Fake implementation of redis API for testing purposes.
Project description
fakeredis: A fake version of a redis-py
fakeredis is a pure python implementation of the redis-py python client that simulates talking to a redis server. This was created for a single purpose: to write unittests. Setting up redis is not hard, but many times you want to write unittests that do not talk to an external server (such as redis). This module now allows tests to simply use this module as a reasonable substitute for redis.
How to Use
The intent is for fakeredis to act as though you’re talking to a real redis server. It does this by storing state in the fakeredis module. For example:
>>> import fakeredis
>>> r = fakeredis.FakeStrictRedis()
>>> r.set('foo', 'bar')
True
>>> r.get('foo')
'bar'
>>> r.lpush('bar', 1)
1
>>> r.lpush('bar', 2)
2
>>> r.lrange('bar', 0, -1)
[2, 1]
By storing state in the fakeredis module, instances can share data:
>>> import fakeredis
>>> r1 = fakeredis.FakeStrictRedis()
>>> r1.set('foo', 'bar')
True
>>> r2 = fakeredis.FakeStrictRedis()
>>> r2.get('foo')
'bar'
>>> r2.set('bar', 'baz')
True
>>> r1.get('bar')
'baz'
>>> r2.get('bar')
'baz'
Because fakeredis stores state at the module level, if you want to ensure that you have a clean slate for every unit test you run, be sure to call r.flushall() in your tearDown method. For example:
def setUp(self): # Setup fake redis for testing. self.r = fakeredis.FakeStrictRedis() def tearDown(self): # Clear data in fakeredis. self.r.flushall()
Fakeredis implements the same interface as redis-py, the popular redis client for python, and models the responses of redis 2.6.
Unimplemented Commands
All of the redis commands are implemented in fakeredis with these exceptions:
sorted_set
zscan
hash
hstrlen
string
bitop
bitpos
geo
geoadd
geopos
georadius
geohash
georadiusbymember
geodist
generic
restore
dump
migrate
object
wait
server
client list
lastsave
slowlog
debug object
shutdown
debug segfault
command count
monitor
client kill
cluster slots
role
config resetstat
time
config get
config set
save
client setname
command getkeys
config rewrite
sync
client getname
bgrewriteaof
slaveof
info
client pause
bgsave
command
dbsize
command info
cluster
cluster getkeysinslot
cluster info
readwrite
cluster slots
cluster keyslot
cluster addslots
readonly
cluster saveconfig
cluster forget
cluster meet
cluster slaves
cluster nodes
cluster countkeysinslot
cluster setslot
cluster count-failure-reports
cluster reset
cluster failover
cluster set-config-epoch
cluster delslots
cluster replicate
connection
echo
select
quit
auth
scripting
script flush
script kill
script load
evalsha
eval
script exists
Contributing
Contributions are welcome. Please see the contributing guide for more details.
If you’d like to help out, you can start with any of the issues labeled with HelpWanted.
Running the Tests
To ensure parity with the real redis, there are a set of integration tests that mirror the unittests. For every unittest that is written, the same test is run against a real redis instance using a real redis-py client instance. In order to run these tests you must have a redis server running on localhost, port 6379 (the default settings). The integration tests use db=10 in order to minimize collisions with an existing redis instance.
To run all the tests, install the requirements file:
pip install -r requirements.txt
If you just want to run the unittests:
nosetests test_fakeredis.py:TestFakeStrictRedis test_fakeredis.py:TestFakeRedis
Because this module is attempting to provide the same interface as redis-py, the python bindings to redis, a reasonable way to test this to to take each unittest and run it against a real redis server. fakeredis and the real redis server should give the same result. This ensures parity between the two. You can run these “integration” tests like this:
nosetests test_fakeredis.py:TestRealStrictRedis test_fakeredis.py:TestRealRedis
In terms of implementation, TestRealRedis is a subclass of TestFakeRedis that overrides a factory method to create an instance of redis.Redis (an actual python client for redis) instead of fakeredis.FakeStrictRedis.
To run both the unittests and the “integration” tests, run:
nosetests
If redis is not running and you try to run tests against a real redis server, these tests will have a result of ‘S’ for skipped.
There are some tests that test redis blocking operations that are somewhat slow. If you want to skip these tests during day to day development, they have all been tagged as ‘slow’ so you can skip them by running:
nosetests -a '!slow'
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