Test Utilities¶
Quite often you want to unittest your application or just check the output from an interactive python session. In theory that is pretty simple because you can fake a WSGI environment and call the application with a dummy start_response and iterate over the application iterator but there are argumentably better ways to interact with an application.
Diving In¶
Werkzeug provides a Client object which you can pass a WSGI application (and optionally a response wrapper) which you can use to send virtual requests to the application.
A response wrapper is a callable that takes three arguments: the application iterator, the status and finally a list of headers. The default response wrapper returns a tuple. Because response objects have the same signature, you can use them as response wrapper, ideally by subclassing them and hooking in test functionality.
>>> from werkzeug.test import Client
>>> from werkzeug.testapp import test_app
>>> from werkzeug.wrappers import BaseResponse
>>> c = Client(test_app, BaseResponse)
>>> resp = c.get('/')
>>> resp.status_code
200
>>> resp.headers
Headers([('Content-Type', 'text/html; charset=utf-8'), ('Content-Length', '8339')])
>>> resp.data.splitlines()[0]
'<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"'
Or without a wrapper defined:
>>> c = Client(test_app)
>>> app_iter, status, headers = c.get('/')
>>> status
'200 OK'
>>> headers
[('Content-Type', 'text/html; charset=utf-8'), ('Content-Length', '8339')]
>>> ''.join(app_iter).splitlines()[0]
'<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"'
Environment Building¶
New in version 0.5.
The easiest way to interactively test applications is using the
EnvironBuilder
. It can create both standard WSGI environments
and request objects.
The following example creates a WSGI environment with one uploaded file and a form field:
>>> from werkzeug.test import EnvironBuilder
>>> from StringIO import StringIO
>>> builder = EnvironBuilder(method='POST', data={'foo': 'this is some text',
... 'file': (StringIO('my file contents'), 'test.txt')})
>>> env = builder.get_environ()
The resulting environment is a regular WSGI environment that can be used for further processing:
>>> from werkzeug.wrappers import Request
>>> req = Request(env)
>>> req.form['foo']
u'this is some text'
>>> req.files['file']
<FileStorage: u'test.txt' ('text/plain')>
>>> req.files['file'].read()
'my file contents'
The EnvironBuilder
figures out the content type automatically if you
pass a dict to the constructor as data. If you provide a string or an
input stream you have to do that yourself.
By default it will try to use application/x-www-form-urlencoded
and only
use multipart/form-data
if files are uploaded:
>>> builder = EnvironBuilder(method='POST', data={'foo': 'bar'})
>>> builder.content_type
'application/x-www-form-urlencoded'
>>> builder.files['foo'] = StringIO('contents')
>>> builder.content_type
'multipart/form-data'
If a string is provided as data (or an input stream) you have to specify the content type yourself:
>>> builder = EnvironBuilder(method='POST', data='{"json": "this is"}')
>>> builder.content_type
>>> builder.content_type = 'application/json'
Testing API¶
-
class
werkzeug.test.
EnvironBuilder
(path='/', base_url=None, query_string=None, method='GET', input_stream=None, content_type=None, content_length=None, errors_stream=None, multithread=False, multiprocess=False, run_once=False, headers=None, data=None, environ_base=None, environ_overrides=None, charset='utf-8')¶ This class can be used to conveniently create a WSGI environment for testing purposes. It can be used to quickly create WSGI environments or request objects from arbitrary data.
The signature of this class is also used in some other places as of Werkzeug 0.5 (
create_environ()
,BaseResponse.from_values()
,Client.open()
). Because of this most of the functionality is available through the constructor alone.Files and regular form data can be manipulated independently of each other with the
form
andfiles
attributes, but are passed with the same argument to the constructor: data.data can be any of these values:
- a str: If it’s a string it is converted into a
input_stream
, thecontent_length
is set and you have to provide acontent_type
. - a dict: If it’s a dict the keys have to be strings and the values
any of the following objects:
- a
file
-like object. These are converted intoFileStorage
objects automatically. - a tuple. The
add_file()
method is called with the tuple items as positional arguments.
- a
New in version 0.6: path and base_url can now be unicode strings that are encoded using the
iri_to_uri()
function.Parameters: - path – the path of the request. In the WSGI environment this will end up as PATH_INFO. If the query_string is not defined and there is a question mark in the path everything after it is used as query string.
- base_url – the base URL is a URL that is used to extract the WSGI URL scheme, host (server name + server port) and the script root (SCRIPT_NAME).
- query_string – an optional string or dict with URL parameters.
- method – the HTTP method to use, defaults to GET.
- input_stream – an optional input stream. Do not specify this and
data. As soon as an input stream is set you can’t
modify
args
andfiles
unless you set theinput_stream
to None again. - content_type – The content type for the request. As of 0.5 you don’t have to provide this when specifying files and form data via data.
- content_length – The content length for the request. You don’t have to specify this when providing data via data.
- errors_stream – an optional error stream that is used for
wsgi.errors. Defaults to
stderr
. - multithread – controls wsgi.multithread. Defaults to False.
- multiprocess – controls wsgi.multiprocess. Defaults to False.
- run_once – controls wsgi.run_once. Defaults to False.
