* porting pytest.skip() to use reason=, adding tests
* avoid adding **kwargs, it breaks other functionality, use optional msg= instead
* deprecation of `pytest.fail(msg=...)`
* fix bug with not capturing the returned reason value
* pass reason= in acceptance async tests instead of msg=
* finalising deprecations of `msg` in `pytest.skip()` and `pytest.fail()`
* Update doc/en/deprecations.rst
Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
* Update doc/en/deprecations.rst
Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
* fix failing test after upstream merge
* adding deprecation to `pytest.exit(msg=...)`
* add docs for pytest.exit deprecations
* finalising deprecation of msg for pytest.skip, pytest.exit and pytest.fail
* hold a reference to the Scope instance to please mypy
Co-authored-by: Bruno Oliveira <nicoddemus@gmail.com>
The current PDF docs attempt to format the list of all plugins as a
table, without any word-wrapping of the plugin description. That results
in almost all the information getting cut off. This PR formats the same
information into more of a paragraph format for the PDF, with nothing
cut off.
Fixes#451
Export `HookRecorder`, `RecordedHookCall` (originally `ParsedCall`),
`RunResult`, `LineMatcher`.
These types are reachable through `Pytester` and so should be public
themselves for typing and other purposes.
The name `ParsedCall` I think is too generic under the `pytest`
namespace, so rename it to `RecordedHookCall`.
The `HookRecorder`'s constructor is made private -- it should only be
constructed by `Pytester`.
`LineMatcher` and `RunResult` are exported as is - no private and no
rename, since they're being used.
All of the classes are made final as they are not designed for
subclassing.
A new plugin has this summary:
Continiously runs pytest on changes in *.py files
The `*` is interpreted as a special character and fails the CI.
Add some rudimentary escaping to hopefully prevent this.
The PDF documentation on readthedocs was missing the figures in the
fixtures reference chapter. This PR uses a Sphinx plugin that
automatically converts the checked-in SVG files to the PDF input files
that LaTeX requires.
The SVG-to-PDF conversion is done by inkscape, which gave the best
conversion among the tools I tried. However, it [does not yet
understand][href-bug] that you can write a plain `href` instead of
`xlink:href` in svg files, so I’ve had to edit the SVG files
accordingly.
[href-bug]: https://github.com/TeX-Live/luatex.git