A test fixtures replacement for Python

Overview

factory_boy

Latest Version Supported Python versions Wheel status License

factory_boy is a fixtures replacement based on thoughtbot's factory_bot.

As a fixtures replacement tool, it aims to replace static, hard to maintain fixtures with easy-to-use factories for complex objects.

Instead of building an exhaustive test setup with every possible combination of corner cases, factory_boy allows you to use objects customized for the current test, while only declaring the test-specific fields:

class FooTests(unittest.TestCase):

    def test_with_factory_boy(self):
        # We need a 200€, paid order, shipping to australia, for a VIP customer
        order = OrderFactory(
            amount=200,
            status='PAID',
            customer__is_vip=True,
            address__country='AU',
        )
        # Run the tests here

    def test_without_factory_boy(self):
        address = Address(
            street="42 fubar street",
            zipcode="42Z42",
            city="Sydney",
            country="AU",
        )
        customer = Customer(
            first_name="John",
            last_name="Doe",
            phone="+1234",
            email="[email protected]",
            active=True,
            is_vip=True,
            address=address,
        )
        # etc.

factory_boy is designed to work well with various ORMs (Django, MongoDB, SQLAlchemy), and can easily be extended for other libraries.

Its main features include:

  • Straightforward declarative syntax
  • Chaining factory calls while retaining the global context
  • Support for multiple build strategies (saved/unsaved instances, stubbed objects)
  • Multiple factories per class support, including inheritance

Links

Download

PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/factory-boy/

$ pip install factory_boy

Source: https://github.com/FactoryBoy/factory_boy/

$ git clone git://github.com/FactoryBoy/factory_boy/
$ python setup.py install

Usage

Note

This section provides a quick summary of factory_boy features. A more detailed listing is available in the full documentation.

Defining factories

Factories declare a set of attributes used to instantiate a Python object. The class of the object must be defined in the model field of a class Meta: attribute:

import factory
from . import models

class UserFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.User

    first_name = 'John'
    last_name = 'Doe'
    admin = False

# Another, different, factory for the same object
class AdminFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.User

    first_name = 'Admin'
    last_name = 'User'
    admin = True

ORM integration

factory_boy integration with Object Relational Mapping (ORM) tools is provided through specific factory.Factory subclasses:

  • Django, with factory.django.DjangoModelFactory
  • Mogo, with factory.mogo.MogoFactory
  • MongoEngine, with factory.mongoengine.MongoEngineFactory
  • SQLAlchemy, with factory.alchemy.SQLAlchemyModelFactory

More details can be found in the ORM section.

Using factories

factory_boy supports several different build strategies: build, create, and stub:

# Returns a User instance that's not saved
user = UserFactory.build()

# Returns a saved User instance.
# UserFactory must subclass an ORM base class, such as DjangoModelFactory.
user = UserFactory.create()

# Returns a stub object (just a bunch of attributes)
obj = UserFactory.stub()

You can use the Factory class as a shortcut for the default build strategy:

# Same as UserFactory.create()
user = UserFactory()

No matter which strategy is used, it's possible to override the defined attributes by passing keyword arguments:

# Build a User instance and override first_name
>>> user = UserFactory.build(first_name='Joe')
>>> user.first_name
"Joe"

It is also possible to create a bunch of objects in a single call:

>>> users = UserFactory.build_batch(10, first_name="Joe")
>>> len(users)
10
>>> [user.first_name for user in users]
["Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe", "Joe"]

Realistic, random values

Demos look better with random yet realistic values; and those realistic values can also help discover bugs. For this, factory_boy relies on the excellent faker library:

class RandomUserFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.User

    first_name = factory.Faker('first_name')
    last_name = factory.Faker('last_name')
>>> RandomUserFactory()
<User: Lucy Murray>

Reproducible random values

The use of fully randomized data in tests is quickly a problem for reproducing broken builds. To that purpose, factory_boy provides helpers to handle the random seeds it uses, located in the factory.random module:

import factory.random

def setup_test_environment():
    factory.random.reseed_random('my_awesome_project')
    # Other setup here

Lazy Attributes

Most factory attributes can be added using static values that are evaluated when the factory is defined, but some attributes (such as fields whose value is computed from other elements) will need values assigned each time an instance is generated.

