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- =====================================
- Writing your first Django app, part 5
- =====================================
- This tutorial begins where :doc:`Tutorial 4 </intro/tutorial04>` left off.
- We've built a Web-poll application, and we'll now create some automated tests
- for it.
- Introducing automated testing
- =============================
- What are automated tests?
- -------------------------
- Tests are simple routines that check the operation of your code.
- Testing operates at different levels. Some tests might apply to a tiny detail
- - *does a particular model method return values as expected?*, while others
- examine the overall operation of the software - *does a sequence of user inputs
- on the site produce the desired result?* That's no different from the kind of
- testing you did earlier in :doc:`Tutorial 1 </intro/tutorial01>`, using the
- shell to examine the behavior of a method, or running the application and
- entering data to check how it behaves.
- What's different in *automated* tests is that the testing work is done for
- you by the system. You create a set of tests once, and then as you make changes
- to your app, you can check that your code still works as you originally
- intended, without having to perform time consuming manual testing.
- Why you need to create tests
- ----------------------------
- So why create tests, and why now?
- You may feel that you have quite enough on your plate just learning
- Python/Django, and having yet another thing to learn and do may seem
- overwhelming and perhaps unnecessary. After all, our polls application is
- working quite happily now; going through the trouble of creating automated
- tests is not going to make it work any better. If creating the polls
- application is the last bit of Django programming you will ever do, then true,
- you don't need to know how to create automated tests. But, if that's not the
- case, now is an excellent time to learn.
- Tests will save you time
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- Up to a certain point, 'checking that it seems to work' will be a satisfactory
- test. In a more sophisticated application, you might have dozens of complex
- interactions between components.
- A change in any of those components could have unexpected consequences on the
- application's behavior. Checking that it still 'seems to work' could mean
- running through your code's functionality with twenty different variations of
- your test data just to make sure you haven't broken something - not a good use
- of your time.
- That's especially true when automated tests could do this for you in seconds.
- If something's gone wrong, tests will also assist in identifying the code
- that's causing the unexpected behavior.
- Sometimes it may seem a chore to tear yourself away from your productive,
- creative programming work to face the unglamorous and unexciting business
- of writing tests, particularly when you know your code is working properly.
- However, the task of writing tests is a lot more fulfilling than spending hours
- testing your application manually or trying to identify the cause of a
- newly-introduced problem.
- Tests don't just identify problems, they prevent them
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- It's a mistake to think of tests merely as a negative aspect of development.
- Without tests, the purpose or intended behavior of an application might be
- rather opaque. Even when it's your own code, you will sometimes find yourself
- poking around in it trying to find out what exactly it's doing.
- Tests change that; they light up your code from the inside, and when something
- goes wrong, they focus light on the part that has gone wrong - *even if you
- hadn't even realized it had gone wrong*.
- Tests make your code more attractive
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- You might have created a brilliant piece of software, but you will find that
- many other developers will simply refuse to look at it because it lacks tests;
- without tests, they won't trust it. Jacob Kaplan-Moss, one of Django's
- original developers, says "Code without tests is broken by design."
- That other developers want to see tests in your software before they take it
- seriously is yet another reason for you to start writing tests.
- Tests help teams work together
- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
- The previous points are written from the point of view of a single developer
- maintaining an application. Complex applications will be maintained by teams.
- Tests guarantee that colleagues don't inadvertently break your code (and that
- you don't break theirs without knowing). If you want to make a living as a
- Django programmer, you must be good at writing tests!
- Basic testing strategies
- ========================
- There are many ways to approach writing tests.
- Some programmers follow a discipline called "`test-driven development`_"; they
- actually write their tests before they write their code. This might seem
- counter-intuitive, but in fact it's similar to what most people will often do
- anyway: they describe a problem, then create some code to solve it. Test-driven
- development simply formalizes the problem in a Python test case.
- More often, a newcomer to testing will create some code and later decide that
- it should have some tests. Perhaps it would have been better to write some
- tests earlier, but it's never too late to get started.
- Sometimes it's difficult to figure out where to get started with writing tests.
- If you have written several thousand lines of Python, choosing something to
- test might not be easy. In such a case, it's fruitful to write your first test
- the next time you make a change, either when you add a new feature or fix a bug.
- So let's do that right away.
