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Pynguin is a tool for automated unit test generation for Python

Project description

Pynguin

Pynguin (IPA: ˈpɪŋɡuiːn), the PYthoN General UnIt test geNerator, is a tool that allows developers to generate unit tests automatically.

Testing software is often considered to be a tedious task. Thus, automated generation techniques have been proposed and mature tools exist—for statically typed languages, such as Java. There is, however, no fully-automated tool available that produces unit tests for general-purpose programs in a dynamically typed language. Pynguin is, to the best of our knowledge, the first tool that fills this gap and allows the automated generation of unit tests for Python programs.

Pynguin is developed at the Chair of Software Engineering II of the University of Passau.

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License LGPL v3 Code style: black PyPI version Supported Python Versions Documentation Status DOI REUSE status Downloads

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Attention

Pynguin executes the module under test! As a consequence, depending on what code is in that module, running Pynguin can cause serious harm to your computer, for example, wipe your entire hard disk! We recommend running Pynguin in an isolated environment; use, for example, a Docker container to minimize the risk of damaging your system.

Prerequisites

Before you begin, ensure you have met the following requirements:

  • You have installed Python 3.10 (we have not yet tested with Python 3.11, there might be some problems due to changed internals regarding the byte-code instrumentation).

    Attention: Pynguin now requires Python 3.10! Older versions are no longer supported!

  • You have a recent Linux/macOS/Windows machine.

Please consider reading the online documentation to start your Pynguin adventure.

Installing Pynguin

Pynguin can be easily installed using the pip tool by typing:

pip install pynguin

Make sure that your version of pip is that of a supported Python version, as any older version is not supported by Pynguin!

Using Pynguin

Before you continue, please read the quick start guide

Pynguin is a command-line application. Once you installed it to a virtual environment, you can invoke the tool by typing pynguin inside this virtual environment. Pynguin will then print a list of its command-line parameters.

A minimal full command line to invoke Pynguin could be the following, where we assume that a project foo is located in /tmp/foo, we want to store Pynguin's generated tests in /tmp/testgen, and we want to generate tests using a whole-suite approach for the module foo.bar (wrapped for better readability):

pynguin \
  --project-path /tmp/foo \
  --output-path /tmp/testgen \
  --module-name foo.bar

Please find a more detailed example in the quick start guide.

Contributing to Pynguin

For the development of Pynguin you will need the poetry dependency management and packaging tool. To start developing, follow these steps:

  1. Clone the repository

  2. Change to the pynguin folder: cd pynguin

  3. Create a virtual environment and install dependencies using poetry: poetry install

  4. Make your changes

  5. Run poetry shell to switch to the virtual environment in your current shell

  6. Run make check to verify that your changes pass all checks

    Please see the poetry documentation for more information on this tool.

Development using PyCharm.

If you want to use the PyCharm IDE you have to set up a few things:

  1. Import pynguin into PyCharm.

  2. Let the poetry support configure a virtual environment.

    If you use a PyCharm version before 2021.3, you have to install the poetry support as a plugin.

  3. Set the default test runner to pytest

  4. Set the DocString format to Google

License

This project is licensed under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License.

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