These "lazy" attributes can be added as follows:

class UserFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.User

    first_name = 'Joe'
    last_name = 'Blow'
    email = factory.LazyAttribute(lambda a: '{}.{}@example.com'.format(a.first_name, a.last_name).lower())
    date_joined = factory.LazyFunction(datetime.now)
>>> UserFactory().email
"[email protected]"

Note

LazyAttribute calls the function with the object being constructed as an argument, when LazyFunction does not send any argument.

Sequences

Unique values in a specific format (for example, e-mail addresses) can be generated using sequences. Sequences are defined by using Sequence or the decorator sequence:

class UserFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.User

    email = factory.Sequence(lambda n: 'person{}@example.com'.format(n))

>>> UserFactory().email
'[email protected]'
>>> UserFactory().email
'[email protected]'

Associations

Some objects have a complex field, that should itself be defined from a dedicated factories. This is handled by the SubFactory helper:

class PostFactory(factory.Factory):
    class Meta:
        model = models.Post

    author = factory.SubFactory(UserFactory)

The associated object's strategy will be used:

# Builds and saves a User and a Post
>>> post = PostFactory()
>>> post.id is None  # Post has been 'saved'
False
>>> post.author.id is None  # post.author has been saved
False

# Builds but does not save a User, and then builds but does not save a Post
>>> post = PostFactory.build()
>>> post.id is None
True
>>> post.author.id is None
True

Support Policy

factory_boy supports active Python versions as well as PyPy3.

Debugging factory_boy

Debugging factory_boy can be rather complex due to the long chains of calls. Detailed logging is available through the factory logger.

A helper, factory.debug(), is available to ease debugging:

with factory.debug():
    obj = TestModel2Factory()


import logging
logger = logging.getLogger('factory')
logger.addHandler(logging.StreamHandler())
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)

This will yield messages similar to those (artificial indentation):

BaseFactory: Preparing tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory(extra={})
  LazyStub: Computing values for tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory(two=<OrderedDeclarationWrapper for <factory.declarations.SubFactory object at 0x1e15610>>)
    SubFactory: Instantiating tests.test_using.TestModelFactory(__containers=(<LazyStub for tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory>,), one=4), create=True
    BaseFactory: Preparing tests.test_using.TestModelFactory(extra={'__containers': (<LazyStub for tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory>,), 'one': 4})
      LazyStub: Computing values for tests.test_using.TestModelFactory(one=4)
      LazyStub: Computed values, got tests.test_using.TestModelFactory(one=4)
    BaseFactory: Generating tests.test_using.TestModelFactory(one=4)
  LazyStub: Computed values, got tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory(two=<tests.test_using.TestModel object at 0x1e15410>)
BaseFactory: Generating tests.test_using.TestModel2Factory(two=<tests.test_using.TestModel object at 0x1e15410>)

Contributing

factory_boy is distributed under the MIT License.

Issues should be opened through GitHub Issues; whenever possible, a pull request should be included. Questions and suggestions are welcome on the mailing-list.

Development dependencies can be installed in a virtualenv with:

$ pip install --editable '.[dev]'

All pull requests should pass the test suite, which can be launched simply with:

$ make testall

In order to test coverage, please use:

$ make coverage

To test with a specific framework version, you may use a tox target:

# list all tox environments
$ tox --listenvs

# run tests inside a specific environment
$ tox -e py36-django20-alchemy13-mongoengine017

Valid options are:

  • DJANGO for Django
  • MONGOENGINE for mongoengine
  • ALCHEMY for SQLAlchemy

To avoid running mongoengine tests (e.g no MongoDB server installed), run:

$ make SKIP_MONGOENGINE=1 test
Owner
FactoryBoy project
Contributors to the factory_boy Python library, and related projects
FactoryBoy project
Test python asyncio-based code with ease.

aiounittest Info The aiounittest is a helper library to ease of your pain (and boilerplate), when writing a test of the asynchronous code (asyncio). Y

Krzysztof Warunek 55 Oct 30, 2022
Front End Test Automation with Pytest Framework

