Automated testing

The purpose of this page is to show you how to write automated tests within the OpenHatch codebase.

If you already know how software testing works, skip to Details specific to OpenHatch.

Tests: An overview
You really should write a test if you add new functionality. That way, you can run:

./bin/mysite test base missions account profile

and you'll see a bunch of dots. Dots mean success.

What a basic test looks like
Imagine this is in mysite/base/views.py:

def multiply(x, y): return x * y

Then this would be in mysite/base/tests.py:

import mysite.base.views class TestMultiplication(django.test.TestCase): def test_return_one(self): # Make a dictionary that should return 1 self.assertEqual(35,                         mysite.base.views.multiply(7, 5))

Getting your local dev OpenHatch setup to run tests
To run tests correctly you'll need to have subversion installed - $ apt-get install subversion

Then run the full suite of tests -- $ ./bin/mysite test base missions account profile

Read the official Django testing guide
The official guide on Django testing is quite good. It says:

The best part is, it's really easy.

We use the Django "unit test" style of writing tests.


 * Go read the official Django testing guide.

How to write code that is easy to test
If you are writing a function, make it accept arguments for its data, rather having it calculate the input itself. For example:

Good

def multiply(x, y): return x * y

Less good

def multiply(x): y = settings.MULTIPLICATION_FACTOR return x * y

It's okay to rely on things like system settings and database content, but in general if your functions are simpler, they are easier to test.

We regularly run Automated Testing
OpenHatch's Automated Testing is run by Hudson, with the interface on the linode server @ http://linode2.openhatch.org:8080/

Where to write your tests
In general, add tests to the same Django app as you are editing. For example, if you made changes to base/views.py, then add a test in base/tests.py.

The test files are kind of sprawling. It doesn't really matter where within the tests.py file you add your test. I would suggest adding it to the end of the file.

The OpenHatch test case helper class
In mysite/base/tests.py there is a TwillTests class. It offers the following convenience methods:


 * login_with_client
 * login_with_twill

About fixtures
If you inherit from TwillTests, you get some data in your database. You can rely on it.

To run your tests
What app did you write your test in? Let's pretend it was in base:

./bin/mysite test base

To run your tests quickly
The normal test runner uses MySQL, and has to do a bunch of database setup and teardown. If you want the tests to run faster, you can use a different settings file that uses an in-memory SQLite database.

./bin/sqlite_mysite test base

The tests will run about five times faster that way.

To run just a few specific tests
./bin/sqlite_mysite test base.Feed base.Unsubscribe.test_unsubscribe_view

The structure here is app.class.method. So if you want to just run your own new test, you can do it that way.

Mocking and patching
This section is important, but we haven't written it yet. Oops.

Testing with Twill, versus the Django test client
To make a long story short:

The Django test client is good at introspecting how the function worked internally.

Twill tests are good because they let you say "Click on the link called log in".

We should write more about this. Maybe you, dear reader, can say some more.