Change our mypy configuration to disallow untyped defs by default, which ensures *new* files added to the code base are fully typed.
To avoid having to type-annotate everything now, add `# mypy: allow-untyped-defs` to files which are not fully type annotated yet.
As we fully type annotate those modules, we can then just remove that directive from the top.
Move handling of user_properties to `finalize()`.
Previously if a fixture failed during teardown, `pytest_runtest_logreport` would not be called with "teardown", resulting in the user properties not being saved on the JUnit XML file.
Fixes: #11367
Fixes https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/issues/10604 which could intermittently display unexpected behavior between checking if the path exists and requesting creation. This was fairly prevalent when pytest was being invoked in parallel by another test runner (CTest) and trying to create the same parent-folder for multiple XMLs. A modest amount of testing did not reproduce other filesystem race conditions.
This notably does not work around an edge case where the parent path of the XML could be created as a file instead of a folder or link. That vanishingly rare case should cause file creation to fail on the next line, with a fairly obvious exception message.
New versions of sphinx starting showing `__init__` parameters even when
we don't want them to show because they are private (have `_ispytest`
argument).
The only working solution I found was to switch to
`autodoc_typehints_description_target = "documented"` and explicitly
document parameters for which we want to show the types. It's a little
tedious and repetitive in some simple cases, but overall it results in
nicer API docs.
* [pre-commit.ci] pre-commit autoupdate
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
* manual fixes after configuration update
* [pre-commit.ci] auto fixes from pre-commit.com hooks
for more information, see https://pre-commit.ci
Co-authored-by: pre-commit-ci[bot] <66853113+pre-commit-ci[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu>
This makes mypy raise an error whenever it detects code which is
statically unreachable, e.g.
x: int
if isinstance(x, str):
... # Statement is unreachable [unreachable]
This is really neat and finds quite a few logic and typing bugs.
Sometimes the code is intentionally unreachable in terms of types, e.g.
raising TypeError when a function is given an argument with a wrong
type. In these cases a `type: ignore[unreachable]` is needed, but I
think it's a nice code hint.
Part of the effort to reduce dependency on the py library.
Besides that, py.xml implements its own XML serialization which is
pretty scary.
I tried to keep the code with minimal changes (though it could use some
cleanups). The differences in behavior I have noticed are:
- Attributes in the output are not sorted.
- Some unneeded escaping is no longer performed, for example escaping
`"` to `"` in a text node.
1. Remove sys.maxunicode check & comment. Nowadays it is always a
constant 0x10ffff.
2. Pre-generate the pattern. Possible due to 1.
3. Compile the regex lazily. No reason to pay startup cost for it.
4. Add docstring in particular to explain a subtle point.
_pytest.timing is an indirection to 'time' functions, which pytest production
code should use instead of 'time' directly.
'mock_timing' is a new fixture which then mocks those functions, allowing us
to write time-reliable tests which run instantly and are not flaky.
This was triggered by recent flaky junitxml tests on Windows related to timing
issues.
pytest has several instances where plugins set their own attributes on
objects they receive in hooks, like nodes and config. Since plugins are
detached from these object's definition by design, this causes a problem
for type checking because these attributes are not defined and mypy
complains.
Fix this by giving these objects a "store" which can be used by plugins
in a type-safe manner.
Currently this mechanism is private. We can consider exposing it at a
later point.