import difflib import pprint import pickle import re import sys import warnings import inspect from copy import deepcopy from test import support import unittest from .support import ( TestEquality, TestHashing, LoggingResult, ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun ) class Test(object): "Keep these TestCase classes out of the main namespace" class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): pass def test1(self): pass class Bar(Foo): def test2(self): pass class LoggingTestCase(unittest.TestCase): """A test case which logs its calls.""" def __init__(self, events): super(Test.LoggingTestCase, self).__init__('test') self.events = events def setUp(self): self.events.append('setUp') def test(self): self.events.append('test') def tearDown(self): self.events.append('tearDown') class Test_TestCase(unittest.TestCase, TestEquality, TestHashing): ### Set up attributes used by inherited tests ################################################################ # Used by TestHashing.test_hash and TestEquality.test_eq eq_pairs = [(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Foo('test1'))] # Used by TestEquality.test_ne ne_pairs = [(Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Foo('runTest')), (Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Bar('test1')), (Test.Foo('test1'), Test.Bar('test2'))] ################################################################ ### /Set up attributes used by inherited tests # "class TestCase([methodName])" # ... # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the # method named methodName." # ... # "methodName defaults to "runTest"." # # Make sure it really is optional, and that it defaults to the proper # thing. def test_init__no_test_name(self): class Test(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): raise MyException() def test(self): pass self.assertEqual(Test().id()[-13:], '.Test.runTest') # test that TestCase can be instantiated with no args # primarily for use at the interactive interpreter test = unittest.TestCase() test.assertEqual(3, 3) with test.assertRaises(test.failureException): test.assertEqual(3, 2) with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): test.run() # "class TestCase([methodName])" # ... # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the # method named methodName." def test_init__test_name__valid(self): class Test(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): raise MyException() def test(self): pass self.assertEqual(Test('test').id()[-10:], '.Test.test') # "class TestCase([methodName])" # ... # "Each instance of TestCase will run a single test method: the # method named methodName." def test_init__test_name__invalid(self): class Test(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): raise MyException() def test(self): pass try: Test('testfoo') except ValueError: pass else: self.fail("Failed to raise ValueError") # "Return the number of tests represented by the this test object. For # TestCase instances, this will always be 1" def test_countTestCases(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): pass self.assertEqual(Foo('test').countTestCases(), 1) # "Return the default type of test result object to be used to run this # test. For TestCase instances, this will always be # unittest.TestResult; subclasses of TestCase should # override this as necessary." def test_defaultTestResult(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): pass result = Foo().defaultTestResult() self.assertEqual(type(result), unittest.TestResult) # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." # # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if setUp() raises # an exception. def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def setUp(self): super(Foo, self).setUp() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') Foo(events).run(result) expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "With a temporary result stopTestRun is called when setUp errors. def test_run_call_order__error_in_setUp_default_result(self): events = [] class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def defaultTestResult(self): return LoggingResult(self.events) def setUp(self): super(Foo, self).setUp() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.setUp') Foo(events).run() expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'addError', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." # # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test raises # an error (as opposed to a failure). def test_run_call_order__error_in_test(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def test(self): super(Foo, self).test() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', 'stopTest'] Foo(events).run(result) self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "With a default result, an error in the test still results in stopTestRun # being called." def test_run_call_order__error_in_test_default_result(self): events = [] class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def defaultTestResult(self): return LoggingResult(self.events) def test(self): super(Foo, self).test() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.test') expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] Foo(events).run() self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." # # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if the test signals # a failure (as opposed to an error). def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def test(self): super(Foo, self).test() self.fail('raised by Foo.test') expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] Foo(events).run(result) self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "When a test fails with a default result stopTestRun is still called." def test_run_call_order__failure_in_test_default_result(self): class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def defaultTestResult(self): return LoggingResult(self.events) def test(self): super(Foo, self).test() self.fail('raised by Foo.test') expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addFailure', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] events = [] Foo(events).run() self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "When a setUp() method is defined, the test runner will run that method # prior to each test. Likewise, if a tearDown() method is defined, the # test runner will invoke that method after each test. In the example, # setUp() was used to create a fresh sequence for each test." # # Make sure the proper call order is maintained, even if tearDown() raises # an exception. def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def tearDown(self): super(Foo, self).tearDown() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') Foo(events).run(result) expected = ['startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', 'stopTest'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "When tearDown errors with a default result stopTestRun is still called." def test_run_call_order__error_in_tearDown_default_result(self): class Foo(Test.LoggingTestCase): def defaultTestResult(self): return LoggingResult(self.events) def tearDown(self): super(Foo, self).tearDown() raise RuntimeError('raised by Foo.tearDown') events = [] Foo(events).run() expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'setUp', 'test', 'tearDown', 'addError', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "TestCase.run() still works when the defaultTestResult is a TestResult # that does not support startTestRun and stopTestRun. def test_run_call_order_default_result(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def defaultTestResult(self): return ResultWithNoStartTestRunStopTestRun() def test(self): pass Foo('test').run() # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in # order to ``play fair'' with the framework. The initial value of this # attribute is AssertionError" def test_failureException__default(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): pass self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is AssertionError) # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." # # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException def test_failureException__subclassing__explicit_raise(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): raise RuntimeError() failureException = RuntimeError self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) Foo('test').run(result) expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "This class attribute gives the exception raised by the test() method. # If a test framework needs to use a specialized exception, possibly to # carry additional information, it must subclass this exception in # order to ``play fair'' with the framework." # # Make sure TestCase.run() respects the designated failureException def test_failureException__subclassing__implicit_raise(self): events = [] result = LoggingResult(events) class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): self.fail("foo") failureException = RuntimeError self.assertTrue(Foo('test').failureException is RuntimeError) Foo('test').run(result) expected = ['startTest', 'addFailure', 'stopTest'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) # "The default implementation does nothing." def test_setUp(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): pass # ... and nothing should happen Foo().setUp() # "The default implementation does nothing." def test_tearDown(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): pass # ... and