I am writing functional tests using pytest for a software that can run locally and in the cloud. I want to create 2 modules, each with the same module/fixture names, and have pytest load one or the other depending if I'm running tests locally or in the cloud:
/fixtures
/fixtures/__init__.py
/fixtures/local_hybrids
/fixtures/local_hybrids/__init__.py
/fixtures/local_hybrids/foo.py
/fixtures/cloud_hybrids
/fixtures/cloud_hybrids/__init__.py
/fixtures/cloud_hybrids/foo.py
/test_hybrids/test_hybrids.py
foo.py
(both of them):
import pytest
@pytest.fixture()
def my_fixture():
return True
/fixtures/__init__.py
:
if True:
import local_hybrids as hybrids
else:
import cloud_hybrids as hybrids
/test_hybrids/test_hybrids.py
:
from fixtures.hybrids.foo import my_fixture
def test_hybrid(my_fixture):
assert my_fixture
The last code block doesn't work of course, because import fixtures.hybrids
is looking at the file system instead of __init__.py
's "fake" namespace, which isn't like from fixtures import hybrids
, which works (but then you cannot use the fixtures as the names would involve dot notation).
I realize that I could play with pytest_generate_test to alter the fixture dynamically (maybe?) but I'd really hate managing each fixture manually from within that function... I was hoping the dynamic import (if x, import this, else import that) was standard Python, unfortunately it clashes with the fixtures mechanism:
import fixtures
def test(fixtures.hybrids.my_fixture): # of course it doesn't work :)
...
I could also import each fixture function one after the other in init; more legwork, but still a viable option to fool pytest and get fixture names without dots.
Show me the black magic. :) Can it be done?