- .. _test-driven development: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test-driven_development
- Writing our first test
- ======================
- We identify a bug
- -----------------
- Fortunately, there's a little bug in the ``polls`` application for us to fix
- right away: the ``Poll.was_published_recently()`` method returns ``True`` if
- the ``Poll`` was published within the last day (which is correct) but also if
- the ``Poll``'s ``pub_date`` field is in the future (which certainly isn't).
- You can see this in the Admin; create a poll whose date lies in the future;
- you'll see that the ``Poll`` change list claims it was published recently.
- You can also see this using the shell::
- >>> import datetime
- >>> from django.utils import timezone
- >>> from polls.models import Poll
- >>> # create a Poll instance with pub_date 30 days in the future
- >>> future_poll = Poll(pub_date=timezone.now() + datetime.timedelta(days=30))
- >>> # was it published recently?
- >>> future_poll.was_published_recently()
- True
- Since things in the future are not 'recent', this is clearly wrong.
- Create a test to expose the bug
- -------------------------------
- What we've just done in the shell to test for the problem is exactly what we
- can do in an automated test, so let's turn that into an automated test.
- The best place for an application's tests is in the application's ``tests.py``
- file - the testing system will look there for tests automatically.
- Put the following in the ``tests.py`` file in the ``polls`` application::
- import datetime
- from django.utils import timezone
- from django.test import TestCase
- from polls.models import Poll
- class PollMethodTests(TestCase):
- def test_was_published_recently_with_future_poll(self):
- """
- was_published_recently() should return False for polls whose
- pub_date is in the future
- """
- future_poll = Poll(pub_date=timezone.now() + datetime.timedelta(days=30))
- self.assertEqual(future_poll.was_published_recently(), False)
- What we have done here is created a :class:`django.test.TestCase` subclass
- with a method that creates a ``Poll`` instance with a ``pub_date`` in the
- future. We then check the output of ``was_published_recently()`` - which
- *ought* to be False.
- Running tests
- -------------
- In the terminal, we can run our test::
- python manage.py test polls
- and you'll see something like::
- Creating test database for alias 'default'...
- F
- ======================================================================
- FAIL: test_was_published_recently_with_future_poll (polls.tests.PollMethodTests)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Traceback (most recent call last):
- File "/path/to/mysite/polls/tests.py", line 16, in test_was_published_recently_with_future_poll
- self.assertEqual(future_poll.was_published_recently(), False)
- AssertionError: True != False
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ran 1 test in 0.001s
- FAILED (failures=1)
- Destroying test database for alias 'default'...
- What happened is this:
- * ``python manage.py test polls`` looked for tests in the ``polls`` application
- * it found a subclass of the :class:`django.test.TestCase` class
- * it created a special database for the purpose of testing
- * it looked for test methods - ones whose names begin with ``test``
- * in ``test_was_published_recently_with_future_poll`` it created a ``Poll``
- instance whose ``pub_date`` field is 30 days in the future
- * ... and using the ``assertEqual()`` method, it discovered that its
- ``was_published_recently()`` returns ``True``, though we wanted it to return
- ``False``
- The test informs us which test failed and even the line on which the failure
- occurred.
- Fixing the bug
- --------------
- We already know what the problem is: ``Poll.was_published_recently()`` should
- return ``False`` if its ``pub_date`` is in the future. Amend the method in
- ``models.py``, so that it will only return ``True`` if the date is also in the
- past::
- def was_published_recently(self):
- now = timezone.now()
- return now - datetime.timedelta(days=1) <= self.pub_date < now
- and run the test again::
- Creating test database for alias 'default'...
- .
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Ran 1 test in 0.001s
- OK
- Destroying test database for alias 'default'...
- After identifying a bug, we wrote a test that exposes it and corrected the bug
- in the code so our test passes.
- Many other things might go wrong with our application in the future, but we can
- be sure that we won't inadvertently reintroduce this bug, because simply
- running the test will warn us immediately. We can consider this little portion
- of the application pinned down safely forever.
- More comprehensive tests
- ------------------------
- While we're here, we can further pin down the ``was_published_recently()``
- method; in fact, it would be positively embarrassing if in fixing one bug we had
- introduced another.
