Until the 1.15 release, NumPy used the nose testing framework, it now uses the pytest framework. The older framework is still maintained in order to support downstream projects that use the old numpy framework, but all tests for NumPy should use pytest.
Our goal is that every module and package in NumPy should have a thorough set of unit tests. These tests should exercise the full functionality of a given routine as well as its robustness to erroneous or unexpected input arguments. Long experience has shown that by far the best time to write the tests is before you write or change the code - this is test-driven development. The arguments for this can sound rather abstract, but we can assure you that you will find that writing the tests first leads to more robust and better designed code. Well-designed tests with good coverage make an enormous difference to the ease of refactoring. Whenever a new bug is found in a routine, you should write a new test for that specific case and add it to the test suite to prevent that bug from creeping back in unnoticed.
Note
SciPy uses the testing framework from numpy.testing, so all of the NumPy examples shown below are also applicable to SciPy
numpy.testing
NumPy can be tested in a number of ways, choose any way you feel comfortable.
You can test an installed NumPy by numpy.test, for example, To run NumPy’s full test suite, use the following:
numpy.test
>>> import numpy >>> numpy.test(label='slow')
The test method may take two or more arguments; the first label is a string specifying what should be tested and the second verbose is an integer giving the level of output verbosity. See the docstring numpy.test for details. The default value for label is ‘fast’ - which will run the standard tests. The string ‘full’ will run the full battery of tests, including those identified as being slow to run. If verbose is 1 or less, the tests will just show information messages about the tests that are run; but if it is greater than 1, then the tests will also provide warnings on missing tests. So if you want to run every test and get messages about which modules don’t have tests:
label
verbose
>>> numpy.test(label='full', verbose=2) # or numpy.test('full', 2)
Finally, if you are only interested in testing a subset of NumPy, for example, the core module, use the following:
core
>>> numpy.core.test()
If you want to build NumPy in order to work on NumPy itself, use runtests.py.To run NumPy’s full test suite:
runtests.py
$ python runtests.py
Testing a subset of NumPy:
$python runtests.py -t numpy/core/tests
For detailed info on testing, see Testing builds
Run tests using your favourite IDE such as vscode or pycharm
If you are writing a package that you’d like to become part of NumPy, please write the tests as you develop the package. Every Python module, extension module, or subpackage in the NumPy package directory should have a corresponding test_<name>.py file. Pytest examines these files for test methods (named test*) and test classes (named Test*).
test_<name>.py
test*
Test*
Suppose you have a NumPy module numpy/xxx/yyy.py containing a function zzz(). To test this function you would create a test module called test_yyy.py. If you only need to test one aspect of zzz, you can simply add a test function:
numpy/xxx/yyy.py
zzz()
test_yyy.py
zzz
def test_zzz(): assert_(zzz() == 'Hello from zzz')
More often, we need to group a number of tests together, so we create a test class:
from numpy.testing import assert_, assert_raises # import xxx symbols from numpy.xxx.yyy import zzz class TestZzz: def test_simple(self): assert_(zzz() == 'Hello from zzz') def test_invalid_parameter(self): assert_raises(...)
Within these test methods, assert_() and related functions are used to test whether a certain assumption is valid. If the assertion fails, the test fails. Note that the Python builtin assert should not be used, because it is stripped during compilation with -O.
assert_()
assert
-O
Note that test_ functions or methods should not have a docstring, because that makes it hard to identify the test from the output of running the test suite with verbose=2 (or similar verbosity setting). Use plain comments (#) if necessary.
test_
verbose=2
#
Also since much of NumPy is legacy code that was originally written without unit tests, there are still several modules that don’t have tests yet. Please feel free to choose one of these modules and develop tests for it.
Unlabeled tests like the ones above are run in the default numpy.test() run. If you want to label your test as slow - and therefore reserved for a full numpy.test(label='full') run, you can label it with pytest.mark.slow:
numpy.test()
numpy.test(label='full')
pytest.mark.slow
import pytest @pytest.mark.slow def test_big(self): print 'Big, slow test'
Similarly for methods:
class test_zzz: @pytest.mark.slow def test_simple(self): assert_(zzz() == 'Hello from zzz')
Testing looks for module-level or class-level setup and teardown functions by name; thus:
def setup(): """Module-level setup""" print 'doing setup' def teardown(): """Module-level teardown""" print 'doing teardown' class TestMe: def setup(): """Class-level setup""" print 'doing setup' def teardown(): """Class-level teardown""" print 'doing teardown'
Setup and teardown functions to functions and methods are known as “fixtures”, and their use is not encouraged.
One very nice feature of testing is allowing easy testing across a range of parameters - a nasty problem for standard unit tests. Use the dec.paramaterize decorator.
dec.paramaterize
Doctests are a convenient way of documenting the behavior of a function and allowing that behavior to be tested at the same time. The output of an interactive Python session can be included in the docstring of a function, and the test framework can run the example and compare the actual output to the expected output.
