__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
As per their email ‘Changes to project subdomains’:
> Starting today, Read the Docs will start hosting projects from subdomains on the domain readthedocs.io, instead of on readthedocs.org. This change addresses some security concerns around site cookies while hosting user generated data on the same domain as our dashboard.
Test Plan: Manually visited all the links I’ve modified. One was not modified - `http://media.readthedocs.org/epub/pytest/latest/pytest.epub` - since it doesn't work on `readthedocs.io`.
While this leads to slightly more complicated user code for the common
case (checking if the exception is of a given type) it's easier to
implement and more flexible.
When __tracebackhide__ gets set to an exception type or list/tuple of
exception types, only those exceptions get filtered, while the full
traceback is shown if another exception (e.g. a bug in a assertion
helper) happens.
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.