pytest-watcher is a tool to automatically rerun tests (using pytest
by default) whenever your code changes.
Works on Unix (Linux, MacOS, BSD) and Windows.
Example:
- Motivation
- File Events
- Installation
- Usage
- Using a different test runner
- Watching different patterns
- Delay
- Differences with pytest-watch
- Configuring
- Compatibility
- License
- Easy to use and remember
- Works for most Python projects out of the box
- Uses native system monitoring API instead of polling on supported systems (see watchdog documentation)
- Listens for new file, delete file, change and move events
- Runs your tests with latest changes in case of post-processing events (see delay)
- Has an interactive mode with handy keyboard shortcuts (Currently only available on POSIX systems)
pytest-watch has been around for a long time and used to address exactly this problem. Unfortunately, pytest-watch is no longer maintained and doesn't work for many users. This project provides an alternative for it.
See also: Differences with pytest-watch
By default pytest-watcher
looks for the following events:
- New
*.py
file created - Existing
*.py
file modified - Existing
*.py
file deleted - A
*.py
file moved either from or to the watched path
You can specify alternative file patterns to watch. See Watching different patterns
pip install pytest-watcher
Specify the path that you want to watch:
ptw .
or
ptw /home/repos/project
pytest-watcher
will pass any arguments (excepted reserved options) after <path>
to the test runner (which is pytest
by default). For example:
ptw . -x --lf --nf
will call pytest
with the following arguments:
pytest -x --lf --nf
The following options are reserved for pytest-watcher
and will not be passed to the test runner:
--runner
- Specify an alternative test runner--patterns
- Specify file patterns to watch--ignore-patterns
- Specify file patterns to ignore--now
- Run tests immediately after starting the watcher--delay
- Specify the delay before running tests--clear
- Clear the terminal screen before each test run
You can specify an alternative test runner using the --runner
flag:
ptw . --runner tox
You can use the --patterns
flag to specify file patterns that you want to watch. It accepts a list of Unix-style patterns separated by a comma. The default value is "*.py"
Example:
ptw . --patterns '*.py,pyproject.toml'
You can also ignore certain patterns using the --ignore-patterns
flag:
ptw . --ignore-patterns 'settings.py,db.py'
pytest-watcher
uses a short delay (0.2 seconds by default) before triggering the actual test run. The main motivation for this is post-processors that can run after you save the file (for example, black
plugin in your IDE). This ensures that tests will run with the latest version of your code.
You can control the actual delay value with the --delay
flag:
ptw . --delay 0.2
To disable the delay altogether, you can set zero as a value:
ptw . --delay 0
Use the --clear
flag to clear the terminal screen before each test run
ptw . --clear
Even though this project was inspired by pytest-watch
, it's not a fork of it. Therefore, there are differences in behavior:
pytest-watcher
needs you to specify a path to watch as a first argument:
ptw .
pytest-watcher
doesn't start tests immediately by default. You can customize this behavior using--now
flag.
You can configure pytest-watcher
via pyproject.toml
file. Here is the default configuration:
[tool.pytest-watcher]
now = false
clear = true
delay = 0.2
runner = "pytest"
runner_args = []
patterns = ["*.py"]
ignore_patterns = []
The code is compatible with Python versions 3.7+
This project is licensed under the MIT License.