nothing should happen Foo().tearDown() # "Return a string identifying the specific test case." # # Because of the vague nature of the docs, I'm not going to lock this # test down too much. Really all that can be asserted is that the id() # will be a string (either 8-byte or unicode -- again, because the docs # just say "string") def test_id(self): class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def runTest(self): pass self.assertIsInstance(Foo().id(), str) # "If result is omitted or None, a temporary result object is created # and used, but is not made available to the caller. As TestCase owns the # temporary result startTestRun and stopTestRun are called. def test_run__uses_defaultTestResult(self): events = [] class Foo(unittest.TestCase): def test(self): events.append('test') def defaultTestResult(self): return LoggingResult(events) # Make run() find a result object on its own Foo('test').run() expected = ['startTestRun', 'startTest', 'test', 'addSuccess', 'stopTest', 'stopTestRun'] self.assertEqual(events, expected) def testShortDescriptionWithoutDocstring(self): self.assertIsNone(self.shortDescription()) @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") def testShortDescriptionWithOneLineDocstring(self): """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.""" self.assertEqual( self.shortDescription(), 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a docstring.') @unittest.skipIf(sys.flags.optimize >= 2, "Docstrings are omitted with -O2 and above") def testShortDescriptionWithMultiLineDocstring(self): """Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer docstring. This method ensures that only the first line of a docstring is returned used in the short description, no matter how long the whole thing is. """ self.assertEqual( self.shortDescription(), 'Tests shortDescription() for a method with a longer ' 'docstring.') def testAddTypeEqualityFunc(self): class SadSnake(object): """Dummy class for test_addTypeEqualityFunc.""" s1, s2 = SadSnake(), SadSnake() self.assertFalse(s1 == s2) def AllSnakesCreatedEqual(a, b, msg=None): return type(a) == type(b) == SadSnake self.addTypeEqualityFunc(SadSnake, AllSnakesCreatedEqual) self.assertEqual(s1, s2) # No this doesn't clean up and remove the SadSnake equality func # from this TestCase instance but since its a local nothing else # will ever notice that. def testAssertIs(self): thing = object() self.assertIs(thing, thing) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIs, thing, object()) def testAssertIsNot(self): thing = object() self.assertIsNot(thing, object()) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNot, thing, thing) def testAssertIsInstance(self): thing = [] self.assertIsInstance(thing, list) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsInstance, thing, dict) def testAssertNotIsInstance(self): thing = [] self.assertNotIsInstance(thing, dict) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIsInstance, thing, list) def testAssertIn(self): animals = {'monkey': 'banana', 'cow': 'grass', 'seal': 'fish'} self.assertIn('a', 'abc') self.assertIn(2, [1, 2, 3]) self.assertIn('monkey', animals) self.assertNotIn('d', 'abc') self.assertNotIn(0, [1, 2, 3]) self.assertNotIn('otter', animals) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'x', 'abc') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 4, [1, 2, 3]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIn, 'elephant', animals) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'c', 'abc') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 1, [1, 2, 3]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertNotIn, 'cow', animals) def testAssertDictContainsSubset(self): with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("ignore", DeprecationWarning) self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {}) self.assertDictContainsSubset({}, {'a': 1}) self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1}) self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'b': 2}, {'a': 1, 'b': 2}) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({1: "one"}, {}) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 2}, {'a': 1}) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({'a': 1, 'c': 1}, {'a': 1}) one = ''.join(chr(i) for i in range(255)) # this used to cause a UnicodeDecodeError constructing the failure msg with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertDictContainsSubset({'foo': one}, {'foo': '\uFFFD'}) def testAssertEqual(self): equal_pairs = [ ((), ()), ({}, {}), ([], []), (set(), set()), (frozenset(), frozenset())] for a, b in equal_pairs: # This mess of try excepts is to test the assertEqual behavior # itself. try: self.assertEqual(a, b) except self.failureException: