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django-test-plus provides useful additions to Django's default TestCase

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# django-test-plus

Useful additions to Django's default TestCase from [REVSYS](https://www.revsys.com/)

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## Rationale

Let's face it, writing tests isn't always fun. Part of the reason for
that is all of the boilerplate you end up writing. django-test-plus is
an attempt to cut down on some of that when writing Django tests. We
guarantee it will increase the time before you get carpal tunnel by at
least 3 weeks!

## Support

Supports: Python 2 and Python 3

Supports Django Versions: 1.8, 1.9, 1.10, 1.11, 2.0

## Documentation

Full documentation is available at http://django-test-plus.readthedocs.org

## Installation

```shell
$ pip install django-test-plus
```

## Usage

Using django-test-plus is pretty easy, simply have your tests inherit
from test\_plus.test.TestCase rather than the normal
django.test.TestCase like so::

```python
from test_plus.test import TestCase

class MyViewTests(TestCase):
...
```

This is sufficient to get things rolling, but you are encouraged to
create *your own* sub-class on a per project basis. This will allow you to add your own project specific helper methods.

For example, if you have a django project named 'myproject', you might
create the following in `myproject/test.py`:

```python
from test_plus.test import TestCase as PlusTestCase

class TestCase(PlusTestCase):
pass
```

And then in your tests use:

```python
from myproject.test import TestCase

class MyViewTests(TestCase):
...
```

Note that you can also option to import it like this if you want, which is
more similar to the regular importing of Django's TestCase:

```python
from test_plus import TestCase
```

## pytest Usage

You can get a TestCase like object as a pytest fixture now by simply asking for `tp`. All of the methods below would then work in pytest functions. For
example:

```python

def test_url_reverse(tp):
expected_url = '/api/'
reversed_url = tp.reverse('api')
assert expected_url == reversed_url
```

## Methods

### reverse(url_name, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

When testing views you often find yourself needing to reverse the URL's name. With django-test-plus there is no need for the `from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse` boilerplate. Instead just use:

```python
def test_something(self):
url = self.reverse('my-url-name')
slug_url = self.reverse('name-takes-a-slug', slug='my-slug')
pk_url = self.reverse('name-takes-a-pk', pk=12)
```

As you can see our reverse also passes along any args or kwargs you need
to pass in.

## get(url\_name, follow=True, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Another thing you do often is HTTP get urls. Our `get()` method
assumes you are passing in a named URL with any args or kwargs necessary
to reverse the url\_name.
If needed, place kwargs for `TestClient.get()` in an 'extra' dictionary.:

```python
def test_get_named_url(self):
response = self.get('my-url-name')
# Get XML data via AJAX request
xml_response = self.get(
'my-url-name',
extra={'HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH': 'XMLHttpRequest'})
```

When using this get method two other things happen for you, we store the
last response in `self.last_response` and the response's Context in `self.context`.

So instead of:

```python
def test_default_django(self):
response = self.client.get(reverse('my-url-name'))
self.assertTrue('foo' in response.context)
self.assertEqual(response.context['foo'], 12)
```

You can instead write:

```python
def test_testplus_get(self):
self.get('my-url-name')
self.assertInContext('foo')
self.assertEqual(self.context['foo'], 12)
```

It's also smart about already reversed URLs so you can be lazy and do:

```python
def test_testplus_get(self):
url = self.reverse('my-url-name')
self.get(url)
self.response_200()
```

If you need to pass query string parameters to your url name, you can do so like this. Assuming the name 'search' maps to '/search/' then:

```python
def test_testplus_get_query(self):
self.get('search', data={'query': 'testing'})
```

Would GET `/search/?query=testing`.

## post(url_name, data, follow=True, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Our `post()` method takes a named URL, the dictionary of data you wish
to post and any args or kwargs necessary to reverse the url_name.
If needed, place kwargs for `TestClient.post()` in an 'extra' dictionary.:

```python
def test_post_named_url(self):
response = self.post('my-url-name', data={'coolness-factor': 11.0},
extra={'HTTP_X_REQUESTED_WITH': 'XMLHttpRequest'})
```

*NOTE* Along with the frequently used get and post, we support all of the HTTP verbs such as put, patch, head, trace, options, and delete in the same fashion.

