pytest plugin with mechanisms for caching across test runs
Project description
Usage
install via:
pip install pytest-cache
after which other plugins can access a new config.cache object which helps sharing values between py.test invocations.
The plugin provides two options to rerun failures, namely --lf to only re-run the failures and --ff to run all tests but the failures from the last run first. For cleanup (usually not needed), a --clearcache option allows to remove all cross-session cache contents ahead of a test run.
Rerunning only failures or failures first
First, let’s create 50 test invocation of which only 2 fail:
# content of test_50.py import pytest @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): pytest.fail("bad luck")
If you run this for the first time you will see two failures:
$ py.test -q .................F.......F........................ =================================== FAILURES =================================== _________________________________ test_num[17] _________________________________ i = 17 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed _________________________________ test_num[25] _________________________________ i = 25 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed
If you then run it with --lf you will run only the two failing test from the last run:
$ py.test --lf ============================= test session starts ============================== platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.3 -- pytest-2.3.5 run-last-failure: rerun last 2 failures plugins: cache collected 50 items test_50.py FF =================================== FAILURES =================================== _________________________________ test_num[17] _________________________________ i = 17 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed _________________________________ test_num[25] _________________________________ i = 25 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed =================== 2 failed, 48 deselected in 0.02 seconds ====================
The last line indicates that 48 tests have not been run.
If you run with the --ff option, all tests will be run but the first failures will be executed first (as can be seen from the series of FF and dots):
$ py.test --ff ============================= test session starts ============================== platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.3 -- pytest-2.3.5 run-last-failure: rerun last 2 failures first plugins: cache collected 50 items test_50.py FF................................................ =================================== FAILURES =================================== _________________________________ test_num[17] _________________________________ i = 17 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed _________________________________ test_num[25] _________________________________ i = 25 @pytest.mark.parametrize("i", range(50)) def test_num(i): if i in (17,25): > pytest.fail("bad luck") E Failed: bad luck test_50.py:6: Failed ===================== 2 failed, 48 passed in 0.07 seconds ======================
The new config.cache object
Plugins or conftest.py support code can get a cached value using the pytest config object. Here is a basic example plugin which implements a funcarg which re-uses previously created state across py.test invocations:
# content of test_caching.py import time def pytest_funcarg__mydata(request): val = request.config.cache.get("example/value", None) if val is None: time.sleep(9*0.6) # expensive computation :) val = 42 request.config.cache.set("example/value", val) return val def test_function(mydata): assert mydata == 23
If you run this command once, it will take a while because of the sleep:
$ py.test -q F =================================== FAILURES =================================== ________________________________ test_function _________________________________ mydata = 42 def test_function(mydata): > assert mydata == 23 E assert 42 == 23 test_caching.py:12: AssertionError
If you run it a second time the value will be retrieved from the cache and this will be quick:
$ py.test -q F =================================== FAILURES =================================== ________________________________ test_function _________________________________ mydata = 42 def test_function(mydata): > assert mydata == 23 E assert 42 == 23 test_caching.py:12: AssertionError
Consult the pytest-cache API for more details.
Inspecting Cache content
You can always peek at the content of the cache using the --cache command line option:
$ py.test --cache ============================= test session starts ============================== platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.3 -- pytest-2.3.5 plugins: cache cachedir: /tmp/doc-exec-6/.cache --------------------------------- cache values --------------------------------- example/value contains: 42 cache/lastfailed contains: set(['test_caching.py::test_function']) =============================== in 0.01 seconds ===============================
Clearing Cache content
You can instruct pytest to clear all cache files and values by adding the --clearcache option like this:
py.test --clearcache
This is recommended for invocations from Continous Integration servers where isolation and correctness is more important than speed.
Notes
repository: http://bitbucket.org/hpk42/pytest-cache
Issues: repository: http://bitbucket.org/hpk42/pytest-cache/issues
more info on py.test: http://pytest.org
Project details
Release history Release notifications | RSS feed
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.
Source Distribution
File details
Details for the file pytest-cache-1.0.tar.gz
.
File metadata
- Download URL: pytest-cache-1.0.tar.gz
- Upload date:
- Size: 16.2 kB
- Tags: Source
- Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
File hashes
Algorithm | Hash digest | |
---|---|---|
SHA256 | be7468edd4d3d83f1e844959fd6e3fd28e77a481440a7118d430130ea31b07a9 |
|
MD5 | e51ff62fec70a1fd456d975ce47977cd |
|
BLAKE2b-256 | d115082fd0428aab33d2bafa014f3beb241830427ba803a8912a5aaeaf3a5663 |