + + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + result.stopTest(test) + + # "Called after the test case test has been executed, regardless of + # the outcome. The default implementation does nothing." + def test_stopTest(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + pass + + test = Foo('test_1') + + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.startTest(test) + + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + result.stopTest(test) + + # Same tests as above; make sure nothing has changed + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + # "Called before and after tests are run. The default implementation does nothing." + def test_startTestRun_stopTestRun(self): + result = unittest.TestResult() + result.startTestRun() + result.stopTestRun() + + # "addSuccess(test)" + # ... + # "Called when the test case test succeeds" + # ... + # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, + # otherwise returns False" + # ... + # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." + # ... + # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an + # unexpected exception. Contains formatted + # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." + # ... + # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was + # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() + # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead + # of sys.exc_info() results." + def test_addSuccess(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + pass + + test = Foo('test_1') + + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.startTest(test) + result.addSuccess(test) + result.stopTest(test) + + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + # "addFailure(test, err)" + # ... + # "Called when the test case test signals a failure. err is a tuple of + # the form returned by sys.exc_info(): (type, value, traceback)" + # ... + # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, + # otherwise returns False" + # ... + # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." + # ... + # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an + # unexpected exception. Contains formatted + # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." + # ... + # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was + # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() + # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead + # of sys.exc_info() results." + def test_addFailure(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + pass + + test = Foo('test_1') + try: + test.fail("foo") + except: + exc_info_tuple = sys.exc_info() + + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.startTest(test) + result.addFailure(test, exc_info_tuple) + result.stopTest(test) + + self.assertFalse(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + test_case, formatted_exc = result.failures[0] + self.assertTrue(test_case is test) + self.assertIsInstance(formatted_exc, str) + + # "addError(test, err)" + # ... + # "Called when the test case test raises an unexpected exception err + # is a tuple of the form returned by sys.exc_info(): + # (type, value, traceback)" + # ... + # "wasSuccessful() - Returns True if all tests run so far have passed, + # otherwise returns False" + # ... + # "testsRun - The total number of tests run so far." + # ... + # "errors - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test which raised an + # unexpected exception. Contains formatted + # tracebacks instead of sys.exc_info() results." + # ... + # "failures - A list containing 2-tuples of TestCase instances and + # formatted tracebacks. Each tuple represents a test where a failure was + # explicitly signalled using the TestCase.fail*() or TestCase.assert*() + # methods. Contains formatted tracebacks instead + # of sys.exc_info() results." + def test_addError(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + pass + + test = Foo('test_1') + try: + raise TypeError() + except: + exc_info_tuple = sys.exc_info() + + result = unittest.TestResult() + + result.startTest(test) + result.addError(test, exc_info_tuple) + result.stopTest(test) + + self.assertFalse(result.wasSuccessful()) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.shouldStop, False) + + test_case, formatted_exc = result.errors[0] + self.assertTrue(test_case is test) + self.assertIsInstance(formatted_exc, str) + + def testGetDescriptionWithoutDocstring(self): + result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) + self.assertEqual( + result.getDescription(self), + 'testGetDescriptionWithoutDocstring (' + __name__ + + '.Test_TestResult)') + + @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, + "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") + def testGetDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring(self): + """Tests getDescription() for a method with a docstring.""" + result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) + self.assertEqual( + result.getDescription(self), + ('testGetDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring ' + '(' + __name__ + '.Test_TestResult)\n' + 'Tests getDescription() for a method with a docstring.')) + + @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, + "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") + def testGetDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring(self): + """Tests getDescription() for a method with a longer docstring. + The second line of the docstring. + """ + result = unittest.TextTestResult(None, True, 1) + self.assertEqual( + result.getDescription(self), + ('testGetDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring ' + '(' + __name__ + '.Test_TestResult)\n' + 'Tests getDescription() for a method with a longer ' + 'docstring.')) + + def testStackFrameTrimming(self): + class Frame(object): + class tb_frame(object): + f_globals = {} + result = unittest.TestResult() + self.assertFalse(result._is_relevant_tb_level(Frame)) + + Frame.tb_frame.f_globals['__unittest'] = True + self.assertTrue(result._is_relevant_tb_level(Frame)) + + def testFailFast(self): + result = unittest.TestResult() + result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' + result.failfast = True + result.addError(None, None) + self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) + + result = unittest.TestResult() + result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' + result.failfast = True + result.addFailure(None, None) + self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) + + result = unittest.TestResult() + result._exc_info_to_string = lambda *_: '' + result.failfast = True + result.addUnexpectedSuccess(None) + self.assertTrue(result.shouldStop) + + def testFailFastSetByRunner(self): + runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(stream=StringIO(), failfast=True) + def test(result): + self.assertTrue(result.failfast) + runner.run(test) + + +classDict = dict(unittest.TestResult.__dict__) +for m in ('addSkip', 'addExpectedFailure', 'addUnexpectedSuccess', + '__init__'): + del classDict[m] + +def __init__(self, stream=None, descriptions=None, verbosity=None): + self.failures = [] + self.errors = [] + self.testsRun = 0 + self.shouldStop = False +classDict['__init__'] = __init__ +OldResult = type('OldResult', (object,), classDict) + +class Test_OldTestResult(unittest.TestCase): + + def assertOldResultWarning(self, test, failures): + with test_support.check_warnings(("TestResult has no add.+ method,", + RuntimeWarning)): + result = OldResult() + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(len(result.failures), failures) + + def testOldTestResult(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def testSkip(self): + self.skipTest('foobar') + @unittest.expectedFailure + def testExpectedFail(self): + raise TypeError + @unittest.expectedFailure + def testUnexpectedSuccess(self): + pass + + for test_name, should_pass in (('testSkip', True), + ('testExpectedFail', True), + ('testUnexpectedSuccess', False)): + test = Test(test_name) + self.assertOldResultWarning(test, int(not should_pass)) + + def testOldTestTesultSetup(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def setUp(self): + self.skipTest('no reason') + def testFoo(self): + pass + self.assertOldResultWarning(Test('testFoo'), 0) + + def testOldTestResultClass(self): + @unittest.skip('no reason') + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def testFoo(self): + pass + self.assertOldResultWarning(Test('testFoo'), 0) + + def testOldResultWithRunner(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def testFoo(self): + pass + runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(resultclass=OldResult, + stream=StringIO()) + # This will raise an exception if TextTestRunner can't handle old + # test result objects + runner.run(Test('testFoo')) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_runner.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_runner.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..f2744878008 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_runner.py @@ -0,0 +1,182 @@ +import unittest + +from cStringIO import StringIO +import pickle + +from .support import LoggingResult, ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun + + +class TestCleanUp(unittest.TestCase): + + def testCleanUp(self): + class TestableTest(unittest.TestCase): + def testNothing(self): + pass + + test = TestableTest('testNothing') + self.assertEqual(test._cleanups, []) + + cleanups = [] + + def cleanup1(*args, **kwargs): + cleanups.append((1, args, kwargs)) + + def cleanup2(*args, **kwargs): + cleanups.append((2, args, kwargs)) + + test.addCleanup(cleanup1, 1, 2, 3, four='hello', five='goodbye') + test.addCleanup(cleanup2) + + self.assertEqual(test._cleanups, + [(cleanup1, (1, 2, 3), dict(four='hello', five='goodbye')), + (cleanup2, (), {})]) + + result = test.doCleanups() + self.assertTrue(result) + + self.assertEqual(cleanups, [(2, (), {}), (1, (1, 2, 3), + dict(four='hello', five='goodbye'))]) + + def testCleanUpWithErrors(self): + class TestableTest(unittest.TestCase): + def testNothing(self): + pass + + class MockResult(object): + errors = [] + def addError(self, test, exc_info): + self.errors.append((test, exc_info)) + + result = MockResult() + test = TestableTest('testNothing') + test._resultForDoCleanups = result + + exc1 = Exception('foo') + exc2 = Exception('bar') + def cleanup1(): + raise exc1 + + def cleanup2(): + raise exc2 + + test.addCleanup(cleanup1) + test.addCleanup(cleanup2) + + self.assertFalse(test.doCleanups()) + + (test1, (Type1, instance1, _)), (test2, (Type2, instance2, _)) = reversed(MockResult.errors) + self.assertEqual((test1, Type1, instance1), (test, Exception, exc1)) + self.assertEqual((test2, Type2, instance2), (test, Exception, exc2)) + + def testCleanupInRun(self): + blowUp = False + ordering = [] + + class TestableTest(unittest.TestCase): + def setUp(self): + ordering.append('setUp') + if blowUp: + raise Exception('foo') + + def testNothing(self): + ordering.append('test') + + def tearDown(self): + ordering.append('tearDown') + + test = TestableTest('testNothing') + + def cleanup1(): + ordering.append('cleanup1') + def cleanup2(): + ordering.append('cleanup2') + test.addCleanup(cleanup1) + test.addCleanup(cleanup2) + + def success(some_test): + self.assertEqual(some_test, test) + ordering.append('success') + + result = unittest.TestResult() + result.addSuccess = success + + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(ordering, ['setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', + 'cleanup2', 'cleanup1', 'success']) + + blowUp = True + ordering = [] + test = TestableTest('testNothing') + test.addCleanup(cleanup1) + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(ordering, ['setUp', 'cleanup1']) + + +class Test_TextTestRunner(unittest.TestCase): + """Tests for TextTestRunner.""" + + def test_works_with_result_without_startTestRun_stopTestRun(self): + class OldTextResult(ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun): + separator2 = '' + def printErrors(self): + pass + + class Runner(unittest.TextTestRunner): + def __init__(self): + super(Runner, self).__init__(StringIO()) + + def _makeResult(self): + return OldTextResult() + + runner = Runner() + runner.run(unittest.TestSuite()) + + def test_startTestRun_stopTestRun_called(self): + class LoggingTextResult(LoggingResult): + separator2 = '' + def printErrors(self): + pass + + class LoggingRunner(unittest.TextTestRunner): + def __init__(self, events): + super(LoggingRunner, self).__init__(StringIO()) + self._events = events + + def _makeResult(self): + return LoggingTextResult(self._events) + + events = [] + runner = LoggingRunner(events) + runner.run(unittest.TestSuite()) + expected = ['startTestRun', 'stopTestRun'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + + def test_pickle_unpickle(self): + # Issue #7197: a TextTestRunner should be (un)pickleable. This is + # required by test_multiprocessing under Windows (in verbose mode). + from StringIO import StringIO as PickleableIO + # cStringIO objects are not pickleable, but StringIO objects are. + stream = PickleableIO("foo") + runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(stream) + for protocol in range(pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL + 1): + s = pickle.dumps(runner, protocol=protocol) + obj = pickle.loads(s) + # StringIO objects never compare equal, a cheap test instead. + self.assertEqual(obj.stream.getvalue(), stream.getvalue()) + + def test_resultclass(self): + def MockResultClass(*args): + return args + STREAM = object() + DESCRIPTIONS = object() + VERBOSITY = object() + runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(STREAM, DESCRIPTIONS, VERBOSITY, + resultclass=MockResultClass) + self.assertEqual(runner.resultclass, MockResultClass) + + expectedresult = (runner.stream, DESCRIPTIONS, VERBOSITY) + self.assertEqual(runner._makeResult(), expectedresult) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_setups.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_setups.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..16fd65bff20 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_setups.py @@ -0,0 +1,405 @@ +import sys + +from cStringIO import StringIO + +import unittest + + +def resultFactory(*_): + return unittest.TestResult() + + +class TestSetups(unittest.TestCase): + + def getRunner(self): + return unittest.TextTestRunner(resultclass=resultFactory, + stream=StringIO()) + def runTests(self, *cases): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + for case in cases: + tests = unittest.defaultTestLoader.loadTestsFromTestCase(case) + suite.addTests(tests) + + runner = self.getRunner() + + # creating a nested suite exposes some potential bugs + realSuite = unittest.TestSuite() + realSuite.addTest(suite) + # adding empty suites to the end exposes potential bugs + suite.addTest(unittest.TestSuite()) + realSuite.addTest(unittest.TestSuite()) + return runner.run(realSuite) + + def test_setup_class(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + setUpCalled = 0 + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + Test.setUpCalled += 1 + unittest.TestCase.setUpClass() + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + result = self.runTests(Test) + + self.assertEqual(Test.setUpCalled, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + def test_teardown_class(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + tearDownCalled = 0 + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.tearDownCalled += 1 + unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + result = self.runTests(Test) + + self.assertEqual(Test.tearDownCalled, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + def test_teardown_class_two_classes(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + tearDownCalled = 0 + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.tearDownCalled += 1 + unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + class Test2(unittest.TestCase): + tearDownCalled = 0 + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test2.tearDownCalled += 1 + unittest.TestCase.tearDownClass() + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) + + self.assertEqual(Test.tearDownCalled, 1) + self.assertEqual(Test2.tearDownCalled, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + def test_error_in_setupclass(self): + class BrokenTest(unittest.TestCase): + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + raise TypeError('foo') + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + result = self.runTests(BrokenTest) + + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) + error, _ = result.errors[0] + self.assertEqual(str(error), + 'classSetUp (%s.BrokenTest)' % __name__) + + def test_error_in_teardown_class(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + tornDown = 0 + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.tornDown += 1 + raise TypeError('foo') + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + class Test2(unittest.TestCase): + tornDown = 0 + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test2.tornDown += 1 + raise TypeError('foo') + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 2) + self.assertEqual(Test.tornDown, 1) + self.assertEqual(Test2.tornDown, 1) + + error, _ = result.errors[0] + self.assertEqual(str(error), + 'classTearDown (%s.Test)' % __name__) + + def test_class_not_torndown_when_setup_fails(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + tornDown = False + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + raise TypeError + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.tornDown = True + raise TypeError('foo') + def test_one(self): + pass + + self.runTests(Test) + self.assertFalse(Test.tornDown) + + def test_class_not_setup_or_torndown_when_skipped(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + classSetUp = False + tornDown = False + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + Test.classSetUp = True + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.tornDown = True + def test_one(self): + pass + + Test = unittest.skip("hop")(Test) + self.runTests(Test) + self.assertFalse(Test.classSetUp) + self.assertFalse(Test.tornDown) + + def test_setup_teardown_order_with_pathological_suite(self): + results = [] + + class Module1(object): + @staticmethod + def setUpModule(): + results.append('Module1.setUpModule') + @staticmethod + def tearDownModule(): + results.append('Module1.tearDownModule') + + class Module2(object): + @staticmethod + def setUpModule(): + results.append('Module2.setUpModule') + @staticmethod + def tearDownModule(): + results.append('Module2.tearDownModule') + + class Test1(unittest.TestCase): + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + results.append('setup 1') + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + results.append('teardown 1') + def testOne(self): + results.append('Test1.testOne') + def testTwo(self): + results.append('Test1.testTwo') + + class Test2(unittest.TestCase): + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + results.append('setup 2') + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + results.append('teardown 2') + def testOne(self): + results.append('Test2.testOne') + def testTwo(self): + results.append('Test2.testTwo') + + class Test3(unittest.TestCase): + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + results.append('setup 3') + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + results.append('teardown 3') + def testOne(self): + results.append('Test3.testOne') + def testTwo(self): + results.append('Test3.testTwo') + + Test1.__module__ = Test2.__module__ = 'Module' + Test3.__module__ = 'Module2' + sys.modules['Module'] = Module1 + sys.modules['Module2'] = Module2 + + first = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('testOne'),)) + second = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('testTwo'),)) + third = unittest.TestSuite((Test2('testOne'),)) + fourth = unittest.TestSuite((Test2('testTwo'),)) + fifth = unittest.TestSuite((Test3('testOne'),)) + sixth = unittest.TestSuite((Test3('testTwo'),)) + suite = unittest.TestSuite((first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth)) + + runner = self.getRunner() + result = runner.run(suite) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 6) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + self.assertEqual(results, + ['Module1.setUpModule', 'setup 1', + 'Test1.testOne', 'Test1.testTwo', 'teardown 1', + 'setup 2', 'Test2.testOne', 'Test2.testTwo', + 'teardown 2', 'Module1.tearDownModule', + 'Module2.setUpModule', 'setup 3', + 'Test3.testOne', 'Test3.testTwo', + 'teardown 3', 'Module2.tearDownModule']) + + def test_setup_module(self): + class Module(object): + moduleSetup = 0 + @staticmethod + def setUpModule(): + Module.moduleSetup += 1 + + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + Test.