asynctest
The package asynctest is built on top of the standard unittest module and cuts down boilerplate code when testing libraries for asyncio.
Currently, asynctest targets the "selector" model, hence, some features will not (yet?) work with Windows' proactor.
Since asynctest 0.13, some major changes may impact you:
- Python 3.4 is not supported anymore: importing asynctest will raise a syntax error.
@patch
decorators used to re-use the mock object for each call of the coroutine, which is inconsistent with the behavior of@unittest.patch
. See issue #121 for the details.
Author & license
Authored by Martin Richard <[email protected]> and licensed under the Apache 2 license.
Copyright 2019 Martin Richard
In addition, permission is explicitly granted to Python contributors to use, copy, modify, (...) the code and documentation of asynctest for any project of the Python Software Foundation. This gives the PSF the irrevocable and perpetual rights that the PSD claims in its CLA.
This means that by contributing to asynctest, you agree that these contributions may be included in any project of the Python Software Foundation, and can be subject to re-licensing under the Python Software License.
See the AUTHORS file for a comprehensive list of the authors.
Documentation
Full documentation is available at http://asynctest.readthedocs.org/en/latest/.
It includes a tutorial with tested examples of how to use TestCase
or
mocks.
Features
TestCases
- Initialize and close a loop created for each test (it can be configurated), if the loop uses a selector, it will be updated with a TestSelector object wrapping the original selector (see below),
- if the test function is a coroutine function or returns a coroutine, it will run on the loop,
- TestCase.setUp() and TestCase.tearDown() can be coroutine functions,
- control post-test checks with @fail_on, for instance, the test fail if the loop didn't run, some optional checks can be activated,
- ClockedTestCase allows to control the loop clock and run timed events without waiting the wall clock.
Mock and CoroutineMock
- CoroutineMock is a new Mock class which mocks a coroutine function, and returns a coroutine when called,
- MagicMock supports asynchronous context managers and asynchronous iterators,
- NonCallableMock, Mock and CoroutineMock can return CoroutineMock objects when its attributes are get if there is a matching attribute in the spec (or spec_set) object which is a coroutine function,
- patch(), patch.object(), patch.multiple() return a MagickMock or CoroutineMock object by default, according to the patched target,
- patch(), patch.object(), patch.multiple() handle generators and coroutines and their behavior can be controled when the generator or coroutine pauses,
- all the patch() methods can decorate coroutine functions,
- mock_open() returns a MagickMock object by default.
- return_once() can be used with Mock.side_effect to return a value only once when a mock is called.
Selectors
The module asynctest.selector provides classes to mock objects performing IO (files, sockets, etc).
- FileMock is a special type of mock which represents a file. FileMock.fileno() returns a special value which allows to identify uniquely the mock,
- SocketMock is a special type of FileMock which uses socket.socket as spec,
- TestSelector is a custom selector able to wrap a real selector implementation and deal with FileMock objects, it can replace a selector loop by calling loop._selector = TestSelector(loop._selector), and will intercept mock so they don't get registered to the actual selector.
- set_read_ready() and set_write_ready() to force read and write event callbacks to be scheduled on the loop, as if the selector scheduled them.
Helpers
- the coroutine exhaust_callbacks(loop) returns once all the callbacks which should be called immediately are executed, which is useful when the test author needs to assert things which are not yet executed by the loop.
Roadmap
I hope I will find time to develop and release the following features:
- set of warnings against common mistakes
- proactor support
Tests
asynctest is unit tested. You can run asynctest test suite with this command:
$ PYTHONPATH=. python -m unittest test