Awesome
Pytest-Falcon
Pytest helpers for the Falcon framework.
Install
pip install pytest-falcon
Usage
You must create an app
fixture to expose the Falcon application you want to test:
import falcon
import pytest
application = falcon.API()
application.req_options.auto_parse_form_urlencoded = True
@pytest.fixture
def app():
return application
Fixtures
client
Allows you to test your API:
class Resource:
def on_post(self, req, resp, **kwargs):
resp.body = json.dumps(req.params)
application.add_route('/route', Resource())
def test_post(client):
resp = client.post('/route', {'myparam': 'myvalue'})
assert resp.status == falcon.HTTP_OK
assert resp.json['myparam'] == 'myvalue'
Response properties:
body
the body asstr
json
the body parsed as json when the response content-type is 'application/json'headers
the response headersstatus
the response status, asstr
('200 OK', '405 Method Not Allowed'…)status_code
the response status code, asint
(200, 201…)
Contributing
As a general rule, please make sure any changes pass all tests and that
any new contribution which fixes a bug or provides a new feature
also has a new test paired with it. The tests are all found under the
tests
folder.
Additionally, there is an optional dependency on falcon_multipart
and
tests to check for compatibility with that package. This package can
be checked out within the github repo under:
https://github.com/yohanboniface/falcon-multipart
Additionally, the optional dependency is included within
requirements-dev.txt
. To install locally, run:
$ pip -r requirements-dev.txt
Style
Pytest-falcon uses isort
and flake8
to manage style within this
project. There are tests that will fail if these styles are violated.
Testing Pytest-Falcon
Pytest-Falcon testing is supported by tox
and tox
is integrated into
travis.
The expected mechanism for running a test is to simply run pytest
within a virtualenv
:
$ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
$ pytest
A safer, more robust way of testing is to use tox
:
$ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
$ tox