Setting Command Line Arguments For Main Function Tests
Solution 1:
To add to the previous answers, instead of modifying sys.argv
It is safer to use a context manager which can cover up and protect the underlying object. An example would be
with unittest.mock.patch('sys.argv', ['program_name', '--option1', 'inputFile']):
main()
This works only with python3. For python2 the Mock library does the trick.
I found this solution on a different stackoverflow post here.
Solution 2:
parse_args
takes a argv
parameter. The docs uses this repeatedly in it's examples
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument('--foo', action='store_true')
parser.add_argument('bar')
parser.parse_known_args(['--foo', '--badger', 'BAR', 'spam'])
where the string list replicates sys.argv[1:]
that it would get from the commandline. If the argument is None
(or omitted) the parser uses sys.argv[1:]
.
So if
defmain(argv=None):
# argparse code
args, other = arg_parser.parse_known_args(argv)
return args.first_arg
You could test with
main(['foo', '-f','v'])
The unittesting
file for argparse.py
uses both this approach, and your's of modifying sys.argv
directly.
https://docs.python.org/3/library/argparse.html#beyond-sys-argv
https://docs.python.org/3/library/argparse.html#partial-parsing
Solution 3:
The best solution I found so far is this
def test_main():
sys.argv = ["some_name", "abc"]
res = main()
and for flags:
sys.argv.append("-f")
sys.argv.append("v")
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