unittest.mock
--- 模拟对象库¶
3.3 新版功能.
源代码: Lib/unittest/mock.py
unittest.mock
是一个用于测试的Python库。它允许使用模拟对象来替换受测系统的一些部分,并对这些部分如何被使用进行断言判断。
unittest.mock
提供的 Mock
类,能在整个测试套件中模拟大量的方法。创建后,就可以断言调用了哪些方法/属性及其参数。还可以以常规方式指定返回值并设置所需的属性。
此外,mock 还提供了用于修补测试范围内模块和类级别属性的 patch()
装饰器,和用于创建独特对象的 sentinel
。 阅读 quick guide 中的案例了解如何使用 Mock
,MagicMock
和 patch()
。
Mock is designed for use with unittest
and
is based on the 'action -> assertion' pattern instead of 'record -> replay'
used by many mocking frameworks.
在 Python 的早期版本要单独使用 unittest.mock
,在 PyPI 获取 mock 。
快速上手¶
当您访问对象时, Mock
和 MagicMock
将创建所有属性和方法,并保存他们在使用时的细节。你可以通过配置,指定返回值或者限制可访问属性,然后断言他们如何被调用:
>>> from unittest.mock import MagicMock
>>> thing = ProductionClass()
>>> thing.method = MagicMock(return_value=3)
>>> thing.method(3, 4, 5, key='value')
3
>>> thing.method.assert_called_with(3, 4, 5, key='value')
通过 side_effect
设置副作用(side effects) ,可以是一个 mock 被调用是抛出的异常:
>>> mock = Mock(side_effect=KeyError('foo'))
>>> mock()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: 'foo'
>>> values = {'a': 1, 'b': 2, 'c': 3}
>>> def side_effect(arg):
... return values[arg]
...
>>> mock.side_effect = side_effect
>>> mock('a'), mock('b'), mock('c')
(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock.side_effect = [5, 4, 3, 2, 1]
>>> mock(), mock(), mock()
(5, 4, 3)
Mock 还可以通过其他方法配置和控制其行为。例如 mock 可以通过设置 spec 参数来从一个对象中获取其规格(specification)。如果访问 mock 的属性或方法不在 spec 中,会报 AttributeError
错误。
使用 patch()
装饰去/上下文管理器,可以更方便地测试一个模块下的类或对象。你指定的对象会在测试过程中替换成 mock (或者其他对象),测试结束后恢复。
>>> from unittest.mock import patch
>>> @patch('module.ClassName2')
... @patch('module.ClassName1')
... def test(MockClass1, MockClass2):
... module.ClassName1()
... module.ClassName2()
... assert MockClass1 is module.ClassName1
... assert MockClass2 is module.ClassName2
... assert MockClass1.called
... assert MockClass2.called
...
>>> test()
注解
当你嵌套 patch 装饰器时,mock 将以执行顺序传递给装饰器函数(Python 装饰器正常顺序)。由于从下至上,因此在上面的示例中,首先 mock 传入的 module.ClassName1
。
patch()
也可以 with 语句中使用上下文管理。
>>> with patch.object(ProductionClass, 'method', return_value=None) as mock_method:
... thing = ProductionClass()
... thing.method(1, 2, 3)
...
>>> mock_method.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
还有一个 patch.dict()
用于在一定范围内设置字典中的值,并在测试结束时将字典恢复为其原始状态:
>>> foo = {'key': 'value'}
>>> original = foo.copy()
>>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}, clear=True):
... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
...
>>> assert foo == original
Mock支持 Python 魔术方法 。使用模式方法最简单的方式是使用 MagicMock
class. 。它可以做如下事情:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'foobarbaz'
>>> str(mock)
'foobarbaz'
>>> mock.__str__.assert_called_with()
Mock 能指定函数(或其他 Mock 实例)为魔术方法,它们将被适当地调用。 MagicMock
是预先创建了所有魔术方法(所有有用的方法) 的 Mock 。
下面是一个使用了普通 Mock 类的魔术方法的例子
>>> mock = Mock()
>>> mock.__str__ = Mock(return_value='wheeeeee')
>>> str(mock)
'wheeeeee'
使用 auto-speccing 可以保证测试中的模拟对象与要替换的对象具有相同的api 。在 patch 中可以通过 autospec 参数实现自动推断,或者使用 create_autospec()
函数。自动推断会创建一个与要替换对象相同的属相和方法的模拟对象,并且任何函数和方法(包括构造函数)都具有与真实对象相同的调用签名。
这么做是为了因确保不当地使用 mock 导致与生产代码相同的失败:
>>> from unittest.mock import create_autospec
>>> def function(a, b, c):
... pass
...
>>> mock_function = create_autospec(function, return_value='fishy')
>>> mock_function(1, 2, 3)
'fishy'
>>> mock_function.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock_function('wrong arguments')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: <lambda>() takes exactly 3 arguments (1 given)
在类中使用 create_autospec()
时,会复制 __init__
方法的签名,另外在可调用对象上使用时,会复制 __call__
方法的签名。
Mock 类¶
Mock
是一个可以灵活的替换存根 (stubs) 的对象,可以测试所有代码。 Mock 是可调用的,在访问其属性时创建一个新的 mock 1 。访问相同的属性只会返回相同的 mock 。 Mock 会保存调用记录,可以通过断言获悉代码的调用。
MagicMock
是 Mock
的子类,它有所有预创建且可使用的魔术方法。在需要模拟不可调用对象时,可以使用 NonCallableMock
和 NonCallableMagicMock
patch()
装饰器使得用 Mock
对象临时替换特定模块中的类非常方便。 默认情况下 patch()
将为你创建一个 MagicMock
。 你可以使用 patch()
的 new_callable 参数指定替代 Mock
的类。
-
class
unittest.mock.
Mock
(spec=None, side_effect=None, return_value=DEFAULT, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, unsafe=False, **kwargs)¶ 创建一个新的
Mock
对象。通过可选参数指定Mock
对象的行为:spec: 可以是要给字符串列表,也可以是充当模拟对象规范的现有对象(类或实例)。如果传入一个对象,则通过在该对象上调用 dir 来生成字符串列表(不支持的魔法属性和方法除外)。访问不在此列表中的任何属性都将触发
AttributeError
。如果 spec 是一个对象(而不是字符串列表),则
__class__
返回 spec 对象的类。 这允许模拟程序通过isinstance()
测试。spec_set :spec 的更严格的变体。如果使用了该属性,尝试模拟 set 或 get 的属性不在 spec_set 所包含的对象中时,会抛出
AttributeError
。side_effect :每当调用 Mock 时都会调用的函数。 参见
side_effect
属性。 对于引发异常或动态更改返回值很有用。 该函数使用与 mock 函数相同的参数调用,并且除非返回DEFAULT
,否则该函数的返回值将用作返回值。另外, side_effect 可以是异常类或实例。 此时,调用模拟程序时将引发异常。
如果 side_effect 是可迭代对象,则每次调用 mock 都将返回可迭代对象的下一个值。
设置 side_effect 为
None
即可清空。return_value :调用 mock 的返回值。 默认情况下,是一个新的Mock(在首次访问时创建)。 参见
return_value
属性 。unsafe: By default, accessing any attribute with name starting with assert, assret, asert, aseert or assrt will raise an
AttributeError
. Passingunsafe=True
will allow access to these attributes.3.5 新版功能.
wraps :要包装的 mock 对象。 如果 wraps 不是
None
,那么调用 Mock 会将调用传递给 wraps 的对象(返回实际结果)。 对模拟的属性访问将返回一个 Mock 对象,该对象包装了 wraps 对象的相应属性(因此,尝试访问不存在的属性将引发AttributeError
)。如果明确指定 return_value ,调用是,不会返回包装对象,而是返回 return_value 。
name :mock 的名称。 在调试时很有用。 名称会传递到子 mock 。
还可以使用任意关键字参数来调用 mock 。 创建模拟后,将使用这些属性来设置 mock 的属性。 有关详细信息,请参见
configure_mock()
方法。-
assert_called
()¶ 断言至少被调用过一次。
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.method() <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> >>> mock.method.assert_called()
3.6 新版功能.
-
assert_called_once
()¶ 断言仅被调用一次。
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.method() <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> >>> mock.method.assert_called_once() >>> mock.method() <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> >>> mock.method.assert_called_once() Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected 'method' to have been called once. Called 2 times.
3.6 新版功能.
-
assert_called_with
(*args, **kwargs)¶ 此方法是断言上次调用已以特定方式进行的一种便捷方法:
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.method(1, 2, 3, test='wow') <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> >>> mock.method.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3, test='wow')
-
assert_called_once_with
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Assert that the mock was called exactly once and that call was with the specified arguments.
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock('foo', bar='baz') >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar='baz') >>> mock('other', bar='values') >>> mock.assert_called_once_with('other', bar='values') Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times.