The doctests can be run by adding the doctests argument to the test() call; for example, to run all tests (including doctests) for numpy.lib:
doctests
test()
>>> import numpy as np >>> np.lib.test(doctests=True)
The doctests are run as if they are in a fresh Python instance which has executed import numpy as np. Tests that are part of a NumPy subpackage will have that subpackage already imported. E.g. for a test in numpy/linalg/tests/, the namespace will be created such that from numpy import linalg has already executed.
import numpy as np
numpy/linalg/tests/
from numpy import linalg
tests/
Rather than keeping the code and the tests in the same directory, we put all the tests for a given subpackage in a tests/ subdirectory. For our example, if it doesn’t already exist you will need to create a tests/ directory in numpy/xxx/. So the path for test_yyy.py is numpy/xxx/tests/test_yyy.py.
numpy/xxx/
numpy/xxx/tests/test_yyy.py
Once the numpy/xxx/tests/test_yyy.py is written, its possible to run the tests by going to the tests/ directory and typing:
python test_yyy.py
Or if you add numpy/xxx/tests/ to the Python path, you could run the tests interactively in the interpreter like this:
numpy/xxx/tests/
>>> import test_yyy >>> test_yyy.test()
__init__.py
setup.py
Usually, however, adding the tests/ directory to the python path isn’t desirable. Instead it would better to invoke the test straight from the module xxx. To this end, simply place the following lines at the end of your package’s __init__.py file:
xxx
... def test(level=1, verbosity=1): from numpy.testing import Tester return Tester().test(level, verbosity)
You will also need to add the tests directory in the configuration section of your setup.py:
... def configuration(parent_package='', top_path=None): ... config.add_subpackage('tests') return config ...
Now you can do the following to test your module:
>>> import numpy >>> numpy.xxx.test()
Also, when invoking the entire NumPy test suite, your tests will be found and run:
>>> import numpy >>> numpy.test() # your tests are included and run automatically!
If you have a collection of tests that must be run multiple times with minor variations, it can be helpful to create a base class containing all the common tests, and then create a subclass for each variation. Several examples of this technique exist in NumPy; below are excerpts from one in numpy/linalg/tests/test_linalg.py:
class LinalgTestCase: def test_single(self): a = array([[1.,2.], [3.,4.]], dtype=single) b = array([2., 1.], dtype=single) self.do(a, b) def test_double(self): a = array([[1.,2.], [3.,4.]], dtype=double) b = array([2., 1.], dtype=double) self.do(a, b) ... class TestSolve(LinalgTestCase): def do(self, a, b): x = linalg.solve(a, b) assert_almost_equal(b, dot(a, x)) assert_(imply(isinstance(b, matrix), isinstance(x, matrix))) class TestInv(LinalgTestCase): def do(self, a, b): a_inv = linalg.inv(a) assert_almost_equal(dot(a, a_inv), identity(asarray(a).shape[0])) assert_(imply(isinstance(a, matrix), isinstance(a_inv, matrix)))
In this case, we wanted to test solving a linear algebra problem using matrices of several data types, using linalg.solve and linalg.inv. The common test cases (for single-precision, double-precision, etc. matrices) are collected in LinalgTestCase.
linalg.solve
linalg.inv
LinalgTestCase
Sometimes you might want to skip a test or mark it as a known failure, such as when the test suite is being written before the code it’s meant to test, or if a test only fails on a particular architecture.
To skip a test, simply use skipif:
skipif
import pytest @pytest.mark.skipif(SkipMyTest, reason="Skipping this test because...") def test_something(foo): ...
The test is marked as skipped if SkipMyTest evaluates to nonzero, and the message in verbose test output is the second argument given to skipif. Similarly, a test can be marked as a known failure by using xfail:
SkipMyTest
xfail
import pytest @pytest.mark.xfail(MyTestFails, reason="This test is known to fail because...") def test_something_else(foo): ...
Of course, a test can be unconditionally skipped or marked as a known failure by using skip or xfail without argument, respectively.
skip
A total of the number of skipped and known failing tests is displayed at the end of the test run. Skipped tests are marked as 'S' in the test results (or 'SKIPPED' for verbose > 1), and known failing tests are marked as 'x' (or 'XFAIL' if verbose > 1).
'S'
'SKIPPED'
verbose > 1
'x'
'XFAIL'
Tests on random data are good, but since test failures are meant to expose new bugs or regressions, a test that passes most of the time but fails occasionally with no code changes is not helpful. Make the random data deterministic by setting the random number seed before generating it. Use either Python’s random.seed(some_number) or NumPy’s numpy.random.seed(some_number), depending on the source of random numbers.
random.seed(some_number)
numpy.random.seed(some_number)
Alternatively, you can use Hypothesis to generate arbitrary data. Hypothesis manages both Python’s and Numpy’s random seeds for you, and provides a very concise and powerful way to describe data (including hypothesis.extra.numpy, e.g. for a set of mutually-broadcastable shapes).
hypothesis.extra.numpy
The advantages over random generation include tools to replay and share failures without requiring a fixed seed, reporting minimal examples for each failure, and better-than-naive-random techniques for triggering bugs.
numpy.
test
Pytest test runner.
A test function is typically added to a package’s __init__.py like so:
from numpy._pytesttester import PytestTester test = PytestTester(__name__).test del PytestTester
Calling this test function finds and runs all tests associated with the module and all its sub-modules.
The name of the module to test.
Notes
Unlike the previous nose-based implementation, this class is not publicly exposed as it performs some numpy-specific warning suppression.
nose
numpy
Full path to the package to test.