Estás leyendo la documentación para una versión de desarrollo. Para la última versión publicada, por favor revisa Humble.
Writing Basic Tests with Python
Starting point: we’ll assume you have a basic ament_python package set up already and you want to add some tests to it.
If you are using ament_cmake_python, refer to the the ament_cmake_python docs for how to make tests dicoverable.
The test contents and invocation with colcon
remain the same.
Package Setup
setup.py
Your setup.py
must a test dependency on pytest
within the call to setup(...)
:
tests_require=['pytest'],
Test Files and Folders
Your test code needs to go in a folder named tests
in the root of your package.
Any file that contains tests that you want to run must have the pattern test_FOO.py
where FOO
can be replaced with anything.
Example package layout:
awesome_ros_package/
awesome_ros_package/
__init__.py
fozzie.py
package.xml
setup.cfg
setup.py
tests/
test_init.py
test_copyright.py
test_fozzie.py
Test Contents
You can now write tests to your heart’s content. There are plenty of resources on pytest, but in short, you can write functions with the test_
prefix and include whatever assert statements you’d like.
def test_math():
assert 2 + 2 == 5 # This should fail for most mathematical systems
Running Tests
See the tutorial on how to run tests from the command line for more information on running the tests and inspecting the test results.
Special Commands
Beyond the standard colcon testing commands you can also specify arguments to the pytest
framework from the command line with the --pytest-args
flag.
For example, you can specify the name of the function to run with
colcon test --packages-select <name-of-pkg> --pytest-args -k name_of_the_test_function
To see the pytest output while running the tests, use these flags:
colcon test --event-handlers console_cohesion+