Suppose I want to assert that result
is in a particular format, I might set the return value to something as (True, 'Success')
def batch_move(self, *args, **kwargs):
'''
Move a batch of files to its respective destinations.
Return type: tuple (boolean, message)
T/F , 'string' / str(exception)
'''
srcs= kwargs.get('srcs', None)
dests = kwargs.get('dests', None)
try:
if srcs and dests:
# map srcs and dests into dictionary (srcs --> keys, dests --> values)
src_dest= dict(zip(srcs, dests))
for src, dest in src_dest:
if os.path.exists(src):
if os.path.exists(dest):
shutil.rmtree(dest)
shutil.move(src, dest) # either way we will proceed to move
else:
return (False, '%s does not exist!' % src)
return (True, 'Success!')
else:
return (False, 'Something gone wrong with those kwargs...')
except Exception as e:
return (False, e)
In order to get to return (True, 'Success!')
- patch
os.path.exists
withTrue
as return value. But in one unittest I want to skip this, how do I patch thatos.path.exists
?
if os.path.exists(dest): # I want to skip this shutil.rmtree(dest)
How do I patch
shutil.move(src, dest)
? Do I just giveTrue
so it doesn't generate error? What if I want the case it fails and caught an exception? How do I simulate that? (I wouldn't always know which exception to catch, the primarily reason to useException as e
).If I actually pass the function, does it really mean no exception caught and it went through every single line? Or is it because I set `mock_object.return_value = (True, 'Success!')?
I am only using two dependencies, do I need to patch out all the external dependencies such as (os, sys, math, datetime) all in one? Or if my function is using other functions (which are refactored)
def f1(*args, **kwargs): f2(..) # use math, plot, datetime f3(..) # use math and datetime f4(..) # use datetime ....
Thanks. Sorry for the long questions. I really want to be good at writing unittests.