I found another solution, based on how the unittest.skip
decorator works. By setting the __unittest_skip__
and __unittest_skip_why__
.
Label-based
I wanted to apply a labeling system, to label some tests as quick
, slow
, glacier
, memoryhog
, cpuhog
, core
, and so on.
Then run all 'quick' tests
, or run everything except 'memoryhog' tests
, your basic whitelist / blacklist setup
Implementation
I implemented this in two parts:
- First add labels to tests (via a custom
@testlabel
class decorator)
- Custom
unittest.TestRunner
to identify which tests to skip, and modify the testlist content before executing.
Working implementation is in this gist:
https://gist.github.com/fragmuffin/a245f59bdcd457936c3b51aa2ebb3f6c
(A fully working example was too long to put here.)
The result being...
$ ./runtests.py --blacklist foo
test_foo (test_things.MyTest2) ... ok
test_bar (test_things.MyTest3) ... ok
test_one (test_things.MyTests1) ... skipped 'label exclusion'
test_two (test_things.MyTests1) ... skipped 'label exclusion'
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 4 tests in 0.000s
OK (skipped=2)
All MyTests1
class tests are skipped, because it has the foo
label.
--whitelist
also works