问题
I have the following simplified class I'm mocking:
class myClass(object):
@staticmethod
def A():
#...
def check(self):
#code...
value = self.A()
#more code...
In my first test I mock only the method A
from django.test import TestCase
from mock import MagicMock
import myClass
class FirstTest(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
myClass.A = MagicMock(return_value = 'CPU')
def test(self):
#some tests
myClassObj = myClass()
myClassObj.check()
Whereas in my second test I mock the entire check method:
from django.test import TestCase
from mock import MagicMock
import myClass
class SecondTest(TestCase):
def setUp(self):
myClass.check = MagicMock(return_value = someObject)
def test(self):
#some tests
myClassObj = myClass()
myClassObj.check()
Now my assertions from my first test fail because, instead of calling check()
and mocking A()
inside check()
, it calls the completely mocked check()
from my second test.
Is there any way to clear and set the method to be 'normal' after the test? I tried myClass.check.reset_mock()
already, but it doesn't seem to do anything. Moving the order of my tests doesn't do anything either.
I'm using mock 1.0b1 for python from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/mock/
回答1:
You can stash the function away on self and put it back when you're done.
import unittest
from mock import MagicMock
from MyClass import MyClass
class FirstTest(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.A = MyClass.A
MyClass.A = MagicMock(name='mocked A', return_value='CPU')
def tearDown(self):
MyClass.A = self.A
def test_mocked_static_method(self):
print 'First Test'
print MyClass.check
print MyClass.A
class SecondTest(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
MyClass.check = MagicMock(name='mocked check', return_value=object)
def test_check_mocked_check_method(self):
print 'Second Test'
print MyClass.check
print MyClass.A
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
Running this file gives the following output:
First Test
<unbound method MyClass.check>
<MagicMock name='mocked A' id='141382732'>
Second Test
<MagicMock name='mocked check' id='141382860'>
<unbound method MyClass.A>
I found myself using the patch decorator a lot more than setUp and tearDown now. In this case you could do
from mock import patch
@patch('MyClass.A')
def test_mocked_static_method(self, mocked_A)
mocked_A.return_value = 'CPU'
# This mock will expire when the test method is finished
回答2:
You can use mock.patch
as a decorator or a context manager:
from mock import patch, MagicMock
@patch('myClass.A', MagicMock(return_value='CPU'))
def test(self):
pass
or:
def test(self):
with patch('myClass.A', MagicMock(return_value='CPU')):
pass
If you don't supply a mock object to patch
then it will provide an autospecced mock that you can modify:
@patch('myClass.A')
def test(self, mock_A):
mock_A.return_value = 'CPU'
pass
or:
def test(self):
with patch('myClass.A') as mock_A:
mock_A.return_value = 'CPU'
pass
In all cases the original value will be restored when the decorated test function or context manager finishes.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/11746431/any-way-to-reset-a-mocked-method-to-its-original-state-python-mock-mock-1-0