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advanced.txt 33 KB

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  1. =======================
  2. Advanced testing topics
  3. =======================
  4. The request factory
  5. ===================
  6. .. currentmodule:: django.test
  7. .. class:: RequestFactory
  8. The :class:`~django.test.RequestFactory` shares the same API as
  9. the test client. However, instead of behaving like a browser, the
  10. RequestFactory provides a way to generate a request instance that can
  11. be used as the first argument to any view. This means you can test a
  12. view function the same way as you would test any other function -- as
  13. a black box, with exactly known inputs, testing for specific outputs.
  14. The API for the :class:`~django.test.RequestFactory` is a slightly
  15. restricted subset of the test client API:
  16. * It only has access to the HTTP methods :meth:`~Client.get()`,
  17. :meth:`~Client.post()`, :meth:`~Client.put()`,
  18. :meth:`~Client.delete()`, :meth:`~Client.head()`,
  19. :meth:`~Client.options()`, and :meth:`~Client.trace()`.
  20. * These methods accept all the same arguments *except* for
  21. ``follow``. Since this is just a factory for producing
  22. requests, it's up to you to handle the response.
  23. * It does not support middleware. Session and authentication
  24. attributes must be supplied by the test itself if required
  25. for the view to function properly.
  26. .. versionchanged:: 5.1
  27. The ``query_params`` parameter was added.
  28. Example
  29. -------
  30. The following is a unit test using the request factory::
  31. from django.contrib.auth.models import AnonymousUser, User
  32. from django.test import RequestFactory, TestCase
  33. from .views import MyView, my_view
  34. class SimpleTest(TestCase):
  35. def setUp(self):
  36. # Every test needs access to the request factory.
  37. self.factory = RequestFactory()
  38. self.user = User.objects.create_user(
  39. username="jacob", email="jacob@…", password="top_secret"
  40. )
  41. def test_details(self):
  42. # Create an instance of a GET request.
  43. request = self.factory.get("/customer/details")
  44. # Recall that middleware are not supported. You can simulate a
  45. # logged-in user by setting request.user manually.
  46. request.user = self.user
  47. # Or you can simulate an anonymous user by setting request.user to
  48. # an AnonymousUser instance.
  49. request.user = AnonymousUser()
  50. # Test my_view() as if it were deployed at /customer/details
  51. response = my_view(request)
  52. # Use this syntax for class-based views.
  53. response = MyView.as_view()(request)
  54. self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
  55. AsyncRequestFactory
  56. -------------------
  57. .. class:: AsyncRequestFactory
  58. ``RequestFactory`` creates WSGI-like requests. If you want to create ASGI-like
  59. requests, including having a correct ASGI ``scope``, you can instead use
  60. ``django.test.AsyncRequestFactory``.
  61. This class is directly API-compatible with ``RequestFactory``, with the only
  62. difference being that it returns ``ASGIRequest`` instances rather than
  63. ``WSGIRequest`` instances. All of its methods are still synchronous callables.
  64. Arbitrary keyword arguments in ``defaults`` are added directly into the ASGI
  65. scope.
  66. .. versionchanged:: 5.1
  67. The ``query_params`` parameter was added.
  68. Testing class-based views
  69. =========================
  70. In order to test class-based views outside of the request/response cycle you
  71. must ensure that they are configured correctly, by calling
  72. :meth:`~django.views.generic.base.View.setup` after instantiation.
  73. For example, assuming the following class-based view:
  74. .. code-block:: python
  75. :caption: ``views.py``
  76. from django.views.generic import TemplateView
  77. class HomeView(TemplateView):
  78. template_name = "myapp/home.html"
  79. def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):
  80. kwargs["environment"] = "Production"
  81. return super().get_context_data(**kwargs)
  82. You may directly test the ``get_context_data()`` method by first instantiating
  83. the view, then passing a ``request`` to ``setup()``, before proceeding with
  84. your test's code:
  85. .. code-block:: python
  86. :caption: ``tests.py``
  87. from django.test import RequestFactory, TestCase
  88. from .views import HomeView
  89. class HomePageTest(TestCase):
  90. def test_environment_set_in_context(self):
  91. request = RequestFactory().get("/")
  92. view = HomeView()
  93. view.setup(request)
  94. context = view.get_context_data()
  95. self.assertIn("environment", context)
  96. .. _topics-testing-advanced-multiple-hosts:
  97. Tests and multiple host names
  98. =============================
  99. The :setting:`ALLOWED_HOSTS` setting is validated when running tests. This
  100. allows the test client to differentiate between internal and external URLs.
