87

I have a following function in Python and I want to test with unittest that if the function gets 0 as argument, it throws a warning. I already tried assertRaises, but since I don't raise the warning, that doesn't work.

def isZero(i):
    if i != 0:
        print "OK"
    else:
        warning = Warning("the input is 0!") 
        print warning
    return i
1
  • 1
    Regarding working around ...if a warning has already been raised because of a once/default rule, then no matter what filters are set the warning will not be seen again unless the warnings registry related to the warning has been cleared. (docs) see this article about module level __warningregistry__ (the registry docs mentions).
    – saaj
    Sep 16, 2016 at 15:12

7 Answers 7

94

Starting with Python 3.2, you can simply use assertWarns() method.

with self.assertWarns(Warning):
    do_something()
5
  • 1
    This works regardless of which warning filters are active. Therefore, I would use this answer rather than the accepted one.
    – NOhs
    Jan 21, 2019 at 0:27
  • 1
    Is there a similar way of asserting that a warning hasn't been triggered or would that require falling back on mocking or warnings.catch_warnings? Jun 9, 2019 at 20:12
  • 2
    ... or running self.assertWarns() but sticking a @unittest.expectedFailure on the test. Jun 9, 2019 at 20:33
  • where is the 'self' in self.assertWarns coming from? Jan 25, 2021 at 19:45
  • @lightbox142 It is your testing class, a child of unittest.TestCase. If you are not familiar with it, you should read the page docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html from its beginning.
    – Melebius
    Jan 29, 2021 at 11:29
63

You can use the catch_warnings context manager. Essentially this allows you to mock the warnings handler, so that you can verify details of the warning. See the official docs for a fuller explanation and sample test code.

import warnings

def fxn():
    warnings.warn("deprecated", DeprecationWarning)

with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w:
    # Cause all warnings to always be triggered.
    warnings.simplefilter("always")
    # Trigger a warning.
    fxn()
    # Verify some things
    assert len(w) == 1
    assert issubclass(w[-1].category, DeprecationWarning)
    assert "deprecated" in str(w[-1].message)
2
  • 5
    Take note that this is NOT thread safe, because it modifies a global state - if you use this in a test suite and other warnings are emitted, these will also show up in catch_warnings, which may cause false negatives.
    – deepbrook
    Dec 17, 2017 at 9:58
  • Upvoted because example shows assertions for interesting properties - number, type, and message contents. Jul 13, 2021 at 22:32
18

You can write your own assertWarns function to incapsulate catch_warnings context. I've just implemented it the following way, with a mixin:

class WarningTestMixin(object):
    'A test which checks if the specified warning was raised'

    def assertWarns(self, warning, callable, *args, **kwds):
        with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as warning_list:
            warnings.simplefilter('always')

            result = callable(*args, **kwds)

            self.assertTrue(any(item.category == warning for item in warning_list))

A usage example:

class SomeTest(WarningTestMixin, TestCase):
    'Your testcase'

    def test_something(self):
        self.assertWarns(
            UserWarning,
            your_function_which_issues_a_warning,
            5, 10, 'john', # args
            foo='bar'      # kwargs
        )

The test will pass if at least one of the warnings issued by your_function is of type UserWarning.

0
7

@ire_and_curses' answer is quite useful and, I think, canonical. Here is another way to do the same thing. This one requires Michael Foord's excellent Mock library.

import unittest, warnings
from mock import patch_object

def isZero( i):
   if i != 0:
     print "OK"
   else:
     warnings.warn( "the input is 0!")
   return i

class Foo(unittest.TestCase):
    @patch_object(warnings, 'warn')
    def test_is_zero_raises_warning(self, mock_warn):
        isZero(0)
        self.assertTrue(mock_warn.called)

if __name__ == '__main__':
    unittest.main()

The nifty patch_object lets you mock out the warn method.

3
  • +1 - This solution is better than the accepted answer, as it does not use the global state of the warnings library - which may cause false negatives.
    – deepbrook
    Dec 17, 2017 at 10:00
  • 1
    This is a reasonable answer, but the assertion in more recent versions of the mock library would be better this way, if you are not yet on Python 3 and can't use assertWarns: mock_warn.assert_called_once(). This would catch cases where some other random module unexpectedly raised a warning. Dec 3, 2018 at 20:59
  • I'm just getting an error and can't find a proper reference: ` from mock import patch_object ImportError: cannot import name 'patch_object' from 'mock' (/usr/local/lib/python3.8/site-packages/mock/__init__.py) ` So I decided to use with self.assertWarns(Warning):
    – Qohelet
    Apr 11, 2022 at 11:41
0

One problem with the warnings.catch_warnings approach is that warnings produced in different tests can interact in strange ways through global state kept in __warningregistry__ attributes.

To address this, we should clear the __warningregistry__ attribute of every module before every test that checks warnings.

class MyTest(unittest.TestCase):

  def setUp(self):
    # The __warningregistry__'s need to be in a pristine state for tests
    # to work properly.
    for v in sys.modules.values():
      if getattr(v, '__warningregistry__', None):
        v.__warningregistry__ = {}

  def test_something(self):
    with warnings.catch_warnings(record=True) as w:
      warnings.simplefilter("always", MySpecialWarning)
      ...
      self.assertEqual(len(w), 1)
      self.assertIsInstance(w[0].message, MySpecialWarning)

This is how Python 3's assertWarns() method is implemented.

0

Building off the answer from @ire_and_curses,

class AssertWarns(warnings.catch_warnings):
    """A Python 2 compatible version of `unittest.TestCase.assertWarns`."""
    def __init__(self, test_case, warning_type):
        self.test_case = test_case
        self.warning_type = warning_type
        self.log = None
        super(AssertWarns, self).__init__(record=True, module=None)

    def __enter__(self):
        self.log = super(AssertWarns, self).__enter__()
        return self.log

    def __exit__(self, *exc_info):
        super(AssertWarns, self).__exit__(*exc_info)
        self.test_case.assertEqual(type(self.log[0]), self.warning_type)

This can be called similarly to unittest.TestCase.assertWarns:

with AssertWarns(self, warnings.WarningMessage):
    warnings.warn('test warning!') 

where self is a unittest.TestCase.

0

Per Melebius' answer, you can use self.assertWarns().

Additionally, if you want to check the warning message as well, you can use self.assertWarnsRegex() for that greater specificity:

import warnings
from unittest import TestCase


class MyCustomWarning(Warning):
    ...


def is_zero(i: int) -> int:
    if i != 0:
        print("OK")
    else:
        warnings.warn("the input is 0!", MyCustomWarning)
    return i



class TestIsZero(TestCase):

    def test_when_then_input_is_zero(self):
        regex = "the input is 0"
        with self.assertWarnsRegex(MyCustomWarning, expected_regex=regex):
            _ = is_zero(0)

This test will fail if the regex is not found in the warning message.

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