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Dev: Testing
It is extremely important that all code contributed to IPython has tests. Tests should be written as unittests, doctests or other entities that the IPython test system can detect. See below for more details on this.
Each subpackage in IPython should have its own tests
directory that
contains all of the tests for that subpackage. All of the files in the
tests
directory should have the word "tests" in them to enable
the testing framework to find them.
In docstrings, examples (either using IPython prompts like In [1]:
or
'classic' python >>>
ones) can and should be included. The testing system
will detect them as doctests and will run them; it offers control to skip parts
or all of a specific doctest if the example is meant to be informative but
shows non-reproducible information (like filesystem data).
If a subpackage has any dependencies beyond the Python standard library, the tests for that subpackage should be skipped if the dependencies are not found. This is very important so users don't get tests failing simply because they don't have dependencies.
The testing system we use is an extension of the nose test runner. In particular we've developed a nose plugin that allows us to paste verbatim IPython sessions and test them as doctests, which is extremely important for us.
You can run IPython from the source download directory without even installing it system-wide or having configure anything, by typing at the terminal:
python ipython.py
In order to run the test suite, you must at least be able to import IPython, even if you haven't fully installed the user-facing scripts yet (common in a development environment). You can then run the tests with:
python -c "import IPython; IPython.test()"
Once you have installed IPython either via a full install or using:
python setup.py develop
you will have available a system-wide script called iptest
that runs
the full test suite. You can then run the suite with:
iptest [args]
By default, this excludes the relatively slow tests for IPython.parallel
. To
run these, use iptest --all
.
Regardless of how you run things, you should eventually see something like:
**********************************************************************
Test suite completed for system with the following information:
{'commit_hash': '144fdae',
'commit_source': 'repository',
'ipython_path': '/home/fperez/usr/lib/python2.6/site-packages/IPython',
'ipython_version': '0.11.dev',
'os_name': 'posix',
'platform': 'Linux-2.6.35-22-generic-i686-with-Ubuntu-10.10-maverick',
'sys_executable': '/usr/bin/python',
'sys_platform': 'linux2',
'sys_version': '2.6.6 (r266:84292, Sep 15 2010, 15:52:39) \n[GCC 4.4.5]'}
Tools and libraries available at test time:
curses matplotlib pymongo qt sqlite3 tornado wx wx.aui zmq
Ran 9 test groups in 67.213s
Status:
OK
If not, there will be a message indicating which test group failed and how to
rerun that group individually. For example, this tests the
IPython.utils
subpackage, the -v
option shows progress
indicators:
$ iptest -v IPython.utils
..........................SS..SSS............................S.S...
.........................................................
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 125 tests in 0.119s
OK (SKIP=7)
Because the IPython test machinery is based on nose, you can use all nose
options and syntax, typing iptest -h
shows all available options. For
example, this lets you run the specific test test_rehashx
inside the
test_magic
module:
$ iptest -vv IPython.core.tests.test_magic:test_rehashx
IPython.core.tests.test_magic.test_rehashx(True,) ... ok
IPython.core.tests.test_magic.test_rehashx(True,) ... ok
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 2 tests in 0.100s
OK
When developing, the --pdb
and --pdb-failures
of nose are
particularly useful, these drop you into an interactive pdb session at the
point of the error or failure respectively.
The system information summary printed above is accessible from the top level package. If you encounter a problem with IPython, it's useful to include this information when reporting on the mailing list; use::
from IPython import sys_info
print sys_info()
and include the resulting information in your query.
We have a script that fetches a pull request from Github, merges it with master, and runs the test suite on different versions of Python. This uses a separate copy of the repository, so you can keep working on the code while it runs. To run it:
python tools/test_pr.py -p 1234
The number is the pull request number from Github; the -p
flag makes it post
the results to a comment on the pull request. Any further arguments are passed
to iptest
.
This requires the requests and keyring packages.
By now IPython has a reasonable test suite, so the best way to see what's
available is to look at the tests
directory in most subpackages. But
here are a few pointers to make the process easier.
The IPython.testing
package is where all of the machinery to test
IPython (rather than the tests for its various parts) lives. In particular,
the iptest
module in there has all the smarts to control the test
process. In there, the make_exclude
function is used to build a
blacklist of exclusions, these are modules that do not get even imported for
tests. This is important so that things that would fail to even import because
of missing dependencies don't give errors to end users, as we stated above.
The decorators
module contains a lot of useful decorators, especially
useful to mark individual tests that should be skipped under certain conditions
(rather than blacklisting the package altogether because of a missing major
dependency).
The plugin
subpackage in testing contains a nose plugin called
ipdoctest
that teaches nose about IPython syntax, so you can write
doctests with IPython prompts. You can also mark doctest output with # random
for the output corresponding to a single input to be ignored (stronger
than using ellipsis and useful to keep it as an example). If you want the
entire docstring to be executed but none of the output from any input to be
checked, you can use the # all-random
marker. The
IPython.testing.plugin.dtexample
module contains examples of how to use
these; for reference here is how to use # random
:
def ranfunc():
"""A function with some random output.
