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Setting up the TurboGears Test Environment and Testing

Initial Environment Setup

Please follow the instructions on the install page to get your environment started. Pay special attention to the virtualenv setup. You want to do your TG development within a clean environment that will not interfere with any existing projects you may have.

Package Installation

Because Turbogears allows the user to swap out so many different moving parts, we need to be able to prove that we can support these components regularly in order to provide a robust experience for our users.

Right now TG testing depends on lxml because of chameleon.genshi, a very fast implementation of genshi that uses the lxml driver. This driver is written in C, and therfore requires some linkage to work properly. Lot’s of folks have problems getting this to work, but if you try this, it will often work:

$ STATIC_DEPS=true; easy_install lxml

You can then install chameleon.genshi successfully:

$ easy_install chameleon.genshi

Tests do have more dependencies than simply using TurboGears because they use all the opional module and also some test specific utilities. In order to install all of these, make sure that you have TurboGears2 registered with Setuptools, either by installing it or by seting it up in development mode (setup.py develop) then ask Setuptools to install the test dependencies:

$ easy_install ‘TurboGears2[core-testing]’

Testing

Automated unit tests are essential to make the future growth of the project as error free as possible.

Although TurboGears2 uses Nose you should run tests with setup.py:

(tg2dev)$ cd tg2
(tg2dev)$ python setup.py test

Sometimes Nose may present false import errors, se we recommend running setup.py as above if you get failed tests with ImportError.

With any luck, your tests will run and produce something like the following output:

----------------------------------------------------------------------
 Ran 281 tests in 2.144s

 OK

As you can see, the tests really take very little time to run, so it makes sense to run the tests any time you want to contribute code in order to make certain it does not break any existing functionality.

Coverage

Adequate code coverage is a goal for the TurboGears project, as it is probably the minimum you could do to make sure your code is well tested. Code coverage testing is built into nose and easy to use. To test TurboGears and see the code coverage output simply type:

$ nosetests --with-coverage --cover-package=tg

The end your output will look something like this:

TOTAL                                 1554   1407    90%
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 245 tests in 3.659s

OK

TurboGears does not currently have 100% coverage, and we realize this is an issue. We’d love some help in this area, so if you have some time and want to learn more about the internals of TurboGears, pick a few untested lines of code and figure out how to supply sufficient tests to cover that code.