  101. Projects that support multitenancy or otherwise alter business logic based on
  102. the request's host and use custom host names in tests must include those hosts
  103. in :setting:`ALLOWED_HOSTS`.
  104. The first option to do so is to add the hosts to your settings file. For
  105. example, the test suite for docs.djangoproject.com includes the following::
  106. from django.test import TestCase
  107. class SearchFormTestCase(TestCase):
  108. def test_empty_get(self):
  109. response = self.client.get(
  110. "/en/dev/search/",
  111. headers={"host": "docs.djangoproject.dev:8000"},
  112. )
  113. self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
  114. and the settings file includes a list of the domains supported by the project::
  115. ALLOWED_HOSTS = ["www.djangoproject.dev", "docs.djangoproject.dev", ...]
  116. Another option is to add the required hosts to :setting:`ALLOWED_HOSTS` using
  117. :meth:`~django.test.override_settings()` or
  118. :attr:`~django.test.SimpleTestCase.modify_settings()`. This option may be
  119. preferable in standalone apps that can't package their own settings file or
  120. for projects where the list of domains is not static (e.g., subdomains for
  121. multitenancy). For example, you could write a test for the domain
  122. ``http://otherserver/`` as follows::
  123. from django.test import TestCase, override_settings
  124. class MultiDomainTestCase(TestCase):
  125. @override_settings(ALLOWED_HOSTS=["otherserver"])
  126. def test_other_domain(self):
  127. response = self.client.get("http://otherserver/foo/bar/")
  128. Disabling :setting:`ALLOWED_HOSTS` checking (``ALLOWED_HOSTS = ['*']``) when
  129. running tests prevents the test client from raising a helpful error message if
  130. you follow a redirect to an external URL.
  131. .. _topics-testing-advanced-multidb:
  132. Tests and multiple databases
  133. ============================
  134. .. _topics-testing-primaryreplica:
  135. Testing primary/replica configurations
  136. --------------------------------------
  137. If you're testing a multiple database configuration with primary/replica
  138. (referred to as master/slave by some databases) replication, this strategy of
  139. creating test databases poses a problem.
  140. When the test databases are created, there won't be any replication,
  141. and as a result, data created on the primary won't be seen on the
  142. replica.
  143. To compensate for this, Django allows you to define that a database is
  144. a *test mirror*. Consider the following (simplified) example database
  145. configuration::
  146. DATABASES = {
  147. "default": {
  148. "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.mysql",
  149. "NAME": "myproject",
  150. "HOST": "dbprimary",
  151. # ... plus some other settings
  152. },
  153. "replica": {
  154. "ENGINE": "django.db.backends.mysql",
  155. "NAME": "myproject",
  156. "HOST": "dbreplica",
  157. "TEST": {
  158. "MIRROR": "default",
  159. },
  160. # ... plus some other settings
  161. },
  162. }
  163. In this setup, we have two database servers: ``dbprimary``, described
  164. by the database alias ``default``, and ``dbreplica`` described by the
  165. alias ``replica``. As you might expect, ``dbreplica`` has been configured
  166. by the database administrator as a read replica of ``dbprimary``, so in
  167. normal activity, any write to ``default`` will appear on ``replica``.
  168. If Django created two independent test databases, this would break any
  169. tests that expected replication to occur. However, the ``replica``
  170. database has been configured as a test mirror (using the
  171. :setting:`MIRROR <TEST_MIRROR>` test setting), indicating that under
  172. testing, ``replica`` should be treated as a mirror of ``default``.
