# (c) 2006 Ian Bicking, Mike Beachy, and contributors # Licensed under the MIT license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/mit-license.php r""" minimock is a simple library for doing Mock objects with doctest. When using doctest, mock objects can be very simple. Here's an example of something we might test, a simple email sender:: >>> import smtplib >>> def send_email(from_addr, to_addr, subject, body): ... conn = smtplib.SMTP('localhost') ... msg = 'To: %s\nFrom: %s\nSubject: %s\n\n%s' % ( ... to_addr, from_addr, subject, body) ... conn.sendmail(from_addr, [to_addr], msg) ... conn.quit() Now we want to make a mock ``smtplib.SMTP`` object. We'll have to inject our mock into the ``smtplib`` module:: >>> smtplib.SMTP = Mock('smtplib.SMTP') >>> smtplib.SMTP.mock_returns = Mock('smtp_connection') Now we do the test:: >>> send_email('ianb@colorstudy.com', 'joe@example.com', ... 'Hi there!', 'How is it going?') Called smtplib.SMTP('localhost') Called smtp_connection.sendmail( 'ianb@colorstudy.com', ['joe@example.com'], 'To: joe@example.com\nFrom: ianb@colorstudy.com\nSubject: Hi there!\n\nHow is it going?') Called smtp_connection.quit() Voila! We've tested implicitly that no unexpected methods were called on the object. We've also tested the arguments that the mock object got. We've provided fake return calls (for the ``smtplib.SMTP()`` constructor). These are all the core parts of a mock library. The implementation is simple because most of the work is done by doctest. """ import warnings warnings.warn( "The module from http://svn.colorstudy.com/home/ianb/recipes/minimock.py is deprecated; " "please install the MiniMock package", DeprecationWarning, stacklevel=2) __all__ = ["mock", "restore", "Mock"] import inspect # A list of mocked objects. Each item is a tuple of (original object, # namespace dict, object name, and a list of object attributes). # mocked = [] def lookup_by_name(name, nsdicts): """ Look up an object by name from a sequence of namespace dictionaries. Returns a tuple of (nsdict, object, attributes); nsdict is the dictionary the name was found in, object is the base object the name is bound to, and the attributes list is the chain of attributes of the object that complete the name. >>> import os >>> nsdict, name, attributes = lookup_by_name("os.path.isdir", ... (locals(),)) >>> name, attributes ('os', ['path', 'isdir']) >>> nsdict, name, attributes = lookup_by_name("os.monkey", (locals(),)) Traceback (most recent call last): ... NameError: name 'os.monkey' is not defined """ for nsdict in nsdicts: attrs = name.split(".") names = [] while attrs: names.append(attrs.pop(0)) obj_name = ".".join(names) if obj_name in nsdict: attr_copy = attrs[:] tmp = nsdict[obj_name] try: while attr_copy: tmp = getattr(tmp, attr_copy.pop(0)) except AttributeError: pass else: return nsdict, obj_name, attrs raise NameError("name '%s' is not defined" % name) def mock(name, nsdicts=None, mock_obj=None, **kw): """ Mock the named object, placing a Mock instance in the correct namespace dictionary. If no iterable of namespace dicts is provided, use introspection to get the locals and globals of the caller of this function. All additional keyword args are passed on to the Mock object initializer. An example of how os.path.isfile is replaced: >>> import os >>> os.path.isfile >>> isfile_id = id(os.path.isfile) >>> mock("os.path.isfile", returns=True) >>> os.path.isfile >>> os.path.isfile("/foo/bar/baz") Called os.path.isfile('/foo/bar/baz') True >>> mock_id = id(os.path.isfile) >>> mock_id != isfile_id True A second mock object will replace the first, but the original object will be the one replaced with the