Reputation: 789
I'm trying to build a test framework for automated web testing in Selenium and unittest, and I want to structure my tests into distinct scripts.
So I've organised it as following:
File base.py - this will contain, for now, the base Selenium test case class for setting up a session.
import unittest
from selenium import webdriver
# Base Selenium Test class from which all test cases inherit.
class BaseSeleniumTest(unittest.TestCase):
def setUp(self):
self.browser = webdriver.Firefox()
def tearDown(self):
self.browser.close()
File main.py - I want this to be the overall test suite from which all the individual tests are run.
import unittest
import test_example
if __name__ == "__main__":
SeTestSuite = test_example.TitleSpelling()
unittest.TextTestRunner(verbosity=2).run(SeTestSuite)
File test_example.py - an example test case. It might be nice to make these run on their own too.
from base import BaseSeleniumTest
# Test the spelling of the title
class TitleSpelling(BaseSeleniumTest):
def test_a(self):
self.assertTrue(False)
def test_b(self):
self.assertTrue(True)
The problem is that when I run main.py, I get the following error:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "H:\Python\testframework\main.py", line 5, in <module>
SeTestSuite = test_example.TitleSpelling()
File "C:\Python27\lib\unittest\case.py", line 191, in __init__
(self.__class__, methodName))
ValueError: no such test method in <class 'test_example.TitleSpelling'>: runTest
I suspect this is due to the very special way in which unittest
runs and I must have missed a trick on how the docs expect me to structure my tests. Any pointers?
Upvotes: 4
Views: 1329
Reputation: 15962
I am not 100% sure, but in main.py
, you might need a:
SeTestSuite = unittest.defaultTestLoader.discover(start_dir='.')
And the runner line should be (maybe):
# If your line didn't work
unittest.TextTestRunner(verbosity=2).run(unittest.TestSuite(SeTestSuite))
Upvotes: 1