337 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
337 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _`assert`:
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How to write and report assertions in tests
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==================================================
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.. _`assert with the assert statement`:
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Asserting with the ``assert`` statement
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---------------------------------------------------------
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``pytest`` allows you to use the standard Python ``assert`` for verifying
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expectations and values in Python tests. For example, you can write the
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following:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of test_assert1.py
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def f():
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return 3
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def test_function():
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assert f() == 4
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to assert that your function returns a certain value. If this assertion fails
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you will see the return value of the function call:
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.. code-block:: pytest
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$ pytest test_assert1.py
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=========================== test session starts ============================
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platform linux -- Python 3.x.y, pytest-7.x.y, pluggy-1.x.y
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rootdir: /home/sweet/project
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collected 1 item
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test_assert1.py F [100%]
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================================= FAILURES =================================
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______________________________ test_function _______________________________
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def test_function():
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> assert f() == 4
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E assert 3 == 4
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E + where 3 = f()
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test_assert1.py:6: AssertionError
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========================= short test summary info ==========================
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FAILED test_assert1.py::test_function - assert 3 == 4
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============================ 1 failed in 0.12s =============================
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``pytest`` has support for showing the values of the most common subexpressions
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including calls, attributes, comparisons, and binary and unary
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operators. (See :ref:`tbreportdemo`). This allows you to use the
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idiomatic python constructs without boilerplate code while not losing
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introspection information.
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However, if you specify a message with the assertion like this:
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.. code-block:: python
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assert a % 2 == 0, "value was odd, should be even"
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then no assertion introspection takes places at all and the message
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will be simply shown in the traceback.
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See :ref:`assert-details` for more information on assertion introspection.
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.. _`assertraises`:
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Assertions about expected exceptions
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------------------------------------------
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In order to write assertions about raised exceptions, you can use
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:func:`pytest.raises` as a context manager like this:
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.. code-block:: python
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import pytest
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def test_zero_division():
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with pytest.raises(ZeroDivisionError):
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1 / 0
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and if you need to have access to the actual exception info you may use:
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.. code-block:: python
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def test_recursion_depth():
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with pytest.raises(RuntimeError) as excinfo:
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def f():
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f()
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f()
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assert "maximum recursion" in str(excinfo.value)
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``excinfo`` is an :class:`~pytest.ExceptionInfo` instance, which is a wrapper around
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the actual exception raised. The main attributes of interest are
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``.type``, ``.value`` and ``.traceback``.
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You can pass a ``match`` keyword parameter to the context-manager to test
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that a regular expression matches on the string representation of an exception
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(similar to the ``TestCase.assertRaisesRegex`` method from ``unittest``):
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.. code-block:: python
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import pytest
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def myfunc():
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raise ValueError("Exception 123 raised")
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def test_match():
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with pytest.raises(ValueError, match=r".* 123 .*"):
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myfunc()
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The regexp parameter of the ``match`` method is matched with the ``re.search``
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function, so in the above example ``match='123'`` would have worked as
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well.
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There's an alternate form of the :func:`pytest.raises` function where you pass
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a function that will be executed with the given ``*args`` and ``**kwargs`` and
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assert that the given exception is raised:
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.. code-block:: python
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pytest.raises(ExpectedException, func, *args, **kwargs)
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The reporter will provide you with helpful output in case of failures such as *no
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exception* or *wrong exception*.
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Note that it is also possible to specify a "raises" argument to
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``pytest.mark.xfail``, which checks that the test is failing in a more
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specific way than just having any exception raised:
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.. code-block:: python
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@pytest.mark.xfail(raises=IndexError)
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def test_f():
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f()
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Using :func:`pytest.raises` is likely to be better for cases where you are
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testing exceptions your own code is deliberately raising, whereas using
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``@pytest.mark.xfail`` with a check function is probably better for something
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like documenting unfixed bugs (where the test describes what "should" happen)
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or bugs in dependencies.
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.. _`assertwarns`:
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Assertions about expected warnings
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-----------------------------------------
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You can check that code raises a particular warning using
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:ref:`pytest.warns <warns>`.
