A fast alternative to freezegun that wraps libfaketime.
Project description
python-libfaketime is a wrapper of libfaketime for python.
import datetime
from libfaketime import fake_time, reexec_if_needed
# libfaketime needs to be preloaded by the dynamic linker.
# This will exec the same command, but with the proper environment variables set.
# Or you can skip running this and manually manage your env (see get_reload_information()).
reexec_if_needed()
def get_tomorrow():
return datetime.date.today() + datetime.timedelta(days=1)
@fake_time('2014-01-01 00:00:00')
def test_get_tomorrow():
assert get_tomorrow() == datetime.date(2014, 1, 2)
It serves as a fast drop-in replacement for freezegun. Here’s the output of a totally unscientific benchmark on my laptop:
$ python benchmark.py re-exec with libfaketime dependencies timing 1000 executions of <class 'libfaketime.fake_time'> 0.021755 seconds $ python benchmark.py freezegun timing 1000 executions of <function freeze_time at 0x10aaa1140> 6.561472 seconds
Some brief details:
linux and osx
microsecond resolution
accepts datetimes and strings that can be parsed by dateutil
not threadsafe
will break profiling. A workaround: use libfaketime.{begin, end}_callback to disable/enable your profiler.
To install: pip install libfaketime.
Changelog
Semantic versioning is used.
0.2.1
released 2016-03-01
python 3 support
0.1.1
released 2015-09-11
prevent distribution of test directory: https://github.com/simon-weber/python-libfaketime/pull/4
0.1.0
released 2015-06-23
add global start/stop callbacks
0.0.3
released 2015-03-28
initial packaged release
Project details
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