Reputation: 1145
I am writing a unittest for a module that accepts command line arguments. I've used optparse in the module to accept the args.
So when I execute the module directly I just type:-
module.py -e 42 -g 84
So far in my unittest I simply create an instance of the module to test then call a specific method:-
instance = module.className()
instance.method()
Can someone please tell me how to pass the command line args to module.py from another module such as a unittest?
Do I use optparse in my unittest and somehow incorporate in when generating the instance of module.py?
Thanks in advance.
Upvotes: 7
Views: 9760
Reputation: 128
You just have to modify the list sys.argv
which represents the list of command line arguments. This list is global to the python interpreter so you don't have to pass it around.
import sys
from optparse import OptionParser
parser = OptionParser()
parser.add_option("-e")
parser.add_option("-g")
print sys.argv # unmodified
(options, args) = parser.parse_args()
print (options, args)
sys.argv = ['module.py','-e','42','-g','84'] # define your commandline arguments here
(options, args) = parser.parse_args()
print (options, args)
Note: The OptionParser Module is deprecated so if possible switch to argparse
(see: http://docs.python.org/library/argparse.html#module-argparse). All you need is Python 2.7.
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 2909
Three alternatives:
1) Use some shell, instead of fixating on 100% Python.
2) Pass around sys.argv (and perhaps a workalike vector) as needed
3) Call the functions that your command line option dispatcher calls instead
Upvotes: 1