Front End Test Automation Framework with Pytest Installation and running instructions: 1. To install the framework on your local machine: clone the re

Sergey Kolokolov 2 Jun 17, 2022
Web testing library for Robot Framework

SeleniumLibrary Contents Introduction Keyword Documentation Installation Browser drivers Usage Extending SeleniumLibrary Community Versions History In

Robot Framework 1.2k Jan 03, 2023
A twitter bot that simply replies with a beautiful screenshot of the tweet, powered by poet.so

Poet this! Replies with a beautiful screenshot of the tweet, powered by poet.so Installation git clone https://github.com/dhravya/poet-this.git cd po

Dhravya Shah 30 Dec 04, 2022
Fail tests that take too long to run

GitHub | PyPI | Issues pytest-fail-slow is a pytest plugin for making tests fail that take too long to run. It adds a --fail-slow DURATION command-lin

John T. Wodder II 4 Nov 27, 2022
Descriptor Vector Exchange

Descriptor Vector Exchange This repo provides code for learning dense landmarks without supervision. Our approach is described in the ICCV 2019 paper

James Thewlis 74 Nov 29, 2022
No longer maintained, please migrate to model_bakery

Model Mommy: Smart fixtures for better tests IMPORTANT: Model Mommy is no longer maintained and was replaced by Model Bakery. Please, consider migrati

Bernardo Fontes 917 Oct 04, 2022
A small faсade for the standard python mocker library to make it user-friendly

unittest-mocker Inspired by the pytest-mock, but written from scratch for using with unittest and convenient tool - patch_class Installation pip insta

Vertliba V.V. 6 Jun 10, 2022
py.test fixture for benchmarking code

Overview docs tests package A pytest fixture for benchmarking code. It will group the tests into rounds that are calibrated to the chosen timer. See c

Ionel Cristian Mărieș 1k Jan 03, 2023
Python package to easily work with selenium and manage tabs effectively.

Simple Selenium The aim of this package is to quickly get started with working with selenium for simple browser automation tasks. Installation Install

Vishal Kumar Mishra 1 Oct 27, 2021
bulk upload files to libgen.lc (Selenium script)

LibgenBulkUpload bulk upload files to http://libgen.lc/librarian.php (Selenium script) Usage ./upload.py to_upload uploaded rejects So title and autho

8 Jul 07, 2022
Data App Performance Tests

Data App Performance Tests My hypothesis is that The different architectures of

Marc Skov Madsen 6 Dec 14, 2022
Bayesian A/B testing

bayesian_testing is a small package for a quick evaluation of A/B (or A/B/C/...) tests using Bayesian approach.

Matus Baniar 35 Dec 15, 2022
Python selenium script to bypass simaster.ugm.ac.id weak captcha.

Python selenium script to bypass simaster.ugm.ac.id weak "captcha".

Hafidh R K 1 Feb 01, 2022
Mixer -- Is a fixtures replacement. Supported Django, Flask, SqlAlchemy and custom python objects.

The Mixer is a helper to generate instances of Django or SQLAlchemy models. It's useful for testing and fixture replacement. Fast and convenient test-

Kirill Klenov 871 Dec 25, 2022
Pymox - open source mock object framework for Python

Pymox is an open source mock object framework for Python. First Steps Installation Tutorial Documentation http://pymox.readthedocs.io/en/latest/index.

Ivan Rocha 7 Feb 02, 2022
A framework-agnostic library for testing ASGI web applications

async-asgi-testclient Async ASGI TestClient is a library for testing web applications that implements ASGI specification (version 2 and 3). The motiva

122 Nov 22, 2022
Travel through time in your tests.

time-machine Travel through time in your tests. A quick example: import datetime as dt

Adam Johnson 373 Dec 27, 2022
A pure Python script to easily get a reverse shell

easy-shell A pure Python script to easily get a reverse shell. How it works? After sending a request, it generates a payload with different commands a

Cristian Souza 48 Dec 12, 2022
A Modular Penetration Testing Framework

fsociety A Modular Penetration Testing Framework Install pip install fsociety Update pip install --upgrade fsociety Usage usage: fsociety [-h] [-i] [-

fsociety-team 802 Dec 31, 2022