I faced the same situation today. After some hesitation I found a different way to work around it.
At first, I have a function looks like this:
def reboot_and_balabala(args):
os.system('do some prepare here')
os.system('reboot')
sys.exit(0)
I want the first call to os.system be invoked, otherwise the local file is not generated, and I cannot verify it.
But I really do not want the second call to os.system be invoked, lol.
At first, I have an unittest similar to:
def test_reboot_and_balabala(self):
with patch.object(os, 'system') as mock_system:
# do some mock setup on mock_system, this is what I looked for
# but I do not found any easy and clear solution
with patch.object(sys, 'exit') as mock_exit:
my_lib.reboot_and_balabala(...)
# assert mock invoke args
# check generated files
But finally, I realized, after adjusting the code, I have a more better code structure, and unittests, by following way:
def reboot():
os.system('reboot')
sys.exit(0)
def reboot_and_balabala(args):
os.system('do some prepare here')
reboot()
And then we can test those code by:
def test_reboot(self):
with patch.object(os, 'system') as mock_system:
with patch.object(sys, 'exit') as mock_exit:
my_lib.reboot()
mock_system.assert_called_once_with('reboot')
mock_exit.assert_called_once_with(0)
def test_reboot_and_balabala(self):
with patch.object(my_lib, 'reboot') as mock_reboot:
my_lib.reboot_and_balabala(...)
# check generated files here
mock_reboot.assert_called_once()
This is not a direct answer to the question. But I think this is very inspiring.