" % \
(strclass(self.__class__), self._testMethodName)
def _addSkip(self, result, reason):
addSkip = getattr(result, 'addSkip', None)
if addSkip is not None:
addSkip(self, reason)
else:
warnings.warn("TestResult has no addSkip method, skips not reported",
RuntimeWarning, 2)
result.addSuccess(self)
def run(self, result=None):
orig_result = result
if result is None:
result = self.defaultTestResult()
startTestRun = getattr(result, 'startTestRun', None)
if startTestRun is not None:
startTestRun()
self._resultForDoCleanups = result
result.startTest(self)
testMethod = getattr(self, self._testMethodName)
if (getattr(self.__class__, "__unittest_skip__", False) or
getattr(testMethod, "__unittest_skip__", False)):
# If the class or method was skipped.
try:
skip_why = (getattr(self.__class__, '__unittest_skip_why__', '')
or getattr(testMethod, '__unittest_skip_why__', ''))
self._addSkip(result, skip_why)
finally:
result.stopTest(self)
return
try:
success = False
try:
self.setUp()
except SkipTest as e:
self._addSkip(result, str(e))
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except:
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
else:
try:
testMethod()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except self.failureException:
result.addFailure(self, sys.exc_info())
except _ExpectedFailure as e:
addExpectedFailure = getattr(result, 'addExpectedFailure', None)
if addExpectedFailure is not None:
addExpectedFailure(self, e.exc_info)
else:
warnings.warn("TestResult has no addExpectedFailure method, reporting as passes",
RuntimeWarning)
result.addSuccess(self)
except _UnexpectedSuccess:
addUnexpectedSuccess = getattr(result, 'addUnexpectedSuccess', None)
if addUnexpectedSuccess is not None:
addUnexpectedSuccess(self)
else:
warnings.warn("TestResult has no addUnexpectedSuccess method, reporting as failures",
RuntimeWarning)
result.addFailure(self, sys.exc_info())
except SkipTest as e:
self._addSkip(result, str(e))
except:
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
else:
success = True
try:
self.tearDown()
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except:
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
success = False
cleanUpSuccess = self.doCleanups()
success = success and cleanUpSuccess
if success:
result.addSuccess(self)
finally:
result.stopTest(self)
if orig_result is None:
stopTestRun = getattr(result, 'stopTestRun', None)
if stopTestRun is not None:
stopTestRun()
def doCleanups(self):
"""Execute all cleanup functions. Normally called for you after
tearDown."""
result = self._resultForDoCleanups
ok = True
while self._cleanups:
function, args, kwargs = self._cleanups.pop(-1)
try:
function(*args, **kwargs)
except KeyboardInterrupt:
raise
except:
ok = False
result.addError(self, sys.exc_info())
return ok
def __call__(self, *args, **kwds):
return self.run(*args, **kwds)
def debug(self):
"""Run the test without collecting errors in a TestResult"""
self.setUp()
getattr(self, self._testMethodName)()
self.tearDown()
while self._cleanups:
function, args, kwargs = self._cleanups.pop(-1)
function(*args, **kwargs)
def skipTest(self, reason):
"""Skip this test."""
raise SkipTest(reason)
def fail(self, msg=None):
"""Fail immediately, with the given message."""
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertFalse(self, expr, msg=None):
"""Check that the expression is false."""
if expr:
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, "%s is not false" % safe_repr(expr))
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertTrue(self, expr, msg=None):
"""Check that the expression is true."""
if not expr:
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, "%s is not true" % safe_repr(expr))
raise self.failureException(msg)
def _formatMessage(self, msg, standardMsg):
"""Honour the longMessage attribute when generating failure messages.