- Add two more test methods to the same class, to test the behavior of the method
- more comprehensively::
- def test_was_published_recently_with_old_poll(self):
- """
- was_published_recently() should return False for polls whose pub_date
- is older than 1 day
- """
- old_poll = Poll(pub_date=timezone.now() - datetime.timedelta(days=30))
- self.assertEqual(old_poll.was_published_recently(), False)
- def test_was_published_recently_with_recent_poll(self):
- """
- was_published_recently() should return True for polls whose pub_date
- is within the last day
- """
- recent_poll = Poll(pub_date=timezone.now() - datetime.timedelta(hours=1))
- self.assertEqual(recent_poll.was_published_recently(), True)
- And now we have three tests that confirm that ``Poll.was_published_recently()``
- returns sensible values for past, recent, and future polls.
- Again, ``polls`` is a simple application, but however complex it grows in the
- future and whatever other code it interacts with, we now have some guarantee
- that the method we have written tests for will behave in expected ways.
- Test a view
- ===========
- The polls application is fairly undiscriminating: it will publish any poll,
- including ones whose ``pub_date`` field lies in the future. We should improve
- this. Setting a ``pub_date`` in the future should mean that the Poll is
- published at that moment, but invisible until then.
- A test for a view
- -----------------
- When we fixed the bug above, we wrote the test first and then the code to fix
- it. In fact that was a simple example of test-driven development, but it
- doesn't really matter in which order we do the work.
- In our first test, we focused closely on the internal behavior of the code. For
- this test, we want to check its behavior as it would be experienced by a user
- through a web browser.
- Before we try to fix anything, let's have a look at the tools at our disposal.
- The Django test client
- ----------------------
- Django provides a test :class:`~django.test.client.Client` to simulate a user
- interacting with the code at the view level. We can use it in ``tests.py``
- or even in the shell.
- We will start again with the shell, where we need to do a couple of things that
- won't be necessary in ``tests.py``. The first is to set up the test environment
- in the shell::
- >>> from django.test.utils import setup_test_environment
- >>> setup_test_environment()
- Next we need to import the test client class (later in ``tests.py`` we will use
- the :class:`django.test.TestCase` class, which comes with its own client, so
- this won't be required)::
- >>> from django.test.client import Client
- >>> # create an instance of the client for our use
- >>> client = Client()
- With that ready, we can ask the client to do some work for us::
- >>> # get a response from '/'
- >>> response = client.get('/')
- >>> # we should expect a 404 from that address
- >>> response.status_code
- 404
- >>> # on the other hand we should expect to find something at '/polls/'
- >>> # we'll use 'reverse()' rather than a harcoded URL
- >>> from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
- >>> response = client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- >>> response.status_code
- 200
- >>> response.content
- '\n\n\n <p>No polls are available.</p>\n\n'
- >>> # note - you might get unexpected results if your ``TIME_ZONE``
- >>> # in ``settings.py`` is not correct. If you need to change it,
- >>> # you will also need to restart your shell session
- >>> from polls.models import Poll
- >>> from django.utils import timezone
- >>> # create a Poll and save it
- >>> p = Poll(question="Who is your favorite Beatle?", pub_date=timezone.now())
- >>> p.save()
- >>> # check the response once again
- >>> response = client.get('/polls/')
- >>> response.content
- '\n\n\n <ul>\n \n <li><a href="/polls/1/">Who is your favorite Beatle?</a></li>\n \n </ul>\n\n'
- >>> response.context['latest_poll_list']
- [<Poll: Who is your favorite Beatle?>]
- Improving our view
- ------------------
- The list of polls shows polls that aren't published yet (i.e. those that have a
- ``pub_date`` in the future). Let's fix that.
- In :doc:`Tutorial 4 </intro/tutorial04>` we deleted the view functions from
- ``views.py`` in favor of a :class:`~django.views.generic.list.ListView` in
- ``urls.py``::
- url(r'^$',
- ListView.as_view(
- queryset=Poll.objects.order_by('-pub_date')[:5],
- context_object_name='latest_poll_list',
- template_name='polls/index.html'),
- name='index'),
- ``response.context_data['latest_poll_list']`` extracts the data this view
- places into the context.
- We need to amend the line that gives us the ``queryset``::
- queryset=Poll.objects.order_by('-pub_date')[:5],
- Let's change the queryset so that it also checks the date by comparing it with
- ``timezone.now()``. First we need to add an import::
- from django.utils import timezone
- and then we must amend the existing ``url`` function to::
- url(r'^$',
- ListView.as_view(
- queryset=Poll.objects.filter(pub_date__lte=timezone.now) \
- .order_by('-pub_date')[:5],
- context_object_name='latest_poll_list',
- template_name='polls/index.html'),
- name='index'),
- ``Poll.objects.filter(pub_date__lte=timezone.now)`` returns a queryset
- containing Polls whose ``pub_date`` is less than or equal to - that is, earlier
- than or equal to - ``timezone.now``. Notice that we use a callable queryset
- argument, ``timezone.now``, which will be evaluated at request time. If we had
- included the parentheses, ``timezone.now()`` would be evaluated just once when
- the web server is started.