-
assert_any_call
(*args, **kwargs)¶ 断言使用指定的参数调用。
The assert passes if the mock has ever been called, unlike
assert_called_with()
andassert_called_once_with()
that only pass if the call is the most recent one, and in the case ofassert_called_once_with()
it must also be the only call.>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock(1, 2, arg='thing') >>> mock('some', 'thing', 'else') >>> mock.assert_any_call(1, 2, arg='thing')
-
assert_has_calls
(calls, any_order=False)¶ assert the mock has been called with the specified calls. The
mock_calls
list is checked for the calls.If any_order is false then the calls must be sequential. There can be extra calls before or after the specified calls.
If any_order is true then the calls can be in any order, but they must all appear in
mock_calls
.>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock(1) >>> mock(2) >>> mock(3) >>> mock(4) >>> calls = [call(2), call(3)] >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls) >>> calls = [call(4), call(2), call(3)] >>> mock.assert_has_calls(calls, any_order=True)
-
assert_not_called
()¶ Assert the mock was never called.
>>> m = Mock() >>> m.hello.assert_not_called() >>> obj = m.hello() >>> m.hello.assert_not_called() Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected 'hello' to not have been called. Called 1 times.
3.5 新版功能.
-
reset_mock
(*, return_value=False, side_effect=False)¶ The reset_mock method resets all the call attributes on a mock object:
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock('hello') >>> mock.called True >>> mock.reset_mock() >>> mock.called False
在 3.6 版更改: Added two keyword only argument to the reset_mock function.
This can be useful where you want to make a series of assertions that reuse the same object. Note that
reset_mock()
doesn't clear the return value,side_effect
or any child attributes you have set using normal assignment by default. In case you want to reset return_value orside_effect
, then pass the corresponding parameter asTrue
. Child mocks and the return value mock (if any) are reset as well.注解
return_value, and
side_effect
are keyword only argument.
-
mock_add_spec
(spec, spec_set=False)¶ Add a spec to a mock. spec can either be an object or a list of strings. Only attributes on the spec can be fetched as attributes from the mock.
If spec_set is true then only attributes on the spec can be set.
-
attach_mock
(mock, attribute)¶ Attach a mock as an attribute of this one, replacing its name and parent. Calls to the attached mock will be recorded in the
method_calls
andmock_calls
attributes of this one.
-
configure_mock
(**kwargs)¶ Set attributes on the mock through keyword arguments.
Attributes plus return values and side effects can be set on child mocks using standard dot notation and unpacking a dictionary in the method call:
>>> mock = Mock() >>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} >>> mock.configure_mock(**attrs) >>> mock.method() 3 >>> mock.other() Traceback (most recent call last): ... KeyError
The same thing can be achieved in the constructor call to mocks:
>>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError} >>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs) >>> mock.some_attribute 'eggs' >>> mock.method() 3 >>> mock.other() Traceback (most recent call last): ... KeyError
configure_mock()
exists to make it easier to do configuration after the mock has been created.
-
__dir__
()¶ Mock
objects limit the results ofdir(some_mock)
to useful results. For mocks with a spec this includes all the permitted attributes for the mock.See
FILTER_DIR
for what this filtering does, and how to switch it off.
-
_get_child_mock
(**kw)¶ Create the child mocks for attributes and return value. By default child mocks will be the same type as the parent. Subclasses of Mock may want to override this to customize the way child mocks are made.
For non-callable mocks the callable variant will be used (rather than any custom subclass).
-
called
¶ A boolean representing whether or not the mock object has been called:
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock.called False >>> mock() >>> mock.called True
-
call_count
¶ An integer telling you how many times the mock object has been called:
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock.call_count 0 >>> mock() >>> mock() >>> mock.call_count 2
-
return_value
¶ Set this to configure the value returned by calling the mock:
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.return_value = 'fish' >>> mock() 'fish'
The default return value is a mock object and you can configure it in the normal way:
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.return_value.attribute = sentinel.Attribute >>> mock.return_value() <Mock name='mock()()' id='...'> >>> mock.return_value.assert_called_with()
return_value
can also be set in the constructor:>>> mock = Mock(return_value=3) >>> mock.return_value 3 >>> mock() 3
-
side_effect
¶ This can either be a function to be called when the mock is called, an iterable or an exception (class or instance) to be raised.
If you pass in a function it will be called with same arguments as the mock and unless the function returns the
DEFAULT
singleton the call to the mock will then return whatever the function returns. If the function returnsDEFAULT
then the mock will return its normal value (from thereturn_value
).If you pass in an iterable, it is used to retrieve an iterator which must yield a value on every call. This value can either be an exception instance to be raised, or a value to be returned from the call to the mock (
DEFAULT
handling is identical to the function case).An example of a mock that raises an exception (to test exception handling of an API):
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.side_effect = Exception('Boom!') >>> mock() Traceback (most recent call last): ... Exception: Boom!
Using
side_effect
to return a sequence of values:>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.side_effect = [3, 2, 1] >>> mock(), mock(), mock() (3, 2, 1)
Using a callable:
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=3) >>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs): ... return DEFAULT ... >>> mock.side_effect = side_effect >>> mock() 3
side_effect
can be set in the constructor. Here's an example that adds one to the value the mock is called with and returns it:>>> side_effect = lambda value: value + 1 >>> mock = Mock(side_effect=side_effect) >>> mock(3) 4 >>> mock(-8) -7
Setting
side_effect
toNone
clears it:>>> m = Mock(side_effect=KeyError, return_value=3) >>> m() Traceback (most recent call last): ... KeyError >>> m.side_effect = None >>> m() 3
-
call_args
¶ This is either
None
(if the mock hasn't been called), or the arguments that the mock was last called with. This will be in the form of a tuple: the first member, which can also be accessed through theargs
property, is any ordered arguments the mock was called with (or an empty tuple) and the second member, which can also be accessed through thekwargs
property, is any keyword arguments (or an empty dictionary).>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> print(mock.call_args) None >>> mock() >>> mock.call_args call() >>> mock.call_args == () True >>> mock(3, 4) >>> mock.call_args call(3, 4) >>> mock.call_args == ((3, 4),) True >>> mock.call_args.args (3, 4) >>> mock.call_args.kwargs {} >>> mock(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!') >>> mock.call_args call(3, 4, 5, key='fish', next='w00t!') >>> mock.call_args.args (3, 4, 5) >>> mock.call_args.kwargs {'key': 'fish', 'next': 'w00t!'}
call_args
, along with members of the listscall_args_list
,method_calls
andmock_calls
arecall
objects. These are tuples, so they can be unpacked to get at the individual arguments and make more complex assertions. See calls as tuples.在 3.8 版更改: Added
args
andkwargs
properties.
-
call_args_list
¶ This is a list of all the calls made to the mock object in sequence (so the length of the list is the number of times it has been called). Before any calls have been made it is an empty list. The
call
object can be used for conveniently constructing lists of calls to compare withcall_args_list
.>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None) >>> mock() >>> mock(3, 4) >>> mock(key='fish', next='w00t!') >>> mock.call_args_list [call(), call(3, 4), call(key='fish', next='w00t!')] >>> expected = [(), ((3, 4),), ({'key': 'fish', 'next': 'w00t!'},)] >>> mock.call_args_list == expected True
Members of
call_args_list
arecall
objects. These can be unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See calls as tuples.
-
method_calls
¶ As well as tracking calls to themselves, mocks also track calls to methods and attributes, and their methods and attributes:
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.method() <Mock name='mock.method()' id='...'> >>> mock.property.method.attribute() <Mock name='mock.property.method.attribute()' id='...'> >>> mock.method_calls [call.method(), call.property.method.attribute()]
Members of
method_calls
arecall
objects. These can be unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See calls as tuples.
-
mock_calls
¶ mock_calls
records all calls to the mock object, its methods, magic methods and return value mocks.>>> mock = MagicMock() >>> result = mock(1, 2, 3) >>> mock.first(a=3) <MagicMock name='mock.first()' id='...'> >>> mock.second() <MagicMock name='mock.second()' id='...'> >>> int(mock) 1 >>> result(1) <MagicMock name='mock()()' id='...'> >>> expected = [call(1, 2, 3), call.first(a=3), call.second(), ... call.__int__(), call()(1)] >>> mock.mock_calls == expected True
Members of
mock_calls
arecall
objects. These can be unpacked as tuples to get at the individual arguments. See calls as tuples.注解
The way
mock_calls
are recorded means that where nested calls are made, the parameters of ancestor calls are not recorded and so will always compare equal:>>> mock = MagicMock() >>> mock.top(a=3).bottom() <MagicMock name='mock.top().bottom()' id='...'> >>> mock.mock_calls [call.top(a=3), call.top().bottom()] >>> mock.mock_calls[-1] == call.top(a=-1).bottom() True
-
__class__
¶ Normally the
__class__
attribute of an object will return its type. For a mock object with aspec
,__class__
returns the spec class instead. This allows mock objects to passisinstance()
tests for the object they are replacing / masquerading as:>>> mock = Mock(spec=3) >>> isinstance(mock, int) True
__class__
is assignable to, this allows a mock to pass anisinstance()
check without forcing you to use a spec:>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.__class__ = dict >>> isinstance(mock, dict) True
-
class
unittest.mock.
