Nose plugin which allows to include/exclude directories for testing by their glob pattern. This allows to selectively filter which tests are executed.
Plugin adds 3 configuration options to nosetests
:
--with-skipnose
- Required option to enable
skipnose
plugin functionality. Alternatively can be provided as an environment variableNOSE_SKIPNOSE
(e.g. add this to.bashrc
-export NOSE_SKIPNOSE=1
). --skipnose-exclude
This option specifies using glob pattern any folders which nosetests should ignore. This option can also be provided multiple times and alternatively can be provided as a
[,;:]
-delimitedNOSE_SKIPNOSE_EXCLUDE
environment variable:$ nosetests --with-skipnose --skipnose-exclude=foo3 --skipnose-exclude=sub2foo? $ # is equivalent to $ NOSE_SKIPNOSE_EXCLUDE=foo3,sub2foo? nosetests --with-skipnose
which would result in the following folders being excluded in the tests:
tests/ foo1/ sub1foo1/ ... sub2foo1/ <= excluded ... foo2/ sub1foo2/ ... sub2foo2/ <= excluded ... foo3/ <= excluded sub1foo3/ <= excluded ... sub2foo3/ <= excluded ...
--skipnose-include
This option specifies using glob pattern the only folders nosetests should run. This option can also be provided multiple times. Each given parameter clause will be ANDed. Within each parameter
:
delimited clauses will be ORed. In addition this parameter can be provided as a[,;:]
-delimited ([,;]
for AND and[:]
for OR)NOSE_SKIPNOSE_INCLUDE
environment variable:$ nosetests --with-skipnose --skipnose-include=foo3 --skipnose-include=sub2foo? $ # is equivalent to $ NOSE_SKIPNOSE_INCLUDE=foo3,sub2foo? nosetests --with-skipnose
which would result in only the following folders being included in the tests:
tests/ foo1/ sub1foo1/ ... sub2foo1/ ... foo2/ sub1foo2/ ... sub2foo2/ ... foo3/ <= only this will run sub1foo3/ ... sub2foo3/ <= only this will run ...
Here is an example when clauses are ORed:
$ nosetests --with-skipnose --skipnose-include=foo3:sub2foo? $ # is equivalent to $ NOSE_SKIPNOSE_INCLUDE=foo3:sub2foo? nosetests --with-skipnose
which would result in only the following folders being included in the tests:
tests/ foo1/ sub1foo1/ ... sub2foo1/ <= only this will run ... foo2/ sub1foo2/ ... sub2foo2/ <= only this will run ... foo3/ <= only this will run sub1foo3/ <= only this will run ... sub2foo3/ <= only this will run ...
--skipnose-skip-tests
- This option allows to skip specific test cases via json file.
The provided value should be a path to a json file with
"skip_tests"
key in json which should contain a list of test case names to skip. --skipnose-debug
- This option enabled some extra print statements for debugging to see which folders skipnose includes or excludes.
Nose already has some options to include and exclude directories by using
-i
or -e
options. The exclude mostly works as in this plugin
however the difference can be observed in include functionality.
Let's consider the following folder tree structure:
tests/ foo/ api/ <= need only subtree subapi/ ... bar/ api/ <= need only subtree ...
Now lets imagine that we need to run only tests within tests/foo/api/
and
tests/bar/api/
. To accomplish that, we would try to provide a regex
similar to "api"
however that will not work because while determining
whether to go inside either foo
or bar
directories, nose will not
match the regex pattern hence will not execute required tests. To solve
that, we might provide a more complex regex to account for this such as
^tests/(foo)|(bar)/api
however that could be more error-prone since
all paths to the api
paths will need to be accounted for.
skipnose
solve this from the first try by just specifying a simple include
pattern "api"
(e.g. --skipnose-include=api
) and it will just work.
Internally before rejecting any folder, skipnose
matches all directories
within the folder in question subtree. In order words, before rejecting
tests/foo
, skipnose
will test it's subtree for the given glob pattern
which will find a match at tests/foo/api
hence test/foo
will not be
rejected. In addition, before rejecting tests/foo/api/subapi
since
subapi
would not match the pattern, skipnose
tests any of the parent
folders which will allow the subapi
to be accepted.
Hopefully this behaviour makes including specific folders and their subtree in the test runner a lot more intuitive and simpler to configure.
To run the tests you need to install testing requirements first:
$ pip install -r requirements-dev.txt
Then to run tests, you can use nosetests
:
$ nosetests -sv