Merge pull request #1735 from flub/reinterpret-docs

Document the re-writing of plugins
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Bruno Oliveira 2016-07-17 12:48:33 -03:00 committed by GitHub
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@ -176,6 +176,63 @@ If a package is installed this way, ``pytest`` will load
to make it easy for users to find your plugin.
Assertion Rewriting
-------------------
One of the main features of ``pytest`` is the use of plain assert
statements and the detailed introspection of expressions upon
assertion failures. This is provided by "assertion rewriting" which
modifies the parsed AST before it gets compiled to bytecode. This is
done via a :pep:`302` import hook which gets installed early on when
``pytest`` starts up and will perform this re-writing when modules get
imported. However since we do not want to test different bytecode
then you will run in production this hook only re-writes test modules
themselves as well as any modules which are part of plugins. Any
other imported module will not be re-written and normal assertion
behaviour will happen.
If you have assertion helpers in other modules where you would need
assertion rewriting to be enabled you need to ask ``pytest``
explicitly to re-write this module before it gets imported.
.. autofunction:: pytest.register_assert_rewrite
This is especially important when you write a pytest plugin which is
created using a package. The import hook only treats ``conftest.py``
files and any modules which are listed in the ``pytest11`` entrypoint
as plugins. As an example consider the following package::
pytest_foo/__init__.py
pytest_foo/plugin.py
pytest_foo/helper.py
With the following typical ``setup.py`` extract:
.. code-block:: python
setup(
...
entry_points={'pytest11': ['foo = pytest_foo.plugin']},
...
)
In this case only ``pytest_foo/plugin.py`` will be re-written. If the
helper module also contains assert statements which need to be
re-written it needs to be marked as such, before it gets imported.
This is easiest by marking it for re-writing inside the
``__init__.py`` module, which will always be imported first when a
module inside a package is imported. This way ``plugin.py`` can still
import ``helper.py`` normally. The contents of
``pytest_foo/__init__.py`` will then need to look like this:
.. code-block:: python
import pytest
pytest.register_assert_rewrite('pytest_foo.helper')
Requiring/Loading plugins in a test module or conftest file
-----------------------------------------------------------
@ -190,6 +247,16 @@ will be loaded as well. You can also use dotted path like this::
which will import the specified module as a ``pytest`` plugin.
Plugins imported like this will automatically be marked to require
assertion rewriting using the :func:`pytest.register_assert_rewrite`
mechanism. However for this to have any effect the module must not be
imported already, it it was already imported at the time the
``pytest_plugins`` statement is processed a warning will result and
assertions inside the plugin will not be re-written. To fix this you
can either call :func:`pytest.register_assert_rewrite` yourself before
the module is imported, or you can arrange the code to delay the
importing until after the plugin is registered.
Accessing another plugin by name
--------------------------------