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README FOR IDLE TESTS IN IDLELIB.IDLE_TEST 0. Quick Start Automated unit tests were added in 3.3 for Python 3.x. To run the tests from a command line: python -m test.test_idle Human-mediated tests were added later in 3.4. python -m idlelib.idle_test.htest 1. Test Files The idle directory, idlelib, has over 60 xyz.py files. The idle_test subdirectory should contain a test_xyz.py for each, where 'xyz' is lowercased even if xyz.py is not. Here is a possible template, with the blanks after '.' and 'as', and before and after '_' to be filled in. import unittest from test.support import requires import idlelib. as class _Test(unittest.TestCase): def test_(self): if __name__ == '__main__': unittest.main(verbosity=2) Add the following at the end of xyy.py, with the appropriate name added after 'test_'. Some files already have something like this for htest. If so, insert the import and unittest.main lines before the htest lines. if __name__ == "__main__": import unittest unittest.main('idlelib.idle_test.test_', verbosity=2, exit=False) 2. GUI Tests When run as part of the Python test suite, Idle GUI tests need to run test.support.requires('gui'). A test is a GUI test if it creates a tkinter.Tk root or master object either directly or indirectly by instantiating a tkinter or idle class. GUI tests cannot run in test processes that either have no graphical environment available or are not allowed to use it. To guard a module consisting entirely of GUI tests, start with from test.support import requires requires('gui') To guard a test class, put "requires('gui')" in its setUpClass function. To avoid interfering with other GUI tests, all GUI objects must be destroyed and deleted by the end of the test. The Tk root created in a setUpX function should be destroyed in the corresponding tearDownX and the module or class attribute deleted. Others widgets should descend from the single root and the attributes deleted BEFORE root is destroyed. See https://bugs.python.org/issue20567. @classmethod def setUpClass(cls): requires('gui') cls.root = tk.Tk() cls.text = tk.Text(root) @classmethod def tearDownClass(cls): del cls.text cls.root.update_idletasks() cls.root.destroy() del cls.root The update_idletasks call is sometimes needed to prevent the following warning either when running a test alone or as part of the test suite (#27196). can't invoke "event" command: application has been destroyed ... "ttk::ThemeChanged" Requires('gui') causes the test(s) it guards to be skipped if any of these conditions are met: - The tests are being run by regrtest.py, and it was started without enabling the "gui" resource with the "-u" command line option. - The tests are being run on Windows by a service that is not allowed to interact with the graphical environment. - The tests are being run on Linux and X Windows is not available. - The tests are being run on Mac OSX in a process that cannot make a window manager connection. - tkinter.Tk cannot be successfully instantiated for some reason. - test.support.use_resources has been set by something other than regrtest.py and does not contain "gui". Tests of non-GUI operations should avoid creating tk widgets. Incidental uses of tk variables and messageboxes can be replaced by the mock classes in idle_test/mock_tk.py. The mock text handles some uses of the tk Text widget. 3. Running Unit Tests Assume that xyz.py and test_xyz.py both end with a unittest.main() call. Running either from an Idle editor runs all tests in the test_xyz file with the version of Python running Idle. Test output appears in the Shell window. The 'verbosity=2' option lists all test methods in the file, which is appropriate when developing tests. The 'exit=False' option is needed in xyx.py files when an htest follows. The following command lines also run all test methods, including GUI tests, in test_xyz.py. (Both '-m idlelib' and '-m idlelib.idle' start Idle and so cannot run tests.) python -m idlelib.xyz python -m idlelib.idle_test.test_xyz The following runs all idle_test/test_*.py tests interactively. >>> import unittest >>> unittest.main('idlelib.idle_test', verbosity=2) The following run all Idle tests at a command line. Option '-v' is the same as 'verbosity=2'. python -m unittest -v idlelib.idle_test python -m test -v -ugui test_idle python -m test.test_idle The idle tests are 'discovered' by idlelib.idle_test.__init__.load_tests, which is also imported into test.test_idle. Normally, neither file should be changed when working on individual test modules. The third command runs unittest indirectly through regrtest. The same happens when the entire test suite is run with 'python -m test'. So that command must work for buildbots to stay green. Idle tests must not disturb the environment in a way that makes other tests fail (issue 18081). To run an individual Testcase or test method, extend the dotted name given to unittest on the command line. python -m unittest -v idlelib.idle_test.test_xyz.Test_case.test_meth 4. Human-mediated Tests Human-mediated tests are widget tests that cannot be automated but need human verification. They are contained in idlelib/idle_test/htest.py, which has instructions. (Some modules need an auxiliary function, identified with "# htest # on the header line.) The set is about complete, though some tests need improvement. To run all htests, run the htest file from an editor or from the command line with: python -m idlelib.idle_test.htest