django1/django/test/testcases.py

1804 lines
64 KiB
Python

import asyncio
import difflib
import json
import logging
import posixpath
import sys
import threading
import unittest
import warnings
from collections import Counter
from contextlib import contextmanager
from copy import copy, deepcopy
from difflib import get_close_matches
from functools import wraps
from unittest.suite import _DebugResult
from unittest.util import safe_repr
from urllib.parse import (
parse_qsl,
unquote,
urlencode,
urljoin,
urlparse,
urlsplit,
urlunparse,
)
from urllib.request import url2pathname
from asgiref.sync import async_to_sync
from django.apps import apps
from django.conf import settings
from django.core import mail
from django.core.exceptions import ImproperlyConfigured, ValidationError
from django.core.files import locks
from django.core.handlers.wsgi import WSGIHandler, get_path_info
from django.core.management import call_command
from django.core.management.color import no_style
from django.core.management.sql import emit_post_migrate_signal
from django.core.servers.basehttp import ThreadedWSGIServer, WSGIRequestHandler
from django.core.signals import setting_changed
from django.db import DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS, connection, connections, transaction
from django.forms.fields import CharField
from django.http import QueryDict
from django.http.request import split_domain_port, validate_host
from django.test.client import AsyncClient, Client
from django.test.html import HTMLParseError, parse_html
from django.test.signals import template_rendered
from django.test.utils import (
CaptureQueriesContext,
ContextList,
compare_xml,
modify_settings,
override_settings,
)
from django.utils.deprecation import RemovedInDjango50Warning
from django.utils.functional import classproperty
from django.utils.version import PY310
from django.views.static import serve
__all__ = (
"TestCase",
"TransactionTestCase",
"SimpleTestCase",
"skipIfDBFeature",
"skipUnlessDBFeature",
)
def to_list(value):
"""Put value into a list if it's not already one."""
if not isinstance(value, list):
value = [value]
return value
def assert_and_parse_html(self, html, user_msg, msg):
try:
dom = parse_html(html)
except HTMLParseError as e:
standardMsg = "%s\n%s" % (msg, e)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(user_msg, standardMsg))
return dom
class _AssertNumQueriesContext(CaptureQueriesContext):
def __init__(self, test_case, num, connection):
self.test_case = test_case
self.num = num
super().__init__(connection)
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
super().__exit__(exc_type, exc_value, traceback)
if exc_type is not None:
return
executed = len(self)
self.test_case.assertEqual(
executed,
self.num,
"%d queries executed, %d expected\nCaptured queries were:\n%s"
% (
executed,
self.num,
"\n".join(
"%d. %s" % (i, query["sql"])
for i, query in enumerate(self.captured_queries, start=1)
),
),
)
class _AssertTemplateUsedContext:
def __init__(self, test_case, template_name, msg_prefix="", count=None):
self.test_case = test_case
self.template_name = template_name
self.msg_prefix = msg_prefix
self.count = count
self.rendered_templates = []
self.rendered_template_names = []
self.context = ContextList()
def on_template_render(self, sender, signal, template, context, **kwargs):
self.rendered_templates.append(template)
self.rendered_template_names.append(template.name)
self.context.append(copy(context))
def test(self):
self.test_case._assert_template_used(
self.template_name,
self.rendered_template_names,
self.msg_prefix,
self.count,
)
def __enter__(self):
template_rendered.connect(self.on_template_render)
return self
def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_value, traceback):
template_rendered.disconnect(self.on_template_render)
if exc_type is not None:
return
self.test()
class _AssertTemplateNotUsedContext(_AssertTemplateUsedContext):
def test(self):
self.test_case.assertFalse(
self.template_name in self.rendered_template_names,
f"{self.msg_prefix}Template '{self.template_name}' was used "
f"unexpectedly in rendering the response",
)
class DatabaseOperationForbidden(AssertionError):
pass
class _DatabaseFailure:
def __init__(self, wrapped, message):
self.wrapped = wrapped
self.message = message
def __call__(self):
raise DatabaseOperationForbidden(self.message)
class SimpleTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
# The class we'll use for the test client self.client.
# Can be overridden in derived classes.
client_class = Client
async_client_class = AsyncClient
_overridden_settings = None
_modified_settings = None
databases = set()
_disallowed_database_msg = (
"Database %(operation)s to %(alias)r are not allowed in SimpleTestCase "
"subclasses. Either subclass TestCase or TransactionTestCase to ensure "
"proper test isolation or add %(alias)r to %(test)s.databases to silence "
"this failure."
)
_disallowed_connection_methods = [
("connect", "connections"),
("temporary_connection", "connections"),
("cursor", "queries"),
("chunked_cursor", "queries"),
]
@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
super().setUpClass()
if cls._overridden_settings:
cls._cls_overridden_context = override_settings(**cls._overridden_settings)
cls._cls_overridden_context.enable()
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._cls_overridden_context.disable)
if cls._modified_settings:
cls._cls_modified_context = modify_settings(cls._modified_settings)
cls._cls_modified_context.enable()
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._cls_modified_context.disable)
cls._add_databases_failures()
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._remove_databases_failures)
@classmethod
def _validate_databases(cls):
if cls.databases == "__all__":
return frozenset(connections)
for alias in cls.databases:
if alias not in connections:
message = (
"%s.%s.databases refers to %r which is not defined in "
"settings.DATABASES."
% (
cls.__module__,
cls.__qualname__,
alias,
)
)
close_matches = get_close_matches(alias, list(connections))
if close_matches:
message += " Did you mean %r?" % close_matches[0]
raise ImproperlyConfigured(message)
return frozenset(cls.databases)
@classmethod
def _add_databases_failures(cls):
cls.databases = cls._validate_databases()
for alias in connections:
if alias in cls.databases:
continue
connection = connections[alias]
for name, operation in cls._disallowed_connection_methods:
message = cls._disallowed_database_msg % {
"test": "%s.%s" % (cls.__module__, cls.__qualname__),
"alias": alias,
"operation": operation,
}
method = getattr(connection, name)
setattr(connection, name, _DatabaseFailure(method, message))
@classmethod
def _remove_databases_failures(cls):
for alias in connections:
if alias in cls.databases:
continue
connection = connections[alias]
for name, _ in cls._disallowed_connection_methods:
method = getattr(connection, name)
setattr(connection, name, method.wrapped)
def __call__(self, result=None):
"""
Wrapper around default __call__ method to perform common Django test
set up. This means that user-defined Test Cases aren't required to
include a call to super().setUp().
