1

I've searched for a solution here and on other sites, but it feels like all import problems I come across are subtly different.

I have a project with the following setup:

  • /
    • __init__.py
    • package1
      • ___init__.py
      • a.py
      • b.py
      • tests/
        • test_a.py
        • test_a.py
    • package2
    • package3

In b.py:

from .a import Foo

In the tests: import a, b

package1, package2, and package3 are essentially smaller packages that are bundled together in the same project/super-package as utilities. The purpose of this project is to be nested inside another package (say, package4) and to have these packages/modules imported by package4. Hence, relative imports to other files in the package are required, if I don't want to modify the path.

As an example, package4:

  • /
    • main.py
    • src/
      • external/
        • project_from_above
          • package1
          • package2
          • package3

I'm omitting the __init__.py's in the hierarchy above. In main.py, I might do:

import src.external.project_from_above.package1.a

My problem: this structure works fine, except for unit testing. I am in the habit of running python3 -m unittest discover tests from each package (package1, package2, package3). This works fine when there are not relative imports. However, running with relative imports will yield the following error: "SystemError: Parent module '' not loaded, cannot perform relative import"

I desire: A way of running the unit tests in package1/tests from the package1 directory, with no imports changing (or at least, maintaining the ability to use this entire project inside the aforementioned package4 as a sub-package). I'd like to avoid any manipulation of the path, but if we can restrict it to a run_tests.py file in package1, then that is okay.

1 Answer 1

1

Here's one solution: add a file called run_tests in package1. In it, do the following:

cd ..
python -m unittest discover package1/tests

This requires you to use absolute imports in your tests (e.g., import package1.a)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.