  173. When the test environment is configured, a test version of ``replica``
  174. will *not* be created. Instead the connection to ``replica``
  175. will be redirected to point at ``default``. As a result, writes to
  176. ``default`` will appear on ``replica`` -- but because they are actually
  177. the same database, not because there is data replication between the
  178. two databases. As this depends on transactions, the tests must use
  179. :class:`~django.test.TransactionTestCase` instead of
  180. :class:`~django.test.TestCase`.
  181. .. _topics-testing-creation-dependencies:
  182. Controlling creation order for test databases
  183. ---------------------------------------------
  184. By default, Django will assume all databases depend on the ``default``
  185. database and therefore always create the ``default`` database first.
  186. However, no guarantees are made on the creation order of any other
  187. databases in your test setup.
  188. If your database configuration requires a specific creation order, you
  189. can specify the dependencies that exist using the :setting:`DEPENDENCIES
  190. <TEST_DEPENDENCIES>` test setting. Consider the following (simplified)
  191. example database configuration::
  192. DATABASES = {
  193. "default": {
  194. # ... db settings
  195. "TEST": {
  196. "DEPENDENCIES": ["diamonds"],
  197. },
  198. },
  199. "diamonds": {
  200. # ... db settings
  201. "TEST": {
  202. "DEPENDENCIES": [],
  203. },
  204. },
  205. "clubs": {
  206. # ... db settings
  207. "TEST": {
  208. "DEPENDENCIES": ["diamonds"],
  209. },
  210. },
  211. "spades": {
  212. # ... db settings
  213. "TEST": {
  214. "DEPENDENCIES": ["diamonds", "hearts"],
  215. },
  216. },
  217. "hearts": {
  218. # ... db settings
  219. "TEST": {
  220. "DEPENDENCIES": ["diamonds", "clubs"],
  221. },
  222. },
  223. }
  224. Under this configuration, the ``diamonds`` database will be created first,
  225. as it is the only database alias without dependencies. The ``default`` and
  226. ``clubs`` alias will be created next (although the order of creation of this
  227. pair is not guaranteed), then ``hearts``, and finally ``spades``.
  228. If there are any circular dependencies in the :setting:`DEPENDENCIES
  229. <TEST_DEPENDENCIES>` definition, an
  230. :exc:`~django.core.exceptions.ImproperlyConfigured` exception will be raised.
  231. Advanced features of ``TransactionTestCase``
  232. ============================================
  233. .. attribute:: TransactionTestCase.available_apps
  234. .. warning::
  235. This attribute is a private API. It may be changed or removed without
  236. a deprecation period in the future, for instance to accommodate changes
  237. in application loading.
  238. It's used to optimize Django's own test suite, which contains hundreds
  239. of models but no relations between models in different applications.
  240. By default, ``available_apps`` is set to ``None``. After each test, Django
  241. calls :djadmin:`flush` to reset the database state. This empties all tables
  242. and emits the :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_migrate` signal, which
  243. recreates one content type and four permissions for each model. This
  244. operation gets expensive proportionally to the number of models.
  245. Setting ``available_apps`` to a list of applications instructs Django to
  246. behave as if only the models from these applications were available. The
  247. behavior of ``TransactionTestCase`` changes as follows:
  248. - :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_migrate` is fired before each
  249. test to create the content types and permissions for each model in
  250. available apps, in case they're missing.
  251. - After each test, Django empties only tables corresponding to models in
  252. available apps. However, at the database level, truncation may cascade to
  253. related models in unavailable apps. Furthermore
  254. :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_migrate` isn't fired; it will be
  255. fired by the next ``TransactionTestCase``, after the correct set of
  256. applications is selected.
  257. Since the database isn't fully flushed, if a test creates instances of
  258. models not included in ``available_apps``, they will leak and they may
  259. cause unrelated tests to fail. Be careful with tests that use sessions;
  260. the default session engine stores them in the database.
  261. Since :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_migrate` isn't emitted after
  262. flushing the database, its state after a ``TransactionTestCase`` isn't the
  263. same as after a ``TestCase``: it's missing the rows created by listeners
  264. to :data:`~django.db.models.signals.post_migrate`. Considering the
  265. :ref:`order in which tests are executed <order-of-tests>`, this isn't an
  266. issue, provided either all ``TransactionTestCase`` in a given test suite
  267. declare ``available_apps``, or none of them.
