##// END OF EJS Templates
Merge pull request #13820 from jasongrout/mypy...
Merge pull request #13820 from jasongrout/mypy Fix mypy error by being more explicit and verbose

File last commit:

r27764:aefe51c6
r27873:e783ccd7 merge
Show More
decorators.py
201 lines | 6.6 KiB | text/x-python | PythonLexer
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
"""Decorators for labeling test objects.
Decorators that merely return a modified version of the original function
object are straightforward. Decorators that return a new function object need
to use nose.tools.make_decorator(original_function)(decorator) in returning the
decorator, in order to preserve metadata such as function name, setup and
teardown functions and so on - see nose.tools for more information.
This module provides a set of useful decorators meant to be ready to use in
your own tests. See the bottom of the file for the ready-made ones, and if you
find yourself writing a new one that may be of generic use, add it here.
Included decorators:
Lightweight testing that remains unittest-compatible.
- An @as_unittest decorator can be used to tag any normal parameter-less
function as a unittest TestCase. Then, both nose and normal unittest will
recognize it as such. This will make it easier to migrate away from Nose if
we ever need/want to while maintaining very lightweight tests.
NOTE: This file contains IPython-specific decorators. Using the machinery in
IPython.external.decorators, we import either numpy.testing.decorators if numpy is
available, OR use equivalent code in IPython.external._decorators, which
we've copied verbatim from numpy.
"""
# Copyright (c) IPython Development Team.
# Distributed under the terms of the Modified BSD License.
import os
import shutil
import sys
import tempfile
import unittest
from importlib import import_module
from decorator import decorator
# Expose the unittest-driven decorators
from .ipunittest import ipdoctest, ipdocstring
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Classes and functions
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Simple example of the basic idea
def as_unittest(func):
"""Decorator to make a simple function into a normal test via unittest."""
class Tester(unittest.TestCase):
def test(self):
func()
Tester.__name__ = func.__name__
return Tester
# Utility functions
def skipif(skip_condition, msg=None):
"""Make function raise SkipTest exception if skip_condition is true
Parameters
----------
skip_condition : bool or callable
Flag to determine whether to skip test. If the condition is a
callable, it is used at runtime to dynamically make the decision. This
is useful for tests that may require costly imports, to delay the cost
until the test suite is actually executed.
msg : string
Message to give on raising a SkipTest exception.
Returns
-------
decorator : function
Decorator, which, when applied to a function, causes SkipTest
to be raised when the skip_condition was True, and the function
to be called normally otherwise.
"""
if msg is None:
msg = "Test skipped due to test condition."
import pytest
assert isinstance(skip_condition, bool)
return pytest.mark.skipif(skip_condition, reason=msg)
# A version with the condition set to true, common case just to attach a message
# to a skip decorator
def skip(msg=None):
"""Decorator factory - mark a test function for skipping from test suite.
Parameters
----------
msg : string
Optional message to be added.
Returns
-------
decorator : function
Decorator, which, when applied to a function, causes SkipTest
to be raised, with the optional message added.
"""
if msg and not isinstance(msg, str):
raise ValueError('invalid object passed to `@skip` decorator, did you '
'meant `@skip()` with brackets ?')
return skipif(True, msg)
def onlyif(condition, msg):
"""The reverse from skipif, see skipif for details."""
return skipif(not condition, msg)
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Utility functions for decorators
def module_not_available(module):
"""Can module be imported? Returns true if module does NOT import.
This is used to make a decorator to skip tests that require module to be
available, but delay the 'import numpy' to test execution time.
"""
try:
mod = import_module(module)
mod_not_avail = False
except ImportError:
mod_not_avail = True
return mod_not_avail
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
# Decorators for public use
# Decorators to skip certain tests on specific platforms.
skip_win32 = skipif(sys.platform == 'win32',
"This test does not run under Windows")
skip_linux = skipif(sys.platform.startswith('linux'),
"This test does not run under Linux")
skip_osx = skipif(sys.platform == 'darwin',"This test does not run under OS X")
# Decorators to skip tests if not on specific platforms.
skip_if_not_win32 = skipif(sys.platform != 'win32',
"This test only runs under Windows")
skip_if_not_linux = skipif(not sys.platform.startswith('linux'),
"This test only runs under Linux")
_x11_skip_cond = (sys.platform not in ('darwin', 'win32') and
os.environ.get('DISPLAY', '') == '')
_x11_skip_msg = "Skipped under *nix when X11/XOrg not available"
skip_if_no_x11 = skipif(_x11_skip_cond, _x11_skip_msg)
# Other skip decorators
# generic skip without module
skip_without = lambda mod: skipif(module_not_available(mod), "This test requires %s" % mod)
skipif_not_numpy = skip_without('numpy')
skipif_not_matplotlib = skip_without('matplotlib')
# A null 'decorator', useful to make more readable code that needs to pick
# between different decorators based on OS or other conditions
null_deco = lambda f: f
# Some tests only run where we can use unicode paths. Note that we can't just
# check os.path.supports_unicode_filenames, which is always False on Linux.
try:
f = tempfile.NamedTemporaryFile(prefix=u"tmp€")
except UnicodeEncodeError:
unicode_paths = False
else:
unicode_paths = True
f.close()
onlyif_unicode_paths = onlyif(unicode_paths, ("This test is only applicable "
"where we can use unicode in filenames."))
def onlyif_cmds_exist(*commands):
"""
Decorator to skip test when at least one of `commands` is not found.
"""
assert (
os.environ.get("IPTEST_WORKING_DIR", None) is None
), "iptest deprecated since IPython 8.0"
for cmd in commands:
reason = f"This test runs only if command '{cmd}' is installed"
if not shutil.which(cmd):
import pytest
return pytest.mark.skip(reason=reason)
return null_deco