[DOCS] Clarify tmp_path directory location and retention (#11830)

Fixes #11789 and #11790
This commit is contained in:
faph 2024-01-18 10:21:49 +00:00 committed by GitHub
parent 7fd561e4ba
commit eefc9d47fc
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG Key ID: B5690EEEBB952194
5 changed files with 19 additions and 13 deletions

View File

@ -141,6 +141,7 @@ Evgeny Seliverstov
Fabian Sturm
Fabien Zarifian
Fabio Zadrozny
faph
Felix Hofstätter
Felix Nieuwenhuizen
Feng Ma

1
changelog/11790.doc.rst Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1 @@
Documented the retention of temporary directories created using the ``tmp_path`` fixture in more detail.

View File

@ -8,9 +8,8 @@ How to use temporary directories and files in tests
The ``tmp_path`` fixture
------------------------
You can use the ``tmp_path`` fixture which will
provide a temporary directory unique to the current test,
created in the `base temporary directory`_.
You can use the ``tmp_path`` fixture which will provide a temporary directory
unique to each test function.
``tmp_path`` is a :class:`pathlib.Path` object. Here is an example test usage:
@ -62,6 +61,11 @@ Running this would result in a passed test except for the last
FAILED test_tmp_path.py::test_create_file - assert 0
============================ 1 failed in 0.12s =============================
By default, ``pytest`` retains the temporary directory for the last 3 ``pytest``
invocations. Concurrent invocations of the same test function are supported by
configuring the base temporary directory to be unique for each concurrent
run. See `temporary directory location and retention`_ for details.
.. _`tmp_path_factory example`:
The ``tmp_path_factory`` fixture
@ -100,7 +104,7 @@ See :ref:`tmp_path_factory API <tmp_path_factory factory api>` for details.
.. _tmpdir:
The ``tmpdir`` and ``tmpdir_factory`` fixtures
---------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------
The ``tmpdir`` and ``tmpdir_factory`` fixtures are similar to ``tmp_path``
and ``tmp_path_factory``, but use/return legacy `py.path.local`_ objects
@ -124,10 +128,10 @@ See :fixture:`tmpdir <tmpdir>` :fixture:`tmpdir_factory <tmpdir_factory>`
API for details.
.. _`base temporary directory`:
.. _`temporary directory location and retention`:
The default base temporary directory
-----------------------------------------------
Temporary directory location and retention
------------------------------------------
Temporary directories are by default created as sub-directories of
the system temporary directory. The base name will be ``pytest-NUM`` where
@ -152,7 +156,7 @@ You can override the default temporary directory setting like this:
for that purpose only.
When distributing tests on the local machine using ``pytest-xdist``, care is taken to
automatically configure a basetemp directory for the sub processes such that all temporary
data lands below a single per-test run basetemp directory.
automatically configure a `basetemp` directory for the sub processes such that all temporary
data lands below a single per-test run temporary directory.
.. _`py.path.local`: https://py.readthedocs.io/en/latest/path.html

View File

@ -326,8 +326,8 @@ class LegacyTmpdirPlugin:
By default, a new base temporary directory is created each test session,
and old bases are removed after 3 sessions, to aid in debugging. If
``--basetemp`` is used then it is cleared each session. See :ref:`base
temporary directory`.
``--basetemp`` is used then it is cleared each session. See
:ref:`temporary directory location and retention`.
The returned object is a `legacy_path`_ object.

View File

@ -262,8 +262,8 @@ def tmp_path(
and old bases are removed after 3 sessions, to aid in debugging.
This behavior can be configured with :confval:`tmp_path_retention_count` and
:confval:`tmp_path_retention_policy`.
If ``--basetemp`` is used then it is cleared each session. See :ref:`base
temporary directory`.
If ``--basetemp`` is used then it is cleared each session. See
:ref:`temporary directory location and retention`.
The returned object is a :class:`pathlib.Path` object.
"""