.. _integration_with_pytest: Integration with pytest test framework ###################################### *Please mind that integration of twister with pytest is still work in progress. Not every platform type is supported in pytest (yet). If you find any issue with the integration or have an idea for an improvement, please, let us know about it and open a GitHub issue/enhancement.* Introduction ************ Pytest is a python framework that *“makes it easy to write small, readable tests, and can scale to support complex functional testing for applications and libraries”* (``_). Python is known for its free libraries and ease of using it for scripting. In addition, pytest utilizes the concept of plugins and fixtures, increasing its expendability and reusability. A pytest plugin `pytest-twister-harness` was introduced to provide an integration between pytest and twister, allowing Zephyr’s community to utilize pytest functionality with keeping twister as the main framework. Integration with twister ************************ By default, there is nothing to be done to enable pytest support in twister. The plugin is developed as a part of Zephyr’s tree. To enable install-less operation, twister first extends ``PYTHONPATH`` with path to this plugin, and then during pytest call, it appends the command with ``-p twister_harness.plugin`` argument. If one prefers to use the installed version of the plugin, they must add ``--allow-installed-plugin`` flag to twister’s call. Pytest-based test suites are discovered the same way as other twister tests, i.e., by a presence of testcase/sample.yaml. Inside, a keyword ``harness`` tells twister how to handle a given test. In the case of ``harness: pytest``, most of twister workflow (test suites discovery, parallelization, building and reporting) remains the same as for other harnesses. The change happens during the execution step. The below picture presents a simplified overview of the integration. .. figure:: ../../../../../../../zephyr/doc/develop/test/twister_and_pytest.svg :figclass: align-center If ``harness: pytest`` is used, twister delegates the test execution to pytest, by calling it as a subprocess. Required parameters (such as build directory, device to be used, etc.) are passed through a CLI command. When pytest is done, twister looks for a pytest report (results.xml) and sets the test result accordingly. How to create a pytest test *************************** An example folder containing a pytest test, application source code and Twister configuration .yaml file can look like the following: .. code-block:: none test_foo/ ├─── pytest/ │ └─── test_foo.py ├─── src/ │ └─── main.c ├─── CMakeList.txt ├─── prj.conf └─── testcase.yaml An example of a pytest test is given at :zephyr_file:`samples/subsys/testsuite/pytest/shell/pytest/test_shell.py`. Using the configuration provided in the ``testcase.yaml`` file, Twister builds the application from ``src`` and then, if the .yaml file contains a ``harness: pytest`` entry, it calls pytest in a separate subprocess. A sample configuration file may look like this: .. code-block:: yaml tests: some.foo.test: harness: pytest tags: foo By default, pytest tries to look for tests in a ``pytest`` directory located next to a directory with binary sources. A keyword ``pytest_root`` placed under ``harness_config`` section in .yaml file can be used to point to other files, directories or subtests (more info :ref:`here `). Pytest scans the given locations looking for tests, following its default `discovery rules `_. Passing extra arguments ======================= There are two ways for passing extra arguments to the called pytest subprocess: #. From .yaml file, using ``pytest_args`` placed under ``harness_config`` section - more info :ref:`here `. #. Through Twister command line interface as ``--pytest-args`` argument. This can be particularly useful when one wants to select a specific testcase from a test suite. For instance, one can use a command: .. code-block:: console $ ./scripts/twister --platform native_sim -T samples/subsys/testsuite/pytest/shell \ -s samples/subsys/testsuite/pytest/shell/sample.pytest.shell \ --pytest-args='-k test_shell_print_version' Fixtures ******** dut === Give access to a `DeviceAdapter`_ type object, that represents Device Under Test. This fixture is the core of pytest harness plugin. It is required to launch DUT (initialize logging, flash device, connect serial etc). This fixture yields a device prepared according to the requested type (``native``, ``qemu``, ``hardware``, etc.). All types of devices share the same API. This allows for writing tests which are device-type-agnostic. Scope of this fixture is determined by the ``pytest_dut_scope`` keyword placed under ``harness_config`` section (more info :ref:`here `). .. code-block:: python from twister_harness import DeviceAdapter def test_sample(dut: DeviceAdapter): dut.readlines_until('Hello