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* new documentation for unit testing - especially module unit testing * unit test documentation reformatting and further fixes * unit test documentation - point to online coverage reports & fix bad spaces * Small copy edits. * First pass copy edit / rewrite. More info needed. * testing documentation - clean up structure, especially code coverage - reduce repetition * module unit test documentation - improved introduction * testing documentation - more fixes from and inspired by review from dharmabumstead * testing documentation - fixes from mattclay + some other minor tweaks * More copy edits. * testing documentation - further fixes from review * Copy edits * Copy edits * More copy edits.
208 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
208 lines
6.7 KiB
ReStructuredText
**********
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Unit Tests
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**********
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Unit tests are small isolated tests that target a specific library or module. Unit tests
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in Ansible are currently the only way of driving tests from python within Ansible's
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continuous integration process. This means that in some circumstances the tests may be a
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bit wider than just units.
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.. contents:: Topics
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Available Tests
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===============
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Unit tests can be found in `test/units
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<https://github.com/ansible/ansible/tree/devel/test/units>`_. Notice that the directory
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structure of the tests matches that of ``lib/ansible/``.
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Running Tests
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=============
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The Ansible unit tests can be run across the whole code base by doing:
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.. code:: shell
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cd /path/to/ansible/source
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source hacking/env-setup
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ansible-test units --tox
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Against a single file by doing:
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.. code:: shell
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ansible-test units --tox apt
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Or against a specific Python version by doing:
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.. code:: shell
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ansible-test units --tox --python 2.7 apt
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For advanced usage see the online help::
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ansible-test units --help
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You can also run tests in Ansible's continuous integration system by opening a pull
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request. This will automatically determine which tests to run based on the changes made
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in your pull request.
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Installing dependencies
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=======================
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``ansible-test`` has a number of dependencies. For ``units`` tests we suggest using ``tox``.
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The dependencies can be installed using the ``--requirements`` argument, which will
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install all the required dependencies needed for unit tests. For example:
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.. code:: shell
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ansible-test units --tox --python 2.7 --requirements apache2_module
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.. note:: tox version requirement
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When using ``ansible-test`` with ``--tox`` requires tox >= 2.5.0
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The full list of requirements can be found at `test/runner/requirements
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<https://github.com/ansible/ansible/tree/devel/test/runner/requirements>`_. Requirements
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files are named after their respective commands. See also the `constraints
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<https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/test/runner/requirements/constraints.txt>`_
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applicable to all commands.
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Extending unit tests
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====================
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.. warning:: What a unit test isn't
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If you start writing a test that requires external services then
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you may be writing an integration test, rather than a unit test.
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Structuring Unit Tests
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``````````````````````
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Ansible drives unit tests through `pytest <https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/>`_. This
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means that tests can either be written a simple functions which are included in any file
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name like ``test_<something>.py`` or as classes.
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Here is an example of a function::
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#this function will be called simply because it is called test_*()
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def test_add()
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a = 10
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b = 23
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c = 33
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assert a + b = c
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Here is an example of a class::
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import unittest:
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class AddTester(unittest.TestCase)
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def SetUp()
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self.a = 10
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self.b = 23
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# this function will
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def test_add()
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c = 33
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assert self.a + self.b = c
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# this function will
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def test_subtract()
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c = -13
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assert self.a - self.b = c
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Both methods work fine in most circumstances; the function-based interface is simpler and
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quicker and so that's probably where you should start when you are just trying to add a
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few basic tests for a module. The class-based test allows more tidy set up and tear down
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of pre-requisites, so if you have many test cases for your module you may want to refactor
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to use that.
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Assertions using the simple ``assert`` function inside the tests will give give full
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information on the cause of the failure with a trace-back of functions called during the
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assertion. This means that plain asserts are recommended over other external assertion
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libraries.
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A number of the unit test suites include functions that are shared between several
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modules, especially in the networking arena. In these cases a file is created in the same
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directory, which is then included directly.
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Module test case common code
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````````````````````````````
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Keep common code as specific as possible within the `test/units/` directory structure. For
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example, if it's specific to testing Amazon modules, it should be in
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`test/units/modules/cloud/amazon/`. Don't import common unit test code from directories
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outside the current or parent directories.
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Don't import other unit tests from a unit test. Any common code should be in dedicated
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files that aren't themselves tests.
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Fixtures files
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``````````````
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To mock out fetching results from devices, or provide other complex datastructures that
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come from external libraries, you can use ``fixtures`` to read in pre-generated data.
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Text files live in ``test/units/modules/network/PLATFORM/fixtures/``
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Data is loaded using the ``load_fixture`` method
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See `eos_banner test
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<https://github.com/ansible/ansible/blob/devel/test/units/modules/network/eos/test_eos_banner.py>`_
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for a practical example.
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If you are simulating APIs you may find that python placebo is useful. See
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doc:`testing_units_modules` for more information.
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Code Coverage For New or Updated Unit Tests
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```````````````````````````````````````````
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New code will be missing from the codecov.io coverage reports (see :doc:`testing`), so
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local reporting is needed. Most ``ansible-test`` commands allow you to collect code
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coverage; this is particularly useful when to indicate where to extend testing.
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To collect coverage data add the ``--coverage`` argument to your ``ansible-test`` command line:
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.. code:: shell
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ansible-test units --coverage apt
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ansible-test coverage html
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Results will be written to ``test/results/reports/coverage/index.html``
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Reports can be generated in several different formats:
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* ``ansible-test coverage report`` - Console report.
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* ``ansible-test coverage html`` - HTML report.
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* ``ansible-test coverage xml`` - XML report.
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To clear data between test runs, use the ``ansible-test coverage erase`` command. See
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:doc:`testing_units_running_locally` for more information about generating coverage
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reports.
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.. seealso::
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:doc:`testing_units_modules`
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Special considerations for unit testing modules
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:doc:`testing_running_locally`
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Running tests locally including gathering and reporting coverage data
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`Python 3 documentation - 26.4. unittest — Unit testing framework <https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html>`_
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The documentation of the unittest framework in python 3
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`Python 2 documentation - 25.3. unittest — Unit testing framework <https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html>`_
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The documentation of the earliest supported unittest framework - from Python 2.6
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`pytest: helps you write better programs <https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/>`_
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The documentation of pytest - the framework actually used to run Ansible unit tests
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