- Testing our new view
- --------------------
- Now you can satisfy yourself that this behaves as expected by firing up the
- runserver, loading the site in your browser, creating ``Polls`` with dates in
- the past and future, and checking that only those that have been published are
- listed. You don't want to have to do that *every single time you make any
- change that might affect this* - so let's also create a test, based on our
- shell session above.
- Add the following to ``polls/tests.py``::
- from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse
- and we'll create a factory method to create polls as well as a new test class::
- def create_poll(question, days):
- """
- Creates a poll with the given `question` published the given number of
- `days` offset to now (negative for polls published in the past,
- positive for polls that have yet to be published).
- """
- return Poll.objects.create(question=question,
- pub_date=timezone.now() + datetime.timedelta(days=days))
- class PollViewTests(TestCase):
- def test_index_view_with_no_polls(self):
- """
- If no polls exist, an appropriate message should be displayed.
- """
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
- self.assertContains(response, "No polls are available.")
- self.assertQuerysetEqual(response.context['latest_poll_list'], [])
- def test_index_view_with_a_past_poll(self):
- """
- Polls with a pub_date in the past should be displayed on the index page.
- """
- create_poll(question="Past poll.", days=-30)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- self.assertQuerysetEqual(
- response.context['latest_poll_list'],
- ['<Poll: Past poll.>']
- )
- def test_index_view_with_a_future_poll(self):
- """
- Polls with a pub_date in the future should not be displayed on the
- index page.
- """
- create_poll(question="Future poll.", days=30)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- self.assertContains(response, "No polls are available.", status_code=200)
- self.assertQuerysetEqual(response.context['latest_poll_list'], [])
- def test_index_view_with_future_poll_and_past_poll(self):
- """
- Even if both past and future polls exist, only past polls should be
- displayed.
- """
- create_poll(question="Past poll.", days=-30)
- create_poll(question="Future poll.", days=30)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- self.assertQuerysetEqual(
- response.context['latest_poll_list'],
- ['<Poll: Past poll.>']
- )
- def test_index_view_with_two_past_polls(self):
- """
- The polls index page may display multiple polls.
- """
- create_poll(question="Past poll 1.", days=-30)
- create_poll(question="Past poll 2.", days=-5)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:index'))
- self.assertQuerysetEqual(
- response.context['latest_poll_list'],
- ['<Poll: Past poll 2.>', '<Poll: Past poll 1.>']
- )
- Let's look at some of these more closely.
- First is a poll factory method, ``create_poll``, to take some repetition out
- of the process of creating polls.
- ``test_index_view_with_no_polls`` doesn't create any polls, but checks the
- message: "No polls are available." and verifies the ``latest_poll_list`` is
- empty. Note that the :class:`django.test.TestCase` class provides some
- additional assertion methods. In these examples, we use
- :meth:`~django.test.TestCase.assertContains()` and
- :meth:`~django.test.TestCase.assertQuerysetEqual()`.
- In ``test_index_view_with_a_past_poll``, we create a poll and verify that it
- appears in the list.
- In ``test_index_view_with_a_future_poll``, we create a poll with a ``pub_date``
- in the future. The database is reset for each test method, so the first poll is
- no longer there, and so again the index shouldn't have any polls in it.
- And so on. In effect, we are using the tests to tell a story of admin input
- and user experience on the site, and checking that at every state and for every
- new change in the state of the system, the expected results are published.
- Testing the ``DetailView``
- --------------------------
- What we have works well; however, even though future polls don't appear in the
- *index*, users can still reach them if they know or guess the right URL. So we
- need similar constraints in the ``DetailViews``, by adding::
- queryset=Poll.objects.filter(pub_date__lte=timezone.now)
- to them - for example::
- url(r'^(?P<pk>\d+)/$',
- DetailView.as_view(
- queryset=Poll.objects.filter(pub_date__lte=timezone.now),
- model=Poll,
- template_name='polls/detail.html'),
- name='detail'),
- and of course, we will add some tests, to check that a ``Poll`` whose
- ``pub_date`` is in the past can be displayed, and that one with a ``pub_date``
- in the future is not::
- class PollIndexDetailTests(TestCase):
- def test_detail_view_with_a_future_poll(self):
- """
- The detail view of a poll with a pub_date in the future should
- return a 404 not found.