world') shell ===== Provide a `Shell `_ class object with methods used to interact with shell application. It calls ``wait_for_promt`` method, to not start scenario until DUT is ready. The shell fixture calls ``dut`` fixture, hence has access to all its methods. The ``shell`` fixture adds methods optimized for interactions with a shell. It can be used instead of ``dut`` for tests. Scope of this fixture is determined by the ``pytest_dut_scope`` keyword placed under ``harness_config`` section (more info :ref:`here `). .. code-block:: python from twister_harness import Shell def test_shell(shell: Shell): shell.exec_command('help') mcumgr ====== Sample fixture to wrap ``mcumgr`` command-line tool used to manage remote devices. More information about MCUmgr can be found here :ref:`mcu_mgr`. .. note:: This fixture requires the ``mcumgr`` available in the system PATH Only selected functionality of MCUmgr is wrapped by this fixture. For example, here is a test with a fixture ``mcumgr`` .. code-block:: python from twister_harness import DeviceAdapter, Shell, McuMgr def test_upgrade(dut: DeviceAdapter, shell: Shell, mcumgr: McuMgr): # free the serial port for mcumgr dut.disconnect() # upload the signed image mcumgr.image_upload('path/to/zephyr.signed.bin') # obtain the hash of uploaded image from the device second_hash = mcumgr.get_hash_to_test() # test a new upgrade image mcumgr.image_test(second_hash) # reset the device remotely mcumgr.reset_device() # continue test scenario, check version etc. Classes ******* DeviceAdapter ============= .. autoclass:: twister_harness.DeviceAdapter .. automethod:: launch .. automethod:: connect .. automethod:: readline .. automethod:: readlines .. automethod:: readlines_until .. automethod:: write .. automethod:: disconnect .. automethod:: close .. _shell_class: Shell ===== .. autoclass:: twister_harness.Shell .. automethod:: exec_command .. automethod:: wait_for_prompt Examples of pytest tests in the Zephyr project ********************************************** * :zephyr:code-sample:`pytest_shell` * MCUmgr tests - :zephyr_file:`tests/boot/with_mcumgr` * LwM2M tests - :zephyr_file:`tests/net/lib/lwm2m/interop` * GDB stub tests - :zephyr_file:`tests/subsys/debug/gdbstub` FAQ *** How to flash/run application only once per pytest session? ========================================================== ``dut`` is a fixture responsible for flashing/running application. By default, its scope is set as ``function``. This can be changed by adding to .yaml file ``pytest_dut_scope`` keyword placed under ``harness_config`` section: .. code-block:: yaml harness: pytest harness_config: pytest_dut_scope: session More info can be found :ref:`here `. How to run only one particular test from a python file? ======================================================= This can be achieved in several ways. In .yaml file it can be added using a ``pytest_root`` entry placed under ``harness_config`` with list of tests which should be run: .. code-block:: yaml harness: pytest harness_config: pytest_root: - "pytest/test_shell.py::test_shell_print_help" Particular tests can be also chosen by pytest ``-k`` option (more info about pytest keyword filter can be found `here `_ ). It can be applied by adding ``-k`` filter in ``pytest_args`` in .yaml file: .. code-block:: yaml harness: pytest harness_config: pytest_args: - "-k test_shell_print_help" or by adding it to Twister command overriding parameters from the .yaml file: .. code-block:: console $ ./scripts/twister ... --pytest-args='-k test_shell_print_help' How to get information about used device type in test? ====================================================== This can be taken from ``dut`` fixture (which represents `DeviceAdapter`_ object): .. code-block:: python device_type: str = dut.device_config.type if device_type == 'hardware': ... elif device_type == 'native': ... How to rerun locally pytest tests without rebuilding application by Twister? ============================================================================ This can be achieved by running Twister once again with ``--test-only`` argument added to Twister command. Another way is running Twister with highest verbosity level (``-vv``) and then copy-pasting from logs command dedicated for spawning pytest (log started by ``Running pytest command: ...``). Is this possible to run pytest tests in parallel? ================================================= Basically ``pytest-harness-plugin`` wasn't written with intention of running pytest tests in parallel. Especially those one dedicated for hardware. There was assumption that parallelization of tests is made by Twister, and it is responsible for managing available sources (jobs and hardwares). If anyone is interested in doing this for some reasons (for example via `pytest-xdist plugin `_) they do so at their own risk. Limitations *********** * Not every platform type is supported in the plugin (yet).