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Testing packages#

When you are developing a package, you should write tests for it. The tests are automatically executed right after the package build has finished.

The tests from the test section are actually packaged into your package and can also be executed straight from the existing package.

The idea behind adding the tests into the package is that you can execute the tests independently from building the package. That is also why we are shipping a test subcommand that takes as input an existing package and executes the tests:

rattler-build test --package-file ./xtensor-0.24.6-h60d57d3_0.tar.bz2

Running the above command will extract the package and create a clean environment where the package and dependencies are installed. Then the tests are executed in this newly-created environment.

If you inspect the package contents, you would find the test files under info/test/*.

How tests are translated#

The tests section allows you to specify the following things:

tests:
  - script:
      # commands to run to test the package. If any of the commands
      # returns with an error code, the test is considered failed.
      - echo "Hello world"
      - pytest ./tests

    # additional requirements at test time
    requirements:
      run:
        - pytest

    files:
      # Extra files to be copied to the test directory from the "work directory"
      source:
        - tests/
        - test.py
        - *.sh
      recipe:
        - more_tests/*.py

  # This test section tries to import the Python modules and errors if it can't
  - python:
      imports:
        - mypkg
        - mypkg.subpkg

When you are writing a test for your package, additional files are created and added to your package. These files are placed under the info/tests/{index}/ folder for each test.

For a script test:

  • All the files are copied straight into the test folder (under info/tests/{index}/)
  • The script is turned into a run_test.sh or run_test.bat file
  • The extra requirements are stored as a JSON file called test_time_dependencies.json

For a Python import test:

  • A JSON file is created that is called python_test.json and stores the imports to be tested and wether to execute pip check or not. This file is placed under info/tests/{index}/

For a downstream test:

  • A JSON file is created that is called downstream_test.json and stores the downstream tests to be executed. This file is placed under info/tests/{index}/

Legacy tests#

Legacy tests (from conda-build) are still supported for execution. These tests are stored as files under the info/test/ folder.

The files are:

  • run_test.sh (Unix)
  • run_test.bat (Windows)
  • run_test.py (for the Python import tests)
  • test_time_dependencies.json (for additional dependencies at test time)

Additionally, the info/test/ folder contains all the files specified in the test section as source_files and files. The tests are executed pointing to this directory as the current working directory.