How to mock asyncio coroutines?
Springing off of Andrew Svetlov's answer, I just wanted to share this helper function:
def get_mock_coro(return_value):
@asyncio.coroutine
def mock_coro(*args, **kwargs):
return return_value
return Mock(wraps=mock_coro)
This lets you use the standard assert_called_with
, call_count
and other methods and attributes a regular unittest.Mock gives you.
You can use this with code in the question like:
class ImGoingToBeMocked:
@asyncio.coroutine
def yeah_im_not_going_to_run(self):
yield from asyncio.sleep(1)
return "sup"
class ImBeingTested:
def __init__(self, hidude):
self.hidude = hidude
@asyncio.coroutine
def i_call_other_coroutines(self):
return (yield from self.hidude.yeah_im_not_going_to_run())
class TestImBeingTested(unittest.TestCase):
def test_i_call_other_coroutines(self):
mocked = Mock(ImGoingToBeMocked)
mocked.yeah_im_not_going_to_run = get_mock_coro()
ibt = ImBeingTested(mocked)
ret = asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(ibt.i_call_other_coroutines())
self.assertEqual(mocked.yeah_im_not_going_to_run.call_count, 1)
Since mock
library doesn't support coroutines I create mocked coroutines manually and assign those to mock object. A bit more verbose but it works.
Your example may look like this:
import asyncio
import unittest
from unittest.mock import Mock
class ImGoingToBeMocked:
@asyncio.coroutine
def yeah_im_not_going_to_run(self):
yield from asyncio.sleep(1)
return "sup"
class ImBeingTested:
def __init__(self, hidude):
self.hidude = hidude
@asyncio.coroutine
def i_call_other_coroutines(self):
return (yield from self.hidude.yeah_im_not_going_to_run())
class TestImBeingTested(unittest.TestCase):
def test_i_call_other_coroutines(self):
mocked = Mock(ImGoingToBeMocked)
ibt = ImBeingTested(mocked)
@asyncio.coroutine
def mock_coro():
return "sup"
mocked.yeah_im_not_going_to_run = mock_coro
ret = asyncio.get_event_loop().run_until_complete(
ibt.i_call_other_coroutines())
self.assertEqual("sup", ret)
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
I am writting a wrapper to unittest which aims at cutting the boilerplate when writting tests for asyncio.
The code lives here: https://github.com/Martiusweb/asynctest
You can mock a coroutine with asynctest.CoroutineMock
:
>>> mock = CoroutineMock(return_value='a result')
>>> asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(mock)
True
>>> asyncio.iscoroutine(mock())
True
>>> asyncio.run_until_complete(mock())
'a result'
It also works with the side_effect
attribute, and an asynctest.Mock
with a spec
can return CoroutineMock:
>>> asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(Foo().coroutine)
True
>>> asyncio.iscoroutinefunction(Foo().function)
False
>>> asynctest.Mock(spec=Foo()).coroutine
<class 'asynctest.mock.CoroutineMock'>
>>> asynctest.Mock(spec=Foo()).function
<class 'asynctest.mock.Mock'>
All the features of unittest.Mock are expected to work correctly (patch(), etc).