.. be in -*- rst -*- mode! General tips and tricks ================================ Interactively passing positional arguments ----------------------------------------------- If you invoke ``tox`` like this:: tox -- -x tests/test_something.py the arguments after the ``--`` will be substituted everywhere where you specify ``{posargs}`` in your test commands, for example using ``py.test``:: # in the testenv or testenv:NAME section of your tox.ini commands = py.test {posargs} or using ``nosetests``:: commands = nosetests {posargs} the above ``tox`` invocation will trigger the test runners to stop after the first failure and to only run a particular test file. You can specify defaults for the positional arguments using this syntax:: commands = nosetests {posargs:--with-coverage} .. _`sphinx checks`: Integrating "sphinx" documentation checks ---------------------------------------------- In a ``testenv`` environment you can specify any command and thus you can easily integrate sphinx_ documentation integrity during a tox test run. Here is an example ``tox.ini`` configuration:: [testenv:docs] basepython=python changedir=doc deps=sphinx commands= sphinx-build -W -b html -d {envtmpdir}/doctrees . {envtmpdir}/html This will create a dedicated ``docs`` virtual environment and install the ``sphinx`` dependency which itself will install the ``sphinx-build`` tool which you can then use as a test command. Note that sphinx output is redirected to the virtualenv environment temporary directory to prevent sphinx from caching results between runs. You can now call:: tox which will make the sphinx tests part of your test run. .. _`TOXENV`: Selecting one or more environments to run tests against -------------------------------------------------------- Using the ``-e ENV[,ENV2,...]`` option you explicitely list the environments where you want to run tests against. For example, given the previous sphinx example you may call:: tox -e docs which will make ``tox`` only manage the ``docs`` environment and call its test commands. You may specify more than one environment like this:: tox -e py25,py26 which would run the commands of the ``py25`` and ``py26`` testenvironments respectively. The special value ``ALL`` selects all environments. You can also specify an environment list in your ``tox.ini``:: [tox] envlist = py25,py26 or override it from the command line or from the environment variable ``TOXENV``:: export TOXENV=py25,py26 # in bash style shells .. _artifacts: Access package artifacts between multiple tox-runs -------------------------------------------------------- If you have multiple projects using tox you can make use of a ``distshare`` directory where ``tox`` will copy in sdist-packages so that another tox run can find the "latest" dependency. This feature allows to test a package against an unreleased development version or even an uncommitted version on your own machine. By default, ``{homedir}/.tox/distshare`` will be used for copying in and copying out artifacts (i.e. Python packages). For project ``two`` to depend on the ``one`` package you use the following entry:: # example two/tox.ini [testenv] deps= {distshare}/one-*.zip # install latest package from "one" project That's all. Tox running on project ``one`` will copy the sdist-package into the ``distshare`` directory after which a ``tox`` run on project ``two`` will grab it because ``deps`` contain an entry with the ``one-*.zip`` pattern. If there is more than one matching package the highest version will be taken. ``tox`` uses verlib_ to compare version strings which must be compliant with :pep:`386`. If you want to use this with Jenkins_, also checkout the :ref:`jenkins artifact example`. .. _verlib: https://bitbucket.org/tarek/distutilsversion/ basepython defaults, overriding ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ By default, for any ``pyXY`` test environment name the underlying "pythonX.Y" executable will be searched in your system ``PATH``. It must exist in order to successfully create virtualenv environments. On Windows a ``pythonX.Y`` named executable will be searched in typical default locations using the ``C:\PythonX.Y\python.exe`` pattern. For ``jython`` and ``pypy`` the respective ``jython`` and ``pypy-c`` names will be looked for. You can override any of the default settings by defining the ``basepython`` variable in a specific test environment section, for example:: [testenv:py27] basepython=/my/path/to/python2.7 Avoiding expensive sdist ------------------------ Some projects are large enough that running and sdist, followed by an install everytime can be prohibitively costly. To solve this, there are two different options you can add to the ``tox`` section. First, you can simply ask tox to please not make an sdist:: [tox] skipsdist=True If you do this, your local software package will not be installed into the virtualenv. You should probably be ok with that, or take steps to deal with it in your commands section:: [testenv] commands = python setup.py develop py.test Running setup.py develop is a common enough model that it has its own option:: [testenv] usedevelop=True And a corresponding command line option ``--develop``, which will set ``skipsdist`` to True and then perform the ``setup.py develop`` step at the place where ``tox`` normally perfoms the installation of the sdist. Specifically, it actually runs ``pip install -e .`` behind the scenes, which itself calls ``setup.py develop``. There is an optimization coded in to not bother re-running the command if ``$projectname.egg-info`` is newer than ``setup.py`` or ``setup.cfg``. .. include:: ../links.txt