This is a unittest framework for Sublime Text 3. It runs unittest testcases on local machines and CI services such as Travis CI, Circle CI and AppVeyor. It also supports testing syntax_test files for the new sublime-syntax format.
- Before testing anything, you have to install UnitTesting via Package Control.
- Your package!
- TestCases should be placed in
test*.py
under the directorytests
(configurable, see below). The testcases are then loaded by TestLoader.discover.
Here are some small examples
UnitTesting can be triggered via the command palette command UnitTesting
.
Enter the package name in the input panel and hit enter, a console should pop
up and the tests should be running. To run only tests in particular files,
enter <Package name>:<filename>
. <filename>
should be a unix shell
wildcard to match the file names, <Package name>:test*.py
is used in
default.
You could run the command UnitTesting: Test Current Package
to run the
current package. The current package will be first reloaded by UnitTesting
and then the tests will be executed.
It is also possible to generate test
coverage report via coverage by using the command
UnitTesting: Test Current Package with Coverage
.
The file .coveragerc is used to control the coverage configurations. If
it is missing, UnitTesting will ignore the tests
directory.
To enable Circle CI Linux and macOS builds, copy the file
.circleci/config.yml to your repository and change the environmental variable PACKAGE
to the name of
your package. Log in to Circle CI and add a new project.
Circle CI doesn't offer free macOS plan by default, but you could contact them for access if your package is open sourced:
We also offer the Seed plan for macOS open-source projects. Contact us at billing@circleci.com for access. If you are building a bigger open-source project and need more resources, let us know how we can help you!
To enable Travis CI Linux and macOS builds, copy the file:
.travis.yml
(caution: with a beginning dot) to your repository and
change the environment variable PACKAGE
to the name of
your package. Log in to Travis CI to enable CI for your package..
To enable AppVeyor Windows builds, copy the file appveyor.yml
to
your repository, change the PACKAGE
variable in
appveyor.yml.
Log in to AppVeyor and add your repository
as a new project.
We support Codecov, Coveralls and Codacy. Codacov is slightly more favorable as it supports merging reports from different CIs.
To submit coverage report to codecov.io:
- install codecov
- run
codecov
after success
To submit coverage report to coveralls.io:
- install python-coveralls
- run
coveralls
after success
To submit coverage report to codacy.com:
-
install both coverage and codacy-coverage
pip install coverage codacy-coverage
-
generate the xml report:
coverage xml -o coverage.xml
-
run
python-codacy-coverage
If your package uses Package Control dependencies, you may want to install
Package Control by uncommenting the line of install_package_control
in
Travis CI and AppVeyor configuration files.
Check this for an example.
The default test directory is "tests". To change the test directory, add a
file unittesting.json
to your repo with the corresponding directory name, eg
unittest
:
"tests_dir" : "unittest"
The test result could be redirected to a file by specifying the output
variable in unittesting.json
.
"output" : "foo.txt"
Tests can be written using the Deferrable testcase, such that you are able to run sublime commands from your test cases and yield control to sublime text runtime and continue the execution later. Would be useful to test asynchronous codes.
An example would be found in here.
To activate deferred testing on Travis CI and AppVeyor, put the following line in
unittesting.json
.
"deferred": true,
PS: this idea was inspired by Plugin UnitTest Harness.
By default, the tests are running in the main thread and can block the graphic inference. Asychronized testing could be used if you need the interface to respond.
Async tests are usually slower than the sync tests because the interface takes time to respond but it is useful when there are blocking codes in the tests. An example would be found in here.
However, it is known that async test does not work very well with coverage. In general, it is recommended to use deferred testing over async testing since there is no need to worry about race condition.
To activate async testing on Travis CI and AppVeyor, put the following line in
unittesting.json
.
"async": true,
Note: if async
is true, deferred
is forced to be false
(relaxation of this is in progress)
It is recommended to add the following in your .sublime-project
file so that c+b would invoke the testing action.
"build_systems":
[
{
"name": "Test Current Package",
"target": "unit_testing_current_package",
}
]
Thanks guillermooo and philippotto for their efforts in AppVeyor and Travis CI macOS support.