- headers – an optional list or
Headers
object of headers. - data – a string or dict of form data. See explanation above.
- environ_base – an optional dict of environment defaults.
- environ_overrides – an optional dict of environment overrides.
- charset – the charset used to encode unicode data.
-
path
¶ The path of the application. (aka PATH_INFO)
-
charset
¶ The charset used to encode unicode data.
-
headers
¶ A
Headers
object with the request headers.
-
errors_stream
¶ The error stream used for the wsgi.errors stream.
-
multithread
¶ The value of wsgi.multithread
-
multiprocess
¶ The value of wsgi.multiprocess
-
environ_base
¶ The dict used as base for the newly create environ.
-
environ_overrides
¶ A dict with values that are used to override the generated environ.
-
input_stream
¶ The optional input stream. This and
form
/files
is mutually exclusive. Also do not provide this stream if the request method is not POST / PUT or something comparable.
-
args
¶ The URL arguments as
MultiDict
.
-
base_url
¶ The base URL is a URL that is used to extract the WSGI URL scheme, host (server name + server port) and the script root (SCRIPT_NAME).
-
close
()¶ Closes all files. If you put real
file
objects into thefiles
dict you can call this method to automatically close them all in one go.
-
content_length
¶ The content length as integer. Reflected from and to the
headers
. Do not set if you setfiles
orform
for auto detection.
-
content_type
¶ The content type for the request. Reflected from and to the
headers
. Do not set if you setfiles
orform
for auto detection.
-
get_environ
()¶ Return the built environ.
-
get_request
(cls=None)¶ Returns a request with the data. If the request class is not specified
request_class
is used.Parameters: cls – The request wrapper to use.
-
input_stream
An optional input stream. If you set this it will clear
form
andfiles
.
-
request_class
¶ the default request class for
get_request()
alias of
BaseRequest
-
server_name
¶ The server name (read-only, use
host
to set)
-
server_port
¶ The server port as integer (read-only, use
host
to set)
-
server_protocol
= 'HTTP/1.1'¶ the server protocol to use. defaults to HTTP/1.1
-
wsgi_version
= (1, 0)¶ the wsgi version to use. defaults to (1, 0)
- a str: If it’s a string it is converted into a
-
class
werkzeug.test.
Client
(application, response_wrapper=None, use_cookies=True, allow_subdomain_redirects=False)¶ This class allows to send requests to a wrapped application.
The response wrapper can be a class or factory function that takes three arguments: app_iter, status and headers. The default response wrapper just returns a tuple.
Example:
class ClientResponse(BaseResponse): ... client = Client(MyApplication(), response_wrapper=ClientResponse)
The use_cookies parameter indicates whether cookies should be stored and sent for subsequent requests. This is True by default, but passing False will disable this behaviour.
If you want to request some subdomain of your application you may set allow_subdomain_redirects to True as if not no external redirects are allowed.
New in version 0.5: use_cookies is new in this version. Older versions did not provide builtin cookie support.
-
open
(*args, **kwargs)¶ Takes the same arguments as the
EnvironBuilder
class with some additions: You can provide aEnvironBuilder
or a WSGI environment as only argument instead of theEnvironBuilder
arguments and two optional keyword arguments (as_tuple, buffered) that change the type of the return value or the way the application is executed.Changed in version 0.5: If a dict is provided as file in the dict for the data parameter the content type has to be called content_type now instead of mimetype. This change was made for consistency with
werkzeug.FileWrapper
.The follow_redirects parameter was added toopen()
.Additional parameters:
Parameters: - as_tuple – Returns a tuple in the form
(environ, result)
- buffered – Set this to True to buffer the application run. This will automatically close the application for you as well.
- follow_redirects – Set this to True if the Client should follow HTTP redirects.
- as_tuple – Returns a tuple in the form
Shortcut methods are available for many HTTP methods:
-
get
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to GET.
-
patch
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to PATCH.
-
post
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to POST.
-
head
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to HEAD.
-
put
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to PUT.
-
delete
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to DELETE.
-
options
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to OPTIONS.
-
trace
(*args, **kw)¶ Like open but method is enforced to TRACE.
-
-
werkzeug.test.
create_environ
([options])¶ Create a new WSGI environ dict based on the values passed. The first parameter should be the path of the request which defaults to ‘/’. The second one can either be an absolute path (in that case the host is localhost:80) or a full path to the request with scheme, netloc port and the path to the script.
This accepts the same arguments as the
EnvironBuilder
constructor.Changed in version 0.5: This function is now a thin wrapper over
EnvironBuilder
which was added in 0.5. The headers, environ_base, environ_overrides and charset parameters were added.
-
werkzeug.test.
run_wsgi_app
(app, environ, buffered=False)¶ Return a tuple in the form (app_iter, status, headers) of the application output. This works best if you pass it an application that returns an iterator all the time.
Sometimes applications may use the write() callable returned by the start_response function. This tries to resolve such edge cases automatically. But if you don’t get the expected output you should set buffered to True which enforces buffering.
If passed an invalid WSGI application the behavior of this function is undefined. Never pass non-conforming WSGI applications to this function.
Parameters: - app – the application to execute.
- buffered – set to True to enforce buffering.
Returns: tuple in the form
(app_iter, status, headers)