Testix is a Mocking framework for Python, meant to be used with pytest.
Testix is special because it allows you to specify what your mock objects do, and it then enforces your specifications automatically. It also reduces (albeit not entirely) mock setup. Other frameworks usually have a flow like this:
- setup mock
- let code do something with mock
- assert mock used in correct way
Testix flow is a bit different
- setup mock objects (
sock
in the following example) - specify exactly what should happen to them using a Scenario context
Read the full docs at readthedocs
Here's a small example:
# create your object under test, pass in some mock objects
# in production, Chatbot will receive and actual socket object
# here we want to test what it does with the socket it receives
# and we do not want it to actually communicate with anyone
# to both those ends, we pass a mock, or fake, object.
self.tested = chatbot.Chatbot(Fake('sock')) # Fake('sock') is a mock object named "sock"
# create a Scenario context
# inside, you specify exactly what the unit should do with the objects its handed
with Scenario() as s:
# we can refer here to s.sock, because there is a mock named `sock`
s.sock.recv(4096) >> 'request text' # unit must call sock.recv(4096).
# this call will return 'request text'
s.sock.send('response text')
# call your unit's code
self.tested.go()
# Scenario context ends, and verifies everything happened exactly as specified
# No more, no less
Note that you do not have to setup sock.recv
or sock.send
- once sock
is
set up, it will generate other mock objects automatically as you go along with
it. Only "top level" mock objects need to be setup explicitly.
Continue reading for further examples.
With pip
:
$ pip install testix
Testix works with Python 3. It will not work with legacy python.
Testix started as a re-implementation of ideas from the Voodoo-Mock unit-testing framework. Since then it has evolved some different traits though.
This software is available under the MIT License, see the LICENSE
file.