  268. ``available_apps`` is mandatory in Django's own test suite.
  269. .. attribute:: TransactionTestCase.reset_sequences
  270. Setting ``reset_sequences = True`` on a ``TransactionTestCase`` will make
  271. sure sequences are always reset before the test run::
  272. class TestsThatDependsOnPrimaryKeySequences(TransactionTestCase):
  273. reset_sequences = True
  274. def test_animal_pk(self):
  275. lion = Animal.objects.create(name="lion", sound="roar")
  276. # lion.pk is guaranteed to always be 1
  277. self.assertEqual(lion.pk, 1)
  278. Unless you are explicitly testing primary keys sequence numbers, it is
  279. recommended that you do not hard code primary key values in tests.
  280. Using ``reset_sequences = True`` will slow down the test, since the primary
  281. key reset is a relatively expensive database operation.
  282. .. _topics-testing-enforce-run-sequentially:
  283. Enforce running test classes sequentially
  284. =========================================
  285. If you have test classes that cannot be run in parallel (e.g. because they
  286. share a common resource), you can use ``django.test.testcases.SerializeMixin``
  287. to run them sequentially. This mixin uses a filesystem ``lockfile``.
  288. For example, you can use ``__file__`` to determine that all test classes in the
  289. same file that inherit from ``SerializeMixin`` will run sequentially::
  290. import os
  291. from django.test import TestCase
  292. from django.test.testcases import SerializeMixin
  293. class ImageTestCaseMixin(SerializeMixin):
  294. lockfile = __file__
  295. def setUp(self):
  296. self.filename = os.path.join(temp_storage_dir, "my_file.png")
  297. self.file = create_file(self.filename)
  298. class RemoveImageTests(ImageTestCaseMixin, TestCase):
  299. def test_remove_image(self):
  300. os.remove(self.filename)
  301. self.assertFalse(os.path.exists(self.filename))
  302. class ResizeImageTests(ImageTestCaseMixin, TestCase):
  303. def test_resize_image(self):
  304. resize_image(self.file, (48, 48))
  305. self.assertEqual(get_image_size(self.file), (48, 48))
  306. .. _testing-reusable-applications:
  307. Using the Django test runner to test reusable applications
  308. ==========================================================
  309. If you are writing a :doc:`reusable application </intro/reusable-apps>`
  310. you may want to use the Django test runner to run your own test suite
  311. and thus benefit from the Django testing infrastructure.
  312. A common practice is a *tests* directory next to the application code, with the
  313. following structure:
  314. .. code-block:: text
  315. runtests.py
  316. polls/
  317. __init__.py
  318. models.py
  319. ...
  320. tests/
  321. __init__.py
  322. models.py
  323. test_settings.py
  324. tests.py
  325. Let's take a look inside a couple of those files:
  326. .. code-block:: python
  327. :caption: ``runtests.py``
  328. #!/usr/bin/env python
  329. import os
  330. import sys
  331. import django
  332. from django.conf import settings
  333. from django.test.utils import get_runner
  334. if __name__ == "__main__":
  335. os.environ["DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE"] = "tests.test_settings"
  336. django.setup()
  337. TestRunner = get_runner(settings)
  338. test_runner = TestRunner()
  339. failures = test_runner.run_tests(["tests"])
  340. sys.exit(bool(failures))
  341. This is the script that you invoke to run the test suite. It sets up the
  342. Django environment, creates the test database and runs the tests.
  343. For the sake of clarity, this example contains only the bare minimum
  344. necessary to use the Django test runner. You may want to add
  345. command-line options for controlling verbosity, passing in specific test
  346. labels to run, etc.
  347. .. code-block:: python
  348. :caption: ``tests/test_settings.py``
  349. SECRET_KEY = "fake-key"
  350. INSTALLED_APPS = [
  351. "tests",
  352. ]
  353. This file contains the :doc:`Django settings </topics/settings>`
  354. required to run your app's tests.
