To complement hoefling's answer, another option is to use pytest-steps to perform incremental testing. This can help you in particular if you wish to share some kind of incremental state/intermediate results between the steps.
However it does not implement advanced dependency mechanisms like pytest-dependency
, so use the package that better suits your goal.
With pytest-steps, hoefling's example would write:
import random
from pytest_steps import test_steps, depends_on
def step_instance_start():
assert random.choice((True, False))
@depends_on(step_instance_start)
def step_instance_stop():
assert random.choice((True, False))
@depends_on(step_instance_start)
def step_instance_delete():
assert random.choice((True, False))
@test_steps(step_instance_start, step_instance_stop, step_instance_delete)
def test_suite(test_step):
# Execute the step
test_step()
EDIT: there is a new 'generator' mode to make it even easier:
import random
from pytest_steps import test_steps, optional_step
@test_steps('step_instance_start', 'step_instance_stop', 'step_instance_delete')
def test_suite():
# First step (Start)
assert random.choice((True, False))
yield
# Second step (Stop)
with optional_step('step_instance_stop') as stop_step:
assert random.choice((True, False))
yield stop_step
# Third step (Delete)
with optional_step('step_instance_delete') as delete_step:
assert random.choice((True, False))
yield delete_step
Check the documentation for details. (I'm the author of this package by the way ;) )