3

I would to combine pytest and trio (or curio, if that is any easier), i.e. write my test cases as coroutine functions. This is relatively easy to achieve by declaring a custom test runner in conftest.py:

    @pytest.mark.tryfirst
    def pytest_pyfunc_call(pyfuncitem):
        '''If item is a coroutine function, run it under trio'''

        if not inspect.iscoroutinefunction(pyfuncitem.obj):
            return

        kernel = trio.Kernel()
        funcargs = pyfuncitem.funcargs
        testargs = {arg: funcargs[arg]
                    for arg in pyfuncitem._fixtureinfo.argnames}
        try:
            kernel.run(functools.partial(pyfuncitem.obj, **testargs))
        finally:
            kernel.run(shutdown=True)

        return True

This allows me to write test cases like this:

    async def test_something():
        server = MockServer()
        server_task = await trio.run(server.serve)
        try:
             # test the server
        finally:
             server.please_terminate()
             try:
                 with trio.fail_after(30):
                     server_task.join()
             except TooSlowError:
                 server_task.cancel()

But this is a lot of boilerplate. In non-async code, I would factor this out into a fixture:

@pytest.yield_fixture()
def mock_server():
    server = MockServer()
    thread = threading.Thread(server.serve)
    thread.start()

    try:
        yield server
    finally:
        server.please_terminate()
        thread.join()
        server.server_close()

def test_something(mock_server):
   # do the test..

Is there a way to do the same in trio, i.e. implement async fixtures? Ideally, I would just write:

async def test_something(mock_server):
   # do the test..
Nikratio
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1 Answers1

3

Edit: the answer below is mostly irrelevant now – instead use pytest-trio and follow the instructions in its manual.


Your example pytest_pyfunc_call code doesn't work becaues it's a mix of trio and curio :-). For trio, there's a decorator trio.testing.trio_test that can be used to mark individual tests (like if you were using classic unittest or something), so the simplest way to write a pytest plugin function is to just apply this to each async test:

from trio.testing import trio_test

@pytest.mark.tryfirst
def pytest_pyfunc_call(pyfuncitem):
    if inspect.iscoroutine(pyfuncitem.obj):
        # Apply the @trio_test decorator
        pyfuncitem.obj = trio_test(pyfuncitem.obj)

In case you're curious, this is basically equivalent to:

import trio
from functools import wraps, partial

@pytest.mark.tryfirst
def pytest_pyfunc_call(pyfuncitem):
    if inspect.iscoroutine(pyfuncitem.obj):
        fn = pyfuncitem.obj
        @wraps(fn)
        def wrapper(**kwargs):
            trio.run(partial(fn, **kwargs))
        pyfuncitem.obj = wrapper

Anyway, that doesn't solve your problem with fixtures – for that you need something much more involved.

Nathaniel J. Smith
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