How can I mock requests and the response?
Rise to the top 3% as a developer or hire one of them at Toptal: https://topt.al/25cXVn
--------------------------------------------------
Music by Eric Matyas
https://www.soundimage.org
Track title: Darkness Approaches Looping
--
Chapters
00:00 How Can I Mock Requests And The Response?
00:52 Accepted Answer Score 84
01:04 Answer 2 Score 280
01:57 Answer 3 Score 475
03:16 Answer 4 Score 53
03:43 Thank you
--
Full question
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1575...
--
Content licensed under CC BY-SA
https://meta.stackexchange.com/help/lice...
--
Tags
#python #mocking #request
#avk47
ANSWER 1
Score 475
This is how you can do it (you can run this file as-is):
import requests
import unittest
from unittest import mock
# This is the class we want to test
class MyGreatClass:
def fetch_json(self, url):
response = requests.get(url)
return response.json()
# This method will be used by the mock to replace requests.get
def mocked_requests_get(*args, **kwargs):
class MockResponse:
def __init__(self, json_data, status_code):
self.json_data = json_data
self.status_code = status_code
def json(self):
return self.json_data
if args[0] == 'http://someurl.com/test.json':
return MockResponse({"key1": "value1"}, 200)
elif args[0] == 'http://someotherurl.com/anothertest.json':
return MockResponse({"key2": "value2"}, 200)
return MockResponse(None, 404)
# Our test case class
class MyGreatClassTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
# We patch 'requests.get' with our own method. The mock object is passed in to our test case method.
@mock.patch('requests.get', side_effect=mocked_requests_get)
def test_fetch(self, mock_get):
# Assert requests.get calls
mgc = MyGreatClass()
json_data = mgc.fetch_json('http://someurl.com/test.json')
self.assertEqual(json_data, {"key1": "value1"})
json_data = mgc.fetch_json('http://someotherurl.com/anothertest.json')
self.assertEqual(json_data, {"key2": "value2"})
json_data = mgc.fetch_json('http://nonexistenturl.com/cantfindme.json')
self.assertIsNone(json_data)
# We can even assert that our mocked method was called with the right parameters
self.assertIn(mock.call('http://someurl.com/test.json'), mock_get.call_args_list)
self.assertIn(mock.call('http://someotherurl.com/anothertest.json'), mock_get.call_args_list)
self.assertEqual(len(mock_get.call_args_list), 3)
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
Important Note: If your MyGreatClass class lives in a different package, say my.great.package, you have to mock my.great.package.requests.get instead of just 'request.get'. In that case your test case would look like this:
import unittest
from unittest import mock
from my.great.package import MyGreatClass
# This method will be used by the mock to replace requests.get
def mocked_requests_get(*args, **kwargs):
# Same as above
class MyGreatClassTestCase(unittest.TestCase):
# Now we must patch 'my.great.package.requests.get'
@mock.patch('my.great.package.requests.get', side_effect=mocked_requests_get)
def test_fetch(self, mock_get):
# Same as above
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()
Enjoy!
ANSWER 2
Score 280
Try using the responses library. Here is an example from their documentation:
import responses
import requests
@responses.activate
def test_simple():
responses.add(responses.GET, 'http://twitter.com/api/1/foobar',
json={'error': 'not found'}, status=404)
resp = requests.get('http://twitter.com/api/1/foobar')
assert resp.json() == {"error": "not found"}
assert len(responses.calls) == 1
assert responses.calls[0].request.url == 'http://twitter.com/api/1/foobar'
assert responses.calls[0].response.text == '{"error": "not found"}'
It provides quite a nice convenience over setting up all the mocking yourself.
There's also HTTPretty... it's not specific to requests library, more powerful in some ways though I found it doesn't lend itself so well to inspecting the requests that it intercepted, which responses does quite easily
There's also httmock.
A new library gaining popularity recently over the venerable requests is httpx, which adds first-class support for async. A mocking library for httpx is: https://github.com/lundberg/respx
ACCEPTED ANSWER
Score 84
Here is what worked for me:
from unittest import mock
@mock.patch('requests.get', mock.Mock(side_effect = lambda k:{'aurl': 'a response', 'burl' : 'b response'}.get(k, 'unhandled request %s'%k)))
ANSWER 4
Score 53
I used requests-mock for writing tests for separate module:
# module.py
import requests
class A():
def get_response(self, url):
response = requests.get(url)
return response.text
And the tests:
# tests.py
import requests_mock
import unittest
from module import A
class TestAPI(unittest.TestCase):
@requests_mock.mock()
def test_get_response(self, m):
a = A()
m.get('http://aurl.com', text='a response')
self.assertEqual(a.get_response('http://aurl.com'), 'a response')
m.get('http://burl.com', text='b response')
self.assertEqual(a.get_response('http://burl.com'), 'b response')
m.get('http://curl.com', text='c response')
self.assertEqual(a.get_response('http://curl.com'), 'c response')
if __name__ == '__main__':
unittest.main()