I'm trying to write test cases for my django project but when I run
"$ ./manage.py test" command
its creating test database but its not creating any tables and I'm getting an error that table does't exists. Any suggestions are welcome. Here is my model which i have created through "./manage.py inspectdb > models.py"
class MyCustomModel(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=200)
last_name = models.CharField(max_length=200)
class Meta:
managed = False
db_table = 'MY_TABLE'
Your table is unmanaged (managed = False
) so it does not get created automatically during migration or testing.
- If your table is supposed to get created during migration, just remove the
managed = False
line
- If your table is a view or legacy table that is not supposed to get created during migration, you need to make the model managed during testing.
If 2, and you're using simple manage.py test
, the best solution I've found is to add a test runner that modifies the managed flag on any unmanaged models. Mine looks like this in a runners.py file:
# Credit:
# http://birdhouse.org/blog/2015/03/25/django-unit-tests-against-unmanaged-databases/
# https://www.caktusgroup.com/blog/2010/09/24/simplifying-the-testing-of-unmanaged-database-models-in-django/
from smapi.settings import *
from django.test.runner import DiscoverRunner
class ManagedModelTestRunner(DiscoverRunner):
"""
Test runner that automatically makes all unmanaged models in your Django
project managed for the duration of the test run, so that one doesn't need
to execute the SQL manually to create them.
"""
def __init__(self, **kwargs):
from django.apps import apps
super(ManagedModelTestRunner, self).__init__(**kwargs)
# for a in apps.get_apps():
# print("Found app %s" % (a))
# NOTE: apps must be registered in INSTALLED_APPS in settings.py before their models appear here
all_models = apps.get_models()
# for m in all_models:
# print("Found model %s - Managed:%s" % (m, m._meta.managed))
self.unmanaged_models = [m for m in all_models if not m._meta.managed]
def setup_test_environment(self, *args, **kwargs):
for m in self.unmanaged_models:
m._meta.managed = True
# print("Modifying model %s to be managed for testing - Managed:%s" % (m, m._meta.managed))
super(ManagedModelTestRunner, self).setup_test_environment(*args, **kwargs)
def teardown_test_environment(self, *args, **kwargs):
super(ManagedModelTestRunner, self).teardown_test_environment(*args, **kwargs)
# reset unmanaged models
for m in self.unmanaged_models:
m._meta.managed = False
# print("Resetting model %s to be unmanaged - Managed:%s" % (m, m._meta.managed))
It is activated by adding this line to settings.py:
# Set Django's test runner to the custom class defined in runners.py
TEST_RUNNER = '<project name>.runners.ManagedModelTestRunner'
Finally, I'm here today because we started using pytest for testing and the solution above stopped working. After a bunch of searching, I discovered a fix in the comments to one of the pages credited in the sample above (source, credit to Jan Murre)
Thanks for the trick. Because I am using pytest-django I had to find
out how to do this my way.
pytest-django uses fixtures. There is already a fixture that does the
setup_test_environment() call.
So, we need a fixture that comes before that, to set the
'_meta.managed'. It seems that automatic fixtures are executed in
alphabetical order, so to come before the pytest-django fixture (that
has a name starting with '_django'), the name of our fixture starts
with a '__'.
@pytest.fixture(autouse=True, scope='session')
def __make_unmanaged_managed():
from django.db.models.loading import get_models
unmanaged_models = [m for m in get_models() if not m._meta.managed]
for m in unmanaged_models:
m._meta.managed = True
We put the above code in conftest.py and our tests started working again.
pytest create table for unmanaged model during testing
add --nomigrations to your pytest.ini
[pytest]
addopts = --nomigrations
and add this to your top-level conftest.py
@pytest.fixture(autouser=True, scope="session")
def django_test_environment(django_test_environment):
from django.apps import apps
get_models = apps.get_models
for m in [m for m in get_models() if not m._meta.managed]:
m._meta.managed = True
It will do the magic
Do you have migrations? Run python manage.py makemigrations
, the DB that's buildt during a test run uses them.