A pytest plugin to detect unused files.
This is a pytest plugin to monitor file accesses while tests are running, then output a report listing files along with whether or not they were accessed:
$ py.test --filecov tests
============================= test session starts ==============================
platform linux -- Python 3.9.5, pytest-6.2.4, py-1.10.0, pluggy-0.13.1
filecov: tests
rootdir: /home/rohan/src/pytest-filecov
plugins: cov-2.12.1, filecov-0.1.0
collected 3 items
tests/test_plugin.py ... [100%]
============================ pytest-filecov report =============================
Filename Covered?
-------- --------
tests/__init__.py 0
tests/fakecmd.py 1
tests/test_plugin.py 1
tests/some-file 1
tests/other-file 0
============================== 3 passed in 0.13s ===============================
Prerequisites:
- Linux
inotifywait
(try installinginotify-tools
package)
Install the plugin:
pip install pytest-filecov
When running your test suite, add --filecov <path>
specifying the directory
tree(s) for which you'd like a report:
py.test --filecov somedir
This plugin targets the following scenario:
- You've got a large, complex test suite.
- You've got some tests relying on external data stored in files.
- After some refactors, you expect some of the test data files are now unused and you'd like to clean them up, but you have no reliable way to determine what is or is not used.
Just as pytest-cov
can help you seek and destroy dead Python code after
refactors, pytest-filecov
can do the same for dead/unused data files.
This plugin is rudimentary, with many missing features.
- The format of the reporter is not configurable.
- The list of files included in the report comes from
git ls-files
and this is not configurable. .py
files may commonly be listed as uncovered for various reasons (e.g..pyc
files were used; or files were imported before monitoring began)
Contributions to improve any of the above are welcome.
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.