"""
self._setup_and_call(result)
def debug(self):
"""Perform the same as __call__(), without catching the exception."""
debug_result = _DebugResult()
self._setup_and_call(debug_result, debug=True)
def _setup_and_call(self, result, debug=False):
"""
Perform the following in order: pre-setup, run test, post-teardown,
skipping pre/post hooks if test is set to be skipped.
If debug=True, reraise any errors in setup and use super().debug()
instead of __call__() to run the test.
"""
testMethod = getattr(self, self._testMethodName)
skipped = getattr(self.__class__, "__unittest_skip__", False) or getattr(
testMethod, "__unittest_skip__", False
)
# Convert async test methods.
if asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(testMethod):
setattr(self, self._testMethodName, async_to_sync(testMethod))
if not skipped:
try:
self._pre_setup()
except Exception:
if debug:
raise
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
return
if debug:
super().debug()
else:
super().__call__(result)
if not skipped:
try:
self._post_teardown()
except Exception:
if debug:
raise
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
return
def _pre_setup(self):
"""
Perform pre-test setup:
* Create a test client.
* Clear the mail test outbox.
"""
self.client = self.client_class()
self.async_client = self.async_client_class()
mail.outbox = []
def _post_teardown(self):
"""Perform post-test things."""
pass
def settings(self, **kwargs):
"""
A context manager that temporarily sets a setting and reverts to the
original value when exiting the context.
"""
return override_settings(**kwargs)
def modify_settings(self, **kwargs):
"""
A context manager that temporarily applies changes a list setting and
reverts back to the original value when exiting the context.
"""
return modify_settings(**kwargs)
def assertRedirects(
self,
response,
expected_url,
status_code=302,
target_status_code=200,
msg_prefix="",
fetch_redirect_response=True,
):
"""
Assert that a response redirected to a specific URL and that the
redirect URL can be loaded.
Won't work for external links since it uses the test client to do a
request (use fetch_redirect_response=False to check such links without
fetching them).
"""
if msg_prefix:
msg_prefix += ": "
if hasattr(response, "redirect_chain"):
# The request was a followed redirect
self.assertTrue(
response.redirect_chain,
msg_prefix
+ (
"Response didn't redirect as expected: Response code was %d "
"(expected %d)"
)
% (response.status_code, status_code),
)
self.assertEqual(
response.redirect_chain[0][1],
status_code,
msg_prefix
+ (
"Initial response didn't redirect as expected: Response code was "
"%d (expected %d)"
)
% (response.redirect_chain[0][1], status_code),
)
url, status_code = response.redirect_chain[-1]
self.assertEqual(
response.status_code,
target_status_code,
msg_prefix
+ (
"Response didn't redirect as expected: Final Response code was %d "
"(expected %d)"
)
% (response.status_code, target_status_code),
)
else:
# Not a followed redirect
self.assertEqual(
response.status_code,
status_code,
msg_prefix
+ (
"Response didn't redirect as expected: Response code was %d "
"(expected %d)"
)
% (response.status_code, status_code),
)
url = response.url
scheme, netloc, path, query, fragment = urlsplit(url)
# Prepend the request path to handle relative path redirects.
if not path.startswith("/"):
url = urljoin(response.request["PATH_INFO"], url)
path = urljoin(response.request["PATH_INFO"], path)
if fetch_redirect_response:
# netloc might be empty, or in cases where Django tests the
# HTTP scheme, the convention is for netloc to be 'testserver'.
# Trust both as "internal" URLs here.
domain, port = split_domain_port(netloc)
if domain and not validate_host(domain, settings.ALLOWED_HOSTS):
raise ValueError(
"The test client is unable to fetch remote URLs (got %s). "
"If the host is served by Django, add '%s' to ALLOWED_HOSTS. "
"Otherwise, use "
"assertRedirects(..., fetch_redirect_response=False)."
% (url, domain)
)
# Get the redirection page, using the same client that was used
# to obtain the original response.
extra = response.client.extra or {}
redirect_response = response.client.get(
path,
QueryDict(query),
secure=(scheme == "https"),
**extra,
)
self.assertEqual(
redirect_response.status_code,
target_status_code,
msg_prefix
+ (
"Couldn't retrieve redirection page '%s': response code was %d "
"(expected %d)"
)
% (path, redirect_response.status_code, target_status_code),
)
self.assertURLEqual(
url,
expected_url,
msg_prefix
+ "Response redirected to '%s', expected '%s'" % (url, expected_url),
)
def assertURLEqual(self, url1, url2, msg_prefix=""):
"""
Assert that two URLs are the same, ignoring the order of query string
parameters except for parameters with the same name.
For example, /path/?x=1&y=2 is equal to /path/?y=2&x=1, but
/path/?a=1&a=2 isn't equal to /path/?a=2&a=1.