  355. Again, this is a minimal example; your tests may require additional
  356. settings to run.
  357. Since the *tests* package is included in :setting:`INSTALLED_APPS` when
  358. running your tests, you can define test-only models in its ``models.py``
  359. file.
  360. .. _other-testing-frameworks:
  361. Using different testing frameworks
  362. ==================================
  363. Clearly, :mod:`unittest` is not the only Python testing framework. While Django
  364. doesn't provide explicit support for alternative frameworks, it does provide a
  365. way to invoke tests constructed for an alternative framework as if they were
  366. normal Django tests.
  367. When you run ``./manage.py test``, Django looks at the :setting:`TEST_RUNNER`
  368. setting to determine what to do. By default, :setting:`TEST_RUNNER` points to
  369. ``'django.test.runner.DiscoverRunner'``. This class defines the default Django
  370. testing behavior. This behavior involves:
  371. #. Performing global pre-test setup.
  372. #. Looking for tests in any file below the current directory whose name matches
  373. the pattern ``test*.py``.
  374. #. Creating the test databases.
  375. #. Running ``migrate`` to install models and initial data into the test
  376. databases.
  377. #. Running the :doc:`system checks </topics/checks>`.
  378. #. Running the tests that were found.
  379. #. Destroying the test databases.
  380. #. Performing global post-test teardown.
  381. If you define your own test runner class and point :setting:`TEST_RUNNER` at
  382. that class, Django will execute your test runner whenever you run
  383. ``./manage.py test``. In this way, it is possible to use any test framework
  384. that can be executed from Python code, or to modify the Django test execution
  385. process to satisfy whatever testing requirements you may have.
  386. .. _topics-testing-test_runner:
  387. Defining a test runner
  388. ----------------------
  389. .. currentmodule:: django.test.runner
  390. A test runner is a class defining a ``run_tests()`` method. Django ships
  391. with a ``DiscoverRunner`` class that defines the default Django testing
  392. behavior. This class defines the ``run_tests()`` entry point, plus a
  393. selection of other methods that are used by ``run_tests()`` to set up, execute
  394. and tear down the test suite.
  395. .. class:: DiscoverRunner(pattern='test*.py', top_level=None, verbosity=1, interactive=True, failfast=False, keepdb=False, reverse=False, debug_mode=False, debug_sql=False, parallel=0, tags=None, exclude_tags=None, test_name_patterns=None, pdb=False, buffer=False, enable_faulthandler=True, timing=True, shuffle=False, logger=None, durations=None, **kwargs)
  396. ``DiscoverRunner`` will search for tests in any file matching ``pattern``.
  397. ``top_level`` can be used to specify the directory containing your
  398. top-level Python modules. Usually Django can figure this out automatically,
  399. so it's not necessary to specify this option. If specified, it should
  400. generally be the directory containing your ``manage.py`` file.
  401. ``verbosity`` determines the amount of notification and debug information
  402. that will be printed to the console; ``0`` is no output, ``1`` is normal
  403. output, and ``2`` is verbose output.
  404. If ``interactive`` is ``True``, the test suite has permission to ask the
  405. user for instructions when the test suite is executed. An example of this
  406. behavior would be asking for permission to delete an existing test
  407. database. If ``interactive`` is ``False``, the test suite must be able to
  408. run without any manual intervention.
  409. If ``failfast`` is ``True``, the test suite will stop running after the
  410. first test failure is detected.
  411. If ``keepdb`` is ``True``, the test suite will use the existing database,
  412. or create one if necessary. If ``False``, a new database will be created,
  413. prompting the user to remove the existing one, if present.
  414. If ``reverse`` is ``True``, test cases will be executed in the opposite
  415. order. This could be useful to debug tests that aren't properly isolated
  416. and have side effects. :ref:`Grouping by test class <order-of-tests>` is
  417. preserved when using this option. This option can be used in conjunction
  418. with ``--shuffle`` to reverse the order for a particular random seed.
  419. ``debug_mode`` specifies what the :setting:`DEBUG` setting should be
  420. set to prior to running tests.