replace() function. >>> mock("os.path.isfile", returns=False) >>> mock_id != id(os.path.isfile) True >>> restore() >>> os.path.isfile >>> isfile_id == id(os.path.isfile) True """ if nsdicts is None: stack = inspect.stack() try: # stack[1][0] is the frame object of the caller to this function globals_ = stack[1][0].f_globals locals_ = stack[1][0].f_locals nsdicts = (locals_, globals_) finally: del(stack) if mock_obj is None: mock_obj = Mock(name, **kw) nsdict, obj_name, attrs = lookup_by_name(name, nsdicts) # Get the original object and replace it with the mock object. tmp = nsdict[obj_name] if not attrs: original = tmp nsdict[obj_name] = mock_obj else: for attr in attrs[:-1]: tmp = getattr(tmp, attr) original = getattr(tmp, attrs[-1]) setattr(tmp, attrs[-1], mock_obj) mocked.append((original, nsdict, obj_name, attrs)) def restore(): """ Restore all mocked objects. """ global mocked # Restore the objects in the reverse order of their mocking to assure # the original state is retrieved. while mocked: original, nsdict, name, attrs = mocked.pop() if not attrs: nsdict[name] = original else: tmp = nsdict[name] for attr in attrs[:-1]: tmp = getattr(tmp, attr) setattr(tmp, attrs[-1], original) return class Mock(object): def __init__(self, name, returns=None, returns_iter=None, returns_func=None, raises=None): self.mock_name = name self.mock_returns = returns if returns_iter is not None: returns_iter = iter(returns_iter) self.mock_returns_iter = returns_iter self.mock_returns_func = returns_func self.mock_raises = raises self.mock_attrs = {} def __repr__(self): return '' % (hex(id(self)), self.mock_name) def __call__(self, *args, **kw): parts = [repr(a) for a in args] parts.extend( '%s=%r' % (items) for items in sorted(kw.items())) msg = 'Called %s(%s)' % (self.mock_name, ', '.join(parts)) if len(msg) > 80: msg = 'Called %s(\n %s)' % ( self.mock_name, ',\n '.join(parts)) print msg return self._mock_return(*args, **kw) def _mock_return(self, *args, **kw): if self.mock_raises is not None: raise self.mock_raises elif self.mock_returns is not None: return self.mock_returns elif self.mock_returns_iter is not None: try: return self.mock_returns_iter.next() except StopIteration: raise Exception("No more mock return values are present.") elif self.mock_returns_func is not None: return self.mock_returns_func(*args, **kw) else: return None def __getattr__(self, attr): if attr not in self.mock_attrs: if self.mock_name: new_name = self.mock_name + '.' + attr else: new_name = attr self.mock_attrs[attr] = Mock(new_name) return self.mock_attrs[attr] __test__ = { "mock" : r""" An additional test for mocking a function accessed directly (i.e. not via object attributes). >>> import os >>> rename = os.rename >>> orig_id = id(rename) >>> mock("rename") >>> mock_id = id(rename) >>> mock("rename") >>> mock_id != id(rename) True >>> restore() >>> orig_id == id(rename) == id(os.rename) True The example from the module docstring, done with the mock/restore functions. >>> import smtplib >>> def send_email(from_addr, to_addr, subject, body): ... conn = smtplib.SMTP('localhost') ... msg = 'To: %s\nFrom: %s\nSubject: %s\n\n%s' % ( ... to_addr, from_addr, subject, body) ... conn.sendmail(from_addr, [to_addr], msg) ... conn.quit() >>> mock("smtplib.SMTP", returns=Mock('smtp_connection')) >>> send_email('ianb@colorstudy.com', 'joe@example.com', ... 'Hi there!', 'How is it going?') Called smtplib.SMTP('localhost') Called smtp_connection.sendmail( 'ianb@colorstudy.com', ['joe@example.com'], 'To: joe@example.com\nFrom: ianb@colorstudy.com\nSubject: Hi there!\n\nHow is it going?') Called smtp_connection.quit() >>> restore() """, } if __name__ == '__main__': import doctest doctest.testmod(optionflags=doctest.ELLIPSIS)