Normal examples are verified as usual:
>>> 1+3
4
But if you put '# random' in the output, it is ignored:
>>> 1+3
junk goes here... # random
>>> 1+2
again, anything goes #random
if multiline, the random mark is only needed once.
>>> 1+2
You can also put the random marker at the end:
# random
>>> 1+2
# random
.. or at the beginning.
More correct input is properly verified:
>>> ranfunc()
'ranfunc'
"""
return 'ranfunc'
and an example of # all-random
:
def random_all():
"""A function where we ignore the output of ALL examples.
Examples:
# all-random
This mark tells the testing machinery that all subsequent examples
should be treated as random (ignoring their output). They are still
executed, so if a they raise an error, it will be detected as such,
but their output is completely ignored.
>>> 1+3
junk goes here...
>>> 1+3
klasdfj;
In [8]: print 'hello'
world # random
In [9]: iprand()
Out[9]: 'iprand'
"""
return 'iprand'
When writing docstrings, you can use the @skip_doctest
decorator to
indicate that a docstring should not be treated as a doctest at all. The
difference between # all-random
and @skip_doctest
is that the former
executes the example but ignores output, while the latter doesn't execute any
code. @skip_doctest
should be used for docstrings whose examples are
purely informational.
If a given docstring fails under certain conditions but otherwise is a good doctest, you can use code like the following, that relies on the 'null' decorator to leave the docstring intact where it works as a test:
# The docstring for full_path doctests differently on win32 (different path
# separator) so just skip the doctest there, and use a null decorator
# elsewhere:
doctest_deco = dec.skip_doctest if sys.platform == 'win32' else dec.null_deco
@doctest_deco
def full_path(startPath,files):
"""Make full paths for all the listed files, based on startPath..."""
# function body follows...
With our nose plugin that understands IPython syntax, an extremely effective
way to write tests is to simply copy and paste an interactive session into a
docstring. You can writing this type of test, where your docstring is meant
only as a test, by prefixing the function name with doctest_
and leaving
its body absolutely empty other than the docstring. In
IPython.core.tests.test_magic
you can find several examples of this, but
for completeness sake, your code should look like this (a simple case):
def doctest_time():
"""
In [10]: %time None
CPU times: user 0.00 s, sys: 0.00 s, total: 0.00 s
Wall time: 0.00 s
"""
This function is only analyzed for its docstring but it is not considered a separate test, which is why its body should be empty.
If you need to run multiple tests inside the same standalone function or method
of a unittest.TestCase
subclass, IPython provides the parametric
decorator for this purpose. This is superior to how test generators work in
nose, because IPython's keeps intact your stack, which makes debugging vastly
easier. For example, these are some parametric tests both in class form and as
a standalone function (choose in each situation the style that best fits the
problem at hand, since both work):
from IPython.testing import decorators as dec
def is_smaller(i,j):
assert i<j,"%s !< %s" % (i,j)
class Tester(ParametricTestCase):
def test_parametric(self):
yield is_smaller(3, 4)
x, y = 1, 2
yield is_smaller(x, y)
@dec.parametric
def test_par_standalone():
yield is_smaller(3, 4)
x, y = 1, 2
yield is_smaller(x, y)
This section is a set of notes on the key points of the IPython testing needs, that were used when writing the system and should be kept for reference as it eveolves.
Testing IPython in full requires modifications to the default behavior of nose
and doctest, because the IPython prompt is not recognized to determine Python
input, and because IPython admits user input that is not valid Python (things
like %magics
and !system commands
.
We basically need to be able to test the following types of code:
-
(1) Pure Python files containing normal tests. These are not a problem, since Nose will pick them up as long as they conform to the (flexible) conventions used by nose to recognize tests.
-
(2) Python files containing doctests. Here, we have two possibilities:
- The prompts are the usual
>>>
and the input is pure Python. - The prompts are of the form
In [1]:
and the input can contain extended IPython expressions.
In the first case, Nose will recognize the doctests as long as it is called with the
--with-doctest
flag. But the second case will likely require modifications or the writing of a new doctest plugin for Nose that is IPython-aware. - The prompts are the usual
-
(3) ReStructuredText files that contain code blocks. For this type of file, we have three distinct possibilities for the code blocks:
- They use
>>>
prompts. - They use
In [1]:
prompts. - They are standalone blocks of pure Python code without any prompts.
The first two cases are similar to the situation #2 above, except that in this case the doctests must be extracted from input code blocks using docutils instead of from the Python docstrings.
In the third case, we must have a convention for distinguishing code blocks that are meant for execution from others that may be snippets of shell code or other examples not meant to be run. One possibility is to assume that all indented code blocks are meant for execution, but to have a special docutils directive for input that should not be executed.
For those code blocks that we will execute, the convention used will simply be that they get called and are considered successful if they run to completion without raising errors. This is similar to what Nose does for standalone test functions, and by putting asserts or other forms of exception-raising statements it becomes possible to have literate examples that double as lightweight tests.
- They use
-
(4) Extension modules with doctests in function and method docstrings. Currently Nose simply can't find these docstrings correctly, because the underlying doctest DocTestFinder object fails there. Similarly to #2 above, the docstrings could have either pure python or IPython prompts.
Of these, only 3-c (reST with standalone code blocks) is not implemented at this point.