Hmm. I always prefer to disable default event loop in tests by `asyncio.set_event_loop(None)` call.
On Tue, May 12, 2015 at 10:09 AM, Martin Richard <[email protected]> wrote: > Ah, too bad I didn't check that before... and I wanted to be > "extra-careful"! > > I changed the name to asynctest and uploaded the project on pypi: > https://pypi.python.org/pypi/asynctest > > Thanks Ludovic! > > On Monday, May 11, 2015 at 11:39:47 PM UTC+2, Ludovic Gasc wrote: >> >> Hi Martin, >> >> Thanks a lot to contribute to improve AsyncIO toolbox. >> >> However, before to add your library on the wiki page: >> https://github.com/python/asyncio/wiki/ThirdParty >> I've spotted we already have an AsyncIO library called aiotest, made by >> Victor: https://bitbucket.org/haypo/aiotest/ already present on PyPI: >> https://pypi.python.org/pypi/aiotest >> >> I should suggest to rename your library to avoid comprehension errors from >> newcomers. >> >> Have a nice night. >> >> -- >> Ludovic Gasc (GMLudo) >> http://www.gmludo.eu/ >> >> 2015-05-11 22:37 GMT+02:00 Martin Richard <[email protected]>: >>> >>> Hi, >>> >>> I would like to talk about a testing library I wrote on top of unittest >>> called aiotest. The goal is to provide a package compatible with the >>> standard unittest package, but which cuts the boilerplate when testing >>> asyncio code. >>> >>> The code is on github here: https://github.com/Martiusweb/aiotest >>> >>> I use this library for a project at work, and it currently integrates the >>> most common features one should need, such as : >>> >>> - a TestCase class which creates and recycle the loop after each test, >>> allows setUp, tearDown and test functions to be coroutine functions, and >>> checks that the loop ran during a test, >>> - CoroutineMock, which allows to mock a coroutine, and modified versions >>> of Mock, MagicMock which can return a CoroutineMock object instead of a >>> MagicMock object when a spec or spec_set is defined and the original member >>> of the mocked object/class is a coroutine function, >>> - mock.patch() are also updated so they return the enhanced Mock and >>> MagickMock objects, or CoroutineMock is the patched value is a coroutine >>> function. >>> >>> I will add the package to PyPI later this week, since It's my first >>> package, I'd like to be extra careful. >>> >>> I am obviously open to suggestions, feature requests and bug reports! >>> >>> Cheers, >>> Martin >> >> > -- Thanks, Andrew Svetlov