"""
def normalize(url):
"""Sort the URL's query string parameters."""
url = str(url) # Coerce reverse_lazy() URLs.
scheme, netloc, path, params, query, fragment = urlparse(url)
query_parts = sorted(parse_qsl(query))
return urlunparse(
(scheme, netloc, path, params, urlencode(query_parts), fragment)
)
self.assertEqual(
normalize(url1),
normalize(url2),
msg_prefix + "Expected '%s' to equal '%s'." % (url1, url2),
)
def _assert_contains(self, response, text, status_code, msg_prefix, html):
# If the response supports deferred rendering and hasn't been rendered
# yet, then ensure that it does get rendered before proceeding further.
if (
hasattr(response, "render")
and callable(response.render)
and not response.is_rendered
):
response.render()
if msg_prefix:
msg_prefix += ": "
self.assertEqual(
response.status_code,
status_code,
msg_prefix + "Couldn't retrieve content: Response code was %d"
" (expected %d)" % (response.status_code, status_code),
)
if response.streaming:
content = b"".join(response.streaming_content)
else:
content = response.content
if not isinstance(text, bytes) or html:
text = str(text)
content = content.decode(response.charset)
text_repr = "'%s'" % text
else:
text_repr = repr(text)
if html:
content = assert_and_parse_html(
self, content, None, "Response's content is not valid HTML:"
)
text = assert_and_parse_html(
self, text, None, "Second argument is not valid HTML:"
)
real_count = content.count(text)
return (text_repr, real_count, msg_prefix)
def assertContains(
self, response, text, count=None, status_code=200, msg_prefix="", html=False
):
"""
Assert that a response indicates that some content was retrieved
successfully, (i.e., the HTTP status code was as expected) and that
``text`` occurs ``count`` times in the content of the response.
If ``count`` is None, the count doesn't matter - the assertion is true
if the text occurs at least once in the response.
"""
text_repr, real_count, msg_prefix = self._assert_contains(
response, text, status_code, msg_prefix, html
)
if count is not None:
self.assertEqual(
real_count,
count,
msg_prefix
+ "Found %d instances of %s in response (expected %d)"
% (real_count, text_repr, count),
)
else:
self.assertTrue(
real_count != 0, msg_prefix + "Couldn't find %s in response" % text_repr
)
def assertNotContains(
self, response, text, status_code=200, msg_prefix="", html=False
):
"""
Assert that a response indicates that some content was retrieved
successfully, (i.e., the HTTP status code was as expected) and that
``text`` doesn't occur in the content of the response.
"""
text_repr, real_count, msg_prefix = self._assert_contains(
response, text, status_code, msg_prefix, html
)
self.assertEqual(
real_count, 0, msg_prefix + "Response should not contain %s" % text_repr
)
def _check_test_client_response(self, response, attribute, method_name):
"""
Raise a ValueError if the given response doesn't have the required
attribute.
"""
if not hasattr(response, attribute):
raise ValueError(
f"{method_name}() is only usable on responses fetched using "
"the Django test Client."
)
def _assert_form_error(self, form, field, errors, msg_prefix, form_repr):
if not form.is_bound:
self.fail(
f"{msg_prefix}The {form_repr} is not bound, it will never have any "
f"errors."
)
if field is not None and field not in form.fields:
self.fail(
f"{msg_prefix}The {form_repr} does not contain the field {field!r}."
)
if field is None:
field_errors = form.non_field_errors()
failure_message = f"The non-field errors of {form_repr} don't match."
else:
field_errors = form.errors.get(field, [])
failure_message = (
f"The errors of field {field!r} on {form_repr} don't match."
)
self.assertEqual(field_errors, errors, msg_prefix + failure_message)
def assertFormError(self, response, form, field, errors, msg_prefix=""):
"""
Assert that a form used to render the response has a specific field
error.
"""
self._check_test_client_response(response, "context", "assertFormError")
if msg_prefix:
msg_prefix += ": "
# Put context(s) into a list to simplify processing.
contexts = [] if response.context is None else to_list(response.context)
if not contexts:
self.fail(
msg_prefix + "Response did not use any contexts to render the response"
)
if errors is None:
warnings.warn(
"Passing errors=None to assertFormError() is deprecated, use "
"errors=[] instead.",
RemovedInDjango50Warning,
stacklevel=2,
)
errors = []
# Put error(s) into a list to simplify processing.
errors = to_list(errors)
# Search all contexts for the error.
found_form = False
for i, context in enumerate(contexts):
if form in context:
found_form = True
self._assert_form_error(
context[form], field, errors, msg_prefix, "form %r" % context[form]
)
if not found_form:
self.fail(
msg_prefix + "The form '%s' was not used to render the response" % form
)
def assertFormsetError(
self, response, formset, form_index, field, errors, msg_prefix=""
):
"""
Assert that a formset used to render the response has a specific error.
For field errors, specify the ``form_index`` and the ``field``.
For non-field errors, specify the ``form_index`` and the ``field`` as
None.
For non-form errors, specify ``form_index`` as None and the ``field``
as None.
"""
self._check_test_client_response(response, "context", "assertFormsetError")
# Add punctuation to msg_prefix
if msg_prefix:
msg_prefix += ": "
# Put context(s) into a list to simplify processing.
contexts = [] if response.context is None else to_list(response.context)
if not contexts:
self.fail(
msg_prefix + "Response did not use any contexts to "
"render the response"
)
if errors is None:
warnings.warn(
"Passing errors=None to assertFormsetError() is deprecated, "
"use errors=[] instead.",
RemovedInDjango50Warning,
stacklevel=2,
)
errors = []
if form_index is None and field is not None:
raise ValueError("You must use field=None with form_index=None.")
# Put error(s) into a list to simplify processing.
errors = to_list(errors)
# Search all contexts for the error.
found_formset = False
for i, context in enumerate(contexts):
if formset not in context or not hasattr(context[formset], "forms"):
continue
formset_repr = repr(context[formset])
if not context[formset].is_bound:
self.fail(
f"{msg_prefix}The formset {formset_repr} is not bound, it will "
f"never have any errors."
)
found_formset = True
if form_index is not None:
form_count = context[formset].total_form_count()
if form_index >= form_count:
form_or_forms = "forms" if form_count > 1 else "form"
self.fail(
f"{msg_prefix}The formset {formset_repr} only has "
f"{form_count} {form_or_forms}."
)
if form_index is not None:
form_repr = f"form {form_index} of formset {formset_repr}"
self._assert_form_error(
context[formset].forms[form_index],
field,
errors,
msg_prefix,
form_repr,
)
else:
failure_message = (
f"{msg_prefix}The non-form errors of formset {formset_repr} don't "
f"match."