NonCallableMock
(spec=None, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, **kwargs)¶ A non-callable version of
Mock
. The constructor parameters have the same meaning ofMock
, with the exception of return_value and side_effect which have no meaning on a non-callable mock.
Mock objects that use a class or an instance as a spec
or
spec_set
are able to pass isinstance()
tests:
>>> mock = Mock(spec=SomeClass)
>>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass)
True
>>> mock = Mock(spec_set=SomeClass())
>>> isinstance(mock, SomeClass)
True
The Mock
classes have support for mocking magic methods. See magic
methods for the full details.
The mock classes and the patch()
decorators all take arbitrary keyword
arguments for configuration. For the patch()
decorators the keywords are
passed to the constructor of the mock being created. The keyword arguments
are for configuring attributes of the mock:
>>> m = MagicMock(attribute=3, other='fish')
>>> m.attribute
3
>>> m.other
'fish'
The return value and side effect of child mocks can be set in the same way,
using dotted notation. As you can't use dotted names directly in a call you
have to create a dictionary and unpack it using **
:
>>> attrs = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
>>> mock = Mock(some_attribute='eggs', **attrs)
>>> mock.some_attribute
'eggs'
>>> mock.method()
3
>>> mock.other()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError
A callable mock which was created with a spec (or a spec_set) will introspect the specification object's signature when matching calls to the mock. Therefore, it can match the actual call's arguments regardless of whether they were passed positionally or by name:
>>> def f(a, b, c): pass
...
>>> mock = Mock(spec=f)
>>> mock(1, 2, c=3)
<Mock name='mock()' id='140161580456576'>
>>> mock.assert_called_with(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock.assert_called_with(a=1, b=2, c=3)
This applies to assert_called_with()
,
assert_called_once_with()
, assert_has_calls()
and
assert_any_call()
. When Autospeccing, it will also
apply to method calls on the mock object.
在 3.4 版更改: Added signature introspection on specced and autospecced mock objects.
-
class
unittest.mock.
PropertyMock
(*args, **kwargs)¶ A mock intended to be used as a property, or other descriptor, on a class.
PropertyMock
provides__get__()
and__set__()
methods so you can specify a return value when it is fetched.Fetching a
PropertyMock
instance from an object calls the mock, with no args. Setting it calls the mock with the value being set.>>> class Foo: ... @property ... def foo(self): ... return 'something' ... @foo.setter ... def foo(self, value): ... pass ... >>> with patch('__main__.Foo.foo', new_callable=PropertyMock) as mock_foo: ... mock_foo.return_value = 'mockity-mock' ... this_foo = Foo() ... print(this_foo.foo) ... this_foo.foo = 6 ... mockity-mock >>> mock_foo.mock_calls [call(), call(6)]
Because of the way mock attributes are stored you can't directly attach a
PropertyMock
to a mock object. Instead you can attach it to the mock type
object:
>>> m = MagicMock()
>>> p = PropertyMock(return_value=3)
>>> type(m).foo = p
>>> m.foo
3
>>> p.assert_called_once_with()
-
class
unittest.mock.
AsyncMock
(spec=None, side_effect=None, return_value=DEFAULT, wraps=None, name=None, spec_set=None, unsafe=False, **kwargs)¶ An asynchronous version of
MagicMock
. TheAsyncMock
object will behave so the object is recognized as an async function, and the result of a call is an awaitable.>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(mock) True >>> inspect.isawaitable(mock()) True
The result of
mock()
is an async function which will have the outcome ofside_effect
orreturn_value
after it has been awaited:if
side_effect
is a function, the async function will return the result of that function,if
side_effect
is an exception, the async function will raise the exception,if
side_effect
is an iterable, the async function will return the next value of the iterable, however, if the sequence of result is exhausted,StopAsyncIteration
is raised immediately,if
side_effect
is not defined, the async function will return the value defined byreturn_value
, hence, by default, the async function returns a newAsyncMock
object.
Setting the spec of a
Mock
orMagicMock
to an async function will result in a coroutine object being returned after calling.>>> async def async_func(): pass ... >>> mock = MagicMock(async_func) >>> mock <MagicMock spec='function' id='...'> >>> mock() <coroutine object AsyncMockMixin._mock_call at ...>
Setting the spec of a
Mock
,MagicMock
, orAsyncMock
to a class with asynchronous and synchronous functions will automatically detect the synchronous functions and set them asMagicMock
(if the parent mock isAsyncMock
orMagicMock
) orMock
(if the parent mock isMock
). All asynchronous functions will beAsyncMock
.>>> class ExampleClass: ... def sync_foo(): ... pass ... async def async_foo(): ... pass ... >>> a_mock = AsyncMock(ExampleClass) >>> a_mock.sync_foo <MagicMock name='mock.sync_foo' id='...'> >>> a_mock.async_foo <AsyncMock name='mock.async_foo' id='...'> >>> mock = Mock(ExampleClass) >>> mock.sync_foo <Mock name='mock.sync_foo' id='...'> >>> mock.async_foo <AsyncMock name='mock.async_foo' id='...'>
3.8 新版功能.
-
assert_awaited
()¶ Assert that the mock was awaited at least once. Note that this is separate from the object having been called, the
await
keyword must be used:>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(coroutine_mock): ... await coroutine_mock ... >>> coroutine_mock = mock() >>> mock.called True >>> mock.assert_awaited() Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited. >>> asyncio.run(main(coroutine_mock)) >>> mock.assert_awaited()
-
assert_awaited_once
()¶ Assert that the mock was awaited exactly once.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(): ... await mock() ... >>> asyncio.run(main()) >>> mock.assert_awaited_once() >>> asyncio.run(main()) >>> mock.method.assert_awaited_once() Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited once. Awaited 2 times.
-
assert_awaited_with
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Assert that the last await was with the specified arguments.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs): ... await mock(*args, **kwargs) ... >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar')) >>> mock.assert_awaited_with('foo', bar='bar') >>> mock.assert_awaited_with('other') Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: expected call not found. Expected: mock('other') Actual: mock('foo', bar='bar')
-
assert_awaited_once_with
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Assert that the mock was awaited exactly once and with the specified arguments.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs): ... await mock(*args, **kwargs) ... >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar')) >>> mock.assert_awaited_once_with('foo', bar='bar') >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar')) >>> mock.assert_awaited_once_with('foo', bar='bar') Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Expected mock to have been awaited once. Awaited 2 times.
-
assert_any_await
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Assert the mock has ever been awaited with the specified arguments.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs): ... await mock(*args, **kwargs) ... >>> asyncio.run(main('foo', bar='bar')) >>> asyncio.run(main('hello')) >>> mock.assert_any_await('foo', bar='bar') >>> mock.assert_any_await('other') Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: mock('other') await not found
-
assert_has_awaits
(calls, any_order=False)¶ Assert the mock has been awaited with the specified calls. The
await_args_list
list is checked for the awaits.If any_order is false then the awaits must be sequential. There can be extra calls before or after the specified awaits.
If any_order is true then the awaits can be in any order, but they must all appear in
await_args_list
.>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args, **kwargs): ... await mock(*args, **kwargs) ... >>> calls = [call("foo"), call("bar")] >>> mock.assert_has_awaits(calls) Traceback (most recent call last): ... AssertionError: Awaits not found. Expected: [call('foo'), call('bar')] Actual: [] >>> asyncio.run(main('foo')) >>> asyncio.run(main('bar')) >>> mock.assert_has_awaits(calls)
-
assert_not_awaited
()¶ Assert that the mock was never awaited.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> mock.assert_not_awaited()
-
reset_mock
(*args, **kwargs)¶ See
Mock.reset_mock()
. Also setsawait_count
to 0,await_args
to None, and clears theawait_args_list
.
-
await_count
¶ An integer keeping track of how many times the mock object has been awaited.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(): ... await mock() ... >>> asyncio.run(main()) >>> mock.await_count 1 >>> asyncio.run(main()) >>> mock.await_count 2
-
await_args
¶ This is either
None
(if the mock hasn’t been awaited), or the arguments that the mock was last awaited with. Functions the same asMock.call_args
.>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args): ... await mock(*args) ... >>> mock.await_args >>> asyncio.run(main('foo')) >>> mock.await_args call('foo') >>> asyncio.run(main('bar')) >>> mock.await_args call('bar')
-
await_args_list
¶ This is a list of all the awaits made to the mock object in sequence (so the length of the list is the number of times it has been awaited). Before any awaits have been made it is an empty list.
>>> mock = AsyncMock() >>> async def main(*args): ... await mock(*args) ... >>> mock.await_args_list [] >>> asyncio.run(main('foo')) >>> mock.await_args_list [call('foo')] >>> asyncio.run(main('bar')) >>> mock.await_args_list [call('foo'), call('bar')]
Calling¶
Mock objects are callable. The call will return the value set as the
return_value
attribute. The default return value is a new Mock
object; it is created the first time the return value is accessed (either
explicitly or by calling the Mock) - but it is stored and the same one
returned each time.
Calls made to the object will be recorded in the attributes
like call_args
and call_args_list
.
