tox-factor enables running a subset of tox test envs, based on factor matching.
Take the following tox config:
[tox]
envlist =
py{35,36,37}-django{20,21,22}-{redis,memcached}
The above defines 18 test envs, based on three factor groups - the python version, the django version, and a caching backend. While the above is powerful, tox does not provide a way to run builds based on a subset of those factors. For example, the call to run all Python 3.7 builds would be:
$ tox -e py37-django20-redis,py37-django20-memcached,py37-django21-redis,py37-django21-memcached,py37-django22-redis,py37-django22-memcached
tox-factor functions similarly to the -e <env name>
argument, except it runs
all envs that match the given factor. The six py37
builds could be ran with:
$ tox -f py37
In addition to ease of use when running tox locally, this is useful for some CI setups. For example, two common tox CI patterns are to either:
-
Define a CI job for each tox test env. e.g.,
tox -e py37-django20-redis
-
Define a CI job for a common environment that runs multiple test envs. e.g.,
tox -e py37-django20-redis,py37-django20-memcached,...
For the latter case, this plugin eases maintenance of CI, as it could be
shortened to tox -f py37
. Additionally, take the following update to the above
tox config:
[tox]
envlist =
py{35,36,37}-django{20,21,22}-{redis,memcached}
py{36,37,38}-django{30}-{redis,memcached}
By using tox-factor, it wouldn't be necessary to update the Python 3.7 build, as
the new py37-django30-*
env would be matched automatically.
If you want to verify which test envs are actually ran, combine the factor
matching with the -l
flag. This will display all test envs that match. e.g.,
$ tox -f py37 -l
py37-django20-redis
py37-django20-memcached
py37-django21-redis
py37-django21-memcached
py37-django22-redis
py37-django22-memcached
The factor option accepts a comma-separated list (similar to the -e
option).
$ tox -f py27,py37 -l
py27-django111
py37-django21
Alternatively, factors can be provided via the TOXFACTOR
environment variable:
$ TOXFACTOR=py27,py37 tox -l
py27-django111
py37-django21
Factors can also match non-generative env names. For example, given the following tox config:
[tox]
envlist =
py{35,36,37}-django20
[testenv:list]
Then the following would match:
$ tox -f py37,lint -l
py37-django20
lint
Factors are always superseded by a given toxenv
. For example, tox-factor would
noop in the following cases:
$ tox -f py37 -e py35-django21 -l
py35-django21
$ TOXENV=py35-django21 tox -f py37 -l
py35-django21
Factors do not support partial matching. tox -f py3
would not match py37
.
However, factors may match disparate dash-separated parts. Given the following:
[tox]
envlist =
py{35,36,37}-django{20,21,22}-{redis,memcached}
Then tox -f py37-redis
would match:
py37-django20-redis
py37-django21-redis
py37-django22-redis
- Update changelog
- Update package version in setup.py
- Create git tag for version
- Upload release to PyPI test server
- Upload release to official PyPI server
$ pip install -U pip setuptools wheel twine
$ rm -rf dist/ build/
$ python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
$ twine upload -r test dist/*
$ twine upload dist/*
This code is largely based off the work done by @ryanhiebert in tox-travis. Without his efforts, it would have taken significantly more time to write and test this package.
See: LICENSE