I’m creating the test cases for web-tests using Jenkins, Python, Selenium2(webdriver) and Py.test frameworks.
So far I’m organizing my tests in the following structure:
each Class is the Test Case and each test_ method is a Test Step.
This setup works GREAT when everything is working fine, however when one step crashes the rest of the “Test Steps” go crazy. I’m able to contain the failure inside the Class (Test Case) with the help of teardown_class(), however I’m looking into how to improve this.
What I need is somehow skip(or xfail) the rest of the test_ methods within one class if one of them has failed, so that the rest of the test cases are not run and marked as FAILED (since that would be false positive)
Thanks!
UPDATE: I’m not looking or the answer “it’s bad practice” since calling it that way is very arguable. (each Test Class is independent – and that should be enough).
UPDATE 2: Putting “if” condition in each test method is not an option – is a LOT of repeated work. What I’m looking for is (maybe) somebody knows how to use the hooks to the class methods.
I like the general “test-step” idea. I’d term it as “incremental” testing and it makes most sense in functional testing scenarios IMHO.
Here is a an implementation that doesn’t depend on internal details of pytest (except for the official hook extensions). Copy this into your
conftest.py:If you now have a “test_step.py” like this:
then running it looks like this (using -rx to report on xfail reasons):
I am using “xfail” here because skips are rather for wrong environments or missing dependencies, wrong interpreter versions.
Edit: Note that neither your example nor my example would directly work with distributed testing. For this, the pytest-xdist plugin needs to grow a way to define groups/classes to be sent whole-sale to one testing slave instead of the current mode which usually sends test functions of a class to different slaves.