If side_effect
is set then it will be called after the call has
been recorded, so if side_effect
raises an exception the call is still
recorded.
The simplest way to make a mock raise an exception when called is to make
side_effect
an exception class or instance:
>>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=IndexError)
>>> m(1, 2, 3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
IndexError
>>> m.mock_calls
[call(1, 2, 3)]
>>> m.side_effect = KeyError('Bang!')
>>> m('two', 'three', 'four')
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError: 'Bang!'
>>> m.mock_calls
[call(1, 2, 3), call('two', 'three', 'four')]
If side_effect
is a function then whatever that function returns is what
calls to the mock return. The side_effect
function is called with the
same arguments as the mock. This allows you to vary the return value of the
call dynamically, based on the input:
>>> def side_effect(value):
... return value + 1
...
>>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=side_effect)
>>> m(1)
2
>>> m(2)
3
>>> m.mock_calls
[call(1), call(2)]
If you want the mock to still return the default return value (a new mock), or
any set return value, then there are two ways of doing this. Either return
mock.return_value
from inside side_effect
, or return DEFAULT
:
>>> m = MagicMock()
>>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
... return m.return_value
...
>>> m.side_effect = side_effect
>>> m.return_value = 3
>>> m()
3
>>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
... return DEFAULT
...
>>> m.side_effect = side_effect
>>> m()
3
To remove a side_effect
, and return to the default behaviour, set the
side_effect
to None
:
>>> m = MagicMock(return_value=6)
>>> def side_effect(*args, **kwargs):
... return 3
...
>>> m.side_effect = side_effect
>>> m()
3
>>> m.side_effect = None
>>> m()
6
The side_effect
can also be any iterable object. Repeated calls to the mock
will return values from the iterable (until the iterable is exhausted and
a StopIteration
is raised):
>>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=[1, 2, 3])
>>> m()
1
>>> m()
2
>>> m()
3
>>> m()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
StopIteration
If any members of the iterable are exceptions they will be raised instead of returned:
>>> iterable = (33, ValueError, 66)
>>> m = MagicMock(side_effect=iterable)
>>> m()
33
>>> m()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
ValueError
>>> m()
66
Deleting Attributes¶
Mock objects create attributes on demand. This allows them to pretend to be objects of any type.
You may want a mock object to return False
to a hasattr()
call, or raise an
AttributeError
when an attribute is fetched. You can do this by providing
an object as a spec
for a mock, but that isn't always convenient.
You "block" attributes by deleting them. Once deleted, accessing an attribute
will raise an AttributeError
.
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> hasattr(mock, 'm')
True
>>> del mock.m
>>> hasattr(mock, 'm')
False
>>> del mock.f
>>> mock.f
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: f
Mock names and the name attribute¶
Since "name" is an argument to the Mock
constructor, if you want your
mock object to have a "name" attribute you can't just pass it in at creation
time. There are two alternatives. One option is to use
configure_mock()
:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock.configure_mock(name='my_name')
>>> mock.name
'my_name'
A simpler option is to simply set the "name" attribute after mock creation:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock.name = "foo"
Attaching Mocks as Attributes¶
When you attach a mock as an attribute of another mock (or as the return
value) it becomes a "child" of that mock. Calls to the child are recorded in
the method_calls
and mock_calls
attributes of the
parent. This is useful for configuring child mocks and then attaching them to
the parent, or for attaching mocks to a parent that records all calls to the
children and allows you to make assertions about the order of calls between
mocks:
>>> parent = MagicMock()
>>> child1 = MagicMock(return_value=None)
>>> child2 = MagicMock(return_value=None)
>>> parent.child1 = child1
>>> parent.child2 = child2
>>> child1(1)
>>> child2(2)
>>> parent.mock_calls
[call.child1(1), call.child2(2)]
The exception to this is if the mock has a name. This allows you to prevent the "parenting" if for some reason you don't want it to happen.
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> not_a_child = MagicMock(name='not-a-child')
>>> mock.attribute = not_a_child
>>> mock.attribute()
<MagicMock name='not-a-child()' id='...'>
>>> mock.mock_calls
[]
Mocks created for you by patch()
are automatically given names. To
attach mocks that have names to a parent you use the attach_mock()
method:
>>> thing1 = object()
>>> thing2 = object()
>>> parent = MagicMock()
>>> with patch('__main__.thing1', return_value=None) as child1:
... with patch('__main__.thing2', return_value=None) as child2:
... parent.attach_mock(child1, 'child1')
... parent.attach_mock(child2, 'child2')
... child1('one')
... child2('two')
...
>>> parent.mock_calls
[call.child1('one'), call.child2('two')]
- 1
The only exceptions are magic methods and attributes (those that have leading and trailing double underscores). Mock doesn't create these but instead raises an
AttributeError
. This is because the interpreter will often implicitly request these methods, and gets very confused to get a new Mock object when it expects a magic method. If you need magic method support see magic methods.
The patchers¶
The patch decorators are used for patching objects only within the scope of the function they decorate. They automatically handle the unpatching for you, even if exceptions are raised. All of these functions can also be used in with statements or as class decorators.
patch¶
注解
The key is to do the patching in the right namespace. See the section where to patch.
-
unittest.mock.
patch
(target, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)¶ patch()
acts as a function decorator, class decorator or a context manager. Inside the body of the function or with statement, the target is patched with a new object. When the function/with statement exits the patch is undone.If new is omitted, then the target is replaced with an
AsyncMock
if the patched object is an async function or aMagicMock
otherwise. Ifpatch()
is used as a decorator and new is omitted, the created mock is passed in as an extra argument to the decorated function. Ifpatch()
is used as a context manager the created mock is returned by the context manager.target should be a string in the form
'package.module.ClassName'
. The target is imported and the specified object replaced with the new object, so the target must be importable from the environment you are callingpatch()
from. The target is imported when the decorated function is executed, not at decoration time.The spec and spec_set keyword arguments are passed to the
MagicMock
if patch is creating one for you.In addition you can pass
spec=True
orspec_set=True
, which causes patch to pass in the object being mocked as the spec/spec_set object.new_callable allows you to specify a different class, or callable object, that will be called to create the new object. By default
AsyncMock
is used for async functions andMagicMock
for the rest.A more powerful form of spec is autospec. If you set
autospec=True
then the mock will be created with a spec from the object being replaced. All attributes of the mock will also have the spec of the corresponding attribute of the object being replaced. Methods and functions being mocked will have their arguments checked and will raise aTypeError
if they are called with the wrong signature. For mocks replacing a class, their return value (the 'instance') will have the same spec as the class. See thecreate_autospec()
function and Autospeccing.Instead of
autospec=True
you can passautospec=some_object
to use an arbitrary object as the spec instead of the one being replaced.By default
patch()
will fail to replace attributes that don't exist. If you pass increate=True
, and the attribute doesn't exist, patch will create the attribute for you when the patched function is called, and delete it again after the patched function has exited. This is useful for writing tests against attributes that your production code creates at runtime. It is off by default because it can be dangerous. With it switched on you can write passing tests against APIs that don't actually exist!注解
在 3.5 版更改: If you are patching builtins in a module then you don't need to pass
create=True
, it will be added by default.Patch can be used as a
TestCase
class decorator. It works by decorating each test method in the class. This reduces the boilerplate code when your test methods share a common patchings set.patch()
finds tests by looking for method names that start withpatch.TEST_PREFIX
. By default this is'test'
, which matches the wayunittest
finds tests. You can specify an alternative prefix by settingpatch.TEST_PREFIX
.Patch can be used as a context manager, with the with statement. Here the patching applies to the indented block after the with statement. If you use "as" then the patched object will be bound to the name after the "as"; very useful if
patch()
is creating a mock object for you.patch()
takes arbitrary keyword arguments. These will be passed toAsyncMock
if the patched object is asynchronous, toMagicMock
otherwise or to new_callable if specified.patch.dict(...)
,patch.multiple(...)
andpatch.object(...)
are available for alternate use-cases.
patch()
as function decorator, creating the mock for you and passing it into
the decorated function:
>>> @patch('__main__.SomeClass')
... def function(normal_argument, mock_class):
... print(mock_class is SomeClass)
...
>>> function(None)
True
Patching a class replaces the class with a MagicMock
instance. If the
class is instantiated in the code under test then it will be the
return_value
of the mock that will be used.
If the class is instantiated multiple times you could use
side_effect
to return a new mock each time. Alternatively you
can set the return_value to be anything you want.
To configure return values on methods of instances on the patched class
you must do this on the return_value
. For example:
>>> class Class:
... def method(self):
... pass
...
>>> with patch('__main__.Class') as MockClass:
... instance = MockClass.return_value
... instance.method.return_value = 'foo'
... assert Class() is instance
... assert Class().method() == 'foo'
...
If you use spec or spec_set and patch()
is replacing a class, then the
return value of the created mock will have the same spec.
