So I've been digging around in the pytest code and figured out why this is happening. The marks on the functions are applied to the function at import time but the class and module level marks don't get applied on the function level until test collection. Function marks happen first and add their kwargs to the function. Then class marks overwrite any same kwargs and module marks further overwrite any matching kwargs.
My solution was to simply create my own modified MarkDecorator that filters kwargs before they are added to the marks. Basically, whatever kwarg values get set first (which seems to always be by a function decorator) will always be the value on the mark. Ideally I think this functionality should be added in the MarkInfo class but since my code wasn't creating instances of that I went with what I was creating instances of: MarkDecorator. Note that I only change two lines from the source code (the bits about keys_to_add).
from _pytest.mark import istestfunc, MarkInfo
import inspect
class TestMarker(object): # Modified MarkDecorator class
def __init__(self, name, args=None, kwargs=None):
self.name = name
self.args = args or ()
self.kwargs = kwargs or {}
@property
def markname(self):
return self.name # for backward-compat (2.4.1 had this attr)
def __repr__(self):
d = self.__dict__.copy()
name = d.pop('name')
return "<MarkDecorator %r %r>" % (name, d)
def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
""" if passed a single callable argument: decorate it with mark info.
otherwise add *args/**kwargs in-place to mark information. """
if args and not kwargs:
func = args[0]
is_class = inspect.isclass(func)
if len(args) == 1 and (istestfunc(func) or is_class):
if is_class:
if hasattr(func, 'pytestmark'):
mark_list = func.pytestmark
if not isinstance(mark_list, list):
mark_list = [mark_list]
mark_list = mark_list + [self]
func.pytestmark = mark_list
else:
func.pytestmark = [self]
else:
holder = getattr(func, self.name, None)
if holder is None:
holder = MarkInfo(
self.name, self.args, self.kwargs
)
setattr(func, self.name, holder)
else:
# Don't set kwargs that already exist on the mark
keys_to_add = {key: value for key, value in self.kwargs.items() if key not in holder.kwargs}
holder.add(self.args, keys_to_add)
return func
kw = self.kwargs.copy()
kw.update(kwargs)
args = self.args + args
return self.__class__(self.name, args=args, kwargs=kw)
# Create my Mark instance. Note my modified mark class must be imported to be used
animal = TestMarker(name='animal')
# Apply it to class and function
@animal(species='croc') # Mark the class with a kwarg
class TestClass(object):
@animal(species='hippo') # Mark the function with new kwarg
def test_function(self):
pass
# Now prints {'species': 'hippo'} Yay!