Django manage.py : Is it possible to pass command line argument (for unit testing)

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Happy的楠姐
Happy的楠姐 2021-02-18 13:46

Is it possible to pass command line arguments to Django\'s manage.py script, specifically for unit tests? i.e. if I do something like

manage.py test         


        
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  • 2021-02-18 14:05

    I just ran into this problem myself, and I wanted to avoid setting environmental variables on the command line. Environmental variables certainly work, but it's difficult to keep track of which variables have an effect and there's no error message to let you know if you've mistyped one of them.

    To get around this I've used argparse to extract extra parameters to the command-line argument. For example, my manage.py file now looks something like this:

    #!/usr/bin/env python
    import os
    import sys
    import argparse
    
    
    if __name__ == "__main__":
        os.environ.setdefault("DJANGO_SETTINGS_MODULE", "project.settings")
    
        argv = sys.argv
        cmd = argv[1] if len(argv) > 1 else None
        if cmd in ['test']:  # limit the extra arguments to certain commands
            parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(add_help=False)
            parser.add_argument('--foo', default='bar')
            args, argv = parser.parse_known_args(argv)
            # We can save the argument as an environmental variable, in
            # which case it's to retrieve from within `project.settings`,
            os.environ['FOO'] = args.foo
            # or we can save the variable to settings directly if it
            # won't otherwise be overridden.
            from django.conf import settings
            settings.foo = args.foo
    
        from django.core.management import execute_from_command_line
    
        # parse_known_args strips the extra arguments from argv,
        # so we can safely pass it to Django.
        execute_from_command_line(argv)
    

    argparse is a really nice library with lots of features. There's a good tutorial on it in the Python docs.

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  • 2021-02-18 14:12

    As an alternative way to manage.py test -a do_this you can use specific settings file

    manage.py --settings=project.test_settings test
    

    and define in this file whatever you want.

    # test_setting.py
    SPECIFIC_OPTION = "test"
    
    # tests.py
    from django.conf import settings
    ...
    def setUp(self):
        if settings.SPECIFIC_OPTION:
            ....
    

    If you need really dynamic options, maybe you can use sys.argv in test_settings.py, but it is a really dirty hack.

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  • 2021-02-18 14:22

    i'm using environment variables workaround in my project (works in unix-like shells only)

    berry$ myvar=myval ./manage.py test 
    

    in your module read this value using

    os.environ.get('myvar')
    
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  • 2021-02-18 14:27

    Django allows adding custom commandline options from the testrunner class. You can create a subclass of the default testrunner class and add your own options, and then let django use your custom testrunner as follows.

    For example, create a testrunner.py in your Django project directory, containing:

    from django.test.runner import DiscoverRunner
    
    class TestRunner(DiscoverRunner):
        def __init__(self, option=None, **kwargs):
            super().__init__(**kwargs)
    
            print("Passed option: {}".format(option))
    
        @classmethod
        def add_arguments(cls, parser):
            DiscoverRunner.add_arguments(parser)
    
            parser.add_argument('-o', '--option', help='Example option')
    

    This is a testrunner that derives from the default runner (so it works just like the default), except that it tells django to add an extra commandline option (in the add_arguments() class method) and processes the value of this extra option in the constructor. To run with this new runner, pass its name as follows:

    ./manage.py test --testrunner=testrunner.TestRunner -o foo
    

    Of course you can put this class anywhere else, as long as you pass the full import name to it on the commandline.

    Note that you must use --testrunner=foo, you cannot use two separate arguments (--testrunner foo), since then the extra arguments do not work. A fix is pending: https://github.com/django/django/pull/10307

    This example just prints the option value, but you'll want to pass it to your testcase somehow. I couldn't find any quick info on how to pass options to unittest testcases, but you could probably just use a global (module level) variable or class variable for this (which is not so re-entrant and elegant, but is easy and works).

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  • 2021-02-18 14:31

    Following up on @Matthijs answer, you can extend the setup_test_environment method similar to how the DiscoveryRunner handles the debug-mode. It changes the value of settings.DEBUG which can be used in your tests by importing django.conf.settings. But you can also add your own settings:

    from django.test.runner import DiscoverRunner
    
    class TestRunner(DiscoverRunner):
        def __init__(self, option=None, **kwargs):
            super().__init__(**kwargs)
    
            print("Passed option: {}".format(option))
            self.option = option
    
        @classmethod
        def add_arguments(cls, parser):
            DiscoverRunner.add_arguments(parser)
    
            parser.add_argument('-o', '--option', help='Example option')
    
        def setup_test_environment(self, **kwargs):
            super(TestRunner, self).setup_test_environment(**kwargs)
            settings.TEST_SETTINGS = {
                'option': self.option,
            }
    

    In the test you can then simply access the option via the settings

    from django.test import TestCase
    from django.conf import settings
    
    
    class MyTestCase(TestCase):
    
        def test_something(self):
            if settings.TEST_SETTINGS['option']:
                print("Do stuff")
    
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