self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) failed' % (a, b)) try: self.assertEqual(a, b, msg='foo') except self.failureException: self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with msg= failed' % (a, b)) try: self.assertEqual(a, b, 'foo') except self.failureException: self.fail('assertEqual(%r, %r) with third parameter failed' % (a, b)) unequal_pairs = [ ((), []), ({}, set()), (set([4,1]), frozenset([4,2])), (frozenset([4,5]), set([2,3])), (set([3,4]), set([5,4]))] for a, b in unequal_pairs: self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, 'foo') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertEqual, a, b, msg='foo') def testEquality(self): self.assertListEqual([], []) self.assertTupleEqual((), ()) self.assertSequenceEqual([], ()) a = [0, 'a', []] b = [] self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, self.assertListEqual, a, b) self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, self.assertListEqual, tuple(a), tuple(b)) self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, a, tuple(b)) b.extend(a) self.assertListEqual(a, b) self.assertTupleEqual(tuple(a), tuple(b)) self.assertSequenceEqual(a, tuple(b)) self.assertSequenceEqual(tuple(a), b) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, a, tuple(b)) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, tuple(a), b) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, None, b) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, None, tuple(b)) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, None, tuple(b)) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertListEqual, 1, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertTupleEqual, 1, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSequenceEqual, 1, 1) self.assertDictEqual({}, {}) c = { 'x': 1 } d = {} self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, c, d) d.update(c) self.assertDictEqual(c, d) d['x'] = 0 self.assertRaises(unittest.TestCase.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, c, d, 'These are unequal') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, None, d) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, [], d) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertDictEqual, 1, 1) def testAssertSequenceEqualMaxDiff(self): self.assertEqual(self.maxDiff, 80*8) seq1 = 'a' + 'x' * 80**2 seq2 = 'b' + 'x' * 80**2 diff = '\n'.join(difflib.ndiff(pprint.pformat(seq1).splitlines(), pprint.pformat(seq2).splitlines())) # the +1 is the leading \n added by assertSequenceEqual omitted = unittest.case.DIFF_OMITTED % (len(diff) + 1,) self.maxDiff = len(diff)//2 try: self.assertSequenceEqual(seq1, seq2) except self.failureException as e: msg = e.args[0] else: self.fail('assertSequenceEqual did not fail.') self.assertTrue(len(msg) < len(diff)) self.assertIn(omitted, msg) self.maxDiff = len(diff) * 2 try: self.assertSequenceEqual(seq1, seq2) except self.failureException as e: msg = e.args[0] else: self.fail('assertSequenceEqual did not fail.') self.assertTrue(len(msg) > len(diff)) self.assertNotIn(omitted, msg) self.maxDiff = None try: self.assertSequenceEqual(seq1, seq2) except self.failureException as e: msg = e.args[0] else: self.fail('assertSequenceEqual did not fail.') self.assertTrue(len(msg) > len(diff)) self.assertNotIn(omitted, msg) def testTruncateMessage(self): self.maxDiff = 1 message = self._truncateMessage('foo', 'bar') omitted = unittest.case.DIFF_OMITTED % len('bar') self.assertEqual(message, 'foo' + omitted) self.maxDiff = None message = self._truncateMessage('foo', 'bar') self.assertEqual(message, 'foobar') self.maxDiff = 4 message = self._truncateMessage('foo', 'bar') self.assertEqual(message, 'foobar') def testAssertDictEqualTruncates(self): test = unittest.TestCase('assertEqual') def truncate(msg, diff): return 'foo' test._truncateMessage = truncate try: test.assertDictEqual({}, {1: 0}) except self.failureException as e: self.assertEqual(str(e), 'foo') else: self.fail('assertDictEqual did not fail') def testAssertMultiLineEqualTruncates(self): test = unittest.TestCase('assertEqual') def truncate(msg, diff): return 'foo' test._truncateMessage = truncate try: test.assertMultiLineEqual('foo', 'bar') except self.failureException as e: self.assertEqual(str(e), 'foo') else: self.fail('assertMultiLineEqual did not fail') def testAssertEqual_diffThreshold(self): # check threshold value self.assertEqual(self._diffThreshold, 2**16) # disable madDiff to get diff markers self.maxDiff = None # set a lower threshold value and add a cleanup to restore it old_threshold = self._diffThreshold self._diffThreshold = 2**8 self.addCleanup(lambda: setattr(self, '_diffThreshold', old_threshold)) # under the threshold: diff marker (^) in error message s = 'x' * (2**7) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException) as