- """
- future_poll = create_poll(question='Future poll.', days=5)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:detail', args=(future_poll.id,)))
- self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 404)
- def test_detail_view_with_a_past_poll(self):
- """
- The detail view of a poll with a pub_date in the past should display
- the poll's question.
- """
- past_poll = create_poll(question='Past Poll.', days=-5)
- response = self.client.get(reverse('polls:detail', args=(past_poll.id,)))
- self.assertContains(response, past_poll.question, status_code=200)
- Ideas for more tests
- --------------------
- We ought to add similar ``queryset`` arguments to the other ``DetailView``
- URLs, and create a new test class for each view. They'll be very similar to
- what we have just created; in fact there will be a lot of repetition.
- We could also improve our application in other ways, adding tests along the
- way. For example, it's silly that ``Polls`` can be published on the site that
- have no ``Choices``. So, our views could check for this, and exclude such
- ``Polls``. Our tests would create a ``Poll`` without ``Choices`` and then test
- that it's not published, as well as create a similar ``Poll`` *with*
- ``Choices``, and test that it *is* published.
- Perhaps logged-in admin users should be allowed to see unpublished ``Polls``,
- but not ordinary visitors. Again: whatever needs to be added to the software to
- accomplish this should be accompanied by a test, whether you write the test
- first and then make the code pass the test, or work out the logic in your code
- first and then write a test to prove it.
- At a certain point you are bound to look at your tests and wonder whether your
- code is suffering from test bloat, which brings us to:
- When testing, more is better
- ============================
- It might seem that our tests are growing out of control. At this rate there will
- soon be more code in our tests than in our application, and the repetition
- is unaesthetic, compared to the elegant conciseness of the rest of our code.
- **It doesn't matter**. Let them grow. For the most part, you can write a test
- once and then forget about it. It will continue performing its useful function
- as you continue to develop your program.
- Sometimes tests will need to be updated. Suppose that we amend our views so that
- only ``Polls`` with ``Choices`` are published. In that case, many of our
- existing tests will fail - *telling us exactly which tests need to be amended to
- bring them up to date*, so to that extent tests help look after themselves.
- At worst, as you continue developing, you might find that you have some tests
- that are now redundant. Even that's not a problem; in testing redundancy is
- a *good* thing.
- As long as your tests are sensibly arranged, they won't become unmanageable.
- Good rules-of-thumb include having:
- * a separate ``TestClass`` for each model or view
- * a separate test method for each set of conditions you want to test
- * test method names that describe their function
- Further testing
- ===============
- This tutorial only introduces some of the basics of testing. There's a great
- deal more you can do, and a number of very useful tools at your disposal to
- achieve some very clever things.
- For example, while our tests here have covered some of the internal logic of a
- model and the way our views publish information, you can use an "in-browser"
- framework such as Selenium_ to test the way your HTML actually renders in a
- browser. These tools allow you to check not just the behavior of your Django
- code, but also, for example, of your JavaScript. It's quite something to see
- the tests launch a browser, and start interacting with your site, as if a human
- being were driving it! Django includes :class:`~django.test.LiveServerTestCase`
- to facilitate integration with tools like Selenium.
- If you have a complex application, you may want to run tests automatically
- with every commit for the purposes of `continuous integration`_, so that
- quality control is itself - at least partially - automated.
- A good way to spot untested parts of your application is to check code
- coverage. This also helps identify fragile or even dead code. If you can't test
- a piece of code, it usually means that code should be refactored or removed.
- Coverage will help to identify dead code. See
- :ref:`topics-testing-code-coverage` for details.
- :doc:`Testing Django applications </topics/testing/index>` has comprehensive
- information about testing.
- .. _Selenium: http://seleniumhq.org/
- .. _continuous integration: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continuous_integration
- What's next?
- ============
- For full details on testing, see :doc:`Testing in Django
- </topics/testing/index>`.
- When you're comfortable with testing Django views, read
- :doc:`part 6 of this tutorial</intro/tutorial06>` to learn about
- static files management.
|