zulip/zerver/tests/test_example.py

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from datetime import timedelta
from unittest import mock
import orjson
import time_machine
from django.utils.timezone import now as timezone_now
from zerver.actions.users import do_change_can_create_users, do_change_user_role
from zerver.lib.exceptions import JsonableError
from zerver.lib.streams import access_stream_for_send_message
from zerver.lib.test_classes import ZulipTestCase
from zerver.lib.test_helpers import most_recent_message
from zerver.lib.users import is_administrator_role
from zerver.models import UserProfile, UserStatus
from zerver.models.realms import get_realm
from zerver.models.streams import get_stream
from zerver.models.users import get_user_by_delivery_email
# Most Zulip tests use ZulipTestCase, which inherits from django.test.TestCase.
# We recommend learning Django basics first, so search the web for "django testing".
# A common first result is https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/3.2/topics/testing/
class TestBasics(ZulipTestCase):
def test_basics(self) -> None:
# Django's tests are based on Python's unittest module, so you
# will see us use things like assertEqual, assertTrue, and assertRaisesRegex
# quite often.
# See https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html#unittest.TestCase.assertEqual
self.assertEqual(7 * 6, 42)
class TestBasicUserStuff(ZulipTestCase):
# Zulip has test fixtures with built-in users. It's good to know
# which users are special. For example, Iago is our built-in
# realm administrator. You can also modify users as needed.
def test_users(self) -> None:
# The example_user() helper returns a UserProfile object.
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
self.assertEqual(hamlet.full_name, "King Hamlet")
self.assertEqual(hamlet.role, UserProfile.ROLE_MEMBER)
iago = self.example_user("iago")
self.assertEqual(iago.role, UserProfile.ROLE_REALM_ADMINISTRATOR)
polonius = self.example_user("polonius")
self.assertEqual(polonius.role, UserProfile.ROLE_GUEST)
self.assertEqual(self.example_email("cordelia"), "cordelia@zulip.com")
def test_lib_functions(self) -> None:
# This test is an example of testing a single library function.
# Our tests aren't always at this level of granularity, but it's
# often possible to write concise tests for library functions.
# Get our UserProfile objects first.
iago = self.example_user("iago")
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
# It is a good idea for your tests to clearly demonstrate a
# **change** to a value. So here we want to make sure that
# do_change_user_role will change Hamlet such that
# is_administrator_role becomes True, but we first assert it's
# False.
self.assertFalse(is_administrator_role(hamlet.role))
# Tests should modify properties using the standard library
# functions, like do_change_user_role. Modifying Django
# objects and then using .save() can be buggy, as doing so can
# fail to update caches, RealmAuditLog, or related tables properly.
do_change_user_role(hamlet, UserProfile.ROLE_REALM_OWNER, acting_user=iago)
self.assertTrue(is_administrator_role(hamlet.role))
# After we promote Hamlet, we also demote him. Testing state
# changes like this in a single test can be a good technique,
# although we also don't want tests to be too long.
#
# Important note: You don't need to undo changes done in the
# test at the end. Every test is run inside a database
# transaction, that is reverted after the test completes.
# There are a few exceptions, where tests interact with the
# filesystem (E.g. uploading files), which is generally
# handled by the setUp/tearDown methods for the test class.
do_change_user_role(hamlet, UserProfile.ROLE_MODERATOR, acting_user=iago)
self.assertFalse(is_administrator_role(hamlet.role))
class TestFullStack(ZulipTestCase):
# Zulip's backend tests are largely full-stack integration tests,
# making use of some strategic mocking at times, though we do use
# unit tests for some classes of low-level functions.
#
# See https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/testing/philosophy.html
# for details on this and other testing design decisions.
def test_client_get(self) -> None:
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
# Most full-stack tests require you to log in the user.
# The login_user helper basically wraps Django's client.login().
self.login_user(hamlet)
# Zulip's client_get is a very thin wrapper on Django's client.get.
# We always use the Zulip wrappers for client_get and client_post.
url = f"/json/users/{cordelia.id}"
result = self.client_get(url)
# Almost every meaningful full-stack test for a "happy path" situation
# uses assert_json_success().
self.assert_json_success(result)
# When we unpack the result.content object, we prefer the orjson library.
content = orjson.loads(result.content)
