Trove Unit Tests

Mock Object Library

Trove unit tests make a frequent use of the Python Mock library. This library lets the caller replace (“mock”) parts of the system under test with mock objects and make assertions about how they have been used. [1]

The Problem of Dangling Mocks

Often one needs to mock global functions in shared system modules. The caller must restore the original state of the module after it is no longer required.

Dangling mock objects in global modules (mocked members of imported modules that never get restored) have been causing various transient failures in the unit test suite.

The main issues posed by dangling mock objects include:

- Such object references propagate across the entire test suite. Any
caller may be hit by a non-functional - or worse - crippled module member
because some other (potentially totally unrelated) test case failed to
restore it.

- Dangling mock references shared across different test modules may
lead to unexpected results/behavior in multi-threaded environments. One
example could be a test case failing because a mock got called multiple
times from unrelated modules.

Such issues are likely to exhibit transient random behavior depending on the runtime environment, making them difficult to debug.

There are several possible strategies available for dealing with dangling mock objects (see the section on recommended patterns). Further information is available in [1], [2], [3].

Dangling Mock Detector

All Trove unit tests should extend ‘trove_testtools.TestCase’. It is a subclass of ‘testtools.TestCase’ which automatically checks for dangling mock objects at each test class teardown. It marks the tests as failed and reports the leaked reference if it finds any.

Writing Unit Tests

Trove has some legacy unit test code for all the components which is not recommended to follow. Use the suggested approaches below.

Writing Unit Tests for Trove API

For trove-api unit test, we use real database (sqlite).

Set up trove database in setUpClass method.

from trove.tests.unittests.util import util

@classmethod
def setUpClass(cls):
    util.init_db()

and clean up the database in the method tearDownClass:

from trove.tests.unittests.util import util

@classmethod
def tearDownClass(cls):
    util.cleanup_db()

Insert some data in setUpClass in order to run the tests.

Trove sends notifications for various operations which communicates with the message queue service. In unit test, this is also mocked and usually called in the setUp method.

from trove.tests.unittests import trove_testtools

def setUp(self):
    trove_testtools.patch_notifier(self)

Look at an example in trove/tests/unittests/instance/test_service.py

Run Unit Test

Run all the unit tests in one command:

tox -e py39

Run all the tests of a specific test class:

tox -e py39 -- trove.tests.unittests.instance.test_service.TestInstanceController

Run a single test case:

tox -e py39 -- trove.tests.unittests.instance.test_service.TestInstanceController.test_create_multiple_versions

References