## get_context(key)

Often you need to get things out of the template context, so let's make that
easy:

```python
def test_context_data(self):
self.get('my-view-with-some-context')
slug = self.get_context('slug')
```

## assertInContext(key)

You can ensure a specific key exists in the last response's context by
using:

```python
def test_in_context(self):
self.get('my-view-with-some-context')
self.assertInContext('some-key')
```

## assertContext(key, value)

We can get context values and ensure they exist, but so let's also test
equality while we're at it. This asserts that key == value:

```python
def test_in_context(self):
self.get('my-view-with-some-context')
self.assertContext('some-key', 'expected value')
```

## response_XXX(response) - status code checking

Another test you often need to do is check that a response has a certain
HTTP status code. With Django's default TestCase you would write:

```python
from django.core.urlresolvers import reverse

def test_status(self):
response = self.client.get(reverse('my-url-name'))
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)
```

With django-test-plus you can shorten that to be:

```python
def test_better_status(self):
response = self.get('my-url-name')
self.response_200(response)
```

django-test-plus provides the following response method checks for you:

- response_200()
- response_201()
- response_204()
- response_302()
- response_403()
- response_404()
- response_405()

All of which take an option Django test client response as their only argument.
If it's available, the response_XXX methods will use the last response. So you
can do:

```python
def test_status(self):
self.get('my-url-name')
self.response_200()
```

Which is a bit shorter.

## get_check_200(url_name, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

GETing and checking views return status 200 is so common a test this
method makes it even easier::

```python
def test_even_better_status(self):
response = self.get_check_200('my-url-name')
```

## make_user(username='testuser', password='password', perms=None)

When testing out views you often need to create various users to ensure
all of your logic is safe and sound. To make this process easier, this
method will create a user for you:

```python
def test_user_stuff(self)
user1 = self.make_user('u1')
user2 = self.make_user('u2')
```

If creating a User in your project is more complicated, say for example
you removed the `username` field from the default Django Auth model
you can provide a [Factory
Boy](https://factoryboy.readthedocs.org/en/latest/) factory to create
it or simply override this method on your own sub-class.

To use a Factory Boy factory simply create your class like this::

```python
from test_plus.test import TestCase
from .factories import UserFactory


class MySpecialTest(TestCase):
user_factory = UserFactory

def test_special_creation(self):
user1 = self.make_user('u1')
```

**NOTE:** Users created by this method will have their password
set to the string 'password' by default, in order to ease testing.
If you need a specific password simply override the `password` parameter.

You can also pass in user permissions by passing in a string of
'`<app_name>.<perm name>`' or '`<app_name>.*`'. For example:

```python
user2 = self.make_user(perms=['myapp.create_widget', 'otherapp.*'])
```

## print_form_errors(response_or_form=None)

When debugging a failing test for a view with a form, this method helps you
quickly look at any form errors.

Example usage:

```python
class MyFormTest(TestCase):

self.post('my-url-name', data={})
self.print_form_errors()

# or

resp = self.post('my-url-name', data={})
self.print_form_errors(resp)

# or

form = MyForm(data={})
self.print_form_errors(form)
```

## Authentication Helpers

### assertLoginRequired(url_name, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

It's pretty easy to add a new view to a project and forget to restrict
it to be login required, this method helps make it easy to test that a
given named URL requires auth:

```python
def test_auth(self):
self.assertLoginRequired('my-restricted-url')
self.assertLoginRequired('my-restricted-object', pk=12)
self.assertLoginRequired('my-restricted-object', slug='something')
```

### login context

Along with ensuing a view requires login and creating users, the next
thing you end up doing is logging in as various users to test our your
restriction logic. This can be made easier with the following context:

```python
def test_restrictions(self):
user1 = self.make_user('u1')
user2 = self.make_user('u2')

self.assertLoginRequired('my-protected-view')

with self.login(username=user1.username, password='password'):
response = self.get('my-protected-view')
# Test user1 sees what they should be seeing

with self.login(username=user2.username, password='password'):
response = self.get('my-protected-view')
# Test user2 see what they should be seeing
```

Since we're likely creating our users using `make_user()` from above,
the login context assumes the password is 'password' unless specified
otherwise. Therefore you you can do:

```python
def test_restrictions(self):
user1 = self.make_user('u1')

with self.login(username=user1.username):
response = self.get('my-protected-view')
```

We can also derive the username if we're using `make_user()` so we can
shorten that up even further like this:

```python
def test_restrictions(self):
user1 = self.make_user('u1')

with self.login(user1):
response = self.get('my-protected-view')
```

## Ensuring low query counts

### assertNumQueriesLessThan(number) - context

Django provides
[assertNumQueries](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.8/topics/testing/tools/#django.test.TransactionTestCase.assertNumQueries)
which is great when your code generates a specific number of
queries. However, if due to the nature of your data this number can vary
you often don't attempt to ensure the code doesn't start producing a ton
more queries than you expect:

```python
def test_something_out(self):

with self.assertNumQueriesLessThan(7):
self.get('some-view-with-6-queries')
```

### assertGoodView(url_name, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

This method does a few of things for you, it:

- Retrieves the name URL
- Ensures the view does not generate more than 50 queries
- Ensures the response has status code 200
- Returns the response