If longMessage is False this means:
* Use only an explicit message if it is provided
* Otherwise use the standard message for the assert
If longMessage is True:
* Use the standard message
* If an explicit message is provided, plus ' : ' and the explicit message
"""
if not self.longMessage:
return msg or standardMsg
if msg is None:
return standardMsg
try:
# don't switch to '{}' formatting in Python 2.X
# it changes the way unicode input is handled
return '%s : %s' % (standardMsg, msg)
except UnicodeDecodeError:
return '%s : %s' % (safe_repr(standardMsg), safe_repr(msg))
def assertRaises(self, excClass, callableObj=None, *args, **kwargs):
"""Fail unless an exception of class excClass is raised
by callableObj when invoked with arguments args and keyword
arguments kwargs. If a different type of exception is
raised, it will not be caught, and the test case will be
deemed to have suffered an error, exactly as for an
unexpected exception.
If called with callableObj omitted or None, will return a
context object used like this::
with self.assertRaises(SomeException):
do_something()
The context manager keeps a reference to the exception as
the 'exception' attribute. This allows you to inspect the
exception after the assertion::
with self.assertRaises(SomeException) as cm:
do_something()
the_exception = cm.exception
self.assertEqual(the_exception.error_code, 3)
"""
context = _AssertRaisesContext(excClass, self)
if callableObj is None:
return context
with context:
callableObj(*args, **kwargs)
def _getAssertEqualityFunc(self, first, second):
"""Get a detailed comparison function for the types of the two args.
Returns: A callable accepting (first, second, msg=None) that will
raise a failure exception if first != second with a useful human
readable error message for those types.
"""
#
# NOTE(gregory.p.smith): I considered isinstance(first, type(second))
# and vice versa. I opted for the conservative approach in case
# subclasses are not intended to be compared in detail to their super
# class instances using a type equality func. This means testing
# subtypes won't automagically use the detailed comparison. Callers
# should use their type specific assertSpamEqual method to compare
# subclasses if the detailed comparison is desired and appropriate.
# See the discussion in http://bugs.python.org/issue2578.
#
if type(first) is type(second):
asserter = self._type_equality_funcs.get(type(first))
if asserter is not None:
if isinstance(asserter, basestring):
asserter = getattr(self, asserter)
return asserter
return self._baseAssertEqual
def _baseAssertEqual(self, first, second, msg=None):
"""The default assertEqual implementation, not type specific."""
if not first == second:
standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(first), safe_repr(second))
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertEqual(self, first, second, msg=None):
"""Fail if the two objects are unequal as determined by the '=='
operator.
"""
assertion_func = self._getAssertEqualityFunc(first, second)
assertion_func(first, second, msg=msg)
def assertNotEqual(self, first, second, msg=None):
"""Fail if the two objects are equal as determined by the '!='
operator.
"""
if not first != second:
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, '%s == %s' % (safe_repr(first),
safe_repr(second)))
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertAlmostEqual(self, first, second, places=None, msg=None, delta=None):
"""Fail if the two objects are unequal as determined by their
difference rounded to the given number of decimal places
(default 7) and comparing to zero, or by comparing that the
between the two objects is more than the given delta.
Note that decimal places (from zero) are usually not the same
as significant digits (measured from the most signficant digit).
If the two objects compare equal then they will automatically
compare almost equal.
"""
if first == second:
# shortcut
return
if delta is not None and places is not None:
raise TypeError("specify delta or places not both")
if delta is not None:
if abs(first - second) <= delta:
return
standardMsg = '%s != %s within %s delta' % (safe_repr(first),
safe_repr(second),
safe_repr(delta))
else:
if places is None:
places = 7
if round(abs(second-first), places) == 0:
return
standardMsg = '%s != %s within %r places' % (safe_repr(first),
safe_repr(second),
places)
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertNotAlmostEqual(self, first, second, places=None, msg=None, delta=None):
"""Fail if the two objects are equal as determined by their
difference rounded to the given number of decimal places
(default 7) and comparing to zero, or by comparing that the
between the two objects is less than the given delta.
Note that decimal places (from zero) are usually not the same
as significant digits (measured from the most signficant digit).
Objects that are equal automatically fail.
