40

Right now I'm just checking the response of the link like so:

self.client = Client()
response = self.client.get(url)
self.assertEqual(response.status_code, 200)

Is there a Django-ic way to test a link to see if a file download event actually takes place? Can't seem to find much resource on this topic.

2 Answers 2

59

If the url is meant to produce a file rather than a "normal" http response, then its content-type and/or content-disposition will be different.

the response object is basically a dictionary, so you could so something like

self.assertEquals(
    response.get('Content-Disposition'),
    "attachment; filename=mypic.jpg"
)

more info: https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/request-response/#telling-the-browser-to-treat-the-response-as-a-file-attachment

UPD: If you want to read the actual contents of the attached file, you can use response.content. Example for a zip file:

try:
    f = io.BytesIO(response.content)
    zipped_file = zipfile.ZipFile(f, 'r')

    self.assertIsNone(zipped_file.testzip())        
    self.assertIn('my_file.txt', zipped_file.namelist())
finally:
    zipped_file.close()
    f.close()
6
  • do you mean you want to check on the actual contents of the file? you can use response.content -- docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/request-response/#id4
    – hwjp
    Oct 9, 2012 at 8:44
  • 1
    I'm trying to do this exact thing but getting the error "ValueError: I/O operation on closed file" whenever I do anything with response.content, even passing it to StringIO. Jun 10, 2014 at 10:11
  • Looks like this is the reason: stackoverflow.com/questions/19359451/… Jun 10, 2014 at 10:51
  • Ran into the same issue as @JustinBlake but the solution linked is not ideal. The IO error is a fault of Django's test client closing the response: git.io/vidaR Using a streaming response bypasses the issue, only because the test client does not close the response but I would not recommend changing production code. Note this warning from the docs: > StreamingHttpResponse should only be used in situations where it is absolutely required ... for example the ETag and Content- Length headers can’t be generated
    – Doug
    Sep 22, 2016 at 20:01
  • 1
    Works for me using io.BytesIO (Python 3) instead of StringIO.StringIO (this is for Python 2, in Python 3 we call StringIO after io module, io.StringIO gives error: TypeError: initial_value must be str or None, not bytes). So I did f = io.BytesIO(response.content) and it worked.
    – Caco
    Nov 14, 2017 at 9:37
2

If what you are returning is a FileResponse, then you need to know that it returns a StreamingHttpResponse. If so, there's no content on this type of response.

{AttributeError}AttributeError('This FileResponse instance has no `content` attribute. Use `streaming_content` instead.')

You need to first evaluate the entire streaming_content, and then read from the buffer.

import io

with io.BytesIO(b"".join(response.streaming_content)) as buf_bytes:
    loaded_response_content = buf_bytes.read()

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