.. _wiki2_adding_tests: ============ Adding Tests ============ We will now add tests for the models and views as well as a few functional tests in a new ``tests`` subpackage. Tests ensure that an application works, and that it continues to work when changes are made in the future. The file ``tests.py`` was generated as part of the ``alchemy`` scaffold, but it is a common practice to put tests into a ``tests`` subpackage, especially as projects grow in size and complexity. Each module in the test subpackage should contain tests for its corresponding module in our application. Each corresponding pair of modules should have the same names, except the test module should have the prefix ``test_``. Start by deleting ``tests.py``, then create a new directory to contain our new tests as well as a new empty file ``tests/__init__.py``. .. warning:: It is very important when refactoring a Python module into a package to be sure to delete the cache files (``.pyc`` files or ``__pycache__`` folders) sitting around! Python will prioritize the cache files before traversing into folders, using the old code, and you will wonder why none of your changes are working! Test the views ============== We'll create a new ``tests/test_views.py`` file, adding a ``BaseTest`` class used as the base for other test classes. Next we'll add tests for each view function we previously added to our application. We'll add four test classes: ``ViewWikiTests``, ``ViewPageTests``, ``AddPageTests``, and ``EditPageTests``. These test the ``view_wiki``, ``view_page``, ``add_page``, and ``edit_page`` views. Functional tests ================ We'll test the whole application, covering security aspects that are not tested in the unit tests, like logging in, logging out, checking that the ``basic`` user cannot edit pages that it didn't create but the ``editor`` user can, and so on. View the results of all our edits to ``tests`` subpackage ========================================================= Open ``tutorial/tests/test_views.py``, and edit it such that it appears as follows: .. literalinclude:: src/tests/tutorial/tests/test_views.py :linenos: :language: python Open ``tutorial/tests/test_functional.py``, and edit it such that it appears as follows: .. literalinclude:: src/tests/tutorial/tests/test_functional.py :linenos: :language: python .. note:: We're utilizing the excellent WebTest_ package to do functional testing of the application. This is defined in the ``tests_require`` section of our ``setup.py``. Any other dependencies needed only for testing purposes can be added there and will be installed automatically when running ``setup.py test``. Running the tests ================= We can run these tests similarly to how we did in :ref:`running_tests`: On UNIX: .. code-block:: bash $ $VENV/bin/py.test -q On Windows: .. code-block:: doscon c:\pyramidtut\tutorial> %VENV%\Scripts\py.test -q The expected result should look like the following: .. code-block:: text ...................... 22 passed, 1 pytest-warnings in 5.81 seconds .. note:: If you use Python 3 during this tutorial, you will see deprecation warnings in the output, which we will choose to ignore. In making this tutorial run on both Python 2 and 3, the authors prioritized simplicity and focus for the learner over accommodating warnings. In your own app or as extra credit, you may choose to either drop Python 2 support or hack your code to work without warnings on both Python 2 and 3. .. _webtest: http://docs.pylonsproject.org/projects/webtest/en/latest/