157 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
157 lines
5.4 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _how-to-handle-failures:
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How to handle test failures
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=============================
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.. _maxfail:
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Stopping after the first (or N) failures
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---------------------------------------------------
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To stop the testing process after the first (N) failures:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest -x # stop after first failure
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pytest --maxfail=2 # stop after two failures
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.. _pdb-option:
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Using :doc:`python:library/pdb` with pytest
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-------------------------------------------
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Dropping to :doc:`pdb <python:library/pdb>` on failures
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Python comes with a builtin Python debugger called :doc:`pdb <python:library/pdb>`. ``pytest``
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allows one to drop into the :doc:`pdb <python:library/pdb>` prompt via a command line option:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest --pdb
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This will invoke the Python debugger on every failure (or KeyboardInterrupt).
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Often you might only want to do this for the first failing test to understand
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a certain failure situation:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest -x --pdb # drop to PDB on first failure, then end test session
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pytest --pdb --maxfail=3 # drop to PDB for first three failures
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Note that on any failure the exception information is stored on
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``sys.last_value``, ``sys.last_type`` and ``sys.last_traceback``. In
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interactive use, this allows one to drop into postmortem debugging with
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any debug tool. One can also manually access the exception information,
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for example::
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>>> import sys
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>>> sys.last_traceback.tb_lineno
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42
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>>> sys.last_value
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AssertionError('assert result == "ok"',)
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.. _trace-option:
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Dropping to :doc:`pdb <python:library/pdb>` at the start of a test
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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``pytest`` allows one to drop into the :doc:`pdb <python:library/pdb>` prompt immediately at the start of each test via a command line option:
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.. code-block:: bash
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pytest --trace
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This will invoke the Python debugger at the start of every test.
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.. _breakpoints:
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Setting breakpoints
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.. versionadded: 2.4.0
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To set a breakpoint in your code use the native Python ``import pdb;pdb.set_trace()`` call
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in your code and pytest automatically disables its output capture for that test:
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* Output capture in other tests is not affected.
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* Any prior test output that has already been captured and will be processed as
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such.
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* Output capture gets resumed when ending the debugger session (via the
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``continue`` command).
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.. _`breakpoint-builtin`:
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Using the builtin breakpoint function
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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Python 3.7 introduces a builtin ``breakpoint()`` function.
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Pytest supports the use of ``breakpoint()`` with the following behaviours:
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- When ``breakpoint()`` is called and ``PYTHONBREAKPOINT`` is set to the default value, pytest will use the custom internal PDB trace UI instead of the system default ``Pdb``.
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- When tests are complete, the system will default back to the system ``Pdb`` trace UI.
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- With ``--pdb`` passed to pytest, the custom internal Pdb trace UI is used with both ``breakpoint()`` and failed tests/unhandled exceptions.
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- ``--pdbcls`` can be used to specify a custom debugger class.
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.. _faulthandler:
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Fault Handler
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-------------
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.. versionadded:: 5.0
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The :mod:`faulthandler` standard module
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can be used to dump Python tracebacks on a segfault or after a timeout.
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The module is automatically enabled for pytest runs, unless the ``-p no:faulthandler`` is given
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on the command-line.
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Also the :confval:`faulthandler_timeout=X<faulthandler_timeout>` configuration option can be used
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to dump the traceback of all threads if a test takes longer than ``X``
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seconds to finish (not available on Windows).
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.. note::
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This functionality has been integrated from the external
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`pytest-faulthandler <https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-faulthandler>`__ plugin, with two
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small differences:
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* To disable it, use ``-p no:faulthandler`` instead of ``--no-faulthandler``: the former
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can be used with any plugin, so it saves one option.
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* The ``--faulthandler-timeout`` command-line option has become the
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:confval:`faulthandler_timeout` configuration option. It can still be configured from
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the command-line using ``-o faulthandler_timeout=X``.
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.. _unraisable:
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Warning about unraisable exceptions and unhandled thread exceptions
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-------------------------------------------------------------------
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.. versionadded:: 6.2
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Unhandled exceptions are exceptions that are raised in a situation in which
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they cannot propagate to a caller. The most common case is an exception raised
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in a :meth:`__del__ <object.__del__>` implementation.
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Unhandled thread exceptions are exceptions raised in a :class:`~threading.Thread`
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but not handled, causing the thread to terminate uncleanly.
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Both types of exceptions are normally considered bugs, but may go unnoticed
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because they don't cause the program itself to crash. Pytest detects these
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conditions and issues a warning that is visible in the test run summary.
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The plugins are automatically enabled for pytest runs, unless the
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``-p no:unraisableexception`` (for unraisable exceptions) and
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``-p no:threadexception`` (for thread exceptions) options are given on the
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command-line.
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The warnings may be silenced selectively using the :ref:`pytest.mark.filterwarnings ref`
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mark. The warning categories are :class:`pytest.PytestUnraisableExceptionWarning` and
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:class:`pytest.PytestUnhandledThreadExceptionWarning`.
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