__module__ = 'Module' + sys.modules['Module'] = Module + + result = self.runTests(Test) + self.assertEqual(Module.moduleSetup, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + def test_error_in_setup_module(self): + class Module(object): + moduleSetup = 0 + moduleTornDown = 0 + @staticmethod + def setUpModule(): + Module.moduleSetup += 1 + raise TypeError('foo') + @staticmethod + def tearDownModule(): + Module.moduleTornDown += 1 + + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + classSetUp = False + classTornDown = False + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + Test.classSetUp = True + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.classTornDown = True + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + class Test2(unittest.TestCase): + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + Test.__module__ = 'Module' + Test2.__module__ = 'Module' + sys.modules['Module'] = Module + + result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) + self.assertEqual(Module.moduleSetup, 1) + self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 0) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 0) + self.assertFalse(Test.classSetUp) + self.assertFalse(Test.classTornDown) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) + error, _ = result.errors[0] + self.assertEqual(str(error), 'setUpModule (Module)') + + def test_testcase_with_missing_module(self): + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + Test.__module__ = 'Module' + sys.modules.pop('Module', None) + + result = self.runTests(Test) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + + def test_teardown_module(self): + class Module(object): + moduleTornDown = 0 + @staticmethod + def tearDownModule(): + Module.moduleTornDown += 1 + + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + Test.__module__ = 'Module' + sys.modules['Module'] = Module + + result = self.runTests(Test) + self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 0) + + def test_error_in_teardown_module(self): + class Module(object): + moduleTornDown = 0 + @staticmethod + def tearDownModule(): + Module.moduleTornDown += 1 + raise TypeError('foo') + + class Test(unittest.TestCase): + classSetUp = False + classTornDown = False + @classmethod + def setUpClass(cls): + Test.classSetUp = True + @classmethod + def tearDownClass(cls): + Test.classTornDown = True + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + + class Test2(unittest.TestCase): + def test_one(self): + pass + def test_two(self): + pass + Test.__module__ = 'Module' + Test2.__module__ = 'Module' + sys.modules['Module'] = Module + + result = self.runTests(Test, Test2) + self.assertEqual(Module.moduleTornDown, 1) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 4) + self.assertTrue(Test.classSetUp) + self.assertTrue(Test.classTornDown) + self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) + error, _ = result.errors[0] + self.assertEqual(str(error), 'tearDownModule (Module)') + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_skipping.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_skipping.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..05958d6a31e --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_skipping.py @@ -0,0 +1,138 @@ +import unittest + +from .support import LoggingResult + + +class Test_TestSkipping(unittest.TestCase): + + def test_skipping(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_skip_me(self): + self.skipTest("skip") + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + test = Foo("test_skip_me") + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest']) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "skip")]) + + # Try letting setUp skip the test now. + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def setUp(self): + self.skipTest("testing") + def test_nothing(self): pass + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + test = Foo("test_nothing") + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest']) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) + + def test_skipping_decorators(self): + op_table = ((unittest.skipUnless, False, True), + (unittest.skipIf, True, False)) + for deco, do_skip, dont_skip in op_table: + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + @deco(do_skip, "testing") + def test_skip(self): pass + + @deco(dont_skip, "testing") + def test_dont_skip(self): pass + test_do_skip = Foo("test_skip") + test_dont_skip = Foo("test_dont_skip") + suite = unittest.TestSuite([test_do_skip, test_dont_skip]) + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + suite.run(result) + self.assertEqual(len(result.skipped), 1) + expected = ['startTest', 'addSkip', 'stopTest', + 'startTest', 'addSuccess', 'stopTest'] + self.assertEqual(events, expected) + self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 2) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test_do_skip, "testing")]) + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + + def test_skip_class(self): + @unittest.skip("testing") + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): + record.append(1) + record = [] + result = unittest.TestResult() + test = Foo("test_1") + suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) + suite.run(result) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) + self.assertEqual(record, []) + + def test_expected_failure(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + @unittest.expectedFailure + def test_die(self): + self.fail("help me!") + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + