I am working on a legacy django project, in there somewhere there is a class defined as follows;
from django.http import HttpResponse
class Response(HttpResponse):
def __init__(self, template='', calling_context='' status=None):
self.template = template
self.calling_context = calling_context
HttpResponse.__init__(self, get_template(template).render(calling_context), status)
and this class is used in views as follows
def some_view(request):
#do some stuff
return Response('some_template.html', RequestContext(request, {'some keys': 'some values'}))
this class was mainly created so that they could use it to perform assertions in the unit tests .i.e they are not using django.test.Client to test the views but rather they create a mock request and pass that to view as(calling the view as a callable) in the tests as follows
def test_for_some_view(self):
mock_request = create_a_mock_request()
#call the view, as a function
response = some_view(mock_request) #returns an instance of the response class above
self.assertEquals('some_template.html', response.template)
self.assertEquals({}, response.context)
The problem is that half way through the test suite(quite a huge test suite), some tests begin blowing up when executing the
return Response('some_template.html', RequestContext(request, {'some keys': 'some values'}))
and the stack trace is
self.template = template
AttributeError: can't set attribute
the full stack trace looks something like
======================================================================
ERROR: test_should_list_all_users_for_that_specific_sales_office
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/austiine/Projects/mped/console/metrics/tests/unit/views/sales_office_views_test.py", line 106, in test_should_list_all_users_for_that_specific_sales_office
response = show(request, sales_office_id=sales_office.id)
File "/Users/austiine/Projects/mped/console/metrics/views/sales_office_views.py", line 63, in show
"sales_office_users": sales_office_users}))
File "/Users/austiine/Projects/mped/console/metrics/utils/response.py", line 9, in __init__
self.template = template
AttributeError: can't set attribute
the actual failing test is
def test_should_list_all_users_for_that_specific_sales_office(self):
user_company = CompanyFactory.create()
request = self.mock_request(user_company)
#some other stuff
#calling the view
response = show(request, sales_office_id=sales_office.id)
self.assertIn(user, response.calling_context["sales_office_users"])
self.assertNotIn(user2, response.calling_context["sales_office_users"])
code for the show view
def show(request, sales_office_id):
user = request.user
sales_office = []
sales_office_users = []
associated_market_names = []
try:
sales_office = SalesOffice.objects.get(id=sales_office_id)
sales_office_users = User.objects.filter(userprofile__sales_office=sales_office)
associated_market_names = Market.objects.filter(id__in= (sales_office.associated_markets.all())).values_list("name", flat=True)
if user.groups.all()[0].name == UserProfile.COMPANY_AO:
associated_market_names = [market.name for market in sales_office.get_sales_office_user_specific_markets(user)]
except:
pass
return Response("sales_office/show.html", RequestContext(request, {'keys': 'values'}))
This answer doesn't address the specifics of this question, but explains the underlying issue. This specific exception "AttributeError: can't set attribute" is raised (see source) when the attribute you're attempting to change is actually a property that doesn't have a setter. If you have access to the library's code, adding a setter would solve the problem.
EDIT: updated source link to new location in the code.