Redis fixtures and fixture factories for Pytest.
Project description
pytest-redis
What is this?
This is a pytest plugin, that enables you to test your code that relies on a running Redis database. It allows you to specify additional fixtures for Redis process and client.
How to use
Plugin contains three fixtures
- redisdb - This is a redis client fixture. It constructs a redis client and cleans redis database after the test.
It relies on redis_proc fixture, and as such the redis process is started at the very beginning of the first test using this fixture, and stopped after the last test finishes.
redis_proc - session scoped fixture, that starts Redis instance at it’s first use and stops at the end of the tests.
redis_nooproc - a nooprocess fixture, that’s connecting to already running redis
Simply include one of these fixtures into your tests fixture list.
#
def test_redis(redisdb):
"""Check that it's actually working on redis database."""
redisdb.set('test1', 'test')
redisdb.set('test2', 'test')
my_functionality = MyRedisBasedComponent()
my_functionality.do_something()
assert my_functionality.did_something
assert redisdb.get("did_it") == 1
For the example above works like following:
pytest runs tests
redis_proc starts redis database server
redisdb creates client connection to the server
test itself runs and finishes
redisdb cleans up the redis
redis_proc stops server (if that was the last test using it)
pytest ends running tests
You can also create additional redis client and process fixtures if you’d need to:
from pytest_redis import factories
redis_my_proc = factories.redis_proc(port=None)
redis_my = factories.redisdb('redis_my_proc')
def test_my_redis(redis_my):
"""Check that it's actually working on redis database."""
redis_my.set('test1', 'test')
redis_my.set('test2', 'test')
my_functionality = MyRedisBasedComponent()
my_functionality.do_something()
assert my_functionality.did_something
assert redis_my.get("did_it") == 1
Connecting to already existing redis database
Some projects are using already running redis servers (ie on docker instances). In order to connect to them, one would be using the redis_nooproc fixture.
redis_external = factories.redisdb('redis_nooproc')
def test_redis(redis_external):
"""Check that it's actually working on redis database."""
redis_external.set('test1', 'test')
redis_external.set('test2', 'test')
my_functionality = MyRedisBasedComponent()
my_functionality.do_something()
assert my_functionality.did_something
assert redis_external.get("did_it") == 1
Standard configuration options apply to it. Note that the modules configuration option has no effect with the redis_nooproc fixture, it is the responsibility of the already running redis server to be properly started with extension modules, if needed.
By default the redis_nooproc fixture would connect to Redis instance using 6379 port attempting to make a successful socket connection within 15 seconds. The fixture will block your test run within this timeout window. You can overwrite the timeout like so:
# set the blocking wait to 5 seconds
redis_external = factories.redis_noproc(timeout=5)
def test_redis(redis_external):
"""Check that it's actually working on redis database."""
redis_external.set('test1', 'test')
# etc etc
These are the configuration options that are working on all levels with the redis_nooproc fixture:
Configuration
You can define your settings in three ways, it’s fixture factory argument, command line option and pytest.ini configuration option. You can pick which you prefer, but remember that these settings are handled in the following order:
Fixture factory argument
Command line option
Configuration option in your pytest.ini file
Redis server option |
Fixture factory argument |
Command line option |
pytest.ini option |
Noop process fixture |
Default |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
executable |
executable |
–redis-exec |
redis_exec |
Look in PATH for redis-server via shutil.which |
|
host |
host |
–redis-host |
redis_host |
host |
127.0.0.1 |
port |
port |
–redis-port |
redis_port |
port |
random |
username |
username |
–redis-username |
redis_username |
username |
None |
password |
password |
–redis-password |
redis_password |
password |
None |
connection timeout |
timeout |
–redis-timeout |
redis_timeout |
30 |
|
number of databases |
db_count |
–redis-db-count |
redis_db_count |
8 |
|
Whether to enable logging to the system logger |
syslog |
–redis-syslog |
redis_syslog |
False |
|
Redis log verbosity level |
loglevel |
–redis-loglevel |
redis_loglevel |
notice |
|
Compress dump files |
compress |
–redis-compress |
redis_compress |
True |
|
Add checksum to RDB files |
checksum |
–redis-rdbcompress |
redis_rdbchecksum |
False |
|
Save configuration |
save |
–redis-save |
redis_save |
“” |
|
Redis test instance data directory path |
datadir |
–redis-datadir |
redis_datadir |
“” |
|
Redis test instance extension module(s) path |
modules (list of paths) |
–redis-modules (comma-separated string) |
redis_modules (comma-separated string) |
“” |
Example usage:
pass it as an argument in your own fixture
redis_proc = factories.redis_proc(port=8888)
use --redis-port command line option when you run your tests
py.test tests --redis-port=8888
specify your port as redis_port in your pytest.ini file.
To do so, put a line like the following under the [pytest] section of your pytest.ini:
[pytest]
redis_port = 8888
Options below are for configuring redis client fixture.
Redis client option |
Fixture factory argument |
Command line option |
pytest.ini option |
Default |
---|---|---|---|---|
decode_response |
decode |
–redis-decode |
redis_decode |
False |
Release
Install pipenv and –dev dependencies first, Then run:
pipenv run tbump [NEW_VERSION]
Project details
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