Merge pull request #4146 from Tadaboody/give_hints_when_an_assertion_value_is_None_instead_of_a_boolean_3191

[#3191] Give hints when an assertion value is None instead of a boolean
This commit is contained in:
Bruno Oliveira 2018-12-05 20:04:52 -02:00 committed by GitHub
commit 76884c73bf
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3 changed files with 124 additions and 0 deletions

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@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
A warning is now issued when assertions are made for ``None``.
This is a common source of confusion among new users, which write::
assert mocked_object.assert_called_with(3, 4, 5, key='value')
When they should write::
mocked_object.assert_called_with(3, 4, 5, key='value')
Because the ``assert_called_with`` method of mock objects already executes an assertion.
This warning will not be issued when ``None`` is explicitly checked. An assertion like::
assert variable is None
will not issue the warning.

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@ -51,6 +51,19 @@ else:
return ast.Call(a, b, c, None, None)
def ast_Call_helper(func_name, *args, **kwargs):
"""
func_name: str
args: Iterable[ast.expr]
kwargs: Dict[str,ast.expr]
"""
return ast.Call(
ast.Name(func_name, ast.Load()),
list(args),
[ast.keyword(key, val) for key, val in kwargs.items()],
)
class AssertionRewritingHook(object):
"""PEP302 Import hook which rewrites asserts."""
@ -828,6 +841,13 @@ class AssertionRewriter(ast.NodeVisitor):
self.push_format_context()
# Rewrite assert into a bunch of statements.
top_condition, explanation = self.visit(assert_.test)
# If in a test module, check if directly asserting None, in order to warn [Issue #3191]
if self.module_path is not None:
self.statements.append(
self.warn_about_none_ast(
top_condition, module_path=self.module_path, lineno=assert_.lineno
)
)
# Create failure message.
body = self.on_failure
negation = ast.UnaryOp(ast.Not(), top_condition)
@ -858,6 +878,33 @@ class AssertionRewriter(ast.NodeVisitor):
set_location(stmt, assert_.lineno, assert_.col_offset)
return self.statements
def warn_about_none_ast(self, node, module_path, lineno):
"""
Returns an AST issuing a warning if the value of node is `None`.
This is used to warn the user when asserting a function that asserts
internally already.
See issue #3191 for more details.
"""
# Using parse because it is different between py2 and py3.
AST_NONE = ast.parse("None").body[0].value
val_is_none = ast.Compare(node, [ast.Is()], [AST_NONE])
send_warning = ast.parse(
"""
from _pytest.warning_types import PytestWarning
from warnings import warn_explicit
warn_explicit(
PytestWarning('asserting the value None, please use "assert is None"'),
category=None,
filename={filename!r},
lineno={lineno},
)
""".format(
filename=module_path.strpath, lineno=lineno
)
).body
return ast.If(val_is_none, send_warning, [])
def visit_Name(self, name):
# Display the repr of the name if it's a local variable or
# _should_repr_global_name() thinks it's acceptable.

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@ -623,3 +623,63 @@ def test_removed_in_pytest4_warning_as_error(testdir, change_default):
else:
assert change_default in ("ini", "cmdline")
result.stdout.fnmatch_lines(["* 1 passed in *"])
class TestAssertionWarnings:
@staticmethod
def assert_result_warns(result, msg):
result.stdout.fnmatch_lines(["*PytestWarning: %s*" % msg])
def test_tuple_warning(self, testdir):
testdir.makepyfile(
"""
def test_foo():
assert (1,2)
"""
)
result = testdir.runpytest()
self.assert_result_warns(
result, "assertion is always true, perhaps remove parentheses?"
)
@staticmethod
def create_file(testdir, return_none):
testdir.makepyfile(
"""
def foo(return_none):
if return_none:
return None
else:
return False
def test_foo():
assert foo({return_none})
""".format(
return_none=return_none
)
)
def test_none_function_warns(self, testdir):
self.create_file(testdir, True)
result = testdir.runpytest()
self.assert_result_warns(
result, 'asserting the value None, please use "assert is None"'
)
def test_assert_is_none_no_warn(self, testdir):
testdir.makepyfile(
"""
def foo():
return None
def test_foo():
assert foo() is None
"""
)
result = testdir.runpytest()
result.stdout.fnmatch_lines(["*1 passed in*"])
def test_false_function_no_warn(self, testdir):
self.create_file(testdir, False)
result = testdir.runpytest()
result.stdout.fnmatch_lines(["*1 failed in*"])