  421. ``parallel`` specifies the number of processes. If ``parallel`` is greater
  422. than ``1``, the test suite will run in ``parallel`` processes. If there are
  423. fewer test case classes than configured processes, Django will reduce the
  424. number of processes accordingly. Each process gets its own database. This
  425. option requires the third-party ``tblib`` package to display tracebacks
  426. correctly.
  427. ``tags`` can be used to specify a set of :ref:`tags for filtering tests
  428. <topics-tagging-tests>`. May be combined with ``exclude_tags``.
  429. ``exclude_tags`` can be used to specify a set of
  430. :ref:`tags for excluding tests <topics-tagging-tests>`. May be combined
  431. with ``tags``.
  432. If ``debug_sql`` is ``True``, failing test cases will output SQL queries
  433. logged to the :ref:`django.db.backends logger <django-db-logger>` as well
  434. as the traceback. If ``verbosity`` is ``2``, then queries in all tests are
  435. output.
  436. ``test_name_patterns`` can be used to specify a set of patterns for
  437. filtering test methods and classes by their names.
  438. If ``pdb`` is ``True``, a debugger (``pdb`` or ``ipdb``) will be spawned at
  439. each test error or failure.
  440. If ``buffer`` is ``True``, outputs from passing tests will be discarded.
  441. If ``enable_faulthandler`` is ``True``, :py:mod:`faulthandler` will be
  442. enabled.
  443. If ``timing`` is ``True``, test timings, including database setup and total
  444. run time, will be shown.
  445. If ``shuffle`` is an integer, test cases will be shuffled in a random order
  446. prior to execution, using the integer as a random seed. If ``shuffle`` is
  447. ``None``, the seed will be generated randomly. In both cases, the seed will
  448. be logged and set to ``self.shuffle_seed`` prior to running tests. This
  449. option can be used to help detect tests that aren't properly isolated.
  450. :ref:`Grouping by test class <order-of-tests>` is preserved when using this
  451. option.
  452. ``logger`` can be used to pass a Python :py:ref:`Logger object <logger>`.
  453. If provided, the logger will be used to log messages instead of printing to
  454. the console. The logger object will respect its logging level rather than
  455. the ``verbosity``.
  456. ``durations`` will show a list of the N slowest test cases. Setting this
  457. option to ``0`` will result in the duration for all tests being shown.
  458. Requires Python 3.12+.
  459. Django may, from time to time, extend the capabilities of the test runner
  460. by adding new arguments. The ``**kwargs`` declaration allows for this
  461. expansion. If you subclass ``DiscoverRunner`` or write your own test
  462. runner, ensure it accepts ``**kwargs``.
  463. Your test runner may also define additional command-line options.
  464. Create or override an ``add_arguments(cls, parser)`` class method and add
  465. custom arguments by calling ``parser.add_argument()`` inside the method, so
  466. that the :djadmin:`test` command will be able to use those arguments.
  467. Attributes
  468. ~~~~~~~~~~
  469. .. attribute:: DiscoverRunner.test_suite
  470. The class used to build the test suite. By default it is set to
  471. ``unittest.TestSuite``. This can be overridden if you wish to implement
  472. different logic for collecting tests.
  473. .. attribute:: DiscoverRunner.test_runner
  474. This is the class of the low-level test runner which is used to execute
  475. the individual tests and format the results. By default it is set to
  476. ``unittest.TextTestRunner``. Despite the unfortunate similarity in
  477. naming conventions, this is not the same type of class as
  478. ``DiscoverRunner``, which covers a broader set of responsibilities. You
  479. can override this attribute to modify the way tests are run and reported.
  480. .. attribute:: DiscoverRunner.test_loader
  481. This is the class that loads tests, whether from TestCases or modules or
  482. otherwise and bundles them into test suites for the runner to execute.
  483. By default it is set to ``unittest.defaultTestLoader``. You can override
  484. this attribute if your tests are going to be loaded in unusual ways.
  485. Methods
  486. ~~~~~~~
  487. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.run_tests(test_labels, **kwargs)
  488. Run the test suite.
  489. ``test_labels`` allows you to specify which tests to run and supports
  490. several formats (see :meth:`DiscoverRunner.build_suite` for a list of
  491. supported formats).
