| PYTEST(1) | pytest | PYTEST(1) |
pytest - pytest usage
SEE ALSO:
In general, pytest is invoked with the command pytest (see below for other ways to invoke pytest). This will execute all tests in all files whose names follow the form test_*.py or \*_test.py in the current directory and its subdirectories. More generally, pytest follows standard test discovery rules.
Pytest supports several ways to run and select tests from the command-line or from a file (see below for reading arguments from file).
Run tests in a module
pytest test_mod.py
Run tests in a directory
pytest testing/
Run tests by keyword expressions
pytest -k 'MyClass and not method'
This will run tests which contain names that match the given string expression (case-insensitive), which can include Python operators that use filenames, class names and function names as variables. The example above will run TestMyClass.test_something but not TestMyClass.test_method_simple. Use "" instead of '' in expression when running this on Windows
Run tests by collection arguments
Pass the module filename relative to the working directory, followed by specifiers like the class name and function name separated by :: characters, and parameters from parameterization enclosed in [].
To run a specific test within a module:
pytest tests/test_mod.py::test_func
To run all tests in a class:
pytest tests/test_mod.py::TestClass
Specifying a specific test method:
pytest tests/test_mod.py::TestClass::test_method
Specifying a specific parametrization of a test:
pytest tests/test_mod.py::test_func[x1,y2]
Run tests by marker expressions
To run all tests which are decorated with the @pytest.mark.slow decorator:
pytest -m slow
To run all tests which are decorated with the annotated @pytest.mark.slow(phase=1) decorator, with the phase keyword argument set to 1:
pytest -m "slow(phase=1)"
For more information see marks.
Run tests from packages
pytest --pyargs pkg.testing
This will import pkg.testing and use its filesystem location to find and run tests from.
Read arguments from file
Added in version 8.2.
All of the above can be read from a file using the @ prefix:
pytest @tests_to_run.txt
where tests_to_run.txt contains an entry per line, e.g.:
tests/test_file.py tests/test_mod.py::test_func[x1,y2] tests/test_mod.py::TestClass -m slow
This file can also be generated using pytest --collect-only -q and modified as needed.
pytest --version # shows where pytest was imported from pytest --fixtures # show available builtin function arguments pytest -h | --help # show help on command line and config file options
Changed in version 6.0.
To get a list of the slowest 10 test durations over 1.0s long:
pytest --durations=10 --durations-min=1.0
By default, pytest will not show test durations that are too small (<0.005s) unless -vv is passed on the command-line.
You can early-load plugins (internal and external) explicitly in the command-line with the -p option:
pytest -p mypluginmodule
The option receives a name parameter, which can be:
pytest -p pytest_cov
To disable loading specific plugins at invocation time, use the -p option together with the prefix no:.
Example: to disable loading the plugin doctest, which is responsible for executing doctest tests from text files, invoke pytest like this:
pytest -p no:doctest
You can invoke testing through the Python interpreter from the command line:
python -m pytest [...]
This is almost equivalent to invoking the command line script pytest [...] directly, except that calling via python will also add the current directory to sys.path.
You can invoke pytest from Python code directly:
retcode = pytest.main()
this acts as if you would call "pytest" from the command line. It will not raise SystemExit but return the exit code instead. If you don't pass it any arguments, main reads the arguments from the command line arguments of the process (sys.argv), which may be undesirable. You can pass in options and arguments explicitly:
retcode = pytest.main(["-x", "mytestdir"])
You can specify additional plugins to pytest.main:
# content of myinvoke.py import sys import pytest class MyPlugin:
def pytest_sessionfinish(self):
print("*** test run reporting finishing") if __name__ == "__main__":
sys.exit(pytest.main(["-qq"], plugins=[MyPlugin()]))
Running it will show that MyPlugin was added and its hook was invoked:
$ python myinvoke.py *** test run reporting finishing
NOTE:
holger krekel at merlinux eu
2015, holger krekel and pytest-dev team
| April 1, 2025 | 8.3.5 |