cm: self.assertEqual(s + 'a', s + 'b') self.assertIn('^', str(cm.exception)) self.assertEqual(s + 'a', s + 'a') # over the threshold: diff not used and marker (^) not in error message s = 'x' * (2**9) # if the path that uses difflib is taken, _truncateMessage will be # called -- replace it with explodingTruncation to verify that this # doesn't happen def explodingTruncation(message, diff): raise SystemError('this should not be raised') old_truncate = self._truncateMessage self._truncateMessage = explodingTruncation self.addCleanup(lambda: setattr(self, '_truncateMessage', old_truncate)) s1, s2 = s + 'a', s + 'b' with self.assertRaises(self.failureException) as cm: self.assertEqual(s1, s2) self.assertNotIn('^', str(cm.exception)) self.assertEqual(str(cm.exception), '%r != %r' % (s1, s2)) self.assertEqual(s + 'a', s + 'a') def testAssertCountEqual(self): a = object() self.assertCountEqual([1, 2, 3], [3, 2, 1]) self.assertCountEqual(['foo', 'bar', 'baz'], ['bar', 'baz', 'foo']) self.assertCountEqual([a, a, 2, 2, 3], (a, 2, 3, a, 2)) self.assertCountEqual([1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, "a"]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [1, 2] + [3] * 100, [1] * 100 + [2, 3]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [1, "2", "a", "a"], ["a", "2", True, 1]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [10], [10, 11]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [10, 11], [10]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [10, 11, 10], [10, 11]) # Test that sequences of unhashable objects can be tested for sameness: self.assertCountEqual([[1, 2], [3, 4], 0], [False, [3, 4], [1, 2]]) # Test that iterator of unhashable objects can be tested for sameness: self.assertCountEqual(iter([1, 2, [], 3, 4]), iter([1, 2, [], 3, 4])) # hashable types, but not orderable self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [], [divmod, 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, frozenset()]) # comparing dicts self.assertCountEqual([{'a': 1}, {'b': 2}], [{'b': 2}, {'a': 1}]) # comparing heterogenous non-hashable sequences self.assertCountEqual([1, 'x', divmod, []], [divmod, [], 'x', 1]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [], [divmod, [], 'x', 1, 5j, 2j, set()]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [[1]], [[2]]) # Same elements, but not same sequence length self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [1, 1, 2], [2, 1]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [1, 1, "2", "a", "a"], ["2", "2", True, "a"]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertCountEqual, [1, {'b': 2}, None, True], [{'b': 2}, True, None]) # Same elements which don't reliably compare, in # different order, see issue 10242 a = [{2,4}, {1,2}] b = a[::-1] self.assertCountEqual(a, b) # test utility functions supporting assertCountEqual() diffs = set(unittest.util._count_diff_all_purpose('aaabccd', 'abbbcce')) expected = {(3,1,'a'), (1,3,'b'), (1,0,'d'), (0,1,'e')} self.assertEqual(diffs, expected) diffs = unittest.util._count_diff_all_purpose([[]], []) self.assertEqual(diffs, [(1, 0, [])]) diffs = set(unittest.util._count_diff_hashable('aaabccd', 'abbbcce')) expected = {(3,1,'a'), (1,3,'b'), (1,0,'d'), (0,1,'e')} self.assertEqual(diffs, expected) def testAssertSetEqual(self): set1 = set() set2 = set() self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, None, set2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, [], set2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, None) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, []) set1 = set(['a']) set2 = set() self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) set1 = set(['a']) set2 = set(['a']) self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) set1 = set(['a']) set2 = set(['a', 'b']) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) set1 = set(['a']) set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) set1 = set(['a', 'b']) set2 = frozenset(['a', 'b']) self.assertSetEqual(set1, set2) set1 = set() set2 = "foo" self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set2, set1) # make sure any string formatting is tuple-safe set1 = set([(0, 1), (2, 3)]) set2 = set([(4, 5)]) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertSetEqual, set1, set2) def testInequality(self): # Try ints self.assertGreater(2, 1) self.assertGreaterEqual(2, 1) self.assertGreaterEqual(1, 1) self.assertLess(1, 2) self.assertLessEqual(1, 2) self.assertLessEqual(1, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1, 2) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 2, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1, 1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 2, 1) # Try Floats