Setup scripts can use pytest-runner to add setup.py test support for pytest runner.
pytest-runner depends on deprecated features of setuptools and relies on features that break security
mechanisms in pip. For example 'setup_requires' and 'tests_require' bypass pip --require-hashes
.
See also pypa/setuptools#1684.
It is recommended that you:
- Remove
'pytest-runner'
from yoursetup_requires
, preferably removing thesetup_requires
option. - Remove
'pytest'
and any other testing requirements fromtests_require
, preferably removing thetests_requires
option. - Select a tool to bootstrap and then run tests such as tox.
- Add 'pytest-runner' to your 'setup_requires'. Pin to '>=2.0,<3dev' (or similar) to avoid pulling in incompatible versions.
- Include 'pytest' and any other testing requirements to 'tests_require'.
- Invoke tests with
setup.py pytest
. - Pass
--index-url
to have test requirements downloaded from an alternate index URL (unnecessary if specified for easy_install in setup.cfg). - Pass additional py.test command-line options using
--addopts
. - Set permanent options for the
python setup.py pytest
command (likeindex-url
) in the[pytest]
section ofsetup.cfg
. - Set permanent options for the
py.test
run (likeaddopts
orpep8ignore
) in the[pytest]
section ofpytest.ini
ortox.ini
or put them in the[tool:pytest]
section ofsetup.cfg
. See pytest issue 567. - Optionally, set
test=pytest
in the[aliases]
section ofsetup.cfg
to causepython setup.py test
to invoke pytest.
The most simple usage looks like this in setup.py:
setup( setup_requires=[ 'pytest-runner', ], tests_require=[ 'pytest', ], )
Additional dependencies require to run the tests (e.g. mock or pytest plugins) may be added to tests_require and will be downloaded and required by the session before invoking pytest.
Follow this search on github for examples of real-world usage.
This technique is deprecated - if you have standalone scripts you wish to invoke with dependencies, use pip-run.
Although pytest-runner
is typically used to add pytest test
runner support to maintained packages, pytest-runner
may
also be used to create standalone tests. Consider this example
failure,
reported in jsonpickle #117
or this MongoDB test
demonstrating a technique that works even when dependencies
are required in the test.
Either example file may be cloned or downloaded and simply run on any system with Python and Setuptools. It will download the specified dependencies and run the tests. Afterward, the the cloned directory can be removed and with it all trace of invoking the test. No other dependencies are needed and no system configuration is altered.
Then, anyone trying to replicate the failure can do so easily and with all the power of pytest (rewritten assertions, rich comparisons, interactive debugging, extensibility through plugins, etc).
As a result, the communication barrier for describing and replicating failures is made almost trivially low.
Because it uses Setuptools setup_requires, pytest-runner will install itself on every invocation of setup.py. In some cases, this causes delays for invocations of setup.py that will never invoke pytest-runner. To help avoid this contingency, consider requiring pytest-runner only when pytest is invoked:
needs_pytest = {'pytest', 'test', 'ptr'}.intersection(sys.argv) pytest_runner = ['pytest-runner'] if needs_pytest else [] # ... setup( #... setup_requires=[ #... (other setup requirements) ] + pytest_runner, )
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