>>> Original = Class
>>> patcher = patch('__main__.Class', spec=True)
>>> MockClass = patcher.start()
>>> instance = MockClass()
>>> assert isinstance(instance, Original)
>>> patcher.stop()
The new_callable argument is useful where you want to use an alternative
class to the default MagicMock
for the created mock. For example, if
you wanted a NonCallableMock
to be used:
>>> thing = object()
>>> with patch('__main__.thing', new_callable=NonCallableMock) as mock_thing:
... assert thing is mock_thing
... thing()
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: 'NonCallableMock' object is not callable
Another use case might be to replace an object with an io.StringIO
instance:
>>> from io import StringIO
>>> def foo():
... print('Something')
...
>>> @patch('sys.stdout', new_callable=StringIO)
... def test(mock_stdout):
... foo()
... assert mock_stdout.getvalue() == 'Something\n'
...
>>> test()
When patch()
is creating a mock for you, it is common that the first thing
you need to do is to configure the mock. Some of that configuration can be done
in the call to patch. Any arbitrary keywords you pass into the call will be
used to set attributes on the created mock:
>>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', first='one', second='two')
>>> mock_thing = patcher.start()
>>> mock_thing.first
'one'
>>> mock_thing.second
'two'
As well as attributes on the created mock attributes, like the
return_value
and side_effect
, of child mocks can
also be configured. These aren't syntactically valid to pass in directly as
keyword arguments, but a dictionary with these as keys can still be expanded
into a patch()
call using **
:
>>> config = {'method.return_value': 3, 'other.side_effect': KeyError}
>>> patcher = patch('__main__.thing', **config)
>>> mock_thing = patcher.start()
>>> mock_thing.method()
3
>>> mock_thing.other()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
KeyError
By default, attempting to patch a function in a module (or a method or an
attribute in a class) that does not exist will fail with AttributeError
:
>>> @patch('sys.non_existing_attribute', 42)
... def test():
... assert sys.non_existing_attribute == 42
...
>>> test()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: <module 'sys' (built-in)> does not have the attribute 'non_existing_attribute'
but adding create=True
in the call to patch()
will make the previous example
work as expected:
>>> @patch('sys.non_existing_attribute', 42, create=True)
... def test(mock_stdout):
... assert sys.non_existing_attribute == 42
...
>>> test()
patch.object¶
-
patch.
object
(target, attribute, new=DEFAULT, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)¶ patch the named member (attribute) on an object (target) with a mock object.
patch.object()
can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context manager. Arguments new, spec, create, spec_set, autospec and new_callable have the same meaning as forpatch()
. Likepatch()
,patch.object()
takes arbitrary keyword arguments for configuring the mock object it creates.When used as a class decorator
patch.object()
honourspatch.TEST_PREFIX
for choosing which methods to wrap.
You can either call patch.object()
with three arguments or two arguments. The
three argument form takes the object to be patched, the attribute name and the
object to replace the attribute with.
When calling with the two argument form you omit the replacement object, and a mock is created for you and passed in as an extra argument to the decorated function:
>>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method')
... def test(mock_method):
... SomeClass.class_method(3)
... mock_method.assert_called_with(3)
...
>>> test()
spec, create and the other arguments to patch.object()
have the same
meaning as they do for patch()
.
patch.dict¶
-
patch.
dict
(in_dict, values=(), clear=False, **kwargs)¶ Patch a dictionary, or dictionary like object, and restore the dictionary to its original state after the test.
in_dict can be a dictionary or a mapping like container. If it is a mapping then it must at least support getting, setting and deleting items plus iterating over keys.
in_dict can also be a string specifying the name of the dictionary, which will then be fetched by importing it.
values can be a dictionary of values to set in the dictionary. values can also be an iterable of
(key, value)
pairs.If clear is true then the dictionary will be cleared before the new values are set.
patch.dict()
can also be called with arbitrary keyword arguments to set values in the dictionary.在 3.8 版更改:
patch.dict()
now returns the patched dictionary when used as a context manager.
patch.dict()
can be used as a context manager, decorator or class
decorator:
>>> foo = {}
>>> @patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'})
... def test():
... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
>>> test()
>>> assert foo == {}
When used as a class decorator patch.dict()
honours
patch.TEST_PREFIX
(default to 'test'
) for choosing which methods to wrap:
>>> import os
>>> import unittest
>>> from unittest.mock import patch
>>> @patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'})
... class TestSample(unittest.TestCase):
... def test_sample(self):
... self.assertEqual(os.environ['newkey'], 'newvalue')
If you want to use a different prefix for your test, you can inform the
patchers of the different prefix by setting patch.TEST_PREFIX
. For
more details about how to change the value of see TEST_PREFIX.
patch.dict()
can be used to add members to a dictionary, or simply let a test
change a dictionary, and ensure the dictionary is restored when the test
ends.
>>> foo = {}
>>> with patch.dict(foo, {'newkey': 'newvalue'}) as patched_foo:
... assert foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
... assert patched_foo == {'newkey': 'newvalue'}
... # You can add, update or delete keys of foo (or patched_foo, it's the same dict)
... patched_foo['spam'] = 'eggs'
...
>>> assert foo == {}
>>> assert patched_foo == {}
>>> import os
>>> with patch.dict('os.environ', {'newkey': 'newvalue'}):
... print(os.environ['newkey'])
...
newvalue
>>> assert 'newkey' not in os.environ
Keywords can be used in the patch.dict()
call to set values in the dictionary:
>>> mymodule = MagicMock()
>>> mymodule.function.return_value = 'fish'
>>> with patch.dict('sys.modules', mymodule=mymodule):
... import mymodule
... mymodule.function('some', 'args')
...
'fish'
patch.dict()
can be used with dictionary like objects that aren't actually
dictionaries. At the very minimum they must support item getting, setting,
deleting and either iteration or membership test. This corresponds to the
magic methods __getitem__()
, __setitem__()
, __delitem__()
and either
__iter__()
or __contains__()
.
>>> class Container:
... def __init__(self):
... self.values = {}
... def __getitem__(self, name):
... return self.values[name]
... def __setitem__(self, name, value):
... self.values[name] = value
... def __delitem__(self, name):
... del self.values[name]
... def __iter__(self):
... return iter(self.values)
...
>>> thing = Container()
>>> thing['one'] = 1
>>> with patch.dict(thing, one=2, two=3):
... assert thing['one'] == 2
... assert thing['two'] == 3
...
>>> assert thing['one'] == 1
>>> assert list(thing) == ['one']
patch.multiple¶
-
patch.
multiple
(target, spec=None, create=False, spec_set=None, autospec=None, new_callable=None, **kwargs)¶ Perform multiple patches in a single call. It takes the object to be patched (either as an object or a string to fetch the object by importing) and keyword arguments for the patches:
with patch.multiple(settings, FIRST_PATCH='one', SECOND_PATCH='two'): ...
Use
DEFAULT
as the value if you wantpatch.multiple()
to create mocks for you. In this case the created mocks are passed into a decorated function by keyword, and a dictionary is returned whenpatch.multiple()
is used as a context manager.patch.multiple()
can be used as a decorator, class decorator or a context manager. The arguments spec, spec_set, create, autospec and new_callable have the same meaning as forpatch()
. These arguments will be applied to all patches done bypatch.multiple()
.When used as a class decorator
patch.multiple()
honourspatch.TEST_PREFIX
for choosing which methods to wrap.
If you want patch.multiple()
to create mocks for you, then you can use
DEFAULT
as the value. If you use patch.multiple()
as a decorator
then the created mocks are passed into the decorated function by keyword.
>>> thing = object()
>>> other = object()
>>> @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT)
... def test_function(thing, other):
... assert isinstance(thing, MagicMock)
... assert isinstance(other, MagicMock)
...
>>> test_function()
patch.multiple()
can be nested with other patch
decorators, but put arguments
passed by keyword after any of the standard arguments created by patch()
:
>>> @patch('sys.exit')
... @patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT)
... def test_function(mock_exit, other, thing):
... assert 'other' in repr(other)
... assert 'thing' in repr(thing)
... assert 'exit' in repr(mock_exit)
...
>>> test_function()
If patch.multiple()
is used as a context manager, the value returned by the
context manager is a dictionary where created mocks are keyed by name:
>>> with patch.multiple('__main__', thing=DEFAULT, other=DEFAULT) as values:
... assert 'other' in repr(values['other'])
... assert 'thing' in repr(values['thing'])
... assert values['thing'] is thing
... assert values['other'] is other
...
patch methods: start and stop¶
All the patchers have start()
and stop()
methods. These make it simpler to do
patching in setUp
methods or where you want to do multiple patches without
nesting decorators or with statements.
To use them call patch()
, patch.object()
or patch.dict()
as
normal and keep a reference to the returned patcher
object. You can then
call start()
to put the patch in place and stop()
to undo it.
If you are using patch()
to create a mock for you then it will be returned by
the call to patcher.start
.
>>> patcher = patch('package.module.ClassName')
>>> from package import module
>>> original = module.ClassName
>>> new_mock = patcher.start()
>>> assert module.ClassName is not original
>>> assert module.ClassName is new_mock
>>> patcher.stop()
>>> assert module.ClassName is original
>>> assert module.ClassName is not new_mock
A typical use case for this might be for doing multiple patches in the setUp
method of a TestCase
:
>>> class MyTest(unittest.TestCase):
... def setUp(self):
... self.patcher1 = patch('package.module.Class1')
... self.patcher2 = patch('package.module.Class2')
... self.MockClass1 = self.patcher1.start()
... self.MockClass2 = self.patcher2.start()
...
