A Python 3 test framework.
Project description
Ward
An experimental test runner for Python 3.6+ that is heavily inspired by pytest
. This project is a work in progress, and is not production ready.
Examples
Dependency injection with fixtures
In the example below, we define a single fixture named cities
.
Our test takes a single parameter, which is also named cities
.
Ward sees that the fixture name and parameter names match, so it
calls the cities
fixture, and passes the result into the test.
from ward import expect, fixture
@fixture
def cities():
return ["Glasgow", "Edinburgh"]
def test_using_cities(cities):
expect(cities).equals(["Glasgow", "Edinburgh"])
Fixtures are great for extracting common setup code that you'd otherwise need to repeat at the top of your tests, but they can also execute teardown code:
@fixture
def database():
db_conn = setup_database()
yield db_conn
db_conn.close()
def test_database_connection(database):
# The database connection can be used in this test,
# and will be closed after the test has completed.
users = get_all_users(database)
expect(users).contains("Bob")
The Expect API
In the (contrived) test_capital_cities
test, we want to determine whether
the get_capitals_from_server
function is behaving as expected,
so we grab the output of the function and pass it to expect
. From
here, we check that the response is as we expect it to be by chaining
methods. If any of the checks fail, the expect chain short-circuits,
and the remaining checks won't be executed for that test. Methods in
the Expect API are named such that they correspond as closely to standard
Python operators as possible, meaning there's not much to memorise.
from ward import expect, fixture
@fixture
def cities():
return {"edinburgh": "scotland", "tokyo": "japan", "madrid": "spain"}
def test_capital_cities(cities):
found_cities = get_capitals_from_server()
(expect(found_cities)
.contains("tokyo") # it contains the key 'tokyo'
.satisfies(lambda x: all(len(k) < 10 for k in x)) # all keys < 10 chars
.equals(cities))
Checking for exceptions
The test below will pass, because a ZeroDivisionError
is raised. If a ZeroDivisionError
wasn't raised,
the test would fail.
from ward import raises
def test_expecting_an_exception():
with raises(ZeroDivisionError):
1/0
Running tests in a directory
You can run tests in a specific directory using the --path
option.
For example, to run all tests inside a directory called tests
:
ward --path tests
To run tests in the current directory, you can just type ward
, which
is functionally equivalent to ward --path .
Filtering tests by name
You can choose to limit which tests are collected and ran by Ward
using the --filter
option. Test names which contain the argument value
as a substring will be run, and everything else will be ignored.
To run a test called test_the_sky_is_blue
:
ward --filter test_the_sky_is_blue
The match takes place on the fully qualified name, so you can run a single
module (e.g. my_module
) using the following command:
ward --filter my_module.
Skipping a test
Use the @skip
annotation to tell Ward not to execute a test.
from ward import skip
@skip
def test_to_be_skipped():
pass
Testing for approximate equality
Check that a value is close to another value.
expect(1.0).approx(1.01, epsilon=0.2) # pass
expect(1.0).approx(1.01, epsilon=0.001) # fail
Cancelling a run after a specific number of failures
If you wish for Ward to cancel a run immediately after a specific number of failing tests,
you can use the --fail-limit
option. To have a run end immediately after 5 tests fail:
ward --fail-limit=5
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