I can't seem to get the nose testing framework to recognize modules beneath my test script in the file structure. I've set up the simplest example that demonstrates the problem. I'll explain it below.
Here's the the package file structure:
./__init__.py
./foo.py
./tests
./__init__.py
./test_foo.py
foo.py contains:
def dumb_true():
return True
tests/test_foo.py contains:
import foo
def test_foo():
assert foo.dumb_true()
Both init.py files are empty
If I run nosetests -vv
in the main directory (where foo.py is), I get:
Failure: ImportError (No module named foo) ... ERROR
======================================================================
ERROR: Failure: ImportError (No module named foo)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/usr/lib/python/site-packages/nose-0.11.1-py2.6.egg/nose/loader.py", line 379, in loadTestsFromName
addr.filename, addr.module)
File "/usr/lib/python/site-packages/nose-0.11.1-py2.6.egg/nose/importer.py", line 39, in importFromPath
return self.importFromDir(dir_path, fqname)
File "/usr/lib/python/site-packages/nose-0.11.1-py2.6.egg/nose/importer.py", line 86, in importFromDir
mod = load_module(part_fqname, fh, filename, desc)
File "/home/user/nose_testing/tests/test_foo.py", line 1, in <module>
import foo
ImportError: No module named foo
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Ran 1 test in 0.002s
FAILED (errors=1)
I get the same error when I run from inside the tests/ directory. According to the documentation and an example I found, nose is supposed to add all parent packages to the path as well as the directory from which it is called, but this doesn't seem to be happening in my case.
I'm running Ubuntu 8.04 with Python 2.6.2. I've built and installed nose manually (not with setup_tools) if that matters.
Of course if you have a syntax error in the module being imported that will cause this. For me the problem reared its head when I had a backup of a tests file with a path like module/tests.bak.py in the same directory as tests.py. Also, to deal with the init package/module problem in a Django app, you can run the following (in a bash/OSX shell) to make sure you don't have any init.pyc files lying around:
To those of you finding this question later on: I get the import error if I don't have an
__init__.py
file in my tests directory.My directory structure was like this:
If I ran nosetests:
It would give the
ImportError
that everyone else is seeing. If I add a blank__init__.py
file it works just fine:I got this error message because I run the
nosetests
command from the wrong directory.Silly, but happens.
Are you in a virtualenv? In my case,
nosetests
was the one in/usr/bin/nosetests
, which was using/usr/bin/python
. The packages in the virtualenv definitely won't be in the system path. The following fixed this:For example, with the following directory structure, if you want to run
nosetests
inm1
,m2
orm3
to test some functions inn.py
, you should usefrom m2.m3 import n
intest.py
.Just to complete the question: If you're struggling with structure like this:
And maybe you want to run test from a path outside the project, include your project path inside your PYTHONPATH.
paste it inside your .profile. If you're under a virtual environment, paste it inside the activate in your venv root