When writing project-specific pytest
plugins, I often find the Config
object useful to attach my own properties. Example:
from _pytest.config import Config
def pytest_configure(config: Config) -> None:
config.fizz = "buzz"
def pytest_unconfigure(config: Config) -> None:
print(config.fizz)
Obviously, there's no fizz
attribute in _pytest.config.Config
class, so running mypy
over the above snippet yields
conftest.py:5: error: "Config" has no attribute "fizz"
conftest.py:8: error: "Config" has no attribute "fizz"
(Note that pytest
doesn't have a release with type hints yet, so if you want to actually reproduce the error locally, install a fork following the steps in this comment).
Sometimes redefining the class for typechecking can offer a quick help:
from typing import TYPE_CHECKING
if TYPE_CHECKING:
from _pytest.config import Config as _Config
class Config(_Config):
fizz: str
else:
from _pytest.config import Config
def pytest_configure(config: Config) -> None:
config.fizz = "buzz"
def pytest_unconfigure(config: Config) -> None:
print(config.fizz)
However, aside from cluttering the code, the subclassing workaround is very limited: adding e.g.
from pytest import Session
def pytest_sessionstart(session: Session) -> None:
session.config.fizz = "buzz"
would force me to also override Session
for typechecking.
What is the best way to resolve this? Config
is one example, but I usually have several more in each project (project-specific adjustments for test collection/invocation/reporting etc). I could imagine writing my own version of pytest
stubs, but then I would need to repeat this for every project, which is very tedious.