... def tearDown(self):
... self.patcher1.stop()
... self.patcher2.stop()
...
... def test_something(self):
... assert package.module.Class1 is self.MockClass1
... assert package.module.Class2 is self.MockClass2
...
>>> MyTest('test_something').run()
警告
If you use this technique you must ensure that the patching is "undone" by
calling stop
. This can be fiddlier than you might think, because if an
exception is raised in the setUp
then tearDown
is not called.
unittest.TestCase.addCleanup()
makes this easier:
>>> class MyTest(unittest.TestCase):
... def setUp(self):
... patcher = patch('package.module.Class')
... self.MockClass = patcher.start()
... self.addCleanup(patcher.stop)
...
... def test_something(self):
... assert package.module.Class is self.MockClass
...
As an added bonus you no longer need to keep a reference to the patcher
object.
It is also possible to stop all patches which have been started by using
patch.stopall()
.
-
patch.
stopall
()¶ Stop all active patches. Only stops patches started with
start
.
patch builtins¶
You can patch any builtins within a module. The following example patches
builtin ord()
:
>>> @patch('__main__.ord')
... def test(mock_ord):
... mock_ord.return_value = 101
... print(ord('c'))
...
>>> test()
101
TEST_PREFIX¶
All of the patchers can be used as class decorators. When used in this way
they wrap every test method on the class. The patchers recognise methods that
start with 'test'
as being test methods. This is the same way that the
unittest.TestLoader
finds test methods by default.
It is possible that you want to use a different prefix for your tests. You can
inform the patchers of the different prefix by setting patch.TEST_PREFIX
:
>>> patch.TEST_PREFIX = 'foo'
>>> value = 3
>>>
>>> @patch('__main__.value', 'not three')
... class Thing:
... def foo_one(self):
... print(value)
... def foo_two(self):
... print(value)
...
>>>
>>> Thing().foo_one()
not three
>>> Thing().foo_two()
not three
>>> value
3
Nesting Patch Decorators¶
If you want to perform multiple patches then you can simply stack up the decorators.
You can stack up multiple patch decorators using this pattern:
>>> @patch.object(SomeClass, 'class_method')
... @patch.object(SomeClass, 'static_method')
... def test(mock1, mock2):
... assert SomeClass.static_method is mock1
... assert SomeClass.class_method is mock2
... SomeClass.static_method('foo')
... SomeClass.class_method('bar')
... return mock1, mock2
...
>>> mock1, mock2 = test()
>>> mock1.assert_called_once_with('foo')
>>> mock2.assert_called_once_with('bar')
Note that the decorators are applied from the bottom upwards. This is the standard way that Python applies decorators. The order of the created mocks passed into your test function matches this order.
Where to patch¶
patch()
works by (temporarily) changing the object that a name points to with
another one. There can be many names pointing to any individual object, so
for patching to work you must ensure that you patch the name used by the system
under test.
The basic principle is that you patch where an object is looked up, which is not necessarily the same place as where it is defined. A couple of examples will help to clarify this.
Imagine we have a project that we want to test with the following structure:
a.py
-> Defines SomeClass
b.py
-> from a import SomeClass
-> some_function instantiates SomeClass
Now we want to test some_function
but we want to mock out SomeClass
using
patch()
. The problem is that when we import module b, which we will have to
do then it imports SomeClass
from module a. If we use patch()
to mock out
a.SomeClass
then it will have no effect on our test; module b already has a
reference to the real SomeClass
and it looks like our patching had no
effect.
The key is to patch out SomeClass
where it is used (or where it is looked up).
In this case some_function
will actually look up SomeClass
in module b,
where we have imported it. The patching should look like:
@patch('b.SomeClass')
However, consider the alternative scenario where instead of from a import
SomeClass
module b does import a
and some_function
uses a.SomeClass
. Both
of these import forms are common. In this case the class we want to patch is
being looked up in the module and so we have to patch a.SomeClass
instead:
@patch('a.SomeClass')
Patching Descriptors and Proxy Objects¶
Both patch and patch.object correctly patch and restore descriptors: class methods, static methods and properties. You should patch these on the class rather than an instance. They also work with some objects that proxy attribute access, like the django settings object.
MagicMock and magic method support¶
Mocking Magic Methods¶
Mock
supports mocking the Python protocol methods, also known as
"magic methods". This allows mock objects to replace containers or other
objects that implement Python protocols.
Because magic methods are looked up differently from normal methods 2, this support has been specially implemented. This means that only specific magic methods are supported. The supported list includes almost all of them. If there are any missing that you need please let us know.
You mock magic methods by setting the method you are interested in to a function
or a mock instance. If you are using a function then it must take self
as
the first argument 3.
>>> def __str__(self):
... return 'fooble'
...
>>> mock = Mock()
>>> mock.__str__ = __str__
>>> str(mock)
'fooble'
>>> mock = Mock()
>>> mock.__str__ = Mock()
>>> mock.__str__.return_value = 'fooble'
>>> str(mock)
'fooble'
>>> mock = Mock()
>>> mock.__iter__ = Mock(return_value=iter([]))
>>> list(mock)
[]
One use case for this is for mocking objects used as context managers in a
with
statement:
>>> mock = Mock()
>>> mock.__enter__ = Mock(return_value='foo')
>>> mock.__exit__ = Mock(return_value=False)
>>> with mock as m:
... assert m == 'foo'
...
>>> mock.__enter__.assert_called_with()
>>> mock.__exit__.assert_called_with(None, None, None)
Calls to magic methods do not appear in method_calls
, but they
are recorded in mock_calls
.
注解
If you use the spec keyword argument to create a mock then attempting to
set a magic method that isn't in the spec will raise an AttributeError
.
The full list of supported magic methods is:
__hash__
,__sizeof__
,__repr__
and__str__
__dir__
,__format__
and__subclasses__
__round__
,__floor__
,__trunc__
and__ceil__
Comparisons:
__lt__
,__gt__
,__le__
,__ge__
,__eq__
and__ne__
Container methods:
__getitem__
,__setitem__
,__delitem__
,__contains__
,__len__
,__iter__
,__reversed__
and__missing__
Context manager:
__enter__
,__exit__
,__aenter__
and__aexit__
Unary numeric methods:
__neg__
,__pos__
and__invert__
The numeric methods (including right hand and in-place variants):
__add__
,__sub__
,__mul__
,__matmul__
,__div__
,__truediv__
,__floordiv__
,__mod__
,__divmod__
,__lshift__
,__rshift__
,__and__
,__xor__
,__or__
, and__pow__
Numeric conversion methods:
__complex__
,__int__
,__float__
and__index__
Descriptor methods:
__get__
,__set__
and__delete__
Pickling:
__reduce__
,__reduce_ex__
,__getinitargs__
,__getnewargs__
,__getstate__
and__setstate__
File system path representation:
__fspath__
Asynchronous iteration methods:
__aiter__
and__anext__
在 3.8 版更改: Added support for os.PathLike.__fspath__()
.
在 3.8 版更改: Added support for __aenter__
, __aexit__
, __aiter__
and __anext__
.
The following methods exist but are not supported as they are either in use by mock, can't be set dynamically, or can cause problems:
__getattr__
,__setattr__
,__init__
and__new__
__prepare__
,__instancecheck__
,__subclasscheck__
,__del__
Magic Mock¶
There are two MagicMock
variants: MagicMock
and NonCallableMagicMock
.
-
class
unittest.mock.
MagicMock
(*args, **kw)¶ MagicMock
is a subclass ofMock
with default implementations of most of the magic methods. You can useMagicMock
without having to configure the magic methods yourself.The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for
Mock
.If you use the spec or spec_set arguments then only magic methods that exist in the spec will be created.
-
class
unittest.mock.
NonCallableMagicMock
(*args, **kw)¶ A non-callable version of
MagicMock
.The constructor parameters have the same meaning as for
MagicMock
, with the exception of return_value and side_effect which have no meaning on a non-callable mock.
The magic methods are setup with MagicMock
objects, so you can configure them
and use them in the usual way:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock[3] = 'fish'
>>> mock.__setitem__.assert_called_with(3, 'fish')
>>> mock.__getitem__.return_value = 'result'
>>> mock[2]
'result'
By default many of the protocol methods are required to return objects of a specific type. These methods are preconfigured with a default return value, so that they can be used without you having to do anything if you aren't interested in the return value. You can still set the return value manually if you want to change the default.
Methods and their defaults:
__lt__
:NotImplemented
__gt__
:NotImplemented
__le__
:NotImplemented
__ge__
:NotImplemented
__int__
:1
__contains__
:False
__len__
:0
__iter__
:iter([])
__exit__
:False
__aexit__
:False
__complex__
:1j
__float__
:1.0
__bool__
:True
__index__
:1
__hash__
: default hash for the mock__str__
: default str for the mock__sizeof__
: default sizeof for the mock
例如:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> int(mock)
1
>>> len(mock)
0
>>> list(mock)
[]
>>> object() in mock
False
The two equality methods, __eq__()
and __ne__()
, are special.
