I have a unit test like so below:
# utilities.py
def get_side_effects():
def side_effect_func3(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"final":"some3"}
def side_effect_func2(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"status":"some2"}
def side_effect_func1(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"name":"some1"}
return side_effect_func1, side_effect_func2, side_effect_func2
#################
# test_a.py
def test_endtoend():
s1, s2, s3 = utilities.get_side_effects()
m1 = mock.MagicMock()
m1.side_effect = s1
m2 = mock.MagicMock()
m2.side_effect = s2
m3 = mock.MagicMock()
m3.side_effect = s3
with mock.patch("a.get_request", m3):
with mock.patch("a.get_request", m2):
with mock.patch("a.get_request", m1):
foo = a() # Class to test
result = foo.run()
As part of the foo.run()
code run, get_request
is called multiple times. I want to have a different side_effect function for each call of get_request
method, in this case it is side_effect_func1
, side_effect_func2
, side_effect_func3
. But what I'm noticing is that only m1
mock object is active, i.e only side_effect_func1
is invoked but not the other 2. How do I achieve this?
I have also tried the below, but the actual side_effect functions don't get invoked, they always return the function object
, but don't actually execute the side_effect functions.
# utilities.py
def get_side_effects():
def side_effect_func3(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"final":"some3"}
def side_effect_func2(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"status":"some2"}
def side_effect_func1(self):
# Need the "self" to do some stuff at run time.
return {"name":"some1"}
all_get_side_effects = []
all_get_side_effects.append(side_effect_func1)
all_get_side_effects.append(side_effect_func2)
all_get_side_effects.append(side_effect_func3)
return all_get_side_effects
#########################
# test_a.py
def test_endtoend():
all_side_effects = utilities.get_side_effects()
m = mock.MagicMock()
m.side_effect = all_side_effects
with mock.patch("a.get_request", m):
foo = a() # Class to test
result = foo.run()
Your first attempt doesn't work because each mock just replaced the previous one (the outer two mocks don't do anything).
Your second attempt doesn't work because side-effect is overloaded to serve a different purpose for iterables (docs):
If
side_effect
is an iterable then each call to the mock will return the next value from the iterable.
Instead you could use a callable class for the side-effect, which is maintaining some state about which underlying function to actually call, consecutively.
Basic example with two functions:
>>> class SideEffect:
... def __init__(self, *fns):
... self.fs = iter(fns)
... def __call__(self, *args, **kwargs):
... f = next(self.fs)
... return f(*args, **kwargs)
...
>>> def sf1():
... print("called sf1")
... return 1
...
>>> def sf2():
... print("called sf2")
... return 2
...
>>> def foo():
... print("called actual func")
... return "f"
...
>>> with mock.patch("__main__.foo", side_effect=SideEffect(sf1, sf2)) as m:
... first = foo()
... second = foo()
...
called sf1
called sf2
>>> assert first == 1
>>> assert second == 2
>>> assert m.call_count == 2