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Chris Dent 4b82d0ddc7 Clean up content-type parsing
Some of the places in which not_binary was being called were
not guarded in a way that made sure that the content-type being
sent to not_binary was just a media-type (without charset etc).

A parse_content_type method was extracted from the
extract_content_type method so that both a headers dict or a simple
header value could be parsed.

This seemed more generic and contractual than making not_binary
extract if required.

Fixes #158
2016-07-03 14:11:12 -04:00
docs release 1.23.0 2016-06-16 14:22:49 +01:00
gabbi Clean up content-type parsing 2016-07-03 14:11:12 -04:00
.gitignore Documentation Updates 2015-06-08 08:39:21 -05:00
.testr.conf Be more visible about test loader needs when concurrent 2016-06-16 13:38:56 +01:00
.travis.yml Add support for pytest 2016-04-05 15:20:52 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING.md Make pep8 rules more clear in CONTRIBUTING.md 2015-10-11 13:01:21 +01:00
LICENSE clean up some copyright strays 2016-03-05 11:46:26 +00:00
Makefile Run release tox with --skip-missing-interpreters 2016-04-16 11:08:59 +01:00
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Documentation Status

Gabbi

Release Notes

Gabbi is a tool for running HTTP tests where requests and responses are represented in a declarative YAML-based form. The simplest test looks like this:

tests:
- name: A test
  GET: /api/resources/id

See the docs for more details on the many features and formats for setting request headers and bodies and evaluating responses.

Gabbi is tested with Python 2.7, 3.4, 3.5 and pypy.

Tests can be run using unittest style test runners, pytest or from the command line with a gabbi-run script.

There is a gabbi-demo repository which provides a tutorial via its commit history. The demo builds a simple API using gabbi to facilitate test driven development.

Purpose

Gabbi works to bridge the gap between human readable YAML files that represent HTTP requests and expected responses and the obscured realm of Python-based, object-oriented unit tests in the style of the unittest module and its derivatives.

Each YAML file represents an ordered list of HTTP requests along with the expected responses. This allows a single file to represent a process in the API being tested. For example:

  • Create a resource.
  • Retrieve a resource.
  • Delete a resource.
  • Retrieve a resource again to confirm it is gone.

At the same time it is still possible to ask gabbi to run just one request. If it is in a sequence of tests, those tests prior to it in the YAML file will be run (in order). In any single process any test will only be run once. Concurrency is handled such that one file runs in one process.

These features mean that it is possible to create tests that are useful for both humans (as tools for improving and developing APIs) and automated CI systems.

Testing

To run the built in tests (the YAML files are in the directories gabbi/gabbits_* and loaded by the file gabbi/test_*.py), you can use tox:

tox -epep8,py27,py34

Or if you have the dependencies installed (or a warmed up virtualenv) you can run the tests by hand and exit on the first failure:

python -m subunit.run discover -f gabbi | subunit2pyunit

Testing can be limited to individual modules by specifying them after the tox invocation:

tox -epep8,py27,py34 -- test_driver test_handlers

If you wish to avoid running tests that connect to internet hosts, set GABBI_SKIP_NETWORK to True.