Python unittests used in a project structure with multiple directories

Question:

I need to use unittest python library to execute tests about the 3 functions in src/arithmetics.py file. Here is my project structure.

.
├── src
│   └── arithmetics.py
└── test
    └── lcm
        ├── __init__.py
        ├── test_lcm_exception.py
        └── test_lcm.py

src/arithmetics.py

def lcm(p, q):
    p, q = abs(p), abs(q)
    m = p * q
    while True:
        p %= q
        if not p:
            return m // q
        q %= p
        if not q:
            return m // p

def lcm_better(p, q):
    p, q = abs(p), abs(q)
    m = p * q
    h = p % q
    while h != 0:
        p = q
        q = h
        h = p % q
    h = m / q
    return h

def lcm_faulty(p, q):
    r, m = 0, 0
    r = p * q
    while (r > p) and (r > q):
        if (r % p == 0) and (r % q == 0):
            m = r
        r = r - 1
    return m

test/lcm/test_lcm.py

import unittest
from src.arithmetics import *

class LcmTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def test_lcm(self):
        for X in range(1, 100):
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm(0, X))
            self.assertTrue(X == lcm(X, X))

        self.assertTrue(840 == lcm(60, 168))
    
    def test_lcm_better(self):
        for X in range(1, 100):
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_better(0, X))
            self.assertTrue(X == lcm_better(X, X))
    
        self.assertTrue(840 == lcm_better(60, 168))
    
    def test_lcm_faulty(self):
        self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_faulty(0, 0))
    
        for X in range(1, 100):
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_faulty(X, 0))
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_faulty(0, X))
    
        self.assertTrue(840 == lcm_faulty(60, 168))

if __name__ == '__main__':
    unittest.main()

test/lcm/test_lcm_exception.py

import unittest
from src.arithmetics import *

class LcmExceptionTest(unittest.TestCase):
    def test_lcm_exception(self):
        for X in range(0, 100):
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm(0, 0))         # ZeroDivisionError
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm(X, 0))         # ZeroDivisionError

    def test_lcm_better_exception(self):
        for X in range(0, 100):
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_better(0, 0))  # ZeroDivisionError
            self.assertTrue(0 == lcm_better(X, 0))  # ZeroDivisionError
    
    def test_lcm_faulty_exception(self):
        for X in range(1, 100):
            self.assertTrue(X == lcm_faulty(X, X))  # ppcm(1, 1) != 1

if __name__ == '__main__':
    unittest.main()

test/lcm/__init__.py is an empty file

To execute my tests, I tried this command :
python3 -m unittest discover

But the output is :

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Ran 0 tests in 0.000s

OK

I don’t understand how can I run my tests…

Thanks for helping me !

Asked By: user20666094

||

Answers:

Some files __init__.py are missing

I think that the problem is the missing of file __init__.py in your subfolders. Try to add this (empty) file in all your subfolders as I show you below:

test_lcm
├── __init__.py
├── src
|   └── __init__py
│   └── arithmetics.py
└── test
    └── __init__py
    └── lcm
        ├── __init__.py
        ├── test_lcm_exception.py
        └── test_lcm.py

If you watch my tree folders I have create a folder test_lcm as root of the tree. You have to execute the cd command to place yourself inside that folder.
So execute a cd command similar to the following (in my system test_lcm is placed in my home folder):

# go to test_lcm folder
cd ~/test_lcm

After that execute:

# execute test
python3 -m unittest discover

The last part of the output is:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 6 tests in 0.002s

FAILED (failures=1, errors=2)

This show that are executed 6 tests with 2 errors (test_lcm_better_exception and test_lcm_exception fail).

A useful link

This is a useful link to know how to define a Python package.

In particular I want to highlight the following sentence: the __init__.py files are required to make Python treat directories containing the file as packages.

Answered By: frankfalse