Is there a way to know in Python if a function is called from the context of a unittest execution or a debugging run?
For the context, I am trying to unittest a code where I use functions that perform a database call. In order to avoid database calls during the test of that function (DB calls are tested separately), I am trying to make the DB IO functions aware of their environement and to mock when they are called within a unittest and log additional variables during a debug run.
My current aproach is to read/write environment variables, but it seems a little bit of an overkill and I think Python must have a better mechanism for that.
Edit: Here is the example of a function I am trying to unittest:
from Database_IO import Database_read
def some_function(significance_level, time_range)
data = Database_read(time_range)
significant_data = data > significance_level
return significant_data
mock.patch('mod.foo', ...)
mocks the functionfoo
imported frommod
, regardless of how deeply inside the test code it appears.import foo
, just mock the entire module:foo = mock.Mock()
. You may need a significant amount of configuration of the resultingMock
instance in order for your test code to work.