Skip to main content

Let your Python tests travel through time

Project description

FreezeGun: Let your Python tests travel through time
====================================================


.. image:: https://secure.travis-ci.org/spulec/freezegun.png?branch=master
:target: https://travis-ci.org/spulec/freezegun
.. image:: https://coveralls.io/repos/spulec/freezegun/badge.png?branch=master
:target: https://coveralls.io/r/spulec/freezegun

FreezeGun is a library that allows your python tests to travel through time by mocking the datetime module.

Usage
-----

Once the decorator or context manager have been invoked, all calls to datetime.datetime.now(), datetime.datetime.utcnow(), datetime.date.today(), time.time(), time.localtime(), time.gmtime(), and time.strftime() will return the time that has been frozen.

Decorator
~~~~~~~~~

.. code-block:: python

from freezegun import freeze_time
import datetime
import unittest


@freeze_time("2012-01-14")
def test():
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)

# Or a unittest TestCase - freezes for every test, from the start of setUpClass to the end of tearDownClass

@freeze_time("1955-11-12")
class MyTests(unittest.TestCase):
def test_the_class(self):
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(1955, 11, 12)

# Or any other class - freezes around each callable (may not work in every case)

@freeze_time("2012-01-14")
class Tester(object):
def test_the_class(self):
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)

Context Manager
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.. code-block:: python

from freezegun import freeze_time

def test():
assert datetime.datetime.now() != datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)
with freeze_time("2012-01-14"):
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)
assert datetime.datetime.now() != datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)

Raw use
~~~~~~~

.. code-block:: python

from freezegun import freeze_time

freezer = freeze_time("2012-01-14 12:00:01")
freezer.start()
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14, 12, 00, 01)
freezer.stop()

Timezones
~~~~~~~~~

.. code-block:: python

from freezegun import freeze_time

@freeze_time("2012-01-14 03:21:34", tz_offset=-4)
def test():
assert datetime.datetime.utcnow() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14, 03, 21, 34)
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 13, 23, 21, 34)

# datetime.date.today() uses local time
assert datetime.date.today() == datetime.date(2012, 01, 13)

Nice inputs
~~~~~~~~~~~

FreezeGun uses dateutil behind the scenes so you can have nice-looking datetimes

.. code-block:: python

@freeze_time("Jan 14th, 2012")
def test_nice_datetime():
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(2012, 01, 14)

`tick` argument
~~~~~~~~~~~

FreezeGun has an additional `tick` argument which will restart time at the given
value, but then time will keep ticking. This is alternative to the default
parameters which will keep time stopped.

.. code-block:: python

@freeze_time("Jan 14th, 2020", tick=True)
def test_nice_datetime():
assert datetime.datetime.now() > datetime.datetime(2020, 01, 14)

Manual ticks
~~~~~~~~~~~~

Freezegun allows for the time to be manually forwarded as well

.. code-block:: python

def test_manual_increment():
initial_datetime = datetime.datetime(year=1, month=7, day=12,
hour=15, minute=6, second=3)
with freeze_time(initial_datetime) as frozen_datetime:
assert frozen_datetime() == initial_datetime

frozen_datetime.tick()
initial_datetime += datetime.timedelta(seconds=1)
assert frozen_datetime() == initial_datetime

frozen_datetime.tick(delta=datetime.timedelta(seconds=10))
initial_datetime += datetime.timedelta(seconds=10)
assert frozen_datetime() == initial_datetime


Installation
------------

To install FreezeGun, simply:

.. code-block:: bash

$ pip install freezegun

On Debian (Testing and Unstable) systems:

.. code-block:: bash

$ sudo apt-get install python-freezegun

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

freezegun-0.3.6.tar.gz (45.8 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

freezegun-0.3.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl (6.1 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2Python 3

File details

Details for the file freezegun-0.3.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: freezegun-0.3.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 45.8 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for freezegun-0.3.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 44cef08c4b34be212534aec8ab61eccdc75ba9e4d908f99d1fcc7f778b4cbaf8
MD5 c321cf7392343f91e524eec0b601e8ec
BLAKE2b-256 ff49d8bdb408d2926ef81081520e690e0f48a6a735ecd8972f6fc31cd6d3416a

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file freezegun-0.3.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for freezegun-0.3.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5e3218aabf683e837e9f518767a352628dd130380674048a0c12110c42e30bf1
MD5 8d923c4aa4ac17a3903bf0e50c282428
BLAKE2b-256 b14adad8b23e696bfb9a94fd3a76fa35710c2366ac17835eccb0d35210ba1272

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page