self.assertGreater(1.1, 1.0) self.assertGreaterEqual(1.1, 1.0) self.assertGreaterEqual(1.0, 1.0) self.assertLess(1.0, 1.1) self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.1) self.assertLessEqual(1.0, 1.0) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 1.0, 1.0) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 1.0, 1.1) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.1, 1.0) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 1.0, 1.0) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 1.1, 1.0) # Try Strings self.assertGreater('bug', 'ant') self.assertGreaterEqual('bug', 'ant') self.assertGreaterEqual('ant', 'ant') self.assertLess('ant', 'bug') self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'bug') self.assertLessEqual('ant', 'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'bug') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, 'ant', 'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, 'ant', 'bug') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'bug', 'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, 'ant', 'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, 'bug', 'ant') # Try bytes self.assertGreater(b'bug', b'ant') self.assertGreaterEqual(b'bug', b'ant') self.assertGreaterEqual(b'ant', b'ant') self.assertLess(b'ant', b'bug') self.assertLessEqual(b'ant', b'bug') self.assertLessEqual(b'ant', b'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, b'ant', b'bug') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreater, b'ant', b'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertGreaterEqual, b'ant', b'bug') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, b'bug', b'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLess, b'ant', b'ant') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertLessEqual, b'bug', b'ant') def testAssertMultiLineEqual(self): sample_text = """\ http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html test case A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] """ revised_sample_text = """\ http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html test case A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. """ sample_text_error = """\ - http://www.python.org/doc/2.3/lib/module-unittest.html ? ^ + http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.1/lib/module-unittest.html ? ^^^ test case - A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] + A test case is the smallest unit of testing. [...] You may provide your ? +++++++++++++++++++++ + own implementation that does not subclass from TestCase, of course. """ self.maxDiff = None try: self.assertMultiLineEqual(sample_text, revised_sample_text) except self.failureException as e: # need to remove the first line of the error message error = str(e).split('\n', 1)[1] # no fair testing ourself with ourself, and assertEqual is used for strings # so can't use assertEqual either. Just use assertTrue. self.assertTrue(sample_text_error == error) def testAsertEqualSingleLine(self): sample_text = "laden swallows fly slowly" revised_sample_text = "unladen swallows fly quickly" sample_text_error = """\ - laden swallows fly slowly ? ^^^^ + unladen swallows fly quickly ? ++ ^^^^^ """ try: self.assertEqual(sample_text, revised_sample_text) except self.failureException as e: error = str(e).split('\n', 1)[1] self.assertTrue(sample_text_error == error) def testAssertIsNone(self): self.assertIsNone(None) self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNone, False) self.assertIsNotNone('DjZoPloGears on Rails') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertIsNotNone, None) def testAssertRegex(self): self.assertRegex('asdfabasdf', r'ab+') self.assertRaises(self.failureException, self.assertRegex, 'saaas', r'aaaa') def testAssertRaisesRegex(self): class ExceptionMock(Exception): pass def Stub(): raise ExceptionMock('We expect') self.assertRaisesRegex(ExceptionMock, re.compile('expect$'), Stub) self.assertRaisesRegex(ExceptionMock, 'expect$', Stub) def testAssertNotRaisesRegex(self): self.assertRaisesRegex( self.failureException, '^Exception not raised by $', self.assertRaisesRegex, Exception, re.compile('x'), lambda: None) self.assertRaisesRegex( self.failureException, '^Exception not raised by $', self.assertRaisesRegex, Exception, 'x', lambda: None) def testAssertRaisesRegexMismatch(self): def Stub(): raise Exception('Unexpected') self.assertRaisesRegex( self.failureException, r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', self.assertRaisesRegex, Exception, '^Expected$', Stub) self.assertRaisesRegex( self.failureException, r'"\^Expected\$" does not match "Unexpected"', self.assertRaisesRegex, Exception, re.compile('^Expected$'), Stub) def testAssertRaisesExcValue(self): class ExceptionMock(Exception): pass