test = Foo("test_die") + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, + ['startTest', 'addExpectedFailure', 'stopTest']) + self.assertEqual(result.expectedFailures[0][0], test) + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + + def test_unexpected_success(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + @unittest.expectedFailure + def test_die(self): + pass + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + test = Foo("test_die") + test.run(result) + self.assertEqual(events, + ['startTest', 'addUnexpectedSuccess', 'stopTest']) + self.assertFalse(result.failures) + self.assertEqual(result.unexpectedSuccesses, [test]) + self.assertTrue(result.wasSuccessful()) + + def test_skip_doesnt_run_setup(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + wasSetUp = False + wasTornDown = False + def setUp(self): + Foo.wasSetUp = True + def tornDown(self): + Foo.wasTornDown = True + @unittest.skip('testing') + def test_1(self): + pass + + result = unittest.TestResult() + test = Foo("test_1") + suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) + suite.run(result) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) + self.assertFalse(Foo.wasSetUp) + self.assertFalse(Foo.wasTornDown) + + def test_decorated_skip(self): + def decorator(func): + def inner(*a): + return func(*a) + return inner + + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + @decorator + @unittest.skip('testing') + def test_1(self): + pass + + result = unittest.TestResult() + test = Foo("test_1") + suite = unittest.TestSuite([test]) + suite.run(result) + self.assertEqual(result.skipped, [(test, "testing")]) + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main() diff --git a/Lib/unittest/test/test_suite.py b/Lib/unittest/test/test_suite.py new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..8430e72b635 --- /dev/null +++ b/Lib/unittest/test/test_suite.py @@ -0,0 +1,295 @@ +import unittest + +from .support import LoggingResult, TestEquality + + +### Support code for Test_TestSuite +################################################################ + +# This will be loaded as a test - problem? +class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + def test_3(self): pass + def runTest(self): pass + +def _mk_TestSuite(*names): + return unittest.TestSuite(Foo(n) for n in names) + +################################################################ + + +class Test_TestSuite(unittest.TestCase, TestEquality): + + ### Set up attributes needed by inherited tests + ################################################################ + + # Used by TestEquality.test_eq + eq_pairs = [(unittest.TestSuite(), unittest.TestSuite()), + (unittest.TestSuite(), unittest.TestSuite([])), + (_mk_TestSuite('test_1'), _mk_TestSuite('test_1'))] + + # Used by TestEquality.test_ne + ne_pairs = [(unittest.TestSuite(), _mk_TestSuite('test_1')), + (unittest.TestSuite([]), _mk_TestSuite('test_1')), + (_mk_TestSuite('test_1', 'test_2'), _mk_TestSuite('test_1', 'test_3')), + (_mk_TestSuite('test_1'), _mk_TestSuite('test_2'))] + + ################################################################ + ### /Set up attributes needed by inherited tests + + ### Tests for TestSuite.__init__ + ################################################################ + + # "class TestSuite([tests])" + # + # The tests iterable should be optional + def test_init__tests_optional(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) + + # "class TestSuite([tests])" + # ... + # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases + # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" + # + # TestSuite should deal with empty tests iterables by allowing the + # creation of an empty suite + def test_init__empty_tests(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite([]) + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) + + # "class TestSuite([tests])" + # ... + # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases + # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" + # + # TestSuite should allow any iterable to provide tests + def test_init__tests_from_any_iterable(self): + def tests(): + yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + + suite_1 = unittest.TestSuite(tests()) + self.assertEqual(suite_1.countTestCases(), 2) + + suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite(suite_1) + self.assertEqual(suite_2.countTestCases(), 2) + + suite_3 = unittest.TestSuite(set(suite_1)) + self.assertEqual(suite_3.countTestCases(), 2) + + # "class TestSuite([tests])" + # ... + # "If tests is given, it must be an iterable of individual test cases + # or other test suites that will be used to build the suite initially" + # + # Does TestSuite() also allow other TestSuite() instances to be present + # in the tests iterable? + def test_init__TestSuite_instances_in_tests(self): + def tests(): + ftc = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + yield unittest.TestSuite([ftc]) + yield unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + + suite = unittest.TestSuite(tests()) + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 2) + + ################################################################ + ### /Tests for TestSuite.