The PyTest documentation states that stdin is redirected to null as no-one will want to do interactive testing in a batch test context. This is true, but interactive is not the only use of stdin. I want to test code that uses stdin just as it would use any other file. I am happy with stdout and sterr being captured but how to actually have stdin connected to an io.StringIO object say in a PyTest conformant way?
2 Answers
You can monkeypatch it:
def test_method(monkeypatch):
monkeypatch.setattr('sys.stdin', io.StringIO('my input'))
# test code
Maybe you could run your script as a subprocess
? In Python 3.6:
import subprocess
def test_a_repl_session():
comlist = ['./executable_script.py']
script = b'input\nlines\n\n'
res = subprocess.run(comlist, input=script,
stdout=subprocess.PIPE, stderr=subprocess.PIPE)
assert res.returncode == 0
assert res.stdout
assert res.stderr == b''
-
This works and was what I was doing for awhile until I needed coverage reports. Nothing in the subprocess counts for that. :( Dec 24, 2022 at 13:25
io.StringIO
instead of referencing stdin directly, in order to pass a mocked object during testing while being able to handle stdin during "real" usage.def test_main_with_empty_list_argument(): with patch(sys.stdin, io.StringIO('')): wc.main([])
but it gives:E AttributeError: 'DontReadFromInput' object has no attribute 'rsplit'