stestr ====== .. image:: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr/actions/workflows/main.yml/badge.svg?branch=main :target: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr/actions/workflows/main.yml :alt: CI Testing status .. image:: https://img.shields.io/codecov/c/gh/mtreinish/stestr?style=flat-square :target: https://codecov.io/gh/mtreinish/stestr :alt: Code coverage .. image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/stestr.svg?style=flat-square :target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/stestr :alt: Latest Version .. image:: https://img.shields.io/github/license/mtreinish/stestr.svg?style=popout-square :target: https://opensource.org/licenses/Apache-2.0 :alt: License: * Read this in other languages: `English`_, `日本語`_ * You can see the full rendered docs at: http://stestr.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ * The code of the project is on Github: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr .. _English: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr/blob/main/README.rst .. _日本語: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr/blob/main/README_ja.rst .. note:: stestr v2.x.x release series will be the last series that supports Python 2. Support for Python 2.7 was dropped in stestr release 3.0.0. Overview -------- stestr is parallel Python test runner designed to execute `unittest`_ test suites using multiple processes to split up execution of a test suite. It also will store a history of all test runs to help in debugging failures and optimizing the scheduler to improve speed. To accomplish this goal it uses the `subunit`_ protocol to facilitate streaming and storing results from multiple workers. .. _unittest: https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html .. _subunit: https://github.com/testing-cabal/subunit stestr originally started as a fork of the `testrepository`_ project. But, instead of being an interface for any test runner that used subunit, like testrepository, stestr concentrated on being a dedicated test runner for python projects. While stestr was originally forked from testrepository it is not backwards compatible with testrepository. At a high level the basic concepts of operation are shared between the two projects but the actual usage is not exactly the same. .. _testrepository: https://testrepository.readthedocs.org/en/latest Installing stestr ----------------- stestr is available via pypi, so all you need to do is run:: pip install -U stestr to get stestr on your system. If you need to use a development version of stestr you can clone the repo and install it locally with:: git clone https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr.git && pip install -e stestr which will install stestr in your python environment in editable mode for local development Using stestr ------------ After you install stestr to use it to run tests is pretty straightforward. The first thing you'll want to do is create a ``.stestr.conf`` file for your project. This file is used to tell stestr where to find tests and basic information about how tests are run. A basic minimal example of the contents of this is:: [DEFAULT] test_path=./project_source_dir/tests which just tells stestr the relative path for the directory to use for test discovery. This is the same as ``--start-directory`` in the standard `unittest discovery`_. .. _unittest discovery: https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html#test-discovery Alternatively, if you're using stestr with `tox `__ you can integrate your stestr config in a ``stestr`` section in the tox.ini file, for example:: [stestr] test_path=./project_source_dir/tests After stestr is configured you should be all set to start using stestr to run tests. To run tests just use:: stestr run it will first create a results repository at ``.stestr/`` in the current working directory and then execute all the tests found by test discovery. If you're just running a single test (or module) and want to avoid the overhead of doing test discovery you can use the ``--no-discover``/``-n`` option to specify that test. For all the details on these commands and more thorough explanation of options see the stestr manual: https://stestr.readthedocs.io/en/latest/MANUAL.html Migrating from testrepository ----------------------------- If you have a project that is already using testrepository stestr's source repo contains a helper script for migrating your repo to use stestr. This script just creates a ``.stestr.conf`` file from a ``.testr.conf`` file. (assuming it uses a standard subunit.run test command format) To run this from your project repo just call:: $STESTR_SOURCE_DIR/tools/testr_to_stestr.py and you'll have a ``.stestr.conf`` created. Building a manpage ------------------ The stestr manual has been formatted so that it renders well as html and as a manpage. The html output and is autogenerated and published to: https://stestr.readthedocs.io/en/latest/MANUAL.html but the manpage has to be generated by hand. To do this you have to manually run sphinx-build with the manpage builder. This has been automated in a small script that should be run from the root of the stestr repository:: tools/build_manpage.sh which will generate the troff file in doc/build/man/stestr.1 which is ready to be packaged and or put in your system's man pages. Contributing ------------ To browse the latest code, see: https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr To clone the latest code, use: ``git clone https://github.com/mtreinish/stestr.git`` Guidelines for contribution are documented at: http://stestr.readthedocs.io/en/latest/developer_guidelines.html Use `github pull requests`_ to submit patches. Before you submit a pull request ensure that all the automated testing will pass by running ``tox`` locally. This will run the test suite and also the automated style rule checks just as they will in CI. If CI fails on your change it will not be able to merge. .. _github pull requests: https://help.github.com/articles/about-pull-requests/ Community --------- Besides Github interactions there is also a stestr IRC channel: #stestr on `OFTC `__ feel free to join to ask questions, or just discuss stestr.