They do the default equality comparison on identity, using the
side_effect
attribute, unless you change their return value to
return something else:
>>> MagicMock() == 3
False
>>> MagicMock() != 3
True
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock.__eq__.return_value = True
>>> mock == 3
True
The return value of MagicMock.__iter__()
can be any iterable object and isn't
required to be an iterator:
>>> mock = MagicMock()
>>> mock.__iter__.return_value = ['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> list(mock)
['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> list(mock)
['a', 'b', 'c']
If the return value is an iterator, then iterating over it once will consume it and subsequent iterations will result in an empty list:
>>> mock.__iter__.return_value = iter(['a', 'b', 'c'])
>>> list(mock)
['a', 'b', 'c']
>>> list(mock)
[]
MagicMock
has all of the supported magic methods configured except for some
of the obscure and obsolete ones. You can still set these up if you want.
Magic methods that are supported but not setup by default in MagicMock
are:
__subclasses__
__dir__
__format__
__get__
,__set__
and__delete__
__reversed__
and__missing__
__reduce__
,__reduce_ex__
,__getinitargs__
,__getnewargs__
,__getstate__
and__setstate__
__getformat__
and__setformat__
- 2
Magic methods should be looked up on the class rather than the instance. Different versions of Python are inconsistent about applying this rule. The supported protocol methods should work with all supported versions of Python.
- 3
The function is basically hooked up to the class, but each
Mock
instance is kept isolated from the others.
Helpers¶
sentinel¶
-
unittest.mock.
sentinel
¶ The
sentinel
object provides a convenient way of providing unique objects for your tests.Attributes are created on demand when you access them by name. Accessing the same attribute will always return the same object. The objects returned have a sensible repr so that test failure messages are readable.
Sometimes when testing you need to test that a specific object is passed as an
argument to another method, or returned. It can be common to create named
sentinel objects to test this. sentinel
provides a convenient way of
creating and testing the identity of objects like this.
In this example we monkey patch method
to return sentinel.some_object
:
>>> real = ProductionClass()
>>> real.method = Mock(name="method")
>>> real.method.return_value = sentinel.some_object
>>> result = real.method()
>>> assert result is sentinel.some_object
>>> result
sentinel.some_object
DEFAULT¶
-
unittest.mock.
DEFAULT
¶ The
DEFAULT
object is a pre-created sentinel (actuallysentinel.DEFAULT
). It can be used byside_effect
functions to indicate that the normal return value should be used.
call¶
-
unittest.mock.
call
(*args, **kwargs)¶ call()
is a helper object for making simpler assertions, for comparing withcall_args
,call_args_list
,mock_calls
andmethod_calls
.call()
can also be used withassert_has_calls()
.>>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None) >>> m(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar') >>> m() >>> m.call_args_list == [call(1, 2, a='foo', b='bar'), call()] True
-
call.
call_list
()¶ For a call object that represents multiple calls,
call_list()
returns a list of all the intermediate calls as well as the final call.
call_list
is particularly useful for making assertions on "chained calls". A
chained call is multiple calls on a single line of code. This results in
multiple entries in mock_calls
on a mock. Manually constructing
the sequence of calls can be tedious.
call_list()
can construct the sequence of calls from the same
chained call:
>>> m = MagicMock()
>>> m(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0)
<MagicMock name='mock().method().other()()' id='...'>
>>> kall = call(1).method(arg='foo').other('bar')(2.0)
>>> kall.call_list()
[call(1),
call().method(arg='foo'),
call().method().other('bar'),
call().method().other()(2.0)]
>>> m.mock_calls == kall.call_list()
True
A call
object is either a tuple of (positional args, keyword args) or
(name, positional args, keyword args) depending on how it was constructed. When
you construct them yourself this isn't particularly interesting, but the call
objects that are in the Mock.call_args
, Mock.call_args_list
and
Mock.mock_calls
attributes can be introspected to get at the individual
arguments they contain.
The call
objects in Mock.call_args
and Mock.call_args_list
are two-tuples of (positional args, keyword args) whereas the call
objects
in Mock.mock_calls
, along with ones you construct yourself, are
three-tuples of (name, positional args, keyword args).
You can use their "tupleness" to pull out the individual arguments for more complex introspection and assertions. The positional arguments are a tuple (an empty tuple if there are no positional arguments) and the keyword arguments are a dictionary:
>>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None)
>>> m(1, 2, 3, arg='one', arg2='two')
>>> kall = m.call_args
>>> kall.args
(1, 2, 3)
>>> kall.kwargs
{'arg': 'one', 'arg2': 'two'}
>>> kall.args is kall[0]
True
>>> kall.kwargs is kall[1]
True
>>> m = MagicMock()
>>> m.foo(4, 5, 6, arg='two', arg2='three')
<MagicMock name='mock.foo()' id='...'>
>>> kall = m.mock_calls[0]
>>> name, args, kwargs = kall
>>> name
'foo'
>>> args
(4, 5, 6)
>>> kwargs
{'arg': 'two', 'arg2': 'three'}
>>> name is m.mock_calls[0][0]
True
create_autospec¶
-
unittest.mock.
create_autospec
(spec, spec_set=False, instance=False, **kwargs)¶ Create a mock object using another object as a spec. Attributes on the mock will use the corresponding attribute on the spec object as their spec.
Functions or methods being mocked will have their arguments checked to ensure that they are called with the correct signature.
If spec_set is
True
then attempting to set attributes that don't exist on the spec object will raise anAttributeError
.If a class is used as a spec then the return value of the mock (the instance of the class) will have the same spec. You can use a class as the spec for an instance object by passing
instance=True
. The returned mock will only be callable if instances of the mock are callable.create_autospec()
also takes arbitrary keyword arguments that are passed to the constructor of the created mock.
See Autospeccing for examples of how to use auto-speccing with
create_autospec()
and the autospec argument to patch()
.
在 3.8 版更改: create_autospec()
now returns an AsyncMock
if the target is
an async function.
ANY¶
-
unittest.mock.
ANY
¶
Sometimes you may need to make assertions about some of the arguments in a
call to mock, but either not care about some of the arguments or want to pull
them individually out of call_args
and make more complex
assertions on them.
To ignore certain arguments you can pass in objects that compare equal to
everything. Calls to assert_called_with()
and
assert_called_once_with()
will then succeed no matter what was
passed in.
>>> mock = Mock(return_value=None)
>>> mock('foo', bar=object())
>>> mock.assert_called_once_with('foo', bar=ANY)
ANY
can also be used in comparisons with call lists like
mock_calls
:
>>> m = MagicMock(return_value=None)
>>> m(1)
>>> m(1, 2)
>>> m(object())
>>> m.mock_calls == [call(1), call(1, 2), ANY]
True
FILTER_DIR¶
-
unittest.mock.
FILTER_DIR
¶
FILTER_DIR
is a module level variable that controls the way mock objects
respond to dir()
(only for Python 2.6 or more recent). The default is True
,
which uses the filtering described below, to only show useful members. If you
dislike this filtering, or need to switch it off for diagnostic purposes, then
set mock.FILTER_DIR = False
.
With filtering on, dir(some_mock)
shows only useful attributes and will
include any dynamically created attributes that wouldn't normally be shown.
If the mock was created with a spec (or autospec of course) then all the
attributes from the original are shown, even if they haven't been accessed
yet:
>>> dir(Mock())
['assert_any_call',
'assert_called',
'assert_called_once',
'assert_called_once_with',
'assert_called_with',
'assert_has_calls',
'assert_not_called',
'attach_mock',
...
>>> from urllib import request
>>> dir(Mock(spec=request))
['AbstractBasicAuthHandler',
'AbstractDigestAuthHandler',
'AbstractHTTPHandler',
'BaseHandler',
...
Many of the not-very-useful (private to Mock
rather than the thing being
mocked) underscore and double underscore prefixed attributes have been
filtered from the result of calling dir()
on a Mock
. If you dislike this
behaviour you can switch it off by setting the module level switch
FILTER_DIR
:
>>> from unittest import mock
>>> mock.FILTER_DIR = False
>>> dir(mock.Mock())
['_NonCallableMock__get_return_value',
'_NonCallableMock__get_side_effect',
'_NonCallableMock__return_value_doc',
'_NonCallableMock__set_return_value',
'_NonCallableMock__set_side_effect',
'__call__',
'__class__',
...
