This type is most prominent in `pytest.raises` and we should allow to
refer to it by a public name.
The type is not in a perfectly "exposable" state. In particular:
- The `traceback` property with type `Traceback` which is derived from
the `py.code` API and exposes a bunch more types transitively. This
stuff is *not* exported and probably won't be.
- The `getrepr` method which probably should be private.
But they're already used in the wild so no point in just hiding them
now.
The __init__ API is hidden -- the public API for this are the `from_*`
classmethods.
The prefixes make the API Reference docs (for e.g. `pytest.raises`,
`pytest.fixture`) uglier.
Being under `_pytest` is sufficient from a privacy perspective, so let's
drop them.
* Fix test_strict_and_skip
The `--strict` argument was removed in #2552, but the removal wasn't
actually correct - see #1472.
* Fix argument handling in pytest.mark.skip
See #8384
* Raise from None
* Fix test name
* retry writing pytest-of dir when invalid chars are in directory name
* add unit tests for getbasetemp() and changelog
* patch _basetemp & _given_basetemp for testing basetemp()
* Tweak changelog for #8317, tidy up comments
Similarly to #7143, at work we have a project with a custom pytest.Class
subclass, adding an additional argument to the constructor.
All from_parent implementations in pytest accept and forward *kw, except
Class (before this change) and DoctestItem - since I'm not familiar with
doctest support, I've left the latter as-is.
* Type annotation polishing for symbols around Pytester.run
Hopefully these will help document readers understand pertinent methods
and constants better.
Following up #8294
* Use NOTSET instead of object
SetupState maintains its own state, so it can store the exception
itself, instead of using the node's store, which is better avoided when
possible.
This also reduces the lifetime of the reference-cycle-inducing exception
objects which is never a bad thing.
The assertion ensures that when `addfinalizer(finalizer, node)` is
called, the node is in the stack. This then would ensure that the
finalization is actually properly executed properly during the node's
teardown. Anything else indicates something is wrong.
Previous commits fixed all of the tests which previously failed this, so
can be reenabeld now.