.. _plugins: .. _`writing-plugins`: Writing plugins =============== It is easy to implement `local conftest plugins`_ for your own project or `pip-installable plugins`_ that can be used throughout many projects, including third party projects. Please refer to :ref:`using plugins` if you only want to use but not write plugins. A plugin contains one or multiple hook functions. :ref:`Writing hooks ` explains the basics and details of how you can write a hook function yourself. ``pytest`` implements all aspects of configuration, collection, running and reporting by calling :ref:`well specified hooks ` of the following plugins: * builtin plugins: loaded from pytest's internal ``_pytest`` directory. * :ref:`external plugins `: modules discovered through `setuptools entry points`_ * `conftest.py plugins`_: modules auto-discovered in test directories In principle, each hook call is a ``1:N`` Python function call where ``N`` is the number of registered implementation functions for a given specification. All specifications and implementations follow the ``pytest_`` prefix naming convention, making them easy to distinguish and find. .. _`pluginorder`: Plugin discovery order at tool startup -------------------------------------- ``pytest`` loads plugin modules at tool startup in the following way: * by loading all builtin plugins * by loading all plugins registered through `setuptools entry points`_. * by pre-scanning the command line for the ``-p name`` option and loading the specified plugin before actual command line parsing. * by loading all :file:`conftest.py` files as inferred by the command line invocation: - if no test paths are specified use current dir as a test path - if exists, load ``conftest.py`` and ``test*/conftest.py`` relative to the directory part of the first test path. Note that pytest does not find ``conftest.py`` files in deeper nested sub directories at tool startup. It is usually a good idea to keep your ``conftest.py`` file in the top level test or project root directory. * by recursively loading all plugins specified by the ``pytest_plugins`` variable in ``conftest.py`` files .. _`pytest/plugin`: http://bitbucket.org/pytest-dev/pytest/src/tip/pytest/plugin/ .. _`conftest.py plugins`: .. _`localplugin`: .. _`local conftest plugins`: conftest.py: local per-directory plugins ---------------------------------------- Local ``conftest.py`` plugins contain directory-specific hook implementations. Hook Session and test running activities will invoke all hooks defined in ``conftest.py`` files closer to the root of the filesystem. Example of implementing the ``pytest_runtest_setup`` hook so that is called for tests in the ``a`` sub directory but not for other directories:: a/conftest.py: def pytest_runtest_setup(item): # called for running each test in 'a' directory print ("setting up", item) a/test_sub.py: def test_sub(): pass test_flat.py: def test_flat(): pass Here is how you might run it::     pytest test_flat.py --capture=no # will not show "setting up" pytest a/test_sub.py --capture=no # will show "setting up" .. note:: If you have ``conftest.py`` files which do not reside in a python package directory (i.e. one containing an ``__init__.py``) then "import conftest" can be ambiguous because there might be other ``conftest.py`` files as well on your ``PYTHONPATH`` or ``sys.path``. It is thus good practice for projects to either put ``conftest.py`` under a package scope or to never import anything from a ``conftest.py`` file. See also: :ref:`pythonpath`. Writing your own plugin ----------------------- .. _`setuptools`: https://pypi.org/project/setuptools/ If you want to write a plugin, there are many real-life examples you can copy from: * a custom collection example plugin: :ref:`yaml plugin` * builtin plugins which provide pytest's own functionality * many `external plugins `_ providing additional features All of these plugins implement :ref:`hooks ` and/or :ref:`fixtures ` to extend and add functionality. .. note:: Make sure to check out the excellent `cookiecutter-pytest-plugin `_ project, which is a `cookiecutter template `_ for authoring plugins. The template provides an excellent starting point with a working plugin, tests running with tox, a comprehensive README file as well as a pre-configured entry-point. Also consider :ref:`contributing your plugin to pytest-dev` once it has some happy users other than yourself. .. _`setuptools entry points`: .. _`pip-installable plugins`: Making your plugin installable by others ---------------------------------------- If you want to make your plugin externally available, you may define