mirror of
				https://github.com/graphql-python/graphene.git
				synced 2025-10-31 16:07:27 +03:00 
			
		
		
		
	* actually run the tests in python 3.12 and 3.13 * remove snapshottest from the example tests so that the tests pass in 3.12 and 3.13 again * remove the section about snapshot testing from the testing docs because the snapshottest package doesn't work on Python 3.12 and above * fix assertion for badly formed JSON input on Python 3.13 * fix deprecation warning about datetime.utcfromtimestamp()
		
			
				
	
	
		
			72 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			72 lines
		
	
	
		
			2.3 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			ReStructuredText
		
	
	
	
	
	
| ===================
 | ||
| Testing in Graphene
 | ||
| ===================
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Automated testing is an extremely useful bug-killing tool for the modern developer. You can use a collection of tests – a test suite – to solve, or avoid, a number of problems:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| - When you’re writing new code, you can use tests to validate your code works as expected.
 | ||
| - When you’re refactoring or modifying old code, you can use tests to ensure your changes haven’t affected your application’s behavior unexpectedly.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Testing a GraphQL application is a complex task, because a GraphQL application is made of several layers of logic – schema definition, schema validation, permissions and field resolution.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| With Graphene test-execution framework and assorted utilities, you can simulate GraphQL requests, execute mutations, inspect your application’s output and generally verify your code is doing what it should be doing.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Testing tools
 | ||
| -------------
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Graphene provides a small set of tools that come in handy when writing tests.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Test Client
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| The test client is a Python class that acts as a dummy GraphQL client, allowing you to test your views and interact with your Graphene-powered application programmatically.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Some of the things you can do with the test client are:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| - Simulate Queries and Mutations and observe the response.
 | ||
| - Test that a given query request is rendered by a given Django template, with a template context that contains certain values.
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Overview and a quick example
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| To use the test client, instantiate ``graphene.test.Client`` and retrieve GraphQL responses:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. code:: python
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     from graphene.test import Client
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     def test_hey():
 | ||
|         client = Client(my_schema)
 | ||
|         executed = client.execute('''{ hey }''')
 | ||
|         assert executed == {
 | ||
|             'data': {
 | ||
|                 'hey': 'hello!'
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|         }
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| Execute parameters
 | ||
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| You can also add extra keyword arguments to the ``execute`` method, such as
 | ||
| ``context``, ``root``, ``variables``, ...:
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| 
 | ||
| .. code:: python
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     from graphene.test import Client
 | ||
| 
 | ||
|     def test_hey():
 | ||
|         client = Client(my_schema)
 | ||
|         executed = client.execute('''{ hey }''', context={'user': 'Peter'})
 | ||
|         assert executed == {
 | ||
|             'data': {
 | ||
|                 'hey': 'hello Peter!'
 | ||
|             }
 | ||
|         }
 |