)
self.assertEqual(
context[formset].non_form_errors(), errors, failure_message
)
if not found_formset:
self.fail(
msg_prefix
+ "The formset '%s' was not used to render the response" % formset
)
def _get_template_used(self, response, template_name, msg_prefix, method_name):
if response is None and template_name is None:
raise TypeError("response and/or template_name argument must be provided")
if msg_prefix:
msg_prefix += ": "
if template_name is not None and response is not None:
self._check_test_client_response(response, "templates", method_name)
if not hasattr(response, "templates") or (response is None and template_name):
if response:
template_name = response
response = None
# use this template with context manager
return template_name, None, msg_prefix
template_names = [t.name for t in response.templates if t.name is not None]
return None, template_names, msg_prefix
def _assert_template_used(self, template_name, template_names, msg_prefix, count):
if not template_names:
self.fail(msg_prefix + "No templates used to render the response")
self.assertTrue(
template_name in template_names,
msg_prefix + "Template '%s' was not a template used to render"
" the response. Actual template(s) used: %s"
% (template_name, ", ".join(template_names)),
)
if count is not None:
self.assertEqual(
template_names.count(template_name),
count,
msg_prefix + "Template '%s' was expected to be rendered %d "
"time(s) but was actually rendered %d time(s)."
% (template_name, count, template_names.count(template_name)),
)
def assertTemplateUsed(
self, response=None, template_name=None, msg_prefix="", count=None
):
"""
Assert that the template with the provided name was used in rendering
the response. Also usable as context manager.
"""
context_mgr_template, template_names, msg_prefix = self._get_template_used(
response,
template_name,
msg_prefix,
"assertTemplateUsed",
)
if context_mgr_template:
# Use assertTemplateUsed as context manager.
return _AssertTemplateUsedContext(
self, context_mgr_template, msg_prefix, count
)
self._assert_template_used(template_name, template_names, msg_prefix, count)
def assertTemplateNotUsed(self, response=None, template_name=None, msg_prefix=""):
"""
Assert that the template with the provided name was NOT used in
rendering the response. Also usable as context manager.
"""
context_mgr_template, template_names, msg_prefix = self._get_template_used(
response,
template_name,
msg_prefix,
"assertTemplateNotUsed",
)
if context_mgr_template:
# Use assertTemplateNotUsed as context manager.
return _AssertTemplateNotUsedContext(self, context_mgr_template, msg_prefix)
self.assertFalse(
template_name in template_names,
msg_prefix
+ "Template '%s' was used unexpectedly in rendering the response"
% template_name,
)
@contextmanager
def _assert_raises_or_warns_cm(
self, func, cm_attr, expected_exception, expected_message
):
with func(expected_exception) as cm:
yield cm
self.assertIn(expected_message, str(getattr(cm, cm_attr)))
def _assertFooMessage(
self, func, cm_attr, expected_exception, expected_message, *args, **kwargs
):
callable_obj = None
if args:
callable_obj, *args = args
cm = self._assert_raises_or_warns_cm(
func, cm_attr, expected_exception, expected_message
)
# Assertion used in context manager fashion.
if callable_obj is None:
return cm
# Assertion was passed a callable.
with cm:
callable_obj(*args, **kwargs)
def assertRaisesMessage(
self, expected_exception, expected_message, *args, **kwargs
):
"""
Assert that expected_message is found in the message of a raised
exception.
Args:
expected_exception: Exception class expected to be raised.
expected_message: expected error message string value.
args: Function to be called and extra positional args.
kwargs: Extra kwargs.
"""
return self._assertFooMessage(
self.assertRaises,
"exception",
expected_exception,
expected_message,
*args,
**kwargs,
)
def assertWarnsMessage(self, expected_warning, expected_message, *args, **kwargs):
"""
Same as assertRaisesMessage but for assertWarns() instead of
assertRaises().
"""
return self._assertFooMessage(
self.assertWarns,
"warning",
expected_warning,
expected_message,
*args,
**kwargs,
)
# A similar method is available in Python 3.10+.
if not PY310:
@contextmanager
def assertNoLogs(self, logger, level=None):
"""
Assert no messages are logged on the logger, with at least the
given level.
"""
if isinstance(level, int):
level = logging.getLevelName(level)
elif level is None:
level = "INFO"
try:
with self.assertLogs(logger, level) as cm:
yield
except AssertionError as e:
msg = e.args[0]
expected_msg = (
f"no logs of level {level} or higher triggered on {logger}"
)
if msg != expected_msg:
raise e
else:
self.fail(f"Unexpected logs found: {cm.output!r}")
def assertFieldOutput(
self,
fieldclass,
valid,
invalid,
field_args=None,
field_kwargs=None,
empty_value="",
):
"""
Assert that a form field behaves correctly with various inputs.
Args:
fieldclass: the class of the field to be tested.
valid: a dictionary mapping valid inputs to their expected
cleaned values.
invalid: a dictionary mapping invalid inputs to one or more
raised error messages.
field_args: the args passed to instantiate the field
field_kwargs: the kwargs passed to instantiate the field
empty_value: the expected clean output for inputs in empty_values
"""
if field_args is None:
field_args = []
if field_kwargs is None:
field_kwargs = {}
required = fieldclass(*field_args, **field_kwargs)
optional = fieldclass(*field_args, **{**field_kwargs, "required": False})
# test valid inputs
for input, output in valid.items():
self.assertEqual(required.clean(input), output)
self.assertEqual(optional.clean(input), output)
# test invalid inputs
for input, errors in invalid.items():
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError) as context_manager:
required.clean(input)
self.assertEqual(context_manager.exception.messages, errors)
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError) as context_manager:
optional.clean(input)
self.assertEqual(context_manager.exception.messages, errors)
# test required inputs
error_required = [required.error_messages["required"]]
for e in required.empty_values:
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError) as context_manager:
required.clean(e)
self.assertEqual(context_manager.exception.messages, error_required)
self.assertEqual(optional.clean(e), empty_value)
# test that max_length and min_length are always accepted
if issubclass(fieldclass, CharField):
field_kwargs.update({"min_length": 2, "max_length": 20})
self.assertIsInstance(fieldclass(*field_args, **field_kwargs), fieldclass)
def assertHTMLEqual(self, html1, html2, msg=None):
"""
Assert that two HTML snippets are semantically the same.