Alternatively you can just use vars(my_mock)
(instance members) and
dir(type(my_mock))
(type members) to bypass the filtering irrespective of
mock.FILTER_DIR
.
mock_open¶
-
unittest.mock.
mock_open
(mock=None, read_data=None)¶ A helper function to create a mock to replace the use of
open()
. It works foropen()
called directly or used as a context manager.The mock argument is the mock object to configure. If
None
(the default) then aMagicMock
will be created for you, with the API limited to methods or attributes available on standard file handles.read_data is a string for the
read()
,readline()
, andreadlines()
methods of the file handle to return. Calls to those methods will take data from read_data until it is depleted. The mock of these methods is pretty simplistic: every time the mock is called, the read_data is rewound to the start. If you need more control over the data that you are feeding to the tested code you will need to customize this mock for yourself. When that is insufficient, one of the in-memory filesystem packages on PyPI can offer a realistic filesystem for testing.在 3.4 版更改: Added
readline()
andreadlines()
support. The mock ofread()
changed to consume read_data rather than returning it on each call.在 3.5 版更改: read_data is now reset on each call to the mock.
在 3.8 版更改: Added
__iter__()
to implementation so that iteration (such as in for loops) correctly consumes read_data.
Using open()
as a context manager is a great way to ensure your file handles
are closed properly and is becoming common:
with open('/some/path', 'w') as f:
f.write('something')
The issue is that even if you mock out the call to open()
it is the
returned object that is used as a context manager (and has __enter__()
and
__exit__()
called).
Mocking context managers with a MagicMock
is common enough and fiddly
enough that a helper function is useful.
>>> m = mock_open()
>>> with patch('__main__.open', m):
... with open('foo', 'w') as h:
... h.write('some stuff')
...
>>> m.mock_calls
[call('foo', 'w'),
call().__enter__(),
call().write('some stuff'),
call().__exit__(None, None, None)]
>>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo', 'w')
>>> handle = m()
>>> handle.write.assert_called_once_with('some stuff')
And for reading files:
>>> with patch('__main__.open', mock_open(read_data='bibble')) as m:
... with open('foo') as h:
... result = h.read()
...
>>> m.assert_called_once_with('foo')
>>> assert result == 'bibble'
Autospeccing¶
Autospeccing is based on the existing spec
feature of mock. It limits the
api of mocks to the api of an original object (the spec), but it is recursive
(implemented lazily) so that attributes of mocks only have the same api as
the attributes of the spec. In addition mocked functions / methods have the
same call signature as the original so they raise a TypeError
if they are
called incorrectly.
Before I explain how auto-speccing works, here's why it is needed.
Mock
is a very powerful and flexible object, but it suffers from two flaws
when used to mock out objects from a system under test. One of these flaws is
specific to the Mock
api and the other is a more general problem with using
mock objects.
First the problem specific to Mock
. Mock
has two assert methods that are
extremely handy: assert_called_with()
and
assert_called_once_with()
.
>>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None)
>>> mock(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock.assert_called_once_with(1, 2, 3)
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AssertionError: Expected 'mock' to be called once. Called 2 times.
Because mocks auto-create attributes on demand, and allow you to call them with arbitrary arguments, if you misspell one of these assert methods then your assertion is gone:
>>> mock = Mock(name='Thing', return_value=None)
>>> mock(1, 2, 3)
>>> mock.assret_called_once_with(4, 5, 6)
Your tests can pass silently and incorrectly because of the typo.
The second issue is more general to mocking. If you refactor some of your code, rename members and so on, any tests for code that is still using the old api but uses mocks instead of the real objects will still pass. This means your tests can all pass even though your code is broken.
Note that this is another reason why you need integration tests as well as unit tests. Testing everything in isolation is all fine and dandy, but if you don't test how your units are "wired together" there is still lots of room for bugs that tests might have caught.
mock
already provides a feature to help with this, called speccing. If you
use a class or instance as the spec
for a mock then you can only access
attributes on the mock that exist on the real class:
>>> from urllib import request
>>> mock = Mock(spec=request.Request)
>>> mock.assret_called_with
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with'
The spec only applies to the mock itself, so we still have the same issue with any methods on the mock:
>>> mock.has_data()
<mock.Mock object at 0x...>
>>> mock.has_data.assret_called_with()
Auto-speccing solves this problem. You can either pass autospec=True
to
patch()
/ patch.object()
or use the create_autospec()
function to create a
mock with a spec. If you use the autospec=True
argument to patch()
then the
object that is being replaced will be used as the spec object. Because the
speccing is done "lazily" (the spec is created as attributes on the mock are
accessed) you can use it with very complex or deeply nested objects (like
modules that import modules that import modules) without a big performance
hit.
Here's an example of it in use:
>>> from urllib import request
>>> patcher = patch('__main__.request', autospec=True)
>>> mock_request = patcher.start()
>>> request is mock_request
True
>>> mock_request.Request
<MagicMock name='request.Request' spec='Request' id='...'>
You can see that request.Request
has a spec. request.Request
takes two
arguments in the constructor (one of which is self). Here's what happens if
we try to call it incorrectly:
>>> req = request.Request()
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
TypeError: <lambda>() takes at least 2 arguments (1 given)
The spec also applies to instantiated classes (i.e. the return value of specced mocks):
>>> req = request.Request('foo')
>>> req
<NonCallableMagicMock name='request.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'>
Request
objects are not callable, so the return value of instantiating our
mocked out request.Request
is a non-callable mock. With the spec in place
any typos in our asserts will raise the correct error:
>>> req.add_header('spam', 'eggs')
<MagicMock name='request.Request().add_header()' id='...'>
>>> req.add_header.assret_called_with
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'assret_called_with'
>>> req.add_header.assert_called_with('spam', 'eggs')
In many cases you will just be able to add autospec=True
to your existing
patch()
calls and then be protected against bugs due to typos and api
changes.
As well as using autospec through patch()
there is a
create_autospec()
for creating autospecced mocks directly:
>>> from urllib import request
>>> mock_request = create_autospec(request)
>>> mock_request.Request('foo', 'bar')
<NonCallableMagicMock name='mock.Request()' spec='Request' id='...'>
This isn't without caveats and limitations however, which is why it is not the default behaviour. In order to know what attributes are available on the spec object, autospec has to introspect (access attributes) the spec. As you traverse attributes on the mock a corresponding traversal of the original object is happening under the hood. If any of your specced objects have properties or descriptors that can trigger code execution then you may not be able to use autospec. On the other hand it is much better to design your objects so that introspection is safe 4.
A more serious problem is that it is common for instance attributes to be
created in the __init__()
method and not to exist on the class at all.
autospec can't know about any dynamically created attributes and restricts
the api to visible attributes.
>>> class Something:
... def __init__(self):
... self.a = 33
...
>>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True):
... thing = Something()
... thing.a
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a'
There are a few different ways of resolving this problem. The easiest, but not necessarily the least annoying, way is to simply set the required attributes on the mock after creation. Just because autospec doesn't allow you to fetch attributes that don't exist on the spec it doesn't prevent you setting them:
>>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True):
... thing = Something()
... thing.a = 33
...
There is a more aggressive version of both spec and autospec that does prevent you setting non-existent attributes. This is useful if you want to ensure your code only sets valid attributes too, but obviously it prevents this particular scenario:
>>> with patch('__main__.Something', autospec=True, spec_set=True):
... thing = Something()
... thing.a = 33
...
Traceback (most recent call last):
...
AttributeError: Mock object has no attribute 'a'
Probably the best way of solving the problem is to add class attributes as
default values for instance members initialised in __init__()
. Note that if
you are only setting default attributes in __init__()
then providing them via
class attributes (shared between instances of course) is faster too. e.g.
class Something:
a = 33
This brings up another issue. It is relatively common to provide a default
value of None
for members that will later be an object of a different type.
None
would be useless as a spec because it wouldn't let you access any
attributes or methods on it. As None
is never going to be useful as a
spec, and probably indicates a member that will normally of some other type,
autospec doesn't use a spec for members that are set to None
. These will
just be ordinary mocks (well - MagicMocks):
>>> class Something:
... member = None
...
>>> mock = create_autospec(Something)
>>> mock.member.foo.bar.baz()
<MagicMock name='mock.member.foo.bar.baz()' id='...'>
If modifying your production classes to add defaults isn't to your liking
then there are more options. One of these is simply to use an instance as the
spec rather than the class. The other is to create a subclass of the
production class and add the defaults to the subclass without affecting the
production class. Both of these require you to use an alternative object as
the spec. Thankfully patch()
supports this - you can simply pass the
alternative object as the autospec argument:
>>> class Something:
... def __init__(self):
... self.a = 33
...
>>> class SomethingForTest(Something):
... a = 33
...
>>> p = patch('__main__.Something', autospec=SomethingForTest)
>>> mock = p.start()
>>> mock.a
<NonCallableMagicMock name='Something.a' spec='int' id='...'>
Sealing mocks¶
-
unittest.mock.
seal
(mock)¶ Seal will disable the automatic creation of mocks when accessing an attribute of the mock being sealed or any of its attributes that are already mocks recursively.
If a mock instance with a name or a spec is assigned to an attribute it won't be considered in the sealing chain. This allows one to prevent seal from fixing part of the mock object.
>>> mock = Mock() >>> mock.submock.attribute1 = 2 >>> mock.not_submock = mock.Mock(name="sample_name") >>> seal(mock) >>> mock.new_attribute # This will raise AttributeError. >>> mock.submock.attribute2 # This will raise AttributeError. >>> mock.not_submock.attribute2 # This won't raise.
3.7 新版功能.