test_ok2/doc/en/reference/customize.rst

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Configuration
=============
Command line options and configuration file settings
-----------------------------------------------------------------
You can get help on command line options and values in INI-style
configurations files by using the general help option:
.. code-block:: bash
pytest -h # prints options _and_ config file settings
This will display command line and configuration file settings
which were registered by installed plugins.
.. _`config file formats`:
Configuration file formats
--------------------------
Many :ref:`pytest settings <ini options ref>` can be set in a *configuration file*, which
by convention resides on the root of your repository or in your
tests folder.
A quick example of the configuration files supported by pytest:
pytest.ini
~~~~~~~~~~
``pytest.ini`` files take precedence over other files, even when empty.
.. code-block:: ini
# pytest.ini
[pytest]
minversion = 6.0
addopts = -ra -q
testpaths =
tests
integration
pyproject.toml
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
.. versionadded:: 6.0
``pyproject.toml`` are considered for configuration when they contain a ``tool.pytest.ini_options`` table.
.. code-block:: toml
# pyproject.toml
[tool.pytest.ini_options]
minversion = "6.0"
addopts = "-ra -q"
testpaths = [
"tests",
"integration",
]
.. note::
One might wonder why ``[tool.pytest.ini_options]`` instead of ``[tool.pytest]`` as is the
case with other tools.
The reason is that the pytest team intends to fully utilize the rich TOML data format
for configuration in the future, reserving the ``[tool.pytest]`` table for that.
The ``ini_options`` table is being used, for now, as a bridge between the existing
``.ini`` configuration system and the future configuration format.
tox.ini
~~~~~~~
``tox.ini`` files are the configuration files of the `tox <https://tox.readthedocs.io>`__ project,
and can also be used to hold pytest configuration if they have a ``[pytest]`` section.
.. code-block:: ini
# tox.ini
[pytest]
minversion = 6.0
addopts = -ra -q
testpaths =
tests
integration
setup.cfg
~~~~~~~~~
``setup.cfg`` files are general purpose configuration files, used originally by :doc:`distutils <distutils/configfile>`, and can also be used to hold pytest configuration
if they have a ``[tool:pytest]`` section.
.. code-block:: ini
# setup.cfg
[tool:pytest]
minversion = 6.0
addopts = -ra -q
testpaths =
tests
integration
.. warning::
Usage of ``setup.cfg`` is not recommended unless for very simple use cases. ``.cfg``
files use a different parser than ``pytest.ini`` and ``tox.ini`` which might cause hard to track
down problems.
When possible, it is recommended to use the latter files, or ``pyproject.toml``, to hold your
pytest configuration.
.. _rootdir:
.. _configfiles:
Initialization: determining rootdir and configfile
--------------------------------------------------
pytest determines a ``rootdir`` for each test run which depends on
the command line arguments (specified test files, paths) and on
the existence of configuration files. The determined ``rootdir`` and ``configfile`` are
printed as part of the pytest header during startup.
Here's a summary what ``pytest`` uses ``rootdir`` for:
* Construct *nodeids* during collection; each test is assigned
a unique *nodeid* which is rooted at the ``rootdir`` and takes into account
the full path, class name, function name and parametrization (if any).
* Is used by plugins as a stable location to store project/test run specific information;
for example, the internal :ref:`cache <cache>` plugin creates a ``.pytest_cache`` subdirectory
in ``rootdir`` to store its cross-test run state.
``rootdir`` is **NOT** used to modify ``sys.path``/``PYTHONPATH`` or
influence how modules are imported. See :ref:`pythonpath` for more details.
The ``--rootdir=path`` command-line option can be used to force a specific directory.
Note that contrary to other command-line options, ``--rootdir`` cannot be used with
:confval:`addopts` inside ``pytest.ini`` because the ``rootdir`` is used to *find* ``pytest.ini``
already.
Finding the ``rootdir``
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here is the algorithm which finds the rootdir from ``args``:
- If ``-c`` is passed in the command-line, use that as configuration file, and its directory as ``rootdir``.
- Determine the common ancestor directory for the specified ``args`` that are
recognised as paths that exist in the file system. If no such paths are
found, the common ancestor directory is set to the current working directory.
- Look for ``pytest.ini``, ``pyproject.toml``, ``tox.ini``, and ``setup.cfg`` files in the ancestor
directory and upwards. If one is matched, it becomes the ``configfile`` and its
directory becomes the ``rootdir``.
- If no configuration file was found, look for ``setup.py`` upwards from the common
ancestor directory to determine the ``rootdir``.
- If no ``setup.py`` was found, look for ``pytest.ini``, ``pyproject.toml``, ``tox.ini``, and
``setup.cfg`` in each of the specified ``args`` and upwards. If one is
matched, it becomes the ``configfile`` and its directory becomes the ``rootdir``.
- If no ``configfile`` was found and no configuration argument is passed, use the already determined common ancestor as root
directory. This allows the use of pytest in structures that are not part of
a package and don't have any particular configuration file.
If no ``args`` are given, pytest collects test below the current working
directory and also starts determining the ``rootdir`` from there.
Files will only be matched for configuration if:
* ``pytest.ini``: will always match and take precedence, even if empty.
* ``pyproject.toml``: contains a ``[tool.pytest.ini_options]`` table.
* ``tox.ini``: contains a ``[pytest]`` section.
* ``setup.cfg``: contains a ``[tool:pytest]`` section.
The files are considered in the order above. Options from multiple ``configfiles`` candidates
are never merged - the first match wins.
The :class:`Config <pytest.Config>` object (accessible via hooks or through the :fixture:`pytestconfig` fixture)
will subsequently carry these attributes:
- :attr:`config.rootpath <pytest.Config.rootpath>`: the determined root directory, guaranteed to exist.
- :attr:`config.inipath <pytest.Config.inipath>`: the determined ``configfile``, may be ``None``
(it is named ``inipath`` for historical reasons).
.. versionadded:: 6.1
The ``config.rootpath`` and ``config.inipath`` properties. They are :class:`pathlib.Path`
versions of the older ``config.rootdir`` and ``config.inifile``, which have type
``py.path.local``, and still exist for backward compatibility.
The ``rootdir`` is used as a reference directory for constructing test
addresses ("nodeids") and can be used also by plugins for storing
per-testrun information.
Example:
.. code-block:: bash
pytest path/to/testdir path/other/
will determine the common ancestor as ``path`` and then
check for configuration files as follows:
.. code-block:: text
# first look for pytest.ini files
path/pytest.ini
path/pyproject.toml # must contain a [tool.pytest.ini_options] table to match
path/tox.ini # must contain [pytest] section to match
path/setup.cfg # must contain [tool:pytest] section to match
pytest.ini
... # all the way up to the root
# now look for setup.py
path/setup.py
setup.py
... # all the way up to the root
.. warning::
Custom pytest plugin commandline arguments may include a path, as in
``pytest --log-output ../../test.log args``. Then ``args`` is mandatory,
otherwise pytest uses the folder of test.log for rootdir determination
(see also `issue 1435 <https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/issues/1435>`_).
A dot ``.`` for referencing to the current working directory is also
possible.
.. _`how to change command line options defaults`:
.. _`adding default options`:
Builtin configuration file options
----------------------------------------------
For the full list of options consult the :ref:`reference documentation <ini options ref>`.
Syntax highlighting theme customization
---------------------------------------
The syntax highlighting themes used by pytest can be customized using two environment variables:
- :envvar:`PYTEST_THEME` sets a `pygment style <https://pygments.org/docs/styles/>`_ to use.
- :envvar:`PYTEST_THEME_MODE` sets this style to *light* or *dark*.