Reputation: 1407
I am trying to mock the urllib2.urlopen library in a way that I should get different responses for different urls I pass into the function.
The way I am doing it in my test file now is like this
@patch(othermodule.urllib2.urlopen)
def mytest(self, mock_of_urllib2_urllopen):
a = Mock()
a.read.side_effect = ["response1", "response2"]
mock_of_urllib2_urlopen.return_value = a
othermodule.function_to_be_tested() #this is the function which uses urllib2.urlopen.read
I expect the the othermodule.function_to_be_tested to get the value "response1" on first call and "response2" on second call which is what side_effect will do
but the othermodule.function_to_be_tested() receives
<MagicMock name='urlopen().read()' id='216621051472'>
and not the actual response. Please suggest where I am going wrong or an easier way to do this.
Upvotes: 13
Views: 13401
Reputation: 624
The argument to patch
needs to be a description of the location of the object, not the object itself. So your problem looks like it may just be that you need to stringify your argument to patch
.
Just for completeness, though, here's a fully working example. First, our module under test:
# mod_a.py
import urllib2
def myfunc():
opened_url = urllib2.urlopen()
return opened_url.read()
Now, set up our test:
# test.py
from mock import patch, Mock
import mod_a
@patch('mod_a.urllib2.urlopen')
def mytest(mock_urlopen):
a = Mock()
a.read.side_effect = ['resp1', 'resp2']
mock_urlopen.return_value = a
res = mod_a.myfunc()
print res
assert res == 'resp1'
res = mod_a.myfunc()
print res
assert res == 'resp2'
mytest()
Running the test from the shell:
$ python test.py
resp1
resp2
Edit: Whoops, initially included the original mistake. (Was testing to verify how it was broken.) Code should be fixed now.
Upvotes: 22