"""
if delta is not None and places is not None:
raise TypeError("specify delta or places not both")
if delta is not None:
if not (first == second) and abs(first - second) > delta:
return
standardMsg = '%s == %s within %s delta' % (safe_repr(first),
safe_repr(second),
safe_repr(delta))
else:
if places is None:
places = 7
if not (first == second) and round(abs(second-first), places) != 0:
return
standardMsg = '%s == %s within %r places' % (safe_repr(first),
safe_repr(second),
places)
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
raise self.failureException(msg)
# Synonyms for assertion methods
# The plurals are undocumented. Keep them that way to discourage use.
# Do not add more. Do not remove.
# Going through a deprecation cycle on these would annoy many people.
assertEquals = assertEqual
assertNotEquals = assertNotEqual
assertAlmostEquals = assertAlmostEqual
assertNotAlmostEquals = assertNotAlmostEqual
assert_ = assertTrue
# These fail* assertion method names are pending deprecation and will
# be a DeprecationWarning in 3.2; http://bugs.python.org/issue2578
def _deprecate(original_func):
def deprecated_func(*args, **kwargs):
warnings.warn(
'Please use {0} instead.'.format(original_func.__name__),
PendingDeprecationWarning, 2)
return original_func(*args, **kwargs)
return deprecated_func
failUnlessEqual = _deprecate(assertEqual)
failIfEqual = _deprecate(assertNotEqual)
failUnlessAlmostEqual = _deprecate(assertAlmostEqual)
failIfAlmostEqual = _deprecate(assertNotAlmostEqual)
failUnless = _deprecate(assertTrue)
failUnlessRaises = _deprecate(assertRaises)
failIf = _deprecate(assertFalse)
def assertSequenceEqual(self, seq1, seq2, msg=None, seq_type=None):
"""An equality assertion for ordered sequences (like lists and tuples).
For the purposes of this function, a valid ordered sequence type is one
which can be indexed, has a length, and has an equality operator.
Args:
seq1: The first sequence to compare.
seq2: The second sequence to compare.
seq_type: The expected datatype of the sequences, or None if no
datatype should be enforced.
msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of
differences.
"""
if seq_type is not None:
seq_type_name = seq_type.__name__
if not isinstance(seq1, seq_type):
raise self.failureException('First sequence is not a %s: %s'
% (seq_type_name, safe_repr(seq1)))
if not isinstance(seq2, seq_type):
raise self.failureException('Second sequence is not a %s: %s'
% (seq_type_name, safe_repr(seq2)))
else:
seq_type_name = "sequence"
differing = None
try:
len1 = len(seq1)
except (TypeError, NotImplementedError):
differing = 'First %s has no length. Non-sequence?' % (
seq_type_name)
if differing is None:
try:
len2 = len(seq2)
except (TypeError, NotImplementedError):
differing = 'Second %s has no length. Non-sequence?' % (
seq_type_name)
if differing is None:
if seq1 == seq2:
return
seq1_repr = safe_repr(seq1)
seq2_repr = safe_repr(seq2)
if len(seq1_repr) > 30:
seq1_repr = seq1_repr[:30] + '...'
if len(seq2_repr) > 30:
seq2_repr = seq2_repr[:30] + '...'
elements = (seq_type_name.capitalize(), seq1_repr, seq2_repr)
differing = '%ss differ: %s != %s\n' % elements
for i in xrange(min(len1, len2)):
try:
item1 = seq1[i]
except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError):
differing += ('\nUnable to index element %d of first %s\n' %
(i, seq_type_name))
break
try:
item2 = seq2[i]
except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError):
differing += ('\nUnable to index element %d of second %s\n' %
(i, seq_type_name))
break
if item1 != item2:
differing += ('\nFirst differing element %d:\n%s\n%s\n' %
(i, item1, item2))
break
else:
if (len1 == len2 and seq_type is None and
type(seq1) != type(seq2)):
