269 lines
8.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
269 lines
8.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Doctest integration for modules and test files
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=========================================================
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By default all files matching the ``test*.txt`` pattern will
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be run through the python standard ``doctest`` module. You
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can change the pattern by issuing:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest --doctest-glob="*.rst"
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on the command line. ``--doctest-glob`` can be given multiple times in the command-line.
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If you then have a text file like this:
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.. code-block:: text
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# content of test_example.txt
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hello this is a doctest
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>>> x = 3
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>>> x
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3
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then you can just invoke ``pytest`` directly:
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.. code-block:: pytest
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$ pytest
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=========================== test session starts ============================
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platform linux -- Python 3.x.y, pytest-6.x.y, py-1.x.y, pluggy-0.x.y
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cachedir: $PYTHON_PREFIX/.pytest_cache
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rootdir: $REGENDOC_TMPDIR
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collected 1 item
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test_example.txt . [100%]
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============================ 1 passed in 0.12s =============================
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By default, pytest will collect ``test*.txt`` files looking for doctest directives, but you
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can pass additional globs using the ``--doctest-glob`` option (multi-allowed).
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In addition to text files, you can also execute doctests directly from docstrings of your classes
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and functions, including from test modules:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of mymodule.py
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def something():
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""" a doctest in a docstring
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>>> something()
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42
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"""
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return 42
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.. code-block:: bash
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$ pytest --doctest-modules
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=========================== test session starts ============================
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platform linux -- Python 3.x.y, pytest-6.x.y, py-1.x.y, pluggy-0.x.y
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cachedir: $PYTHON_PREFIX/.pytest_cache
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rootdir: $REGENDOC_TMPDIR
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collected 2 items
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mymodule.py . [ 50%]
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test_example.txt . [100%]
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============================ 2 passed in 0.12s =============================
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You can make these changes permanent in your project by
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putting them into a pytest.ini file like this:
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.. code-block:: ini
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# content of pytest.ini
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[pytest]
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addopts = --doctest-modules
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.. note::
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The builtin pytest doctest supports only ``doctest`` blocks, but if you are looking
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for more advanced checking over *all* your documentation,
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including doctests, ``.. codeblock:: python`` Sphinx directive support,
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and any other examples your documentation may include, you may wish to
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consider `Sybil <https://sybil.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.html>`__.
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It provides pytest integration out of the box.
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Encoding
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--------
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The default encoding is **UTF-8**, but you can specify the encoding
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that will be used for those doctest files using the
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``doctest_encoding`` ini option:
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.. code-block:: ini
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# content of pytest.ini
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[pytest]
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doctest_encoding = latin1
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Using 'doctest' options
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-----------------------
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Python's standard ``doctest`` module provides some `options <https://docs.python.org/3/library/doctest.html#option-flags>`__
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to configure the strictness of doctest tests. In pytest, you can enable those flags using the
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configuration file.
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For example, to make pytest ignore trailing whitespaces and ignore
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lengthy exception stack traces you can just write:
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.. code-block:: ini
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[pytest]
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doctest_optionflags= NORMALIZE_WHITESPACE IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
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Alternatively, options can be enabled by an inline comment in the doc test
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itself:
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.. code-block:: rst
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>>> something_that_raises() # doctest: +IGNORE_EXCEPTION_DETAIL
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Traceback (most recent call last):
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ValueError: ...
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pytest also introduces new options:
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* ``ALLOW_UNICODE``: when enabled, the ``u`` prefix is stripped from unicode
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strings in expected doctest output. This allows doctests to run in Python 2
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and Python 3 unchanged.
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* ``ALLOW_BYTES``: similarly, the ``b`` prefix is stripped from byte strings
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in expected doctest output.
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* ``NUMBER``: when enabled, floating-point numbers only need to match as far as
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the precision you have written in the expected doctest output. For example,
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the following output would only need to match to 2 decimal places::
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>>> math.pi
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3.14
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If you wrote ``3.1416`` then the actual output would need to match to 4
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decimal places; and so on.
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This avoids false positives caused by limited floating-point precision, like
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this::
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Expected:
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0.233
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Got:
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0.23300000000000001
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``NUMBER`` also supports lists of floating-point numbers -- in fact, it
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matches floating-point numbers appearing anywhere in the output, even inside
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a string! This means that it may not be appropriate to enable globally in
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``doctest_optionflags`` in your configuration file.
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.. versionadded:: 5.1
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Continue on failure
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-------------------
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By default, pytest would report only the first failure for a given doctest. If
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you want to continue the test even when you have failures, do:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-continue-on-failure
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Output format
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-------------
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You can change the diff output format on failure for your doctests
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by using one of standard doctest modules format in options
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(see :data:`python:doctest.REPORT_UDIFF`, :data:`python:doctest.REPORT_CDIFF`,
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:data:`python:doctest.REPORT_NDIFF`, :data:`python:doctest.REPORT_ONLY_FIRST_FAILURE`):
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-report none
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-report udiff
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-report cdiff
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-report ndiff
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pytest --doctest-modules --doctest-report only_first_failure
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pytest-specific features
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------------------------
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Some features are provided to make writing doctests easier or with better integration with
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your existing test suite. Keep in mind however that by using those features you will make
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your doctests incompatible with the standard ``doctests`` module.
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Using fixtures
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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It is possible to use fixtures using the ``getfixture`` helper:
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.. code-block:: text
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# content of example.rst
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>>> tmp = getfixture('tmpdir')
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>>> ...
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>>>
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Note that the fixture needs to be defined in a place visible by pytest, for example a `conftest.py`
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file or plugin; normal python files containing docstrings are not normally scanned for fixtures
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unless explicitly configured by :confval:`python_files`.
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Also, the :ref:`usefixtures <usefixtures>` mark and fixtures marked as :ref:`autouse <autouse>` are supported
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when executing text doctest files.
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.. _`doctest_namespace`:
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'doctest_namespace' fixture
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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The ``doctest_namespace`` fixture can be used to inject items into the
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namespace in which your doctests run. It is intended to be used within
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your own fixtures to provide the tests that use them with context.
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``doctest_namespace`` is a standard ``dict`` object into which you
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place the objects you want to appear in the doctest namespace:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of conftest.py
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import numpy
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@pytest.fixture(autouse=True)
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def add_np(doctest_namespace):
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doctest_namespace["np"] = numpy
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which can then be used in your doctests directly:
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.. code-block:: python
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# content of numpy.py
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def arange():
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"""
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>>> a = np.arange(10)
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>>> len(a)
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10
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"""
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pass
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Note that like the normal ``conftest.py``, the fixtures are discovered in the directory tree conftest is in.
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Meaning that if you put your doctest with your source code, the relevant conftest.py needs to be in the same directory tree.
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Fixtures will not be discovered in a sibling directory tree!
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Skipping tests dynamically
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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.. versionadded:: 4.4
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You can use ``pytest.skip`` to dynamically skip doctests. For example:
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.. code-block:: text
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>>> import sys, pytest
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>>> if sys.platform.startswith('win'):
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... pytest.skip('this doctest does not work on Windows')
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...
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