Whitespace in most cases is ignored, and attribute ordering is not
significant. The arguments must be valid HTML.
"""
dom1 = assert_and_parse_html(
self, html1, msg, "First argument is not valid HTML:"
)
dom2 = assert_and_parse_html(
self, html2, msg, "Second argument is not valid HTML:"
)
if dom1 != dom2:
standardMsg = "%s != %s" % (safe_repr(dom1, True), safe_repr(dom2, True))
diff = "\n" + "\n".join(
difflib.ndiff(
str(dom1).splitlines(),
str(dom2).splitlines(),
)
)
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertHTMLNotEqual(self, html1, html2, msg=None):
"""Assert that two HTML snippets are not semantically equivalent."""
dom1 = assert_and_parse_html(
self, html1, msg, "First argument is not valid HTML:"
)
dom2 = assert_and_parse_html(
self, html2, msg, "Second argument is not valid HTML:"
)
if dom1 == dom2:
standardMsg = "%s == %s" % (safe_repr(dom1, True), safe_repr(dom2, True))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertInHTML(self, needle, haystack, count=None, msg_prefix=""):
needle = assert_and_parse_html(
self, needle, None, "First argument is not valid HTML:"
)
haystack = assert_and_parse_html(
self, haystack, None, "Second argument is not valid HTML:"
)
real_count = haystack.count(needle)
if count is not None:
self.assertEqual(
real_count,
count,
msg_prefix
+ "Found %d instances of '%s' in response (expected %d)"
% (real_count, needle, count),
)
else:
self.assertTrue(
real_count != 0, msg_prefix + "Couldn't find '%s' in response" % needle
)
def assertJSONEqual(self, raw, expected_data, msg=None):
"""
Assert that the JSON fragments raw and expected_data are equal.
Usual JSON non-significant whitespace rules apply as the heavyweight
is delegated to the json library.
"""
try:
data = json.loads(raw)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
self.fail("First argument is not valid JSON: %r" % raw)
if isinstance(expected_data, str):
try:
expected_data = json.loads(expected_data)
except ValueError:
self.fail("Second argument is not valid JSON: %r" % expected_data)
self.assertEqual(data, expected_data, msg=msg)
def assertJSONNotEqual(self, raw, expected_data, msg=None):
"""
Assert that the JSON fragments raw and expected_data are not equal.
Usual JSON non-significant whitespace rules apply as the heavyweight
is delegated to the json library.
"""
try:
data = json.loads(raw)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
self.fail("First argument is not valid JSON: %r" % raw)
if isinstance(expected_data, str):
try:
expected_data = json.loads(expected_data)
except json.JSONDecodeError:
self.fail("Second argument is not valid JSON: %r" % expected_data)
self.assertNotEqual(data, expected_data, msg=msg)
def assertXMLEqual(self, xml1, xml2, msg=None):
"""
Assert that two XML snippets are semantically the same.
Whitespace in most cases is ignored and attribute ordering is not
significant. The arguments must be valid XML.
"""
try:
result = compare_xml(xml1, xml2)
except Exception as e:
standardMsg = "First or second argument is not valid XML\n%s" % e
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
else:
if not result:
standardMsg = "%s != %s" % (
safe_repr(xml1, True),
safe_repr(xml2, True),
)
diff = "\n" + "\n".join(
difflib.ndiff(xml1.splitlines(), xml2.splitlines())
)
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertXMLNotEqual(self, xml1, xml2, msg=None):
"""
Assert that two XML snippets are not semantically equivalent.
Whitespace in most cases is ignored and attribute ordering is not
significant. The arguments must be valid XML.
"""
try:
result = compare_xml(xml1, xml2)
except Exception as e:
standardMsg = "First or second argument is not valid XML\n%s" % e
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
else:
if result:
standardMsg = "%s == %s" % (
safe_repr(xml1, True),
safe_repr(xml2, True),
)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
class TransactionTestCase(SimpleTestCase):
# Subclasses can ask for resetting of auto increment sequence before each
# test case
reset_sequences = False
# Subclasses can enable only a subset of apps for faster tests
available_apps = None
# Subclasses can define fixtures which will be automatically installed.
fixtures = None
databases = {DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS}
_disallowed_database_msg = (
"Database %(operation)s to %(alias)r are not allowed in this test. "
"Add %(alias)r to %(test)s.databases to ensure proper test isolation "
"and silence this failure."
)
# If transactions aren't available, Django will serialize the database
# contents into a fixture during setup and flush and reload them
# during teardown (as flush does not restore data from migrations).
# This can be slow; this flag allows enabling on a per-case basis.
serialized_rollback = False
def _pre_setup(self):
"""
Perform pre-test setup:
* If the class has an 'available_apps' attribute, restrict the app
registry to these applications, then fire the post_migrate signal --
it must run with the correct set of applications for the test case.
* If the class has a 'fixtures' attribute, install those fixtures.
