Suppose I have the following Event
model:
from django.db import models
import datetime
class Event(models.Model):
date_start = models.DateField()
date_end = models.DateField()
def is_over(self):
return datetime.date.today() > self.date_end
I want to test Event.is_over()
by creating an Event that ends in the future (today + 1 or something), and stubbing the date and time so the system thinks we've reached that future date.
I'd like to be able to stub ALL system time objects as far as python is concerned. This includes datetime.date.today()
, datetime.datetime.now()
, and any other standard date/time objects.
What's the standard way to do this?
EDIT: Since my answer is the accepted answer here I'm updating it to let everyone know a better way has been created in the meantime, the freezegun library: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/freezegun. I use this in all my projects when I want to influence time in tests. Have a look at it.
Original answer:
Replacing internal stuff like this is always dangerous because it can have nasty side effects. So what you indeed want, is to have the monkey patching be as local as possible.
We use Michael Foord's excellent mock library: http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/mock/ that has a @patch
decorator which patches certain functionality, but the monkey patch only lives in the scope of the testing function, and everything is automatically restored after the function runs out of its scope.
The only problem is that the internal datetime
module is implemented in C, so by default you won't be able to monkey patch it. We fixed this by making our own simple implementation which can be mocked.
The total solution is something like this (the example is a validator function used within a Django project to validate that a date is in the future). Mind you I took this from a project but took out the non-important stuff, so things may not actually work when copy-pasting this, but you get the idea, I hope :)
First we define our own very simple implementation of datetime.date.today
in a file called utils/date.py
:
import datetime
def today():
return datetime.date.today()
Then we create the unittest for this validator in tests.py
:
import datetime
import mock
from unittest2 import TestCase
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from .. import validators
class ValidationTests(TestCase):
@mock.patch('utils.date.today')
def test_validate_future_date(self, today_mock):
# Pin python's today to returning the same date
# always so we can actually keep on unit testing in the future :)
today_mock.return_value = datetime.date(2010, 1, 1)
# A future date should work
validators.validate_future_date(datetime.date(2010, 1, 2))
# The mocked today's date should fail
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError) as e:
validators.validate_future_date(datetime.date(2010, 1, 1))
self.assertEquals([u'Date should be in the future.'], e.exception.messages)
# Date in the past should also fail
with self.assertRaises(ValidationError) as e:
validators.validate_future_date(datetime.date(2009, 12, 31))
self.assertEquals([u'Date should be in the future.'], e.exception.messages)
The final implementation looks like this:
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
from django.core.exceptions import ValidationError
from utils import date
def validate_future_date(value):
if value <= date.today():
raise ValidationError(_('Date should be in the future.'))
Hope this helps