This is a pytest plugin, that enables you to test your code that relies on a database connection to a MongoDB and expects certain data to be present. It allows you to specify fixtures for database collections in JSON/BSON or YAML format. Under the hood we use the mongomock library, that you should consult for documentation on how to use MongoDB mock objects. If suitable you can also use a real MongoDB server.
Note: This project has been renamed from humongous
to pytest-mongodb
in order
to conform to the pytest plugin naming convention and to be easier to find on the
Python package index. See the migration section for more information.
If you don't want to put your database fixtures on the top-level directory of your package
you have to specify a directory where pytest-mongodb
looks for your data definitions.
To do so put a line like the following under the pytest
section of your
pytest.ini
-file put a
[pytest]
mongodb_fixture_dir =
tests/unit/fixtures
pytest-mongodb
would then look for files ending in .yaml
or .json
in that
directory.
You can also choose to use a real MongoDB server for your tests. In that case
you might also want to configure the hostname and/or the credentials if you
don't want to stick with the default (localhost and no credentials). Use the
following configuration values in your pytest.ini
to adapt the settings to
your needs:
[pytest]
mongodb_engine = pymongo
mongodb_host = mongodb://user:passwd@server.tld
mongodb_dbname = mydbname
After you configured pytest-mongodb
so that it can find your fixtures you're ready to
specify some data. Regardless of the markup language you choose, the data is provided
as a list of documents (dicts). The collection that these documents are being inserted
into is given by the filename of your fixture-file. E.g.: If you had a file named
players.yaml
with the following content:
-
name: Mario
surname: Götze
position: striker
-
name: Manuel
surname: Neuer
position: keeper
you'd end up with a collection players
that has the above player definitions
inserted. If your fixture file is in JSON/BSON format you can also use BSON specific
types like $oid
, $date
, etc.
You get ahold of the database in your test-function by using the mongodb
fixture
like so:
def test_players(mongodb):
assert 'players' in mongodb.collection_names()
manuel = mongodb.players.find_one({'name': 'Manuel'})
assert manuel['surname'] == 'Neuer'
For further information refer to the mongomock documentation.
If you want to skip specific tests if the engine is ie. a mongomock engine you could do that like so:
from pytest_mongodb.plugin import mongo_engine
from pytest import mark
@mark.skipif(mongo_engine() == 'mongomock', reason="mongomock does not support that")
def test_players(mongodb):
assert 'players' in mongodb.collection_names()
manuel = mongodb.players.find_one({'name': 'Manuel'})
assert manuel['surname'] == 'Neuer'
In the course of migrating the package name from humongous
to pytest-mongodb
most
configuration values which previously were prefixed with humongous_
have been
renamed to a mongodb_
-prefixed counterpart. The only notable exception is the
humongous_basedir
config value, which now is named mongodb_fixture_dir
.
Additionally the commandline options have been unified, in a way that multi-word option
names are now consistently separated with dashes instead of underscores.