Reputation: 20493
I use unittest
(actually unittest2
) for Python testing, together with Python Mock for mocking objects and nose to run all tests in a single pass.
I miss being able to tell what is working and what's wrong at a glance from the green/red bars. Is there a way to get colored output from unittest?
(Changing test suite at this point is not an option, and I actually like unittest)
Upvotes: 53
Views: 30629
Reputation: 10174
pytest can do this with no changes needed for unit tests.
Now install pytest.
pip install --user pytest
And run the tests to see the color!
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 1616
If you are running pytest this way:
python -m unittest test_my.py
Change it to:
pytest test_my.py
And you get colors for free
Upvotes: 12
Reputation: 9116
Using a method very similar to robert's answer, I have (today!) released a package that enables colour output in unittest
test results. I have called it colour-runner
.
To install it, run:
pip install colour-runner
Then, where you were using unittest.TextTestRunner
, use colour_runner.runner.ColourTextTestRunner
instead.
See how it looks with verbosity=1
...and verbosity=2
Upvotes: 32
Reputation: 103
I've also found another colouring plugin for nose: YANC at https://pypi.python.org/pypi/yanc
Works for me with Python 3.5 and nose 1.3.7 (I couldn't get any of the other options for nose listed above to work)
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 664
In python 2.x you could try pyrg. Does not work in Python 3 though.
Upvotes: 13
Reputation: 789
If you could change just the line of your test imports, you could use redgreenunittest
. It's a clone I made of unittest
, but it has colorized output.
If you want to use it without updating any of the meat of your code, you can just use it like so:
import redgreenunittest as unittest
It's not a clone of unittest2, so it wouldn't work out-of-the-box with Andrea's code, but its source is right there, so a unittest2
fork of redgreenunittest
wouldn't be out of the question.
Also, any "you're doing it wrong" comments are welcome, so long as they contain some reasoning. I'd love to do it right instead.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 9965
I'm having good success with nosetests and rednose. It's still maintained at the time of writing this.
Upvotes: 21
Reputation: 34438
Make a class that inherits from unittest.TestResult
(say, MyResults
) and implements a bunch of methods. Then make a class that inherits from unittest.TextTestRunner
(say, MyRunner
) and override _makeResult()
to return an instance of MyResults
.
Then, construct a test suite (which you've probably already got working), and call MyRunner().run(suite)
.
You can put whatever behavior you like, including colors, into MyResults
.
Upvotes: 12