- node.warn() for a node-specific warning
- config.warn() for a global non-node specific warning
Each warning is accompanied by a "warning number" so that we can later
introduce mechanisms for surpressing them.
Each warning will trigger a call to pytest_report_warn(number, node, message)
which is by default implemented by the TerminalReporter which introduces
a new option "-rw" to show details about warnings.
If the compared text was in bytes and not actually valid text
(i.e. could not be encoded to text/unicode using the default encoding)
then the assertrepr would fail with an EncodingError. This ensures
that the internal string is always valid unicode, converting any bytes
safely to valid unicode. This is done using repr() which then needs
post-processing to fix the encompassing quotes and un-escape newlines.
This fixes issue 429.
Made it clearer that clearing such references is not mandatory and is only an
optional step which may help the Python interpreter speed up its garbage
collection.
--HG--
branch : document_ExceptionInfo_ref_cycle
pytest.raises() returns an ExceptionInfo object which, if a local reference is
made to it, forms a reference cycle:
ExceptionInfo
--> exception
--> stack frame raising the exception
--> current stack frame
--> current local variables
--> Exception Info
Such a reference cycle would then prevent any local variables in the current
stack frame, or any of its child stack frames involved in the same reference
cycle, from being garbage collected until the next reference cycle garbage
collection phase. This unnecessarily increases the program's memory footprint
and potentially slows it down.
This situation is based on a similar one described in the official 'try'
statement Python documentation for locally stored exception references.
--HG--
branch : document_ExceptionInfo_ref_cycle
When a MarkDecorator instance is called it does the following:
1. If called with a single class as its only positional argument and no
additional keyword arguments, it attaches itself to the class so it gets
applied automatically to all test cases found in that class.
2. If called with a single function as its only positional argument and no
additional keyword arguments, it attaches a MarkInfo object to the
function, containing all the arguments already stored internally in the
MarkDecorator.
3. When called in any other case, it performs a 'fake construction' call, i.e.
it returns a new MarkDecorator instance with the original MarkDecorator's
content updated with the arguments passed to this call.
When Python applies a function decorator it always passes the target class/
function to the decorator as its positional argument with no additional
positional or keyword arguments. However, when MarkDecorator was deciding
whether it was being called to decorate a target function/class (cases 1. & 2.
as documented above) or to return an updated MarkDecorator (case 3. as
documented above), it only checked that it received a single callable positional
argument and did not take into consideration whether additional keyword
arguments were being passed in as well.
With this change, it is now possible to create a pytest mark storing a function/
class parameter passed as its only positional argument and accompanied by one or
more additional keyword arguments. Before, it was only possible to do so if the
function/class parameter argument was accompanied by at least one other
positional argument.
Added a related unit test.
Updated MarkDecorator doc-string.
The only remaining 'py.test' references are:
* those referring to the 'py.test' executable
* those in code explicitly testing py.test/pytest module compatibility
* those in old CHANGES documentation
* those in documentation generated based on external data
* those in seemingly unfinished & unmaintained Japanese documentation
Minor stylistic changes and typo corrections made to documentation next to
several applied py.test --> pytest content changes.