Skip to main content

Basic notebook checks. Do they run? Do they contain lint?

Project description

See Build Status on Travis CI See Build Status on AppVeyor

nbsmoke

Basic notebook smoke tests: Do they run ok? Do they contain lint?

WARNING: early stage proof of concept; work in progress. Use at your own risk.

In particular, this extension is supposed to handle ipython magics as far as possible, but has not yet been widely tested.


This Pytest plugin was generated with Cookiecutter along with @hackebrot’s Cookiecutter-pytest-plugin template.

Installation

You can install nbsmoke via pip from PyPI:

$ pip install nbsmoke

Or you can install nbsmoke via conda from anaconda.org:

$ conda install -c pyviz/label/dev -c conda-forge nbsmoke

Usage

Check all notebooks run without errors:

$ pytest --nbsmoke-run

Check all notebooks run without errors, and store html to look at afterwards:

$ pytest --nbsmoke-run --store-html=/scratch

Lint check notebooks:

$ pytest --nbsmoke-lint

Instead of all files in a directory, you can specify a list e.g.:

$ pytest --nbsmoke-run notebooks/Untitled*.ipynb

If you want to restrict pytest to running only your notebook tests, use -k, e.g.:

$ pytest --nbsmoke-run -k ".ipynb"

Additional options are available by standard pytest ‘ini’ configuration in setup.cfg, pytest.ini, or tox.ini:

[pytest]
# when running, seconds allowed per cell (see nbconvert timeout)
nbsmoke_cell_timeout = 600

# notebooks to skip running; one case insensitive re to match per line
nbsmoke_skip_run = ^.*skipme\.ipynb$
                   ^.*skipmetoo.*$

# case insensitive re to match for file to be considered notebook;
# defaults to ``^.*\.ipynb``
it_is_nb_file = ^.*\.something$

nbsmoke supports # noqa comments to mark that something should be ignored during lint checking.

The nbsmoke_skip_run list in a project’s config can be ignored by passing --ignore-nbsmoke-skip-run (useful if sometimes you want to run all notebooks).

What’s the point?

Although more sophisticated testing of notebooks is possible (e.g. see nbval), just checking that notebooks run from start to finish without error in a fresh kernel (or on a neutral CI service) can be useful during development. Practical experience of working on several projects with notebooks confirms this, but that’s all the evidence I have.

Checking notebooks for lint might seem trivial/pointless, but it frequently uncovers unused names (typically unused imports). It’s also quite common to find python 2 vs 3 problems, and sometimes undefined names - in a way that’s faster than running the notebook (over multiple versions of python).

Unused imports/names themselves might seem trivial, but they can hinder understanding of a notebook by readers, or add dependencies that are not required.

Using # noqa: explanation in a notebook might seem like overkill, but the intention is to encourage unavoidable/desirable ‘mysterious imports’ to be clarified. E.g. if you’re importing something for its side effects, it’s very helpful to inform the reader of that.

Pyflakes is used as the underlying linter because “Pyflakes makes a simple promise: it will never complain about style, and it will try very, very hard to never emit false positives.”

Contributing

First, install using pip install -e .. Then run the tests using tox or pytest -v tests/.

New release to PyPI and anaconda.org: git tag -a vX.Y.Z -m "Something about release" && git push --tags.

License

Distributed under the terms of the BSD-3 license, “nbsmoke” is free and open source software.

Issues

If you encounter any problems, please file an issue (ideally including a copy of any problematic notebook).

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

nbsmoke-0.2.6.tar.gz (16.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

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

nbsmoke-0.2.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl (9.0 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2Python 3

File details

Details for the file nbsmoke-0.2.6.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: nbsmoke-0.2.6.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 16.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for nbsmoke-0.2.6.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 dc396a9f798bd89b2b4b50976f127f44e53bfbe806a8603acc824d5fd07e2ebe
MD5 070faecc087f5c98bbe0523466b4dae2
BLAKE2b-256 19538406b261c5f57d331e225d50bd36ddb5578fd1cc66e893be0e7adb0092d6

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file nbsmoke-0.2.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for nbsmoke-0.2.6-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 b9344d024442a4cd25e51847dc9ac86b18021c1503b3796569ef71a7beb8b2f0
MD5 30a218adec01c7b366c9bd7f7930c7d5
BLAKE2b-256 0b84d8bc722bb34d2b0e5ff0cac49bfc7fc495a1395038e1075f7cba6089940d

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