Nosetests --pdb let's me halt upon error or failure, but this is too late for my needs. Stepping through code during execution helps me debug where the problem is.

However, nosetests are helpful as they allow tests that rely on relative imports (i.e. tests in a package).

How can I set breakpoints before the tests are executed? Currently I'm using:

python -m pdb /path/to/my/nosetests testfile.py

This solution isn't adequate. Nosetests interfere with pdb output, and my keyboard controls (e.g. arrow keys) are broken.

Using import pdb; pdb.set_trace() would seem like a good idea, however nosetests is blocking my access to the pdb console.

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2 Answers

up vote 7 down vote accepted

You can add

import pdb; pdb.set_trace() 

anywhere in your source that you want to stop in the debugger.

Make sure you pass -s to nose so that it does not capture stdout.

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I was just about to add this to my question. This isn't an acceptable solution either. When using this with nosetests, it's apparent this is literally unusable as access to the pdb console is screened, and no pdb commands can be executed. – Devin Feb 9 '11 at 21:32
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Add the -s flag to nosetests to prevent it from capturing stdout, and you'll be able to use pdb just fine. – Ned Batchelder Feb 9 '11 at 23:47
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Even better than remembering to use -s is to use the set_trace variant that comes with Nose. Add

from nose.tools import set_trace; set_trace()

wherever you'd like to break in to the debugger. The stdin/out redirection will be taken care of for you. The only strange side effect I've run into is the inability to restart your code from within pdb (using run) while debugging during a nose run.

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@Devin any chance this solved your issue? – Matt Luongo Oct 27 '11 at 22:15
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