"""
super()._pre_setup()
if self.available_apps is not None:
apps.set_available_apps(self.available_apps)
setting_changed.send(
sender=settings._wrapped.__class__,
setting="INSTALLED_APPS",
value=self.available_apps,
enter=True,
)
for db_name in self._databases_names(include_mirrors=False):
emit_post_migrate_signal(verbosity=0, interactive=False, db=db_name)
try:
self._fixture_setup()
except Exception:
if self.available_apps is not None:
apps.unset_available_apps()
setting_changed.send(
sender=settings._wrapped.__class__,
setting="INSTALLED_APPS",
value=settings.INSTALLED_APPS,
enter=False,
)
raise
# Clear the queries_log so that it's less likely to overflow (a single
# test probably won't execute 9K queries). If queries_log overflows,
# then assertNumQueries() doesn't work.
for db_name in self._databases_names(include_mirrors=False):
connections[db_name].queries_log.clear()
@classmethod
def _databases_names(cls, include_mirrors=True):
# Only consider allowed database aliases, including mirrors or not.
return [
alias
for alias in connections
if alias in cls.databases
and (
include_mirrors
or not connections[alias].settings_dict["TEST"]["MIRROR"]
)
]
def _reset_sequences(self, db_name):
conn = connections[db_name]
if conn.features.supports_sequence_reset:
sql_list = conn.ops.sequence_reset_by_name_sql(
no_style(), conn.introspection.sequence_list()
)
if sql_list:
with transaction.atomic(using=db_name):
with conn.cursor() as cursor:
for sql in sql_list:
cursor.execute(sql)
def _fixture_setup(self):
for db_name in self._databases_names(include_mirrors=False):
# Reset sequences
if self.reset_sequences:
self._reset_sequences(db_name)
# Provide replica initial data from migrated apps, if needed.
if self.serialized_rollback and hasattr(
connections[db_name], "_test_serialized_contents"
):
if self.available_apps is not None:
apps.unset_available_apps()
connections[db_name].creation.deserialize_db_from_string(
connections[db_name]._test_serialized_contents
)
if self.available_apps is not None:
apps.set_available_apps(self.available_apps)
if self.fixtures:
# We have to use this slightly awkward syntax due to the fact
# that we're using *args and **kwargs together.
call_command(
"loaddata", *self.fixtures, **{"verbosity": 0, "database": db_name}
)
def _should_reload_connections(self):
return True
def _post_teardown(self):
"""
Perform post-test things:
* Flush the contents of the database to leave a clean slate. If the
class has an 'available_apps' attribute, don't fire post_migrate.
* Force-close the connection so the next test gets a clean cursor.
"""
try:
self._fixture_teardown()
super()._post_teardown()
if self._should_reload_connections():
# Some DB cursors include SQL statements as part of cursor
# creation. If you have a test that does a rollback, the effect
# of these statements is lost, which can affect the operation of
# tests (e.g., losing a timezone setting causing objects to be
# created with the wrong time). To make sure this doesn't
# happen, get a clean connection at the start of every test.
for conn in connections.all():
conn.close()
finally:
if self.available_apps is not None:
apps.unset_available_apps()
setting_changed.send(
sender=settings._wrapped.__class__,
setting="INSTALLED_APPS",
value=settings.INSTALLED_APPS,
enter=False,
)
def _fixture_teardown(self):
# Allow TRUNCATE ... CASCADE and don't emit the post_migrate signal
# when flushing only a subset of the apps
for db_name in self._databases_names(include_mirrors=False):
# Flush the database
inhibit_post_migrate = (
self.available_apps is not None
or ( # Inhibit the post_migrate signal when using serialized
# rollback to avoid trying to recreate the serialized data.
self.serialized_rollback
and hasattr(connections[db_name], "_test_serialized_contents")
)
)
call_command(
"flush",
verbosity=0,
interactive=False,
database=db_name,
reset_sequences=False,
allow_cascade=self.available_apps is not None,
inhibit_post_migrate=inhibit_post_migrate,
)
def assertQuerysetEqual(self, qs, values, transform=None, ordered=True, msg=None):
values = list(values)
items = qs
if transform is not None:
items = map(transform, items)
if not ordered:
return self.assertDictEqual(Counter(items), Counter(values), msg=msg)
# For example qs.iterator() could be passed as qs, but it does not
# have 'ordered' attribute.
if len(values) > 1 and hasattr(qs, "ordered") and not qs.ordered:
raise ValueError(
"Trying to compare non-ordered queryset against more than one "
"ordered value."
)
return self.assertEqual(list(items), values, msg=msg)
def assertNumQueries(self, num, func=None, *args, using=DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS, **kwargs):
conn = connections[using]
context = _AssertNumQueriesContext(self, num, conn)
if func is None:
return context
with context:
func(*args, **kwargs)
def connections_support_transactions(aliases=None):
"""
Return whether or not all (or specified) connections support
transactions.
"""
conns = (
connections.all()
if aliases is None
else (connections[alias] for alias in aliases)
)
return all(conn.features.supports_transactions for conn in conns)
class TestData:
"""
Descriptor to provide TestCase instance isolation for attributes assigned
during the setUpTestData() phase.
Allow safe alteration of objects assigned in setUpTestData() by test
methods by exposing deep copies instead of the original objects.
Objects are deep copied using a memo kept on the test case instance in
order to maintain their original relationships.
"""
memo_attr = "_testdata_memo"
def __init__(self, name, data):
self.name = name
self.data = data
def get_memo(self, testcase):
try:
memo = getattr(testcase, self.memo_attr)
except AttributeError:
memo = {}
setattr(testcase, self.memo_attr, memo)
return memo
def __get__(self, instance, owner):
if instance is None:
return self.data
memo = self.get_memo(instance)
data = deepcopy(self.data, memo)
setattr(instance, self.name, data)
return data
def __repr__(self):
return "<TestData: name=%r, data=%r>" % (self.name, self.data)
class TestCase(TransactionTestCase):
"""
Similar to TransactionTestCase, but use `transaction.atomic()` to achieve
test isolation.
In most situations, TestCase should be preferred to TransactionTestCase as
it allows faster execution. However, there are some situations where using
TransactionTestCase might be necessary (e.g. testing some transactional
behavior).
On database backends with no transaction support, TestCase behaves as
TransactionTestCase.