Often a wide sweeping test like this is better than no test at all. You
can use it like this:

```python
def test_better_than_nothing(self):
response = self.assertGoodView('my-url-name')
```

## Testing DRF views

To take advantage of the convenience of DRF's test client, you can create a subclass of `TestCase` and set the `client_class` property:

```python
from test_plus import TestCase
from rest_framework.test import APIClient


class APITestCase(TestCase):
client_class = APIClient
```

For convenience, `test_plus` ships with `APITestCase`, which does just that:

```python
from test_plus import APITestCase


class MyAPITestCase(APITestCase):

def test_post(self):
data = {'testing': {'prop': 'value'}}
self.post('view-json', data=data, extra={'format': 'json'})
self.response_200()
```

Note that using `APITestCase` requires Django >= 1.8 and having installed `django-rest-framework`.

## Testing class-based "generic" views

The TestCase methods `get()` and `post()` work for both function-based
and class-based views. However, in doing so they invoke Django's
URL resolution, middleware, template processing, and decorator systems.
For integration testing this is desirable, as you want to ensure your
URLs resolve properly, view permissions are enforced, etc.
For unit testing this is costly because all these Django request/response
systems are invoked in addition to your method, and they typically do not
affect the end result.

Class-based views (derived from Django's `generic.models.View` class)
contain methods and mixins which makes granular unit testing (more) feasible.
Quite often your usage of a generic view class comprises a simple override
of an existing method. Invoking the entire view and the Django request/response
stack is a waste of time... you really want to call the overridden
method directly and test the result.

CBVTestCase to the rescue!

As with TestCase above, simply have your tests inherit
from test_plus.test.CBVTestCase rather than TestCase like so:

```python
from test_plus.test import CBVTestCase

class MyViewTests(CBVTestCase):
```

## Methods

### get_instance(cls, initkwargs=None, request=None, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

This core method simplifies the instantiation of your class, giving you
a way to invoke class methods directly.

Returns an instance of `cls`, initialized with `initkwargs`.
Sets `request`, `args`, and `kwargs` attributes on the class instance.
`args` and `kwargs` are the same values you would pass to `reverse()`.

Sample usage:

```python
from django.views import generic
from test_plus.test import CBVTestCase

class MyClass(generic.DetailView)

def get_context_data(self, **kwargs):
kwargs['answer'] = 42
return kwargs

class MyTests(CBVTestCase):

def test_context_data(self):
my_view = self.get_instance(MyClass, {'object': some_object})
context = my_view.get_context_data()
self.assertEqual(context['answer'], 42)
```

### get(cls, initkwargs=None, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Invokes `cls.get()` and returns the response, rendering template if possible.
Builds on the `CBVTestCase.get_instance()` foundation.

All test_plus.test.TestCase methods are valid, so the following works:

```python
response = self.get(MyClass)
self.assertContext('my_key', expected_value)
```

All test_plus TestCase side-effects are honored and all test_plus
TestCase assertion methods work with `CBVTestCase.get()`.

**NOTE:** This method bypasses Django's middleware, and therefore context
variables created by middleware are not available. If this affects your
template/context testing you should use TestCase instead of CBVTestCase.

### post(cls, data=None, initkwargs=None, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Invokes `cls.post()` and returns the response, rendering template if possible.
Builds on the `CBVTestCase.get_instance()` foundation.

Example:

```python
response = self.post(MyClass, data={'search_term': 'revsys'})
self.response_200(response)
self.assertContext('company_name', 'RevSys')
```

All test_plus TestCase side-effects are honored and all test_plus
TestCase assertion methods work with `CBVTestCase.post()`.

**NOTE:** This method bypasses Django's middleware, and therefore context
variables created by middleware are not available. If this affects your
template/context testing you should use TestCase instead of CBVTestCase.

### get_check_200(cls, initkwargs=None, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Works just like `TestCase.get_check_200()`.
Caller must provide a view class instead of a URL name or path parameter.

All test_plus TestCase side-effects are honored and all test_plus
TestCase assertion methods work with `CBVTestCase.post()`.

### assertGoodView(cls, initkwargs=None, \*args, \*\*kwargs)

Works just like `TestCase.assertGoodView()`.
Caller must provide a view class instead of a URL name or path parameter.

All test_plus TestCase side-effects are honored and all test_plus
TestCase assertion methods work with `CBVTestCase.post()`.

## Development

To work on django-test-plus itself, you need to clone this repository and run the following commands:

```shell
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -e
```

## Need help?

[REVSYS](http://www.revsys.com?utm_medium=github&utm_source=django-test-plus) can help with your Python, Django, and infrastructure projects. If you have a question about this project, please open a GitHub issue. If you love us and want to keep track of our goings-on, here's where you can find us online:

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