Source code for unittest.suite

"""TestSuite"""

import sys

from . import case
from . import util

__unittest = True


def _call_if_exists(parent, attr):
    func = getattr(parent, attr, lambda: None)
    func()


[docs]class BaseTestSuite(object): """A simple test suite that doesn't provide class or module shared fixtures. """
[docs] def __init__(self, tests=()): self._tests = [] self.addTests(tests)
[docs] def __repr__(self): return "<%s tests=%s>" % (util.strclass(self.__class__), list(self))
[docs] def __eq__(self, other): if not isinstance(other, self.__class__): return NotImplemented return list(self) == list(other)
[docs] def __ne__(self, other): return not self == other
# Can't guarantee hash invariant, so flag as unhashable __hash__ = None
[docs] def __iter__(self): return iter(self._tests)
[docs] def countTestCases(self): cases = 0 for test in self: cases += test.countTestCases() return cases
[docs] def addTest(self, test): # sanity checks if not hasattr(test, '__call__'): raise TypeError("{} is not callable".format(repr(test))) if isinstance(test, type) and issubclass(test, (case.TestCase, TestSuite)): raise TypeError("TestCases and TestSuites must be instantiated " "before passing them to addTest()") self._tests.append(test)
[docs] def addTests(self, tests): if isinstance(tests, basestring): raise TypeError("tests must be an iterable of tests, not a string") for test in tests: self.addTest(test)
[docs] def run(self, result): for test in self: if result.shouldStop: break test(result) return result
[docs] def __call__(self, *args, **kwds): return self.run(*args, **kwds)
[docs] def debug(self): """Run the tests without collecting errors in a TestResult""" for test in self: test.debug()
[docs]class TestSuite(BaseTestSuite): """A test suite is a composite test consisting of a number of TestCases. For use, create an instance of TestSuite, then add test case instances. When all tests have been added, the suite can be passed to a test runner, such as TextTestRunner. It will run the individual test cases in the order in which they were added, aggregating the results. When subclassing, do not forget to call the base class constructor. """
[docs] def run(self, result, debug=False): topLevel = False if getattr(result, '_testRunEntered', False) is False: result._testRunEntered = topLevel = True for test in self: if result.shouldStop: break if _isnotsuite(test): self._tearDownPreviousClass(test, result) self._handleModuleFixture(test, result) self._handleClassSetUp(test, result) result._previousTestClass = test.__class__ if (getattr(test.__class__, '_classSetupFailed', False) or getattr(result, '_moduleSetUpFailed', False)): continue if not debug: test(result) else: test.debug() if topLevel: self._tearDownPreviousClass(None, result) self._handleModuleTearDown(result) result._testRunEntered = False return result
[docs] def debug(self): """Run the tests without collecting errors in a TestResult""" debug = _DebugResult() self.run(debug, True)
################################
[docs] def _handleClassSetUp(self, test, result): previousClass = getattr(result, '_previousTestClass', None) currentClass = test.__class__ if currentClass == previousClass: return if result._moduleSetUpFailed: return if getattr(currentClass, "__unittest_skip__", False): return try: currentClass._classSetupFailed = False except TypeError: # test may actually be a function # so its class will be a builtin-type pass setUpClass = getattr(currentClass, 'setUpClass', None) if setUpClass is not None: _call_if_exists(result, '_setupStdout') try: setUpClass() except Exception as e: if isinstance(result, _DebugResult): raise currentClass._classSetupFailed = True className = util.strclass(currentClass) errorName = 'setUpClass (%s)' % className self._addClassOrModuleLevelException(result, e, errorName) finally: _call_if_exists(result, '_restoreStdout')
[docs] def _get_previous_module(self, result): previousModule = None previousClass = getattr(result, '_previousTestClass', None) if previousClass is not None: previousModule = previousClass.__module__ return previousModule
[docs] def _handleModuleFixture(self, test, result): previousModule = self._get_previous_module(result) currentModule = test.__class__.__module__ if currentModule == previousModule: return self._handleModuleTearDown(result) result._moduleSetUpFailed = False try: module = sys.modules[currentModule] except KeyError: return setUpModule = getattr(module, 'setUpModule', None) if setUpModule is not None: _call_if_exists(result, '_setupStdout') try: setUpModule() except Exception, e: if isinstance(result, _DebugResult): raise result._moduleSetUpFailed = True errorName = 'setUpModule (%s)' % currentModule self._addClassOrModuleLevelException(result, e, errorName) finally: _call_if_exists(result, '_restoreStdout')
[docs] def _addClassOrModuleLevelException(self, result, exception, errorName): error = _ErrorHolder(errorName) addSkip = getattr(result, 'addSkip', None) if addSkip is not None and isinstance(exception, case.SkipTest): addSkip(error, str(exception)) else: result.addError(error, sys.exc_info())
[docs] def _handleModuleTearDown(self, result): previousModule = self._get_previous_module(result) if previousModule is None: return if result._moduleSetUpFailed: return try: module = sys.modules[previousModule] except KeyError: return tearDownModule = getattr(module, 'tearDownModule', None) if tearDownModule is not None: _call_if_exists(result, '_setupStdout') try: tearDownModule() except Exception as e: if isinstance(result, _DebugResult): raise errorName = 'tearDownModule (%s)' % previousModule self._addClassOrModuleLevelException(result, e, errorName) finally: _call_if_exists(result, '_restoreStdout')
[docs] def _tearDownPreviousClass(self, test, result): previousClass = getattr(result, '_previousTestClass', None) currentClass = test.__class__ if currentClass == previousClass: return if getattr(previousClass, '_classSetupFailed', False): return if getattr(result, '_moduleSetUpFailed', False): return if getattr(previousClass, "__unittest_skip__", False): return tearDownClass = getattr(previousClass, 'tearDownClass', None) if tearDownClass is not None: _call_if_exists(result, '_setupStdout') try: tearDownClass() except Exception, e: if isinstance(result, _DebugResult): raise className = util.strclass(previousClass) errorName = 'tearDownClass (%s)' % className self._addClassOrModuleLevelException(result, e, errorName) finally: _call_if_exists(result, '_restoreStdout')
class _ErrorHolder(object): """ Placeholder for a TestCase inside a result. As far as a TestResult is concerned, this looks exactly like a unit test. Used to insert arbitrary errors into a test suite run. """ # Inspired by the ErrorHolder from Twisted: # http://twistedmatrix.com/trac/browser/trunk/twisted/trial/runner.py # attribute used by TestResult._exc_info_to_string failureException = None def __init__(self, description): self.description = description def id(self): return self.description def shortDescription(self): return None def __repr__(self): return "<ErrorHolder description=%r>" % (self.description,) def __str__(self): return self.id() def run(self, result): # could call result.addError(...) - but this test-like object # shouldn't be run anyway pass def __call__(self, result): return self.run(result) def countTestCases(self): return 0 def _isnotsuite(test): "A crude way to tell apart testcases and suites with duck-typing" try: iter(test) except TypeError: return True return False class _DebugResult(object): "Used by the TestSuite to hold previous class when running in debug." _previousTestClass = None _moduleSetUpFailed = False shouldStop = False