# In this case we will validate the entire payload. It's good to use
# concrete values where possible, but some things, like "cordelia.id",
# are somewhat unpredictable, so we don't hard code values.
#
# Others, like email and full_name here, are fields we haven't
# changed, and thus explicit values would just be hardcoding
# test database defaults in additional places.
self.assertEqual(
content["user"],
dict(
avatar_url=content["user"]["avatar_url"],
avatar_version=1,
date_joined=content["user"]["date_joined"],
delivery_email=None,
email=cordelia.email,
full_name=cordelia.full_name,
is_active=True,
is_admin=False,
is_billing_admin=False,
is_bot=False,
is_guest=False,
is_owner=False,
role=UserProfile.ROLE_MEMBER,
timezone="Etc/UTC",
user_id=cordelia.id,
),
)
def test_client_post(self) -> None:
# Here we're gonna test a POST call to /json/users, and it's
# important that we not only check the payload, but we make
# sure that the intended side effects actually happen.
iago = self.example_user("iago")
self.login_user(iago)
realm = get_realm("zulip")
self.assertEqual(realm.id, iago.realm_id)
# Get our failing test first.
self.assertRaises(
UserProfile.DoesNotExist, lambda: get_user_by_delivery_email("romeo@zulip.net", realm)
)
# Before we can successfully post, we need to ensure
# that Iago can create users.
do_change_can_create_users(iago, True)
params = dict(
email="romeo@zulip.net",
password="xxxx",
full_name="Romeo Montague",
)
# Use the Zulip wrapper.
result = self.client_post("/json/users", params)
# Once again we check that the HTTP request was successful.
self.assert_json_success(result)
content = orjson.loads(result.content)
# Finally we test the side effect of the post.
user_id = content["user_id"]
romeo = get_user_by_delivery_email("romeo@zulip.net", realm)
self.assertEqual(romeo.id, user_id)
def test_can_create_users(self) -> None:
# Typically, when testing an API endpoint, we prefer a single
# test covering both the happy path and common error paths.
#
# See https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/testing/philosophy.html#share-test-setup-code.
iago = self.example_user("iago")
self.login_user(iago)
do_change_can_create_users(iago, False)
valid_params = dict(
email="romeo@zulip.net",
password="xxxx",
full_name="Romeo Montague",
)
# We often use assert_json_error for negative tests.
result = self.client_post("/json/users", valid_params)
self.assert_json_error(result, "User not authorized to create users", 400)
do_change_can_create_users(iago, True)
incomplete_params = dict(
full_name="Romeo Montague",
)
result = self.client_post("/json/users", incomplete_params)
self.assert_json_error(result, "Missing 'email' argument", 400)
# Verify that the original parameters were valid. Especially
# for errors with generic error messages, this is important to
# confirm that the original request with these parameters
# failed because of incorrect permissions, and not because
# valid_params weren't actually valid.
result = self.client_post("/json/users", valid_params)
self.assert_json_success(result)
# Verify error handling when the user already exists.
result = self.client_post("/json/users", valid_params)
self.assert_json_error(result, "Email 'romeo@zulip.net' already in use", 400)
def test_tornado_redirects(self) -> None:
# Let's poke a bit at Zulip's event system.
# See https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/subsystems/events-system.html
# for context on the system itself and how it should be tested.
#
# Most specific features that might feel tricky to test have
# similarly handy helpers, so find similar tests with `git grep` and read them!
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
self.login_user(cordelia)
params = dict(status_text="on vacation")
# Use the capture_send_event_calls context manager to capture events.
with self.capture_send_event_calls(expected_num_events=1) as events:
result = self.api_post(cordelia, "/api/v1/users/me/status", params)
self.assert_json_success(result)
# Check that the POST to Zulip caused the expected events to be sent
# to Tornado.
self.assertEqual(
events[0]["event"],
dict(type="user_status", user_id=cordelia.id, status_text="on vacation"),
)
# Grabbing the last row in the table is OK here, but often it's
# better to look up the object we created via its ID,
# especially if there's risk of similar objects existing
# (E.g. a message sent to that topic earlier in the test).
row = UserStatus.objects.last()
assert row is not None
self.assertEqual(row.user_profile_id, cordelia.id)
self.assertEqual(row.status_text, "on vacation")
class TestStreamHelpers(ZulipTestCase):
# Streams are an important concept in Zulip, and ZulipTestCase
# has helpers such as subscribe, users_subscribed_to_stream,
# and make_stream.
def test_new_streams(self) -> None:
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
othello = self.example_user("othello")
realm = cordelia.realm
stream_name = "Some new stream"
self.subscribe(cordelia, stream_name)
self.assertEqual(set(self.users_subscribed_to_stream(stream_name, realm)), {cordelia})
self.subscribe(othello, stream_name)
self.assertEqual(
set(self.users_subscribed_to_stream(stream_name, realm)), {cordelia, othello}
)
def test_private_stream(self) -> None:
# When we test stream permissions, it's very common to use at least
# two users, so that you can see how different users are impacted.
# We commonly use Othello to represent the "other" user from the primary user.
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
othello = self.example_user("othello")
realm = cordelia.realm
stream_name = "Some private stream"
# Use the invite_only flag in make_stream to make a stream "private".
stream = self.make_stream(stream_name=stream_name, invite_only=True)
self.subscribe(cordelia, stream_name)
self.assertEqual(set(self.users_subscribed_to_stream(stream_name, realm)), {cordelia})
stream = get_stream(stream_name, realm)
self.assertEqual(stream.name, stream_name)
self.assertTrue(stream.invite_only)
# We will now observe that Cordelia can access the stream...
access_stream_for_send_message(cordelia, stream, forwarder_user_profile=None)
# ...but Othello can't.
with self.assertRaisesRegex(JsonableError, "Not authorized to send to channel"):
access_stream_for_send_message(othello, stream, forwarder_user_profile=None)
class TestMessageHelpers(ZulipTestCase):
# If you are testing behavior related to messages, then it's good
# to know about send_stream_message, send_personal_message, and
# most_recent_message.
def test_stream_message(self) -> None:
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
iago = self.example_user("iago")
self.subscribe(hamlet, "Denmark")
self.subscribe(iago, "Denmark")
# The functions to send a message return the ID of the created
# message, so you usually you don't need to look it up.
sent_message_id = self.send_stream_message(
sender=hamlet,
stream_name="Denmark",
topic_name="lunch",
content="I want pizza!",
)
# But if you want to verify the most recent message received
# by a user, there's a handy function for that.
iago_message = most_recent_message(iago)
# Here we check that the message we sent is the last one that
# Iago received. While we verify several properties of the
# last message, the most important to verify is the unique ID,
# since that protects us from bugs if this test were to be
# extended to send multiple similar messages.
self.assertEqual(iago_message.id, sent_message_id)
self.assertEqual(iago_message.sender_id, hamlet.id)
self.assert_message_stream_name(iago_message, "Denmark")
self.assertEqual(iago_message.topic_name(), "lunch")
self.assertEqual(iago_message.content, "I want pizza!")
def test_personal_message(self) -> None:
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
sent_message_id = self.send_personal_message(
from_user=hamlet,
to_user=cordelia,
content="hello there!",
)
cordelia_message = most_recent_message(cordelia)
self.assertEqual(cordelia_message.id, sent_message_id)
self.assertEqual(cordelia_message.sender_id, hamlet.id)
self.assertEqual(cordelia_message.content, "hello there!")
class TestQueryCounts(ZulipTestCase):
def test_capturing_queries(self) -> None:
# It's a common pitfall in Django to accidentally perform
# database queries in a loop, due to lazy evaluation of
# foreign keys. We use the assert_database_query_count
# context manager to ensure our query count is predictable.
#
# When a test containing one of these query count assertions
# fails, we'll want to understand the new queries and whether
# they're necessary. You can investiate whether the changes
# are expected/sensible by comparing print(queries) between
# your branch and main.
hamlet = self.example_user("hamlet")
cordelia = self.example_user("cordelia")
with self.assert_database_query_count(15):
self.send_personal_message(
from_user=hamlet,
to_user=cordelia,
content="hello there!",
)
class TestDevelopmentEmailsLog(ZulipTestCase):
# We have development specific utilities that automate common tasks
# to improve developer productivity.
#
# Ones such is /emails/generate/ endpoint that can be used to generate
# all sorts of emails zulip sends. Those can be accessed at /emails/
# in development server. Let's test that here.
def test_generate_emails(self) -> None:
# It is a common case where some functions that we test rely
# on a certain setting's value. You can test those under the
# context of a desired setting value as done below.
# The endpoint we're testing here rely on these settings:
# * EMAIL_BACKEND: The backend class used to send emails.
# * DEVELOPMENT_LOG_EMAILS: Whether to log emails sent.
# so, we set those to required values.
#
# If the code you're testing creates logs, it is best to capture them
# and verify the log messages. That can be achieved with assertLogs()
# as you'll see below. Read more about assertLogs() at:
# https://docs.python.org/3/library/unittest.html#unittest.TestCase.assertLogs
with self.settings(EMAIL_BACKEND="zproject.email_backends.EmailLogBackEnd"), self.settings(
DEVELOPMENT_LOG_EMAILS=True
), self.assertLogs(level="INFO") as logger, mock.patch(
"zproject.email_backends.EmailLogBackEnd._do_send_messages", lambda *args: 1
):
result = self.client_get(
"/emails/generate/"
) # Generates emails and redirects to /emails/
self.assertEqual("/emails/", result["Location"]) # Make sure redirect URL is correct.
