* added test case in testing/python/approx.py based on test case provided by reporter in issue #12114
* test cases pass for pytest testing/python/approx.py
* expanded the type annotation to include objects which may cast to a array and renamed other_side to other_side_as_array and asserted that it is not none
and also fixes a regression in pytest 8.0.0 where `setup_method` crashes
if the class has static or class method tests.
It is allowed to have a test class with static/class methods which
request non-static/class method fixtures (including `setup_method`
xunit-fixture). I take it as a given that we need to support this
somewhat odd scenario (stdlib unittest also supports it).
This raises a question -- when a staticmethod test requests a bound
fixture, what is that fixture's `self`?
stdlib unittest says - a fresh instance for the test.
Previously, pytest said - some instance that is shared by all
static/class methods. This is definitely broken since it breaks test
isolation.
Change pytest to behave like stdlib unittest here.
In practice, this means stopping to rely on `self.obj.__self__` to get
to the instance from the test function's binding. This doesn't work
because staticmethods are not bound to anything.
Instead, keep the instance explicitly and use that.
BTW, I think this will allow us to change `Class`'s fixture collection
(`parsefactories`) to happen on the class itself instead of a class
instance, allowing us to avoid one class instantiation. But needs more
work.
Fixes#12065.
- Separate the requesting from the requested.
- Avoid the term "factory", I think most people don't distinguish
between "fixture" and "fixture function" (i.e. "factory") and would
find the term "factory" unfamiliar.
Previously, if more than one fixture finalizer raised, only the first
was reported, and the other errors were lost.
Use an exception group to report them all. This is similar to the change
we made in node teardowns (in `SetupState`).
Dicts these days preserve order, so the sort is no longer needed to
achieve determinism.
As shown by the `test_dynamic_parametrized_ordering` test, this can
change the ordering of items, but only in equivalent ways (same number
of setups/teardowns per scope), it will just respect the user's given
ordering better (hence `vxlan` items now ordered before `vlan` items
compared to the previous ordering).
* Improve error message when using @pytest.fixture twice
While obvious in hindsight, this error message confused me. I thought my fixture
function was used in a test function twice, since the wording is ambiguous.
Also, the error does not tell me *which* function is the culprit.
Finally, this adds a test, which wasn't done in
cfd16d0dac where this was originally implemented.
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
---------
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
ruff is faster and handle everything we had prior.
isort configuration done based on the indication from
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/4670, previousely based on
reorder-python-import (#11896)
flake8-docstrings was a wrapper around pydocstyle (now archived) that
explicitly asks to use ruff in https://github.com/PyCQA/pydocstyle/pull/658.
flake8-typing-import is useful mainly for project that support python 3.7
and the one useful check will be implemented in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/2302
We need to keep blacken-doc because ruff does not handle detection
of python code inside .md and .rst. The direct link to the repo is
now used to avoid a redirection.
Manual fixes:
- Lines that became too long
- % formatting that was not done automatically
- type: ignore that were moved around
- noqa of hard to fix issues (UP031 generally)
- fmt: off and fmt: on that is not really identical
between black and ruff
- autofix re-order in pre-commit from faster to slower
Co-authored-by: Ran Benita <ran@unusedvar.com>
Change our mypy configuration to disallow untyped defs by default, which ensures *new* files added to the code base are fully typed.
To avoid having to type-annotate everything now, add `# mypy: allow-untyped-defs` to files which are not fully type annotated yet.
As we fully type annotate those modules, we can then just remove that directive from the top.
Refs #11662.
--- Problem
Each fixture definition has a "visibility", the `FixtureDef.baseid`
attribute. This is nodeid-like string. When a certain `node` requests a
certain fixture name, we match node's nodeid against the fixture
definitions with this name.
The matching currently happens on the *textual* representation of the
nodeid - we split `node.nodeid` to its "parent nodeids" and then check
if the fixture's `baseid` is in there.
While this has worked so far, we really should try to avoid textual
manipulation of nodeids as much as possible. It has also caused problem
in an odd case of a `Package` in the root directory: the `Package` gets
nodeid `.`, while a `Module` in it gets nodeid `test_module.py`. And
textually, `.` is not a parent of `test_module.py`.
--- Solution
Avoid this entirely by just checking the node hierarchy itself. This is
made possible by the fact that we now have proper `Directory` nodes
(`Dir` or `Package`) for the entire hierarchy.
Also do the same for `_getautousenames` which is a similar deal.
The `iterparentnodeids` function is no longer used and is removed.
Previously the error report would have all sections glued together:
- The assertion representation
- The error explanation
- The full diff
This makes it hard to see at a glance where which one starts and ends.
One of the representation (dataclasses, tuples, attrs) does display a
newlines at the start already.
Let's add a newlines before the error explanation and before the full
diff, so we get an easier to read report.
This has one disadvantage: we get one line less in the least verbose
mode, where the output gets truncated.
To remove fixtures.py::add_funcargs_pseudo_fixture_def and add its logic
i.e. registering funcargs as params and making corresponding fixturedefs,
right to Metafunc.parametrize in which parametrization takes place.
To remove funcargs from metafunc attributes as we populate metafunc
params and make pseudo fixturedefs simultaneously and there's no need to
keep funcargs separately.
Previously, when assigning a scope for a fully-indirect parameter set,
when there are multiple fixturedefs for a param (i.e. same-name fixture
chain), the highest scope was used, but it should be the lowest scope,
since that's the effective scope of the fixture.
Previously, the `_getconftestmodules` function was used both to load
conftest modules for a path (during `pytest_load_initial_conftests`),
and to retrieve conftest modules for a path (during hook dispatch and
for fetching `collect_ignore`). This made things muddy - it is usually
nicer to have clear separation between "command" and "query" functions,
when they occur in separate phases.
So split into "load" and "get".
Currently, `gethookproxy` still loads conftest itself. I hope to change
this in the future.
This test makes clear the need for the `_check_scope()` call in the
`pytest_setup_fixture` impl in fixtures.py, which otherwise seems
redundant with the one in `_compute_fixture_value`.
Dict comparsion in the ApproxMapping class did not check if values were None before attempting to subtract for max_abs_diff stat, which was throwing an TypeError instead of being handled by pytest error assertion. Check for None has been added before these calculations, so that None will properly show as Obtained/Expected in pytest assert message
TracebackEntry needs the excinfo for the `__tracebackhide__ = callback`
functionality, where `callback` accepts the excinfo.
Currently it achieves this by storing a weakref to the excinfo which
created it. I think this is not great, mixing layers and bloating the
objects.
Instead, have `ishidden` (and transitively, `Traceback.filter()`) take
the excinfo as a parameter.
Since pytest now requires Python>=3.7, we can use the stdlib attrs
clone, dataclasses, instead of the OG package.
attrs is still somewhat nicer than dataclasses and has some extra
functionality, but for pytest usage there's not really a justification
IMO to impose the extra dependency on users when a standard alternative
exists.