  492. This method should return the number of tests that failed.
  493. .. classmethod:: DiscoverRunner.add_arguments(parser)
  494. Override this class method to add custom arguments accepted by the
  495. :djadmin:`test` management command. See
  496. :py:meth:`argparse.ArgumentParser.add_argument()` for details about adding
  497. arguments to a parser.
  498. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.setup_test_environment(**kwargs)
  499. Sets up the test environment by calling
  500. :func:`~django.test.utils.setup_test_environment` and setting
  501. :setting:`DEBUG` to ``self.debug_mode`` (defaults to ``False``).
  502. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.build_suite(test_labels=None, **kwargs)
  503. Constructs a test suite that matches the test labels provided.
  504. ``test_labels`` is a list of strings describing the tests to be run. A test
  505. label can take one of four forms:
  506. * ``path.to.test_module.TestCase.test_method`` -- Run a single test method
  507. in a test case class.
  508. * ``path.to.test_module.TestCase`` -- Run all the test methods in a test
  509. case.
  510. * ``path.to.module`` -- Search for and run all tests in the named Python
  511. package or module.
  512. * ``path/to/directory`` -- Search for and run all tests below the named
  513. directory.
  514. If ``test_labels`` has a value of ``None``, the test runner will search for
  515. tests in all files below the current directory whose names match its
  516. ``pattern`` (see above).
  517. Returns a ``TestSuite`` instance ready to be run.
  518. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.setup_databases(**kwargs)
  519. Creates the test databases by calling
  520. :func:`~django.test.utils.setup_databases`.
  521. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.run_checks(databases)
  522. Runs the :doc:`system checks </topics/checks>` on the test ``databases``.
  523. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.run_suite(suite, **kwargs)
  524. Runs the test suite.
  525. Returns the result produced by the running the test suite.
  526. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.get_test_runner_kwargs()
  527. Returns the keyword arguments to instantiate the
  528. ``DiscoverRunner.test_runner`` with.
  529. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.teardown_databases(old_config, **kwargs)
  530. Destroys the test databases, restoring pre-test conditions by calling
  531. :func:`~django.test.utils.teardown_databases`.
  532. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.teardown_test_environment(**kwargs)
  533. Restores the pre-test environment.
  534. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.suite_result(suite, result, **kwargs)
  535. Computes and returns a return code based on a test suite, and the result
  536. from that test suite.
  537. .. method:: DiscoverRunner.log(msg, level=None)
  538. If a ``logger`` is set, logs the message at the given integer
  539. `logging level`_ (e.g. ``logging.DEBUG``, ``logging.INFO``, or
  540. ``logging.WARNING``). Otherwise, the message is printed to the console,
  541. respecting the current ``verbosity``. For example, no message will be
  542. printed if the ``verbosity`` is 0, ``INFO`` and above will be printed if
  543. the ``verbosity`` is at least 1, and ``DEBUG`` will be printed if it is at
  544. least 2. The ``level`` defaults to ``logging.INFO``.
  545. .. _`logging level`: https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.html#levels
  546. Testing utilities
  547. -----------------
  548. ``django.test.utils``
  549. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  550. .. module:: django.test.utils
  551. :synopsis: Helpers to write custom test runners.
  552. To assist in the creation of your own test runner, Django provides a number of
  553. utility methods in the ``django.test.utils`` module.
  554. .. function:: setup_test_environment(debug=None)
  555. Performs global pre-test setup, such as installing instrumentation for the
  556. template rendering system and setting up the dummy email outbox.
  557. If ``debug`` isn't ``None``, the :setting:`DEBUG` setting is updated to its
  558. value.
  559. .. function:: teardown_test_environment()
  560. Performs global post-test teardown, such as removing instrumentation from
  561. the template system and restoring normal email services.
  562. .. function:: setup_databases(verbosity, interactive, *, time_keeper=None, keepdb=False, debug_sql=False, parallel=0, aliases=None, serialized_aliases=None, **kwargs)
  563. Creates the test databases.
  564. Returns a data structure that provides enough detail to undo the changes
  565. that have been made. This data will be provided to the
  566. :func:`teardown_databases` function at the conclusion of testing.
