is currently being supported in addition to nose, and will likely
be preferred to nose going forward. The nose plugin system used
by SQLAlchemy has been split out so that it works under pytest as
well. There are no plans to drop support for nose at the moment
and we hope that the test suite itself can continue to remain as
agnostic of testing platform as possible. See the file
README.unittests.rst for updated information on running tests
with pytest.
The test plugin system has also been enhanced to support running
tests against mutiple database URLs at once, by specifying the ``--db``
and/or ``--dburi`` flags multiple times. This does not run the entire test
suite for each database, but instead allows test cases that are specific
to certain backends make use of that backend as the test is run.
When using pytest as the test runner, the system will also run
specific test suites multiple times, once for each database, particularly
those tests within the "dialect suite". The plan is that the enhanced
system will also be used by Alembic, and allow Alembic to run
migration operation tests against multiple backends in one run, including
third-party backends not included within Alembic itself.
Third party dialects and extensions are also encouraged to standardize
on SQLAlchemy's test suite as a basis; see the file README.dialects.rst
for background on building out from SQLAlchemy's test platform.
to :class:`.Engine`. This method works similarly to
:class:`.Connection.execution_options` in that it creates
a copy of the parent object which will refer to the new
set of options. The method can be used to build
sharding schemes where each engine shares the same
underlying pool of connections. The method
has been tested against the horizontal shard
recipe in the ORM as well.
become an externally usable package but still remains within the main sqlalchemy parent package.
in this system, we use kind of an ugly hack to get the noseplugin imported outside of the
"sqlalchemy" package, while still making it available within sqlalchemy for usage by
third party libraries.
this uses pool events but bypasses the pool's fairy/record/dispose services. pypy still seems to expose
some holes in that at least as far as what some (or maybe just one, cant find it yet) of the tests does.
haven't tested this too deeply, just on sqlite + postgres, cypthon 2.7 + pypy. will see what the buildbot
says
outside of "sqlalchemy" and under "test/".
Rationale:
- coverage plugin works without issue, without need for an awkward
additional package install
- command line for "nosetests" isn't polluted with SQLAlchemy options
[ticket:1949]