__init__ + + # Container types should support the iter protocol + def test_iter(self): + test1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + suite = unittest.TestSuite((test1, test2)) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [test1, test2]) + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. + # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can + # return larger [greater than 1] values" + # + # Presumably an empty TestSuite returns 0? + def test_countTestCases_zero_simple(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. + # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can + # return larger [greater than 1] values" + # + # Presumably an empty TestSuite (even if it contains other empty + # TestSuite instances) returns 0? + def test_countTestCases_zero_nested(self): + class Test1(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): + pass + + suite = unittest.TestSuite([unittest.TestSuite()]) + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 0) + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. + # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can + # return larger [greater than 1] values" + def test_countTestCases_simple(self): + test1 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + suite = unittest.TestSuite((test1, test2)) + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 2) + + # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. + # ...this method is also implemented by the TestSuite class, which can + # return larger [greater than 1] values" + # + # Make sure this holds for nested TestSuite instances, too + def test_countTestCases_nested(self): + class Test1(unittest.TestCase): + def test1(self): pass + def test2(self): pass + + test2 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + test3 = unittest.FunctionTestCase(lambda: None) + child = unittest.TestSuite((Test1('test2'), test2)) + parent = unittest.TestSuite((test3, child, Test1('test1'))) + + self.assertEqual(parent.countTestCases(), 4) + + # "Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into + # the test result object passed as result." + # + # And if there are no tests? What then? + def test_run__empty_suite(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + suite.run(result) + + self.assertEqual(events, []) + + # "Note that unlike TestCase.run(), TestSuite.run() requires the + # "result object to be passed in." + def test_run__requires_result(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + try: + suite.run() + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise TypeError") + + # "Run the tests associated with this suite, collecting the result into + # the test result object passed as result." + def test_run(self): + events = [] + result = LoggingResult(events) + + class LoggingCase(unittest.TestCase): + def run(self, result): + events.append('run %s' % self._testMethodName) + + def test1(self): pass + def test2(self): pass + + tests = [LoggingCase('test1'), LoggingCase('test2')] + + unittest.TestSuite(tests).run(result) + + self.assertEqual(events, ['run test1', 'run test2']) + + # "Add a TestCase ... to the suite" + def test_addTest__TestCase(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): pass + + test = Foo('test') + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + suite.addTest(test) + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [test]) + + # "Add a ... TestSuite to the suite" + def test_addTest__TestSuite(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test(self): pass + + suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite([Foo('test')]) + + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + suite.addTest(suite_2) + + self.assertEqual(suite.countTestCases(), 1) + self.assertEqual(list(suite), [suite_2]) + + # "Add all the tests from an iterable of TestCase and TestSuite + # instances to this test suite." + # + # "This is equivalent to iterating over tests, calling addTest() for + # each element" + def test_addTests(self): + class Foo(unittest.TestCase): + def test_1(self): pass + def test_2(self): pass + + test_1 = Foo('test_1') + test_2 = Foo('test_2') + inner_suite = unittest.TestSuite([test_2]) + + def gen(): + yield test_1 + yield test_2 + yield inner_suite + + suite_1 = unittest.TestSuite() + suite_1.addTests(gen()) + + self.assertEqual(list(suite_1), list(gen())) + + # "This is equivalent to iterating over tests, calling addTest() for + # each element" + suite_2 = unittest.TestSuite() + for t in gen(): + suite_2.addTest(t) + + self.assertEqual(suite_1, suite_2) + + # "Add all the tests from an iterable of TestCase and TestSuite + # instances to this test suite." + # + # What happens if it doesn't get an iterable? + def test_addTest__noniterable(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + + try: + suite.addTests(5) + except TypeError: + pass + else: + self.fail("Failed to raise TypeError") + + def test_addTest__noncallable(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, 5) + + def test_addTest__casesuiteclass(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, Test_TestSuite) + self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTest, unittest.TestSuite) + + def test_addTests__string(self): + suite = unittest.TestSuite() + self.assertRaises(TypeError, suite.addTests, "foo") + + +if __name__ == '__main__': + unittest.main()