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spaCy tests

spaCy uses the pytest framework for testing. For more info on this, see the pytest documentation.

Tests for spaCy modules and classes live in their own directories of the same name. For example, tests for the Tokenizer can be found in /tests/tokenizer. All test modules (i.e. directories) also need to be listed in spaCy's setup.py. To be interpreted and run, all test files and test functions need to be prefixed with test_.

Table of contents

  1. Running the tests
  2. Dos and don'ts
  3. Parameters
  4. Fixtures
  5. Helpers and utilities
  6. Contributing to the tests

Running the tests

py.test spacy                    # run basic tests
py.test spacy --models           # run basic and model tests
py.test spacy --slow             # run basic and slow tests
py.test spacy --models --slow    # run all tests

To show print statements, run the tests with py.test -s. To abort after the first failure, run them with py.test -x.

Dos and don'ts

To keep the behaviour of the tests consistent and predictable, we try to follow a few basic conventions:

  • Test names should follow a pattern of test_[module]_[tested behaviour]. For example: test_tokenizer_keeps_email or test_spans_override_sentiment.
  • If you're testing for a bug reported in a specific issue, always create a regression test. Regression tests should be named test_issue[ISSUE NUMBER] and live in the regression directory.
  • Only use @pytest.mark.xfail for tests that should pass, but currently fail. To test for desired negative behaviour, use assert not in your test.
  • Very extensive tests that take a long time to run should be marked with @pytest.mark.slow. If your slow test is testing important behaviour, consider adding an additional simpler version.
  • Tests that require loading the models should be marked with @pytest.mark.models.
  • Before requiring the models, always make sure there is no other way to test the particular behaviour. In a lot of cases, it's sufficient to simply create a Doc object manually. See the section on helpers and utility functions for more info on this.
  • Avoid unnecessary imports. There should never be a need to explicitly import spaCy at the top of a file, and most components are available as fixtures. You should also avoid wildcard imports (from module import *).
  • If you're importing from spaCy, always use relative imports. Otherwise, you might accidentally be running the tests over a different copy of spaCy, e.g. one you have installed on your system.
  • Don't forget the unicode declarations at the top of each file. This way, unicode strings won't have to be prefixed with u.
  • Try to keep the tests readable and concise. Use clear and descriptive variable names (doc, tokens and text are great), keep it short and only test for one behaviour at a time.

Parameters

If the test cases can be extracted from the test, always parametrize them instead of hard-coding them into the test:

@pytest.mark.parametrize('text', ["google.com", "spacy.io"])
def test_tokenizer_keep_urls(tokenizer, text):
    tokens = tokenizer(text)
    assert len(tokens) == 1

This will run the test once for each text value. Even if you're only testing one example, it's usually best to specify it as a parameter. This will later make it easier for others to quickly add additional test cases without having to modify the test.

You can also specify parameters as tuples to test with multiple values per test:

@pytest.mark.parametrize('text,length', [("U.S.", 1), ("us.", 2), ("(U.S.", 2)])

To test for combinations of parameters, you can add several parametrize markers:

@pytest.mark.parametrize('text', ["A test sentence", "Another sentence"])
@pytest.mark.parametrize('punct', ['.', '!', '?'])

This will run the test with all combinations of the two parameters text and punct. Use this feature sparingly, though, as it can easily cause unneccessary or undesired test bloat.

Fixtures

Fixtures to create instances of spaCy objects and other components should only be defined once in the global conftest.py. We avoid having per-directory conftest files, as this can easily lead to confusion.

These are the main fixtures that are currently available:

Fixture Description
tokenizer Creates all available language tokenizers and runs the test for each of them.
en_tokenizer Creates an English Tokenizer object.
de_tokenizer Creates a German Tokenizer object.
hu_tokenizer Creates a Hungarian Tokenizer object.
en_vocab Creates an English Vocab object.
en_entityrecognizer Creates an English EntityRecognizer object.
lemmatizer Creates a Lemmatizer object from the installed language data (None if no data is found).
EN Creates an instance of English. Only use for tests that require the models.
DE Creates an instance of German. Only use for tests that require the models.
text_file Creates an instance of StringIO to simulate reading from and writing to files.
text_file_b Creates an instance of ByteIO to simulate reading from and writing to files.

The fixtures can be used in all tests by simply setting them as an argument, like this:

def test_module_do_something(en_tokenizer):
    tokens = en_tokenizer("Some text here")

If all tests in a file require a specific configuration, or use the same complex example, it can be helpful to create a separate fixture. This fixture should be added at the top of each file. Make sure to use descriptive names for these fixtures and don't override any of the global fixtures listed above. From looking at a test, it should immediately be clear which fixtures are used, and where they are coming from.

Helpers and utilities

Our new test setup comes with a few handy utility functions that can be imported from util.py.

Constructing a Doc object manually with get_doc()

Loading the models is expensive and not necessary if you're not actually testing the model performance. If all you need ia a Doc object with annotations like heads, POS tags or the dependency parse, you can use get_doc() to construct it manually.

def test_doc_token_api_strings(en_tokenizer):
    text = "Give it back! He pleaded."
    pos = ['VERB', 'PRON', 'PART', 'PUNCT', 'PRON', 'VERB', 'PUNCT']
    heads = [0, -1, -2, -3, 1, 0, -1]
    deps = ['ROOT', 'dobj', 'prt', 'punct', 'nsubj', 'ROOT', 'punct']

    tokens = en_tokenizer(text)
    doc = get_doc(tokens.vocab, [t.text for t in tokens], pos=pos, heads=heads, deps=deps)
    assert doc[0].text == 'Give'
    assert doc[0].lower_ == 'give'
    assert doc[0].pos_ == 'VERB'
    assert doc[0].dep_ == 'ROOT'

You can construct a Doc with the following arguments:

Argument Description
vocab Vocab instance to use. If you're tokenizing before creating a Doc, make sure to use the tokenizer's vocab. Otherwise, you can also use the en_vocab fixture. (required)
words List of words, for example [t.text for t in tokens]. (required)
heads List of heads as integers.
pos List of POS tags as text values.
tag List of tag names as text values.
dep List of dependencies as text values.
ents List of entity tuples with ent_id, label, start, end (for example ('Stewart Lee', 'PERSON', 0, 2)). The label will be looked up in vocab.strings[label].

Here's how to quickly get these values from within spaCy:

doc = nlp(u'Some text here')
print [token.head.i-token.i for token in doc]
print [token.tag_ for token in doc]
print [token.pos_ for token in doc]
print [token.dep_ for token in doc]

Note: There's currently no way of setting the serializer data for the parser without loading the models. If this is relevant to your test, constructing the Doc via get_doc() won't work.

Other utilities

Name Description
apply_transition_sequence(parser, doc, sequence) Perform a series of pre-specified transitions, to put the parser in a desired state.
add_vecs_to_vocab(vocab, vectors) Add list of vector tuples ([("text", [1, 2, 3])]) to given vocab. All vectors need to have the same length.
get_cosine(vec1, vec2) Get cosine for two given vectors.
assert_docs_equal(doc1, doc2) Compare two Doc objects and assert that they're equal. Tests for tokens, tags, dependencies and entities.

Contributing to the tests

There's still a long way to go to finally reach 100% test coverage – and we'd appreciate your help! 🙌 You can open an issue on our issue tracker and label it tests, or make a pull request to this repository.

📖 For more information on contributing to spaCy in general, check out our contribution guidelines.