# The above call to /emails/generate/ creates the emails and
# logs the below line for every email.
output_log = (
"INFO:root:Emails sent in development are available at http://testserver/emails"
)
# logger.output is a list of all the log messages captured. Verify it is as expected.
self.assertEqual(logger.output, [output_log] * 18)
# Now, lets actually go the URL the above call redirects to, i.e., /emails/
result = self.client_get(result["Location"])
# assert_in_success_response() is another helper that is commonly used to ensure
# we are on the right page by verifying a string exists in the page's content.
self.assert_in_success_response(["All emails sent in the Zulip"], result)
class TestMocking(ZulipTestCase):
# Mocking, primarily used in testing, is a technique that allows you to
# replace methods or objects with fake entities.
#
# Mocking is generally used in situations where
# we want to avoid running original code for reasons
# like skipping HTTP requests, saving execution time etc.
#
# Learn more about mocking in-depth at:
# https://zulip.readthedocs.io/en/latest/testing/testing-with-django.html#testing-with-mocks
#
# The following test demonstrates a simple use case
# where mocking is helpful in saving test-run time.
def test_edit_message(self) -> None:
"""
Verify if the time limit imposed on message editing is working correctly.
"""
iago = self.example_user("iago")
self.login("iago")
# Set limit to edit message content.
MESSAGE_CONTENT_EDIT_LIMIT = 5 * 60 # 5 minutes
result = self.client_patch(
"/json/realm",
{
"allow_message_editing": "true",
"message_content_edit_limit_seconds": MESSAGE_CONTENT_EDIT_LIMIT,
},
)
self.assert_json_success(result)
sent_message_id = self.send_stream_message(
iago,
"Scotland",
topic_name="lunch",
content="I want pizza!",
)
message_sent_time = timezone_now()
# Verify message sent.
message = most_recent_message(iago)
self.assertEqual(message.id, sent_message_id)
self.assertEqual(message.content, "I want pizza!")
# Edit message content now. This should work as we're editing
# it immediately after sending i.e., before the limit exceeds.
result = self.client_patch(
f"/json/messages/{sent_message_id}", {"content": "I want burger!"}
)
self.assert_json_success(result)
message = most_recent_message(iago)
self.assertEqual(message.id, sent_message_id)
self.assertEqual(message.content, "I want burger!")
# Now that we tested message editing works within the limit,
# we want to verify it doesn't work beyond the limit.
#
# To do that we'll have to wait for the time limit to pass which is
# 5 minutes here. Easy, use time.sleep() but mind that it slows down the
# test to a great extent which isn't good. This is when mocking comes to rescue.
# We can check what the original code does to determine whether the time limit
# exceeded and mock that here such that the code runs as if the time limit
# exceeded without actually waiting for that long!
#
# In this case, it is timezone_now, an alias to django.utils.timezone.now,
# to which the difference with message-sent-time is checked. So, we want
# that timezone_now() call to return `datetime` object representing time
# that is beyond the limit.
#
# Notice how mock.patch() is used here to do exactly the above mentioned.
# mock.patch() here makes any calls to `timezone_now` in `zerver.actions.message_edit`
# to return the value passed to `return_value` in the its context.
# You can also use mock.patch() as a decorator depending on the
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# requirements. Read more at the documentation link provided above.
time_beyond_edit_limit = message_sent_time + timedelta(
seconds=MESSAGE_CONTENT_EDIT_LIMIT + 100
) # There's a buffer time applied to the limit, hence the extra 100s.
with time_machine.travel(time_beyond_edit_limit, tick=False):
result = self.client_patch(
f"/json/messages/{sent_message_id}", {"content": "I actually want pizza."}
)
self.assert_json_error(result, msg="The time limit for editing this message has passed")
message = most_recent_message(iago)
self.assertEqual(message.id, sent_message_id)
self.assertEqual(message.content, "I want burger!")