def Stub(foo): raise ExceptionMock(foo) v = "particular value" ctx = self.assertRaises(ExceptionMock) with ctx: Stub(v) e = ctx.exception self.assertIsInstance(e, ExceptionMock) self.assertEqual(e.args[0], v) def testAssertWarnsCallable(self): def _runtime_warn(): warnings.warn("foo", RuntimeWarning) # Success when the right warning is triggered, even several times self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning, _runtime_warn) self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning, _runtime_warn) # A tuple of warning classes is accepted self.assertWarns((DeprecationWarning, RuntimeWarning), _runtime_warn) # *args and **kwargs also work self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning, warnings.warn, "foo", category=RuntimeWarning) # Failure when no warning is triggered with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning, lambda: 0) # Failure when another warning is triggered with warnings.catch_warnings(): # Force default filter (in case tests are run with -We) warnings.simplefilter("default", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning, _runtime_warn) # Filters for other warnings are not modified with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("error", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(RuntimeWarning): self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning, _runtime_warn) def testAssertWarnsContext(self): # Believe it or not, it is preferrable to duplicate all tests above, # to make sure the __warningregistry__ $@ is circumvented correctly. def _runtime_warn(): warnings.warn("foo", RuntimeWarning) _runtime_warn_lineno = inspect.getsourcelines(_runtime_warn)[1] with self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning) as cm: _runtime_warn() # A tuple of warning classes is accepted with self.assertWarns((DeprecationWarning, RuntimeWarning)) as cm: _runtime_warn() # The context manager exposes various useful attributes self.assertIsInstance(cm.warning, RuntimeWarning) self.assertEqual(cm.warning.args[0], "foo") self.assertIn("test_case.py", cm.filename) self.assertEqual(cm.lineno, _runtime_warn_lineno + 1) # Same with several warnings with self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning): _runtime_warn() _runtime_warn() with self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning): warnings.warn("foo", category=RuntimeWarning) # Failure when no warning is triggered with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): with self.assertWarns(RuntimeWarning): pass # Failure when another warning is triggered with warnings.catch_warnings(): # Force default filter (in case tests are run with -We) warnings.simplefilter("default", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): with self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning): _runtime_warn() # Filters for other warnings are not modified with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("error", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(RuntimeWarning): with self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning): _runtime_warn() def testAssertWarnsRegexCallable(self): def _runtime_warn(msg): warnings.warn(msg, RuntimeWarning) self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+", _runtime_warn, "foox") # Failure when no warning is triggered with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+", lambda: 0) # Failure when another warning is triggered with warnings.catch_warnings(): # Force default filter (in case tests are run with -We) warnings.simplefilter("default", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertWarnsRegex(DeprecationWarning, "o+", _runtime_warn, "foox") # Failure when message doesn't match with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+", _runtime_warn, "barz") # A little trickier: we ask RuntimeWarnings to be raised, and then # check for some of them. It is implementation-defined whether # non-matching RuntimeWarnings are simply re-raised, or produce a # failureException. with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("error", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises((RuntimeWarning, self.failureException)): self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+", _runtime_warn, "barz") def testAssertWarnsRegexContext(self): # Same as above, but with assertWarnsRegex as a context manager def _runtime_warn(msg): warnings.warn(msg, RuntimeWarning) _runtime_warn_lineno = inspect.getsourcelines(_runtime_warn)[1] with self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+") as cm: _runtime_warn("foox") self.assertIsInstance(cm.warning, RuntimeWarning) self.assertEqual(cm.warning.args[0], "foox") self.assertIn("test_case.py", cm.filename) self.assertEqual(cm.lineno, _runtime_warn_lineno + 