This is a plugin which will terminate tests after a certain timeout. When doing so it will show a stack dump of all threads running at the time. This is useful when running tests under a continuous integration server or simply if you don't know why the test suite hangs.
Note that while by default on POSIX systems py.test will continue to
execute the tests after a test has timed, out this is not always
possible. Often the only sure way to interrupt a hanging test is by
terminating the entire process. As this is a hard termination
(os._exit()
) it will result in no teardown, JUnit XML output etc.
But the plugin will ensure you will have the debugging output on
stderr nevertheless, which is the most important part at this stage.
See below for detailed information on the timeout methods and their
side-effects.
The pytest-timeout plugin has been tested on python 2.7 or higher, including 3.X, pypy and pypy3. See tox.ini for currently tested versions.
Install is as simple as e.g.:
pip install pytest-timeout
Now you can run tests using a timeout, in seconds, after which they will be terminated:
py.test --timeout=300
Alternatively you can mark individual tests as having a timeout:
@pytest.mark.timeout(60) def test_foo(): pass
By default the plugin will not time out any tests, you must specify a valid timeout for the plugin to interrupt long-running tests. A timeout is always specified as an integer number of seconds and can be defined in a number of ways, from low to high priority:
You can set a global timeout in the py.test configuration file using the
timeout
option. E.g.:[pytest] timeout = 300
The
PYTEST_TIMEOUT
environment variable sets a global timeout overriding a possible value in the configuration file.The
--timeout
command line option sets a global timeout overriding both the environment variable and configuration option.Using the
timeout
marker on test items you can specify timeouts on a per-item basis:@pytest.mark.timeout(300) def test_foo(): pass
Setting a timeout to 0 seconds disables the timeout, so if you have a global timeout set you can still disable the timeout by using the mark.
Interrupting tests which hang is not always as simple and can be platform dependent. Furthermore some methods of terminating a test might conflict with the code under test itself. The pytest-timeout plugin tries to pick the most suitable method based on your platform, but occasionally you may need to specify a specific timeout method explicitly.
If a timeout method does not work your safest bet is to use the thread method.
This is the surest and most portable method. It is also the default on systems not supporting the signal method. For each test item the pytest-timeout plugin starts a timer thread which will terminate the whole process after the specified timeout. When a test item finishes this timer thread is cancelled and the test run continues.
The downsides of this method are that there is a relatively large
overhead for running each test and that test runs are not completed.
This means that other py.test features, like e.g. JUnit XML output or
fixture teardown, will not function normally. The second issue might
be alleviated by using the --boxed
option of the pytest-xdist
plugin.
The benefit of this method is that it will always work. Furthermore it will still provide you debugging information by printing the stacks of all the threads in the application to stderr.
If the system supports the SIGALRM signal the signal method will be
used by default. This method schedules an alarm when the test item
starts and cancels it when it finishes. If the alarm expires during
the test the signal handler will dump the stack of any other threads
running to stderr and use pytest.fail()
to interrupt the test.
The benefit of this method is that the py.test process is not terminated and the test run can complete normally.
The main issue to look out for with this method is that it may interfere with the code under test. If the code under test uses SIGALRM itself things will go wrong and you will have to choose the thread method.
The timeout method can be specified by using the timeout_method
option in the py.test configuration file, the --timeout_method
command line parameter or the timeout
marker. Simply set their
value to the string thread
or signal
to override the default
method. On a marker this is done using the method
keyword:
@pytest.mark.timeout(method='thread') def test_foo(): pass
The full signature of the timeout marker is:
pytest.mark.timeout(timeout=0, method=DEFAULT_METHOD)
You can use either positional or keyword arguments for both the timeout and the method. Neither needs to be present.
See the marker api documentation and examples for the various ways markers can be applied to test items.
The plugin will happily terminate timeouts in the finalisers of fixtures. The timeout specified applies to the entire process of setting up fixtures, running the tests and finalising the fixtures. However when a timeout occurs in a fixture finaliser and the test suite continues, i.e. the signal method is used, it must be realised that subsequent fixtures which need to be finalised might not have been executed, which could result in a broken test-suite anyway. In case of doubt the thread method which terminates the entire process might result in clearer output.
- Give the threads a name to help debugging, thanks Thomas Grainger.
- Changed location to https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest-timeout because bitbucket is dropping mercurial support. Thanks Thomas Grainger and Bruno Oliveira.
- Fix support for pytest >= 3.10.
- This changelog was ommitted for the 1.3.2 release and was added afterwards. Apologies for the confusion.
- Fix pytest 3.7.3 compatibility. The capture API had changed slightly and this needed fixing. Thanks Bruno Oliveira for the contribution.
- Fix deprecation warning on Python 3.6. Thanks Mickaël Schoentgen
- Create a valid tag for the release. Somehow this didn't happen for 1.3.0, that tag points to a non-existing commit.
- Make it possible to only run the timeout timer on the test function and not the whole fixture setup + test + teardown duration. Thanks Pedro Algarvio for the work!
- Use the new pytest marker API, Thanks Pedro Algarvio for the work!
- Fix for pytest 3.3, thanks Bruno Oliveira.
- Update supported python versions: - Add CPython 3.6. - Drop CPyhon 2.6 (as did pytest 3.3) - Drop CPyhon 3.3 - Drop CPyhon 3.4
- Allow using floats as timeout instead of only integers, thanks Tom Myers.
- Report (default) timeout duration in header, thanks Holger Krekel.
- Bump version to 1.0 to commit to semantic versioning.
- Fix issue #12: Now compatible with py.test 2.8, thanks Holger Krekel.
- No longer test with pexpect on py26 as it is no longer supported
- Require py.test 2.8 and use new hookimpl decorator
- Timeouts will no longer be triggered when inside an interactive pdb
session started by
pytest.set_trace()
/pdb.set_trace()
. - Add pypy3 environment to tox.ini.
- Transfer repository to pytest-dev team account.
- Support timeouts happening in (session scoped) finalizers.
- Change command line option --timeout_method into --timeout-method for consistency with py.test
- Added the PYTEST_TIMEOUT environment variable as a way of specifying the timeout (closes issue #2).
- More flexible marker argument parsing: you can now specify the method using a positional argument.
- The plugin is now enabled by default. There is no longer a need to
specify
timeout=0
in the configuration file or on the command line simply so that a marker would work.
- Add a marker to modify the timeout delay using a @pytest.timeout(N) syntax, thanks to Laurant Brack for the initial code.
- Allow the timeout marker to select the timeout method using the
method
keyword argument. - Rename the --nosigalrm option to --method=thread to future proof support for eventlet and gevent. Thanks to Ronny Pfannschmidt for the hint.
- Add
timeout
andtimeout_method
items to the configuration file so you can enable and configure the plugin using the ini file. Thanks to Holger Krekel and Ronny Pfannschmidt for the hints. - Tested (and fixed) for python 2.6, 2.7 and 3.2.