=================================== Mock - Mocking and Testing Library =================================== .. include:: ../README.rst .. module:: mock :synopsis: Mock object and testing library. .. index:: introduction .. toctree:: :hidden: changelog Python Version Compatibility ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ * Version 1.0.1 is the last version compatible with Python < 2.6. * Version 1.3.0 is the last version compatible with Python 3.2. * Version 2.0.0 is the last version compatible with Python 2.6. * Version 2.0.0 is the last version offering official Jython support. .. index:: installing .. _installing: Installing ++++++++++ .. index:: repository .. index:: git You can checkout the latest development version from GitHub repository with the following command: ``git clone https://github.com/testing-cabal/mock.git`` .. index:: pip You can install mock with pip: | ``pip install -U mock`` .. index:: bug reports Bug Reports +++++++++++ Issues with the backport process, such as compatibility with a particular Python, should be reported to the `bug tracker `_. Feature requests and issues with Mock functionality should be reported to the `Python bug tracker `_. .. index:: python changes Changelog +++++++++ See the :doc:`change log `. .. index:: maintainer notes Maintainer Notes ++++++++++++++++ Development ----------- Checkout from git (see :ref:`installing`) and submit pull requests. Committers can just push as desired: since all semantic development takes place in cPython, the backport process is as lightweight as we can make it. mock is CI tested using Travis-CI on Python versions 2.7, 3.4, 3.5, 3.6, pypy, pypy3. If you end up fixing anything backport-specific, please add an entry to the top of ``CHANGELOG.rst`` so it shows up in the next release notes. Releasing --------- NB: please use semver. Bump the major component on API breaks, minor on all non-bugfix changes, patch on bugfix only changes. 1. Run ``release.py [major|minor|bugfix]`` which will roll out new NEWS items, bump the version number and create a commit for the release. 2. Review that commit, feel free to amend it if you want to note anything manually in ``CHANGELOG.rst``. 3. Push to the ``master`` branch on https://github.com/testing-cabal/mock.git and the Circle CI automation will take care of pushing releases to PyPI and creating a tag. Backporting rules ----------------- - ``isinstance`` checks in cPython to ``type`` need to check ``ClassTypes``. Code calling ``obj.isidentifier`` needs to change to ``_isidentifier(obj)``. - f-strings need to be rewritten using some other string substitution. - ``assertRaisesRegex`` needs to be ``assertRaisesRegexp`` for Python 2. - If test code won't compile on a particular version of Python, move it to a matching ``_py{version}.py`` file. If ``{version}`` isn't 3, adjust ``conftest.py``. - If code such as this causes coverage checking to drop below 100%: .. code-block:: python def will_never_be_called(): pass It should be adjusted to the following pattern, preferably upstream, so that the ``.coveragerc`` in this repo knows to ignore it: .. code-block:: python def will_never_be_called(): pass Backporting process ------------------- 1. Clone cpython and mock into the same directory, eg: .. code-block:: bash mkdir vcs cd vcs git clone https://github.com/python/cpython.git git clone https://github.com/testing-cabal/mock.git Make sure they both on master and up to date! 2. Create a branch in your ``mock`` clone and switch to it. 3. Make sure you build a suitable virtualenv for Mock development and activate it. For backporting, this should use Python 3.7+. 4. Run ``backport.py``: .. code-block:: bash cd vcs/mock python backport.py This will find the next cpython patch that needs to be applied, munge it and attempt to apply it with ``git am``. If it succeeds, run the tests and/or push your branch up to a fork and do a pull request into the master branch of the main repo to kick off the continuous integration tests. If it fails, you'll have to manually work with what ``git status`` shows to get the patch committed. If it turns out that there's nothing that should be applied from the failed commit, run ``python backport.py --skip-current``, maybe with ``--skip-reason``. If you have to make changes, please do a ``git commit --amend`` and add notes about what needed doing below the ``Signed-off-by`` block. If you have to make changes because tests fail with an applied patch, please make those changes in a followup commit and take note of the "Backporting rules" above. 5. Rinse and repeat until ``backport.py`` reports no more patches need applying. 6. If ``backport.py`` has updated ``lastsync.txt``, now would be a good time to commit that change.