56

I've written a specialized HTML parser, that I want to unit test with a couple of sample webpages I've downloaded.

In Java, I've used class resources, to load data into unit tests, without having to rely on them being at a particular path on the file system. Is there a way to do this in Python?

I found the doctest.testfile() function, but that appears to be specific to doctests. I'd like to just get a file handle, to a particular HTML file, which is relative to the current module.

Thanks in advance for any suggestions!

4 Answers 4

88

To load data from a file in a unittest, if the testdata is on the same dir as unittests, one solution :

TESTDATA_FILENAME = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'testdata.html')


class MyTest(unittest.TestCase)

   def setUp(self):
       self.testdata = open(TESTDATA_FILENAME).read()

   def test_something(self):
       ....
2
  • 6
    Using the 'new' python pathlib this command becomes: TEST_FILE = pathlib.Path(__file__).parent.joinpath("testdata.html") and then TEST_FILE.open(). Remember to import pathlib and please note the suggestion in the answer from @LeilaHC to properly close the testfile again, e.g. in the tearDown method.
    – Kim
    May 6, 2020 at 15:32
  • pkg_resources is a tool that comes with setuptools. If a package is installed, even with just pip install -e or ./setup.py develop, then pkg_resources can find resource files just by knowing __name__.
    – kojiro
    Nov 7, 2020 at 1:46
24

This is based on Ferran's answer, but it closes the file during MyTest.tearDown() to avoid 'ResourceWarning: unclosed file':

TESTDATA_FILENAME = os.path.join(os.path.dirname(__file__), 'testdata.html')


class MyTest(unittest.TestCase)

   def setUp(self):
       self.testfile = open(TESTDATA_FILENAME)
       self.testdata = self.testfile.read()

   def tearDown(self):
       self.testfile.close()

   def test_something(self):
       ....
1
  • 7
    For visibility, it might be better to edit Ferran's answer with your addition.
    – Splendor
    Feb 7, 2019 at 23:59
2

You can also use a StringIO or cStringIO to simulate a string containing your file's contents as a file.

1
  • 2
    Ya, I thought of that, but it would require that I put all the HTML into a python file as a string, which I don't like as it's > 3k lines long
    – cberner
    Nov 9, 2011 at 0:20
1

I guess your task boils down to what's given here to get the current file. Then extend that path by the path to you HTML file and open it.

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