1) # Failure when no warning is triggered with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): with self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+"): pass # Failure when another warning is triggered with warnings.catch_warnings(): # Force default filter (in case tests are run with -We) warnings.simplefilter("default", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): with self.assertWarnsRegex(DeprecationWarning, "o+"): _runtime_warn("foox") # Failure when message doesn't match with self.assertRaises(self.failureException): with self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+"): _runtime_warn("barz") # A little trickier: we ask RuntimeWarnings to be raised, and then # check for some of them. It is implementation-defined whether # non-matching RuntimeWarnings are simply re-raised, or produce a # failureException. with warnings.catch_warnings(): warnings.simplefilter("error", RuntimeWarning) with self.assertRaises((RuntimeWarning, self.failureException)): with self.assertWarnsRegex(RuntimeWarning, "o+"): _runtime_warn("barz") def testDeprecatedMethodNames(self): """ Test that the deprecated methods raise a DeprecationWarning. See #9424. """ old = ( (self.failIfEqual, (3, 5)), (self.assertNotEquals, (3, 5)), (self.failUnlessEqual, (3, 3)), (self.assertEquals, (3, 3)), (self.failUnlessAlmostEqual, (2.0, 2.0)), (self.assertAlmostEquals, (2.0, 2.0)), (self.failIfAlmostEqual, (3.0, 5.0)), (self.assertNotAlmostEquals, (3.0, 5.0)), (self.failUnless, (True,)), (self.assert_, (True,)), (self.failUnlessRaises, (TypeError, lambda _: 3.14 + 'spam')), (self.failIf, (False,)), (self.assertSameElements, ([1, 1, 2, 3], [1, 2, 3])), (self.assertDictContainsSubset, (dict(a=1, b=2), dict(a=1, b=2, c=3))), (self.assertRaisesRegexp, (KeyError, 'foo', lambda: {}['foo'])), (self.assertRegexpMatches, ('bar', 'bar')), ) for meth, args in old: with self.assertWarns(DeprecationWarning): meth(*args) def testDeprecatedFailMethods(self): """Test that the deprecated fail* methods get removed in 3.3""" if sys.version_info[:2] < (3, 3): return deprecated_names = [ 'failIfEqual', 'failUnlessEqual', 'failUnlessAlmostEqual', 'failIfAlmostEqual', 'failUnless', 'failUnlessRaises', 'failIf', 'assertSameElements', 'assertDictContainsSubset', ] for deprecated_name in deprecated_names: with self.assertRaises(AttributeError): getattr(self, deprecated_name) # remove these in 3.3 def testDeepcopy(self): # Issue: 5660 class TestableTest(unittest.TestCase): def testNothing(self): pass test = TestableTest('testNothing') # This shouldn't blow up deepcopy(test) def testPickle(self): # Issue 10326 # Can't use TestCase classes defined in Test class as # pickle does not work with inner classes test = unittest.TestCase('run') for protocol in range(pickle.HIGHEST_PROTOCOL + 1): # blew up prior to fix pickled_test = pickle.dumps(test, protocol=protocol) unpickled_test = pickle.loads(pickled_test) self.assertEqual(test, unpickled_test) # exercise the TestCase instance in a way that will invoke # the type equality lookup mechanism unpickled_test.assertEqual(set(), set()) def testKeyboardInterrupt(self): def _raise(self=None): raise KeyboardInterrupt def nothing(self): pass class Test1(unittest.TestCase): test_something = _raise class Test2(unittest.TestCase): setUp = _raise test_something = nothing class Test3(unittest.TestCase): test_something = nothing tearDown = _raise class Test4(unittest.TestCase): def test_something(self): self.addCleanup(_raise) for klass in (Test1, Test2, Test3, Test4): with self.assertRaises(KeyboardInterrupt): klass('test_something').run() def testSkippingEverywhere(self): def _skip(self=None): raise unittest.SkipTest('some reason') def nothing(self): pass class Test1(unittest.TestCase): test_something = _skip class Test2(unittest.TestCase): setUp = _skip test_something = nothing class Test3(unittest.TestCase): test_something = nothing tearDown = _skip class Test4(unittest.TestCase): def test_something(self): self.addCleanup(_skip) for klass in (Test1, Test2, Test3, Test4): result = unittest.TestResult() klass('test_something').run(result) self.assertEqual(len(result.skipped), 1) self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1) def testSystemExit(self): def _raise(self=None): raise SystemExit def nothing(self): pass class Test1(unittest.TestCase): test_something = _raise class Test2(unittest.TestCase): setUp = _raise test_something = nothing class Test3(unittest.TestCase): test_something = nothing tearDown = _raise class Test4(unittest.TestCase): def test_something(self): self.addCleanup(_raise) for klass in (Test1, Test2, Test3, Test4): result = unittest.TestResult() klass('test_something').run(result) self.assertEqual(len(result.errors), 1) self.assertEqual(result.testsRun, 1)