Test case for overriding autouse fixture with a parametrized fixture.
The test covers the problem explained in the issue 1601
Adding Diego Russo to AUTHORS
Add --continue-on-collection-errors option to restore the previous behaviour:
Execute tests (that were successfully collected) even when collection errors
happen.
Some tests had to be modified e.g. because the return code changed to 2
(EXIT_INTERRUPTED) instead of 1 (EXIT_TESTSFAILED) because an Interrupted
exception is raised on collection error.
Implemented via pair programming with:
Oleg Pidsadnyi <oleg.pidsadnyi@gmail.com>
closes#1421
The inner function and the explanatory comment it makes necessary can
all be removed if we switch to an if/else rather than try/except for
this condition.
Perhaps this bit comes from my fondness for C, but I think I would
find this style clearer and easier to understand even if it weren't
for the Python 2 quirk that makes the other style require us to add an
unnecessary-looking function abstraction. In any case, given that the
alternative does require that abstraction this is definitely simpler.
When the method argument is missing on teardown_method, the traceback is
100% internal to pytest, which with default options get pruned. Then
that traceback is empty, leading to a new exception as a traceback shall
not be empty.
This PR fixes that issue by pushing back the last stack on the
traceback, when the stacktrace is empty after pruning. Then the output
is still pruned, but gives meaningful information with the item where it
failed on the stack.
* fixes issue #1604
Signed-off-by: Guyzmo <guyzmo+github@m0g.net>
__test__ needs to be checked for methods of a class too. Earlier,
this was not done, and all methods in a class was assumed to be
a test. This commit adds the appropriate condition to ensure that
if the __test__ is set to False, it does not collect that method.
Fixes https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/issues/1558
The commit allow users to add a properties node in testsuite level see
example below:
<testsuite errors="0" failures="0" name="pytest" skips="1" tests="1"
time="11.824">
<properties>
<property name="ARCH" value="PPC"/>
<property name="OS" value="RHEL 7.2"/>
<property name="TestPlanURL" value="https://url.."/>
<property name="Automated" value="True"/>
</properties>
<testcase classname="git.....>
</testcase>
</testsuite>
The current situation is that properties node can be added to every
testcase node. However, sometimes we need some global properties that
applies to all testcases and give better description for the testsuite
itself.
When defining a fixture in the same module as where it is used, the
function argument shadows the fixture name, which a) annoys pylint and
b) can lead to bugs where you forget to request a fixture into a test
method.
This allows one to define fixtures with a different name than the name
of the function, bypassing that problem.
a more descriptive docstring (the workaround itself is just to import
readline earlier). I removed the conditional on targetfd from the
workaround since it doesn't really matter.
* Added # noqa marker.
* Added changelog entry, and self to authors.
Fixes issue 331
previously to this change the collection code would issue a warning for
when ever it encountered a variable that looked like a test but wasn't a
function saying that it wouldn't collect it because it wasn't a function.
This fixes the logic so that if that warning is issued it really isn't
collected.
However previously special cases existed to support tests that were
created using functools.wraps and functools.partial. So the condition for
issuing that warning has been updated to take that in to account
Also try the old way of detecting functions just for proper integration
with mock.path in python 2.7 the get_real_func returned the unbound method
This adds the `file` and `line` attributes to the junit-xml output
which can be used by tooling to identify where tests come from. This can be
used for many things such as IDEs jumping to failures and test
runners evenly balancing tests among multiple executors.
Update test_junitxml.py
Foo.