test_ok1/doc/en/capture.txt

116 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
Raw Normal View History

.. _`captures`:
Capturing of the stdout/stderr output
=========================================================
Default stdout/stderr/stdin capturing behaviour
---------------------------------------------------------
During test execution any output sent to ``stdout`` and ``stderr`` is
captured. If a test or a setup method fails its according captured
output will usually be shown along with the failure traceback.
In addition, ``stdin`` is set to a "null" object which will
fail on attempts to read from it because it is rarely desired
to wait for interactive input when running automated tests.
By default capturing is done by intercepting writes to low level
file descriptors. This allows to capture output from simple
print statements as well as output from a subprocess started by
a test.
Setting capturing methods or disabling capturing
-------------------------------------------------
There are two ways in which ``py.test`` can perform capturing:
* file descriptor (FD) level capturing (default): All writes going to the
operating system file descriptors 1 and 2 will be captured.
* ``sys`` level capturing: Only writes to Python files ``sys.stdout``
and ``sys.stderr`` will be captured. No capturing of writes to
filedescriptors is performed.
.. _`disable capturing`:
You can influence output capturing mechanisms from the command line::
py.test -s # disable all capturing
py.test --capture=sys # replace sys.stdout/stderr with in-mem files
py.test --capture=fd # also point filedescriptors 1 and 2 to temp file
2010-12-06 17:41:20 +08:00
.. _printdebugging:
Using print statements for debugging
---------------------------------------------------
One primary benefit of the default capturing of stdout/stderr output
is that you can use print statements for debugging::
# content of test_module.py
def setup_function(function):
print ("setting up %s" % function)
def test_func1():
assert True
def test_func2():
assert False
and running this module will show you precisely the output
of the failing function and hide the other one::
$ py.test
=========================== test session starts ============================
2012-10-20 20:05:33 +08:00
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.3 -- pytest-2.3.1
collected 2 items
2010-12-06 17:41:20 +08:00
test_module.py .F
================================= FAILURES =================================
________________________________ test_func2 ________________________________
def test_func2():
> assert False
E assert False
test_module.py:9: AssertionError
----------------------------- Captured stdout ------------------------------
2012-10-20 20:05:33 +08:00
setting up <function test_func2 at 0x240e050>
==================== 1 failed, 1 passed in 0.01 seconds ====================
2010-12-06 17:41:20 +08:00
Accessing captured output from a test function
---------------------------------------------------
The :ref:`funcarg mechanism` allows test function a very easy
way to access the captured output by simply using the names
``capsys`` or ``capfd`` in the test function signature. Here
is an example test function that performs some output related
checks::
def test_myoutput(capsys): # or use "capfd" for fd-level
print ("hello")
sys.stderr.write("world\n")
out, err = capsys.readouterr()
assert out == "hello\n"
assert err == "world\n"
print "next"
out, err = capsys.readouterr()
assert out == "next\n"
The ``readouterr()`` call snapshots the output so far -
and capturing will be continued. After the test
function finishes the original streams will
be restored. Using ``capsys`` this way frees your
test from having to care about setting/resetting
output streams and also interacts well with py.test's
own per-test capturing.
If you want to capture on ``fd`` level you can use
the ``capfd`` function argument which offers the exact
same interface.
.. include:: links.inc