CAN YOU HELP? I don't have the time to maintain this properly. Would you like to volunteer to take it over? Or suggest someone who'd be good to do it?
I've moved it into its own organisation, so there can be multiple admins.
Thanks Rachel
A Django TestRunner for the Behave BDD module
- To provide a Cucumber-compatible BDD toolset for Django;
- To work well with existing Django testing behaviour e.g. use a test database
- To use Cucumber/Gherkin syntax.
- To provide a library of django-useful steps.
- add 'django_behave' to INSTALLED_APPS
- set TEST_RUNNER to 'django_behave.runner.DjangoBehaveTestSuiteRunner'
- add features directories to apps
- decide which automation library you want to use
- setup your environment.py to use this library to open browser (see below)
- copy django_behave/features/steps/library.py, if wanted.
Assuming you have a app called proj.apps.myapp
Edit INSTALLED_APPS, as above. Edit TEST_RUNNER, as above.
Create proj/apps/myapp/features and proj/apps/myapp/features/steps.
Copy example_app/features/tutorial.feature to the features dir. Copy example_app/features/steps/tutorial.py to the features/steps dir.
$ python manage.py test myapp
should then show you django-behave in action, finding the tutorial feature and running the tests.
The main one is the 'behave' module, of course, which provides the BDD toolset for Python.
Also used are:
- django >= 1.4 (needed for the LiveServerTestCase)
- selenium
See requirements.txt for details.
Django_behave is agnostic about which automation library you use inside the tests.
I like splinter (http://splinter.cobrateam.info).
You will need to setup a browser for use with this library.
For example, my features/environment.py file has this:
from splinter.browser import Browser
def before_all(context):
context.browser = Browser()
def after_all(context):
context.browser.quit()
context.browser = None
It is possible to use Behave command line options. In order to avoid conflict with Django's manage.py test options, all options meant for django-behave start with '--behave_'. For example, given the following Behave command:
behave --no-color --tags @mytag ...
this would become:
./manage.py test --behave_no-color --behave_tags @mytag ...
In addition, the option '--behave_browser' can allow the user to specify which browser to use for testing. For example:
./manage.py test --behave_browser firefox ...
The splinter before_all() example above could then use this option:
def before_all(context):
context.browser = Browser(context.config.browser)
You can run all unittest2 tests with the following:
python tests.py
The tests use the example_proj project which has installed the example_app application.