django1/tests/invalid_models_tests/tests.py

47 lines
1.8 KiB
Python

import sys
import unittest
from django.apps import app_cache
from django.core.management.validation import get_validation_errors
from django.test.utils import override_settings
from django.utils.six import StringIO
class InvalidModelTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
"""Import an appliation with invalid models and test the exceptions."""
def setUp(self):
# Make sure sys.stdout is not a tty so that we get errors without
# coloring attached (makes matching the results easier). We restore
# sys.stderr afterwards.
self.old_stdout = sys.stdout
self.stdout = StringIO()
sys.stdout = self.stdout
def tearDown(self):
sys.stdout = self.old_stdout
# Technically, this isn't an override -- TEST_SWAPPED_MODEL must be
# set to *something* in order for the test to work. However, it's
# easier to set this up as an override than to require every developer
# to specify a value in their test settings.
@override_settings(
TEST_SWAPPED_MODEL='invalid_models.ReplacementModel',
TEST_SWAPPED_MODEL_BAD_VALUE='not-a-model',
TEST_SWAPPED_MODEL_BAD_MODEL='not_an_app.Target',
)
def test_invalid_models(self):
with app_cache._with_app("invalid_models_tests.invalid_models"):
module = app_cache.get_app_config("invalid_models").models_module
get_validation_errors(self.stdout, module)
self.stdout.seek(0)
error_log = self.stdout.read()
actual = error_log.split('\n')
expected = module.model_errors.split('\n')
unexpected = [err for err in actual if err not in expected]
missing = [err for err in expected if err not in actual]
self.assertFalse(unexpected, "Unexpected Errors: " + '\n'.join(unexpected))
self.assertFalse(missing, "Missing Errors: " + '\n'.join(missing))