# The sequences are the same, but have differing types.
return
if len1 > len2:
differing += ('\nFirst %s contains %d additional '
'elements.\n' % (seq_type_name, len1 - len2))
try:
differing += ('First extra element %d:\n%s\n' %
(len2, seq1[len2]))
except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError):
differing += ('Unable to index element %d '
'of first %s\n' % (len2, seq_type_name))
elif len1 < len2:
differing += ('\nSecond %s contains %d additional '
'elements.\n' % (seq_type_name, len2 - len1))
try:
differing += ('First extra element %d:\n%s\n' %
(len1, seq2[len1]))
except (TypeError, IndexError, NotImplementedError):
differing += ('Unable to index element %d '
'of second %s\n' % (len1, seq_type_name))
standardMsg = differing
diffMsg = '\n' + '\n'.join(
difflib.ndiff(pprint.pformat(seq1).splitlines(),
pprint.pformat(seq2).splitlines()))
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diffMsg)
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
self.fail(msg)
def _truncateMessage(self, message, diff):
max_diff = self.maxDiff
if max_diff is None or len(diff) <= max_diff:
return message + diff
return message + (DIFF_OMITTED % len(diff))
def assertListEqual(self, list1, list2, msg=None):
"""A list-specific equality assertion.
Args:
list1: The first list to compare.
list2: The second list to compare.
msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of
differences.
"""
self.assertSequenceEqual(list1, list2, msg, seq_type=list)
def assertTupleEqual(self, tuple1, tuple2, msg=None):
"""A tuple-specific equality assertion.
Args:
tuple1: The first tuple to compare.
tuple2: The second tuple to compare.
msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of
differences.
"""
self.assertSequenceEqual(tuple1, tuple2, msg, seq_type=tuple)
def assertSetEqual(self, set1, set2, msg=None):
"""A set-specific equality assertion.
Args:
set1: The first set to compare.
set2: The second set to compare.
msg: Optional message to use on failure instead of a list of
differences.
assertSetEqual uses ducktyping to support different types of sets, and
is optimized for sets specifically (parameters must support a
difference method).
"""
try:
difference1 = set1.difference(set2)
except TypeError, e:
self.fail('invalid type when attempting set difference: %s' % e)
except AttributeError, e:
self.fail('first argument does not support set difference: %s' % e)
try:
difference2 = set2.difference(set1)
except TypeError, e:
self.fail('invalid type when attempting set difference: %s' % e)
except AttributeError, e:
self.fail('second argument does not support set difference: %s' % e)
if not (difference1 or difference2):
return
lines = []
if difference1:
lines.append('Items in the first set but not the second:')
for item in difference1:
lines.append(repr(item))
if difference2:
lines.append('Items in the second set but not the first:')
for item in difference2:
lines.append(repr(item))
standardMsg = '\n'.join(lines)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIn(self, member, container, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a in b), but with a nicer default message."""
if member not in container:
standardMsg = '%s not found in %s' % (safe_repr(member),
safe_repr(container))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertNotIn(self, member, container, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a not in b), but with a nicer default message."""
if member in container:
standardMsg = '%s unexpectedly found in %s' % (safe_repr(member),
safe_repr(container))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIs(self, expr1, expr2, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a is b), but with a nicer default message."""
if expr1 is not expr2:
standardMsg = '%s is not %s' % (safe_repr(expr1),
safe_repr(expr2))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIsNot(self, expr1, expr2, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a is not b), but with a nicer default message."""
if expr1 is expr2:
standardMsg = 'unexpectedly identical: %s' % (safe_repr(expr1),)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertDictEqual(self, d1, d2, msg=None):
self.assertIsInstance(d1, dict, 'First argument is not a dictionary')
self.assertIsInstance(d2, dict, 'Second argument is not a dictionary')
if d1 != d2:
standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(d1, True), safe_repr(d2, True))
diff = ('\n' + '\n'.join(difflib.ndiff(
pprint.pformat(d1).splitlines(),
pprint.pformat(d2).splitlines())))
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertDictContainsSubset(self, expected, actual, msg=None):
"""Checks whether actual is a superset of expected."""
missing = []
mismatched = []
for key, value in expected.iteritems():
if key not in actual:
missing.append(key)
elif