I've got this production class:
class MyClass:
def __init__(self):
self.value = None
def set_value(self, value):
self.value = value
def foo(self):
# work with self.value here
# raise RuntimeError("error!")
return "a"
Which is being used from another place, like this:
class Caller:
def bar(self, smth):
obj = MyClass()
obj.set_value(smth)
# ...
# try:
obj.foo()
# except MyError:
# pass
obj.set_value("str2")
# obj.foo()
and I got this:
class MyError(Exception):
pass
In my test I want to make sure that Caller.bar calls obj.set_value, first with smth="a", then with smth="b", but I want it to really set the value (i.e. call the real set_value method). Is there any way for me to tell the mock to use the actual method, so I can later on read what it was called with?
P.S. I know that I can just change "foo" to require the parameter "smth" so I could get rid of "set_value", but I want to know if there is another option than this.
Okay, so I have tried this in my test:
def test_caller(self):
with patch('fullpath.to.MyClass', autospec=MyClass) as mock:
mock.foo.side_effect = [MyError("msg"), "text"]
caller = Caller()
caller.bar("str1")
calls = [call("str1"), call("str2")]
mock.set_value.assert_has_calls(calls)
But I see that the mock was not successful since the real "foo" is called when I wanted it to first raise MyError, then return "text".
Also, the assertion fails:
AssertionError: Calls not found.
Expected: [call('str1'), call('str2')]
Actual: []
Caller
, you are not testingMyClass
. Are you sure you can't just mock outMyClass
entirely? – Martijn Pieters♦ Apr 2 '16 at 17:13