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.. _newreport:
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Making use of context-sensitive comparisons
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-------------------------------------------------
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``pytest`` has rich support for providing context-sensitive information
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when it encounters comparisons. For example:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of test_assert2.py
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def test_set_comparison():
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set1 = set("1308")
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set2 = set("8035")
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assert set1 == set2
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if you run this module:
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.. code-block:: pytest
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$ pytest test_assert2.py
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=========================== test session starts ============================
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platform linux -- Python 3.x.y, pytest-7.x.y, pluggy-1.x.y
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rootdir: /home/sweet/project
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collected 1 item
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test_assert2.py F [100%]
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================================= FAILURES =================================
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___________________________ test_set_comparison ____________________________
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def test_set_comparison():
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set1 = set("1308")
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set2 = set("8035")
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> assert set1 == set2
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E AssertionError: assert {'0', '1', '3', '8'} == {'0', '3', '5', '8'}
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E Extra items in the left set:
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E '1'
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E Extra items in the right set:
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E '5'
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E Use -v to get more diff
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test_assert2.py:4: AssertionError
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========================= short test summary info ==========================
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FAILED test_assert2.py::test_set_comparison - AssertionError: assert {'0'...
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============================ 1 failed in 0.12s =============================
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Special comparisons are done for a number of cases:
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* comparing long strings: a context diff is shown
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* comparing long sequences: first failing indices
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* comparing dicts: different entries
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See the :ref:`reporting demo <tbreportdemo>` for many more examples.
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Defining your own explanation for failed assertions
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---------------------------------------------------
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It is possible to add your own detailed explanations by implementing
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the ``pytest_assertrepr_compare`` hook.
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.. autofunction:: _pytest.hookspec.pytest_assertrepr_compare
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:noindex:
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As an example consider adding the following hook in a :ref:`conftest.py <conftest.py>`
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file which provides an alternative explanation for ``Foo`` objects:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of conftest.py
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from test_foocompare import Foo
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def pytest_assertrepr_compare(op, left, right):
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if isinstance(left, Foo) and isinstance(right, Foo) and op == "==":
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return [
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"Comparing Foo instances:",
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f" vals: {left.val} != {right.val}",
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]
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now, given this test module:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of test_foocompare.py
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class Foo:
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def __init__(self, val):
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self.val = val
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def __eq__(self, other):
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return self.val == other.val
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def test_compare():
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f1 = Foo(1)
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f2 = Foo(2)
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assert f1 == f2
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you can run the test module and get the custom output defined in
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the conftest file:
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.. code-block:: pytest
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$ pytest -q test_foocompare.py
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F [100%]
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================================= FAILURES =================================
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_______________________________ test_compare _______________________________
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def test_compare():
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f1 = Foo(1)
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f2 = Foo(2)
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> assert f1 == f2
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E assert Comparing Foo instances:
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E vals: 1 != 2
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test_foocompare.py:12: AssertionError
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========================= short test summary info ==========================
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FAILED test_foocompare.py::test_compare - assert Comparing Foo instances:
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1 failed in 0.12s
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.. _assert-details:
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.. _`assert introspection`:
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Assertion introspection details
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-------------------------------
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Reporting details about a failing assertion is achieved by rewriting assert
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statements before they are run. Rewritten assert statements put introspection
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information into the assertion failure message. ``pytest`` only rewrites test
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modules directly discovered by its test collection process, so **asserts in
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supporting modules which are not themselves test modules will not be rewritten**.
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You can manually enable assertion rewriting for an imported module by calling
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:ref:`register_assert_rewrite <assertion-rewriting>`
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before you import it (a good place to do that is in your root ``conftest.py``).
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For further information, Benjamin Peterson wrote up `Behind the scenes of pytest's new assertion rewriting <http://pybites.blogspot.com/2011/07/behind-scenes-of-pytests-new-assertion.html>`_.
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Assertion rewriting caches files on disk
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``pytest`` will write back the rewritten modules to disk for caching. You can disable
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this behavior (for example to avoid leaving stale ``.pyc`` files around in projects that
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move files around a lot) by adding this to the top of your ``conftest.py`` file:
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.. code-block:: python
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import sys
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sys.dont_write_bytecode = True
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Note that you still get the benefits of assertion introspection, the only change is that
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the ``.pyc`` files won't be cached on disk.
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Additionally, rewriting will silently skip caching if it cannot write new ``.pyc`` files,
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i.e. in a read-only filesystem or a zipfile.
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Disabling assert rewriting
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``pytest`` rewrites test modules on import by using an import
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hook to write new ``pyc`` files. Most of the time this works transparently.
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However, if you are working with the import machinery yourself, the import hook may
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interfere.
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If this is the case you have two options:
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* Disable rewriting for a specific module by adding the string
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``PYTEST_DONT_REWRITE`` to its docstring.
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* Disable rewriting for all modules by using ``--assert=plain``.
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