  567. The ``aliases`` argument determines which :setting:`DATABASES` aliases test
  568. databases should be set up for. If it's not provided, it defaults to all of
  569. :setting:`DATABASES` aliases.
  570. The ``serialized_aliases`` argument determines what subset of ``aliases``
  571. test databases should have their state serialized to allow usage of the
  572. :ref:`serialized_rollback <test-case-serialized-rollback>` feature. If
  573. it's not provided, it defaults to ``aliases``.
  574. .. function:: teardown_databases(old_config, parallel=0, keepdb=False)
  575. Destroys the test databases, restoring pre-test conditions.
  576. ``old_config`` is a data structure defining the changes in the database
  577. configuration that need to be reversed. It's the return value of the
  578. :meth:`setup_databases` method.
  579. ``django.db.connection.creation``
  580. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
  581. .. currentmodule:: django.db.connection.creation
  582. The creation module of the database backend also provides some utilities that
  583. can be useful during testing.
  584. .. function:: create_test_db(verbosity=1, autoclobber=False, serialize=True, keepdb=False)
  585. Creates a new test database and runs ``migrate`` against it.
  586. ``verbosity`` has the same behavior as in ``run_tests()``.
  587. ``autoclobber`` describes the behavior that will occur if a
  588. database with the same name as the test database is discovered:
  589. * If ``autoclobber`` is ``False``, the user will be asked to
  590. approve destroying the existing database. ``sys.exit`` is
  591. called if the user does not approve.
  592. * If ``autoclobber`` is ``True``, the database will be destroyed
  593. without consulting the user.
  594. ``serialize`` determines if Django serializes the database into an
  595. in-memory JSON string before running tests (used to restore the database
  596. state between tests if you don't have transactions). You can set this to
  597. ``False`` to speed up creation time if you don't have any test classes
  598. with :ref:`serialized_rollback=True <test-case-serialized-rollback>`.
  599. ``keepdb`` determines if the test run should use an existing
  600. database, or create a new one. If ``True``, the existing
  601. database will be used, or created if not present. If ``False``,
  602. a new database will be created, prompting the user to remove
  603. the existing one, if present.
  604. Returns the name of the test database that it created.
  605. ``create_test_db()`` has the side effect of modifying the value of
  606. :setting:`NAME` in :setting:`DATABASES` to match the name of the test
  607. database.
  608. .. function:: destroy_test_db(old_database_name, verbosity=1, keepdb=False)
  609. Destroys the database whose name is the value of :setting:`NAME` in
  610. :setting:`DATABASES`, and sets :setting:`NAME` to the value of
  611. ``old_database_name``.
  612. The ``verbosity`` argument has the same behavior as for
  613. :class:`~django.test.runner.DiscoverRunner`.
  614. If the ``keepdb`` argument is ``True``, then the connection to the
  615. database will be closed, but the database will not be destroyed.
  616. .. _topics-testing-code-coverage:
  617. Integration with ``coverage.py``
  618. ================================
  619. Code coverage describes how much source code has been tested. It shows which
  620. parts of your code are being exercised by tests and which are not. It's an
  621. important part of testing applications, so it's strongly recommended to check
  622. the coverage of your tests.
  623. Django can be easily integrated with `coverage.py`_, a tool for measuring code
  624. coverage of Python programs. First, install :pypi:`coverage`. Next, run the
  625. following from your project folder containing ``manage.py``:
  626. .. code-block:: shell
  627. coverage run --source='.' manage.py test myapp
  628. This runs your tests and collects coverage data of the executed files in your
  629. project. You can see a report of this data by typing following command:
  630. .. code-block:: shell
  631. coverage report
  632. Note that some Django code was executed while running tests, but it is not
  633. listed here because of the ``source`` flag passed to the previous command.
  634. For more options like annotated HTML listings detailing missed lines, see the
  635. `coverage.py`_ docs.
  636. .. _coverage.py: https://coverage.readthedocs.io/