Using py.test is great and the support for test fixtures is pretty awesome. However, in order to share your fixtures across your entire module, py.test suggests you define all your fixtures within one single conftest.py
file. This is impractical if you have a large quantity of fixtures -- for better organization and readibility, you would much rather define your fixtures across multiple, well-named files. But how do you do that? ...No one on the internet seemed to know.
Turns out, however, you can define fixtures in individual files like this:
tests/fixtures/add.py
import pytest
@pytest.fixture
def add(x, y):
x + y
Then you can import these fixtures in your conftest.py
:
tests/conftest.py
import pytest
from fixtures.add import add
...and then you're good to test!
tests/adding_test.py
import pytest
@pytest.mark.usefixtures("add")
def test_adding(add):
assert add(2, 3) == 5
Because of the modularity, tests will have to be run with python -m py.test
instead of py.test
directly.
Hello everyone, thank you for all the insightful comments.
If you use PyCharm, it seems that, for now, you won't be able to use the glob approach because of this issue, which cleans up the "unused import" needed with this approach.
My recommendation would be to use the hard-coded list and maintain the conftest.py file.
With this, you also do not need to import the fixture in your test file.
Otherwise, here's a summary of the above:
tests/conftest.py
tests/fixtures/example.py
tests/unit/mytest.py