a so-called entry point for your distribution so that ``pytest`` finds your plugin module. Entry points are a feature that is provided by `setuptools`_. pytest looks up the ``pytest11`` entrypoint to discover its plugins and you can thus make your plugin available by defining it in your setuptools-invocation: .. sourcecode:: python # sample ./setup.py file from setuptools import setup setup( name="myproject", packages=["myproject"], # the following makes a plugin available to pytest entry_points={"pytest11": ["name_of_plugin = myproject.pluginmodule"]}, # custom PyPI classifier for pytest plugins classifiers=["Framework :: Pytest"], ) If a package is installed this way, ``pytest`` will load ``myproject.pluginmodule`` as a plugin which can define :ref:`hooks `. .. note:: Make sure to include ``Framework :: Pytest`` in your list of `PyPI classifiers `_ to make it easy for users to find your plugin. .. _assertion-rewriting: 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 rewriting when modules get imported. However since we do not want to test different bytecode then you will run in production this hook only rewrites test modules themselves as well as any modules which are part of plugins. Any other imported module will not be rewritten 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 rewrite this module before it gets imported. .. autofunction:: pytest.register_assert_rewrite :noindex: 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 rewritten. If the helper module also contains assert statements which need to be rewritten it needs to be marked as such, before it gets imported. This is easiest by marking it for rewriting 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 ----------------------------------------------------------- You can require plugins in a test module or a ``conftest.py`` file like this: .. code-block:: python pytest_plugins = ["name1", "name2"] When the test module or conftest plugin is loaded the specified plugins will be loaded as well. Any module can be blessed as a plugin, including internal application modules: .. code-block:: python pytest_plugins = "myapp.testsupport.myplugin" ``pytest_plugins`` variables are processed recursively, so note that in the example above if ``myapp.testsupport.myplugin`` also declares ``pytest_plugins``, the contents of the variable will also be loaded as plugins, and so on. .. _`requiring plugins in non-root conftests`: .. note:: Requiring plugins using a ``pytest_plugins`` variable in non-root ``conftest.py`` files is deprecated. This is important because ``conftest.py`` files implement per-directory hook implementations, but once a plugin is imported, it will affect the entire directory tree. In order to avoid confusion, defining ``pytest_plugins`` in any ``conftest.py`` file which is not located in the tests root directory is deprecated, and will raise a warning. This mechanism makes it easy to share fixtures within applications or even external applications without the need to create external plugins using the ``setuptools``'s entry point technique. Plugins imported by ``pytest_plugins`` will also automatically be marked for assertion rewriting (see :func:`pytest.register_assert_rewrite`). However for this to have any effect the module must not be imported already; if 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 rewritten. 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 -------------------------------- If a plugin wants to collaborate with code from another plugin it can obtain a reference through the plugin manager like this: .. sourcecode:: python plugin = config.pluginmanager.get_plugin("name_of_plugin") If you want to look at the names of existing plugins, use the ``--trace-config`` option. Testing plugins --------------- pytest comes with a plugin named ``pytester`` that helps you write tests for your plugin code. The plugin is disabled by default, so you will have to enable it before you can use it. You can do so by adding the following line to a ``conftest.py`` file in your testing directory: .. code-block:: python # content of conftest.py pytest_plugins = ["pytester"] Alternatively you can invoke pytest with the ``-p pytester`` command line option. This will allow you to use the :py:class:`testdir <_pytest.pytester.Testdir>` fixture for testing your plugin code. Let's demonstrate what you can do with the plugin with an example. Imagine we developed a plugin that provides a fixture ``hello`` which yields a function and we can invoke this function with one optional parameter. It will return a string value of ``Hello World!