"""
@classmethod
def _enter_atomics(cls):
"""Open atomic blocks for multiple databases."""
atomics = {}
for db_name in cls._databases_names():
atomic = transaction.atomic(using=db_name)
atomic._from_testcase = True
atomic.__enter__()
atomics[db_name] = atomic
return atomics
@classmethod
def _rollback_atomics(cls, atomics):
"""Rollback atomic blocks opened by the previous method."""
for db_name in reversed(cls._databases_names()):
transaction.set_rollback(True, using=db_name)
atomics[db_name].__exit__(None, None, None)
@classmethod
def _databases_support_transactions(cls):
return connections_support_transactions(cls.databases)
@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
super().setUpClass()
if not cls._databases_support_transactions():
return
cls.cls_atomics = cls._enter_atomics()
if cls.fixtures:
for db_name in cls._databases_names(include_mirrors=False):
try:
call_command(
"loaddata",
*cls.fixtures,
**{"verbosity": 0, "database": db_name},
)
except Exception:
cls._rollback_atomics(cls.cls_atomics)
raise
pre_attrs = cls.__dict__.copy()
try:
cls.setUpTestData()
except Exception:
cls._rollback_atomics(cls.cls_atomics)
raise
for name, value in cls.__dict__.items():
if value is not pre_attrs.get(name):
setattr(cls, name, TestData(name, value))
@classmethod
def tearDownClass(cls):
if cls._databases_support_transactions():
cls._rollback_atomics(cls.cls_atomics)
for conn in connections.all():
conn.close()
super().tearDownClass()
@classmethod
def setUpTestData(cls):
"""Load initial data for the TestCase."""
pass
def _should_reload_connections(self):
if self._databases_support_transactions():
return False
return super()._should_reload_connections()
def _fixture_setup(self):
if not self._databases_support_transactions():
# If the backend does not support transactions, we should reload
# class data before each test
self.setUpTestData()
return super()._fixture_setup()
if self.reset_sequences:
raise TypeError("reset_sequences cannot be used on TestCase instances")
self.atomics = self._enter_atomics()
def _fixture_teardown(self):
if not self._databases_support_transactions():
return super()._fixture_teardown()
try:
for db_name in reversed(self._databases_names()):
if self._should_check_constraints(connections[db_name]):
connections[db_name].check_constraints()
finally:
self._rollback_atomics(self.atomics)
def _should_check_constraints(self, connection):
return (
connection.features.can_defer_constraint_checks
and not connection.needs_rollback
and connection.is_usable()
)
@classmethod
@contextmanager
def captureOnCommitCallbacks(cls, *, using=DEFAULT_DB_ALIAS, execute=False):
"""Context manager to capture transaction.on_commit() callbacks."""
callbacks = []
start_count = len(connections[using].run_on_commit)
try:
yield callbacks
finally:
while True:
callback_count = len(connections[using].run_on_commit)
for _, callback in connections[using].run_on_commit[start_count:]:
callbacks.append(callback)
if execute:
callback()
if callback_count == len(connections[using].run_on_commit):
break
start_count = callback_count
class CheckCondition:
"""Descriptor class for deferred condition checking."""
def __init__(self, *conditions):
self.conditions = conditions
def add_condition(self, condition, reason):
return self.__class__(*self.conditions, (condition, reason))
def __get__(self, instance, cls=None):
# Trigger access for all bases.
if any(getattr(base, "__unittest_skip__", False) for base in cls.__bases__):
return True
for condition, reason in self.conditions:
if condition():
# Override this descriptor's value and set the skip reason.
cls.__unittest_skip__ = True
cls.__unittest_skip_why__ = reason
return True
return False
def _deferredSkip(condition, reason, name):
def decorator(test_func):
nonlocal condition
if not (
isinstance(test_func, type) and issubclass(test_func, unittest.TestCase)
):
@wraps(test_func)
def skip_wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
if (
args
and isinstance(args[0], unittest.TestCase)
and connection.alias not in getattr(args[0], "databases", {})
):
raise ValueError(
"%s cannot be used on %s as %s doesn't allow queries "
"against the %r database."
% (
name,
args[0],
args[0].__class__.__qualname__,
connection.alias,
)
)
if condition():
raise unittest.SkipTest(reason)
return test_func(*args, **kwargs)
test_item = skip_wrapper
else:
# Assume a class is decorated
test_item = test_func
databases = getattr(test_item, "databases", None)
if not databases or connection.alias not in databases:
# Defer raising to allow importing test class's module.
def condition():
raise ValueError(
"%s cannot be used on %s as it doesn't allow queries "
"against the '%s' database."
% (
name,
test_item,
connection.alias,
)
)
# Retrieve the possibly existing value from the class's dict to
# avoid triggering the descriptor.
skip = test_func.__dict__.get("__unittest_skip__")
if isinstance(skip, CheckCondition):
test_item.__unittest_skip__ = skip.add_condition(condition, reason)
elif skip is not True:
test_item.__unittest_skip__ = CheckCondition((condition, reason))
return test_item
return decorator
def skipIfDBFeature(*features):
"""Skip a test if a database has at least one of the named features."""
return _deferredSkip(
lambda: any(
getattr(connection.features, feature, False) for feature in features
),
"Database has feature(s) %s" % ", ".join(features),
"skipIfDBFeature",
)
def skipUnlessDBFeature(*features):
"""Skip a test unless a database has all the named features."""
return _deferredSkip(
lambda: not all(
getattr(connection.features, feature, False) for feature in features
),
"Database doesn't support feature(s): %s" % ", ".join(features),
"skipUnlessDBFeature",
)
def skipUnlessAnyDBFeature(*features):
"""Skip a test unless a database has any of the named features."""
return _deferredSkip(
lambda: not any(
getattr(connection.features, feature, False) for feature in features
),
"Database doesn't support any of the feature(s): %s" % ", ".join(features),
"skipUnlessAnyDBFeature",
)
class QuietWSGIRequestHandler(WSGIRequestHandler):
"""
A WSGIRequestHandler that doesn't log to standard output any of the
requests received, so as to not clutter the test result output.
"""
def log_message(*args):
pass
class FSFilesHandler(WSGIHandler):
"""
WSGI middleware that intercepts calls to a directory, as defined by one of
the *_ROOT settings, and serves those files, publishing them under *_URL.
