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I have a Django app that requires a settings attribute in the form of:

RELATED_MODELS = ('appname1.modelname1.attribute1',
                  'appname1.modelname2.attribute2', 
                  'appname2.modelname3.attribute3', ...)

Then hooks their post_save signal to update some other fixed model depending on the attributeN defined.

I would like to test this behaviour and tests should work even if this app is the only one in the project (except for its own dependencies, no other wrapper app need to be installed). How can I create and attach/register/activate mock models just for the test database? (or is it possible at all?)

Solutions that allow me to use test fixtures would be great.

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2 Answers

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You can put your tests in a tests/ subdirectory of the app (rather than a tests.py file), and include a tests/models.py with the test-only models. At the beginning of your tests (i.e. in a setUp method, or at the beginning of a set of doctests), you'll need to dynamically add "myapp.tests" to the INSTALLED_APPS setting, and then do this:

from django.core.management import call_command
from django.db.models import loading
loading.cache.loaded = False
call_command('syncdb', verbosity=0)

Then at the end of your tests, you should clean up by restoring the old version of INSTALLED_APPS and clearing the app cache again.

This class encapsulates the pattern so it doesn't clutter up your test code quite as much.

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That's a clean and powerful snipplet (I guess it's yours). Creating a whole app at first seemed like too much just for a mock model. But now I think it represents real world usage best from a unit testing perspective. Thanks. – muhuk Feb 3 at 10:41
Yeah, I don't know what's best, but this works for me. "Creating a whole app" seems like a lot less of a big deal when you realize that all it really means is "create a models.py file". – Carl Meyer Feb 3 at 15:44
Carl, thanks for the snippet. I was about to go write this when I found this page and the link. Good stuff. – celopes Nov 3 at 20:36
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It's quite strange but form me works very simple pattern:

  1. add tests.py to app which you are going to test,
  2. in this file just define testing models,
  3. below put your testing code (doctest or TestCase definition),

Below I've put some code which defines Article model which is needed only for tests (it exists in someapp/tests.py and I can test it just with: ./manage.py test someapp ):

class Article(models.Model):
    title = models.CharField(max_length=128)
    description = models.TextField()
    document = DocumentTextField(template=lambda i: i.description)

    def __unicode__(self):
        return self.title

__test__ = {"doctest": """
#smuggling model for tests
>>> from .tests import Article

#testing data
>>> by_two = Article.objects.create(title="divisible by two", description="two four six eight")
>>> by_three = Article.objects.create(title="divisible by three", description="three six nine")
>>> by_four = Article.objects.create(title="divisible by four", description="four four eight")

>>> Article.objects.all().search(document='four')
[<Article: divisible by two>, <Article: divisible by four>]
>>> Article.objects.all().search(document='three')
[<Article: divisible by three>]
"""}

Unit tests also working with such model definition.

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