`` if we do not supply a value or ``Hello {value}!`` if we do supply a string value. .. code-block:: python # -*- coding: utf-8 -*- import pytest def pytest_addoption(parser): group = parser.getgroup("helloworld") group.addoption( "--name", action="store", dest="name", default="World", help='Default "name" for hello().', ) @pytest.fixture def hello(request): name = request.config.getoption("name") def _hello(name=None): if not name: name = request.config.getoption("name") return "Hello {name}!".format(name=name) return _hello Now the ``testdir`` fixture provides a convenient API for creating temporary ``conftest.py`` files and test files. It also allows us to run the tests and return a result object, with which we can assert the tests' outcomes. .. code-block:: python def test_hello(testdir): """Make sure that our plugin works.""" # create a temporary conftest.py file testdir.makeconftest( """ import pytest @pytest.fixture(params=[ "Brianna", "Andreas", "Floris", ]) def name(request): return request.param """ ) # create a temporary pytest test file testdir.makepyfile( """ def test_hello_default(hello): assert hello() == "Hello World!" def test_hello_name(hello, name): assert hello(name) == "Hello {0}!".format(name) """ ) # run all tests with pytest result = testdir.runpytest() # check that all 4 tests passed result.assert_outcomes(passed=4) additionally it is possible to copy examples for a example folder before running pytest on it .. code:: ini # content of pytest.ini [pytest] pytester_example_dir = . .. code:: python # content of test_example.py def test_plugin(testdir): testdir.copy_example("test_example.py") testdir.runpytest("-k", "test_example") def test_example(): pass .. code:: $ pytest =========================== test session starts ============================ platform linux -- Python 3.x.y, pytest-3.x.y, py-1.x.y, pluggy-0.x.y rootdir: $REGENDOC_TMPDIR, inifile: pytest.ini collected 2 items test_example.py .. [100%] ============================= warnings summary ============================= $REGENDOC_TMPDIR/test_example.py:4: PytestExperimentalApiWarning: testdir.copy_example is an experimental api that may change over time testdir.copy_example("test_example.py") -- Docs: https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/warnings.html =================== 2 passed, 1 warnings in 0.12 seconds =================== For more information about the result object that ``runpytest()`` returns, and the methods that it provides please check out the :py:class:`RunResult <_pytest.pytester.RunResult>` documentation. .. _`writinghooks`: Writing hook functions ====================== .. _validation: hook function validation and execution -------------------------------------- pytest calls hook functions from registered plugins for any given hook specification. Let's look at a typical hook function for the ``pytest_collection_modifyitems(session, config, items)`` hook which pytest calls after collection of all test items is completed. When we implement a ``pytest_collection_modifyitems`` function in our plugin pytest will during registration verify that you use argument names which match the specification and bail out if not. Let's look at a possible implementation: .. code-block:: python def pytest_collection_modifyitems(config, items): # called after collection is completed # you can modify the ``items`` list ... Here, ``pytest`` will pass in ``config`` (the pytest config object) and ``items`` (the list of collected test items) but will not pass in the ``session`` argument because we didn't list it in the function signature. This dynamic "pruning" of arguments allows ``pytest`` to be "future-compatible": we can introduce new hook named parameters without breaking the signatures of existing hook implementations. It is one of the reasons for the general long-lived compatibility of pytest plugins. Note that hook functions other than ``pytest_runtest_*`` are not allowed to raise exceptions. Doing so will break the pytest run. .. _firstresult: firstresult: stop at first non-None result ------------------------------------------- Most calls to ``pytest`` hooks result in a **list of results** which contains all non-None results of the called hook functions. Some hook specifications use the ``firstresult=True`` option so that the hook call only executes until the first of N registered functions returns a non-None result which is then taken as result of the overall hook call. The remaining hook functions will not be called in this case. hookwrapper: executing around other hooks ------------------------------------------------- .. currentmodule:: _pytest.core .. versionadded:: 2.7 pytest plugins can implement hook wrappers which wrap the execution of other hook implementations. A hook wrapper is a generator function which yields exactly once. When pytest invokes hooks it first executes hook wrappers and passes the same arguments as to the regular hooks. At the yield point of the hook wrapper pytest will execute the next hook implementations and return their result to the yield point in the form of a :py:class:`Result ` instance which encapsulates a result or exception info. The yield point itself will thus typically not raise exceptions (unless there are bugs). Here is an example definition of a hook wrapper:: import pytest @pytest.hookimpl(hookwrapper=True) def pytest_pyfunc_call(pyfuncitem): do_something_before_next_hook_executes() outcome = yield # outcome.excinfo may be None or a (cls, val, tb) tuple res = outcome.get_result() # will raise if outcome was exception post_process_result(res) outcome.force_result(new_res) # to override the return value to the plugin system Note that hook wrappers don't return results themselves, they merely perform tracing or other side effects around the actual hook implementations. If the result of the underlying hook is a mutable object, they may modify that result but it's probably better to avoid it. For more information, consult the `pluggy documentation `_. Hook function ordering / call example ------------------------------------- For any given hook specification there may be more than one implementation and we thus generally view ``hook`` execution as a ``1:N`` function call where ``N`` is the number of registered functions. There are ways to influence if a hook implementation comes before or after others, i.e. the position in the ``N``-sized list of functions: .. code-block:: python # Plugin 1 @pytest.hookimpl(tryfirst=True) def pytest_collection_modifyitems(items): # will execute as early as possible ... # Plugin 2 @pytest.hookimpl(trylast=True) def pytest_collection_modifyitems(items): # will execute as late as possible ... # Plugin 3 @pytest.hookimpl(hookwrapper=True) def pytest_collection_modifyitems(items): # will execute even before the tryfirst one above! outcome = yield # will execute after all non-hookwrappers executed Here is the order of execution: 1. Plugin3's pytest_collection_modifyitems called until the yield point because it is a hook wrapper. 2. Plugin1's pytest_collection_modifyitems is called because it is marked with ``tryfirst=True``. 3. Plugin2's pytest_collection_modifyitems is called because it is marked with ``trylast=True`` (but even without this mark it would come after Plugin1). 4. Plugin3's pytest_collection_modifyitems then executing the code after the yield point. The yield receives a :py:class:`Result ` instance which encapsulates the result from calling the non-wrappers. Wrappers shall not modify the result. It's possible to use ``tryfirst`` and ``trylast`` also in conjunction with ``hookwrapper=True`` in which case it will influence the ordering of hookwrappers among each other. Declaring new hooks ------------------------ .. currentmodule:: _pytest.hookspec Plugins and ``conftest.py`` files may declare new hooks that can then be implemented by other plugins in order to alter behaviour or interact with the new plugin: .. autofunction:: pytest_addhooks :noindex: Hooks are usually declared as do-nothing functions that contain only documentation describing when the hook will be called and what return values are expected. For an example, see `newhooks.py`_ from `xdist `_. .. _`newhooks.py`: https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-xdist/blob/974bd566c599dc6a9ea291838c6f226197208b46/xdist/newhooks.py Optionally using hooks from 3rd party plugins --------------------------------------------- Using new hooks from plugins as explained above might be a little tricky because of the standard :ref:`validation mechanism `: if you depend on a plugin that is not installed, validation will fail and the error message will not make much sense to your users. One approach is to defer the hook implementation to a new plugin instead of declaring the hook functions directly in your plugin module, for example:: # contents of myplugin.py class DeferPlugin(object): """Simple plugin to defer pytest-xdist hook functions.""" def pytest_testnodedown(self, node, error): """standard xdist hook function. """ def pytest_configure(config): if config.pluginmanager.hasplugin('xdist'): config.pluginmanager.register(DeferPlugin()) This has the added benefit of allowing you to conditionally install hooks depending on which plugins are installed.