"""
def __init__(self, application):
self.application = application
self.base_url = urlparse(self.get_base_url())
super().__init__()
def _should_handle(self, path):
"""
Check if the path should be handled. Ignore the path if:
* the host is provided as part of the base_url
* the request's path isn't under the media path (or equal)
"""
return path.startswith(self.base_url[2]) and not self.base_url[1]
def file_path(self, url):
"""Return the relative path to the file on disk for the given URL."""
relative_url = url[len(self.base_url[2]) :]
return url2pathname(relative_url)
def get_response(self, request):
from django.http import Http404
if self._should_handle(request.path):
try:
return self.serve(request)
except Http404:
pass
return super().get_response(request)
def serve(self, request):
os_rel_path = self.file_path(request.path)
os_rel_path = posixpath.normpath(unquote(os_rel_path))
# Emulate behavior of django.contrib.staticfiles.views.serve() when it
# invokes staticfiles' finders functionality.
# TODO: Modify if/when that internal API is refactored
final_rel_path = os_rel_path.replace("\\", "/").lstrip("/")
return serve(request, final_rel_path, document_root=self.get_base_dir())
def __call__(self, environ, start_response):
if not self._should_handle(get_path_info(environ)):
return self.application(environ, start_response)
return super().__call__(environ, start_response)
class _StaticFilesHandler(FSFilesHandler):
"""
Handler for serving static files. A private class that is meant to be used
solely as a convenience by LiveServerThread.
"""
def get_base_dir(self):
return settings.STATIC_ROOT
def get_base_url(self):
return settings.STATIC_URL
class _MediaFilesHandler(FSFilesHandler):
"""
Handler for serving the media files. A private class that is meant to be
used solely as a convenience by LiveServerThread.
"""
def get_base_dir(self):
return settings.MEDIA_ROOT
def get_base_url(self):
return settings.MEDIA_URL
class LiveServerThread(threading.Thread):
"""Thread for running a live HTTP server while the tests are running."""
server_class = ThreadedWSGIServer
def __init__(self, host, static_handler, connections_override=None, port=0):
self.host = host
self.port = port
self.is_ready = threading.Event()
self.error = None
self.static_handler = static_handler
self.connections_override = connections_override
super().__init__()
def run(self):
"""
Set up the live server and databases, and then loop over handling
HTTP requests.
"""
if self.connections_override:
# Override this thread's database connections with the ones
# provided by the main thread.
for alias, conn in self.connections_override.items():
connections[alias] = conn
try:
# Create the handler for serving static and media files
handler = self.static_handler(_MediaFilesHandler(WSGIHandler()))
self.httpd = self._create_server()
# If binding to port zero, assign the port allocated by the OS.
if self.port == 0:
self.port = self.httpd.server_address[1]
self.httpd.set_app(handler)
self.is_ready.set()
self.httpd.serve_forever()
except Exception as e:
self.error = e
self.is_ready.set()
finally:
connections.close_all()
def _create_server(self, connections_override=None):
return self.server_class(
(self.host, self.port),
QuietWSGIRequestHandler,
allow_reuse_address=False,
connections_override=connections_override,
)
def terminate(self):
if hasattr(self, "httpd"):
# Stop the WSGI server
self.httpd.shutdown()
self.httpd.server_close()
self.join()
class LiveServerTestCase(TransactionTestCase):
"""
Do basically the same as TransactionTestCase but also launch a live HTTP
server in a separate thread so that the tests may use another testing
framework, such as Selenium for example, instead of the built-in dummy
client.
It inherits from TransactionTestCase instead of TestCase because the
threads don't share the same transactions (unless if using in-memory sqlite)
and each thread needs to commit all their transactions so that the other
thread can see the changes.
"""
host = "localhost"
port = 0
server_thread_class = LiveServerThread
static_handler = _StaticFilesHandler
@classproperty
def live_server_url(cls):
return "http://%s:%s" % (cls.host, cls.server_thread.port)
@classproperty
def allowed_host(cls):
return cls.host
@classmethod
def _make_connections_override(cls):
connections_override = {}
for conn in connections.all():
# If using in-memory sqlite databases, pass the connections to
# the server thread.
if conn.vendor == "sqlite" and conn.is_in_memory_db():
connections_override[conn.alias] = conn
return connections_override
@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
super().setUpClass()
cls._live_server_modified_settings = modify_settings(
ALLOWED_HOSTS={"append": cls.allowed_host},
)
cls._live_server_modified_settings.enable()
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._live_server_modified_settings.disable)
cls._start_server_thread()
@classmethod
def _start_server_thread(cls):
connections_override = cls._make_connections_override()
for conn in connections_override.values():
# Explicitly enable thread-shareability for this connection.
conn.inc_thread_sharing()
cls.server_thread = cls._create_server_thread(connections_override)
cls.server_thread.daemon = True
cls.server_thread.start()
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._terminate_thread)
# Wait for the live server to be ready
cls.server_thread.is_ready.wait()
if cls.server_thread.error:
raise cls.server_thread.error
@classmethod
def _create_server_thread(cls, connections_override):
return cls.server_thread_class(
cls.host,
cls.static_handler,
connections_override=connections_override,
port=cls.port,
)
@classmethod
def _terminate_thread(cls):
# Terminate the live server's thread.
cls.server_thread.terminate()
# Restore shared connections' non-shareability.
for conn in cls.server_thread.connections_override.values():
conn.dec_thread_sharing()
class SerializeMixin:
"""
Enforce serialization of TestCases that share a common resource.
Define a common 'lockfile' for each set of TestCases to serialize. This
file must exist on the filesystem.
Place it early in the MRO in order to isolate setUpClass()/tearDownClass().
"""
lockfile = None
def __init_subclass__(cls, /, **kwargs):
super().__init_subclass__(**kwargs)
if cls.lockfile is None:
raise ValueError(
"{}.lockfile isn't set. Set it to a unique value "
"in the base class.".format(cls.__name__)
)
@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
cls._lockfile = open(cls.lockfile)
cls.addClassCleanup(cls._lockfile.close)
locks.lock(cls._lockfile, locks.LOCK_EX)
super().setUpClass()