Unit Testing with Django Models and a lot of relations involved

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北恋
北恋 2020-12-28 23:06

Or, \"How to design your Database Schema for easy Unit testing?\"

By the way, there is a very similar question to this here: How to test Models in Django with Foreig

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  • 2020-12-28 23:12

    I'm not really sure if you need to go that deep. You should not design your software basing on how you want to test it, you need to adapt your way of testing to the tools you're using.

    Say that you want to get that level of granularity, like mocking FK and M2M models when you test some model, right? Something like

    class Invoice(models.Model):
        client = models.ForeignKey(Client)
    

    and in your tests, you want to test only Invoice model, without dealing with Client model. Is that right? So, why don't you mock the database backend too, and just test ONLY what your model should do?

    My point is that you don't need to get to that level. Add some tests to your models for non-trivial things like signals, methods, check that the model creations are working (can even avoid this if you trust the database), and when you need to work with external models just create what you need on the test's setUp() method.

    Also if you want you can mock whatever you want using Python's mock library: http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/mock/. If you really want to do TDD, you can use it for mock your FK in each test, but if you change that model, you will need to change all the mockers too.

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  • 2020-12-28 23:17

    Try to use Mixer. It's much easier than 'factory_boy' and is much more powerful. You don't need to setup factories and you get data when you need them:

    from mixer.backend.django import mixer
    
    mixer.blend(MyModel)
    
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  • 2020-12-28 23:33

    There is no list of best practices for testing, it's a lot of what works for you and the particular project you're working on. I agree with pyriku when he says:

    You should not design your software basing on how you want to test it

    But, I would add that if you have a good and modular software design, it should be easy to test properly.

    I've been recently a little into unit testing in my job, and I've found some interesting and useful tools in Python, FactoryBoy is one of those tools, instead of preparing a lot of objects in the setUp() method of your test class, you can just define a factory for each model and generate them in bulk if needed.

    You can also try Mocker, it's a library to mock objects and, since in Python everything is an object, you can mock functions too, it is useful if you need a test a function that generates X event at a certain time of the day, for example, send a message at 10:00am, you write a mock of datetime.datetime.now() that always returns '10:00am' and call that function with that mock.

    If you also need to test some front-end or your test needs some human interaction (like when doing OAuth against ), you have those forms filled and submitted by using Selenium.

    In your case, to prepare objects with relations with FactoryBoy, you can try to overwrite the Factory._prepare() method, let's do it with this simple django model:

    class Group(models.Model):
        name = models.CharField(max_length=128)
        members = models.ManyToManyField(User, blank=True, null=True)
    
        # ...
    

    Now, let's define a simple UserFactory:

    class UserFactory(factory.Factory):
        FACTORY_FOR = User
    
        first_name = 'Foo'
        last_name = factory.Sequence(lambda n: 'Bar%s' % n)
        username = factory.LazzyAttribute(lambda obj: '%s.%s' % (obj.first_name, obj.last_name))
    

    Now, let's say that I want or need that my factory generates groups with 5 members, the GroupFactory should look like this

    class GroupFactory(factory.Factory):
        FACTORY_FOR = Group
    
        name = factory.Sequence(lambda n: 'Test Group %s' % n)
    
        @classmethod
        def _prepare(cls, create, **kwargs):
            group = super(GroupFactory, cls)._prepare(create, **kwargs)
            for _ in range(5):
                group.members.add(UserFactory())
            return group
    

    Hope this helps, or at least gave you a light. Here I'll leave some links to resources related with the tools I mentioned:

    Factory Boy: https://github.com/rbarrois/factory_boy

    Mocker: http://niemeyer.net/mocker

    Selenium: http://selenium-python.readthedocs.org/en/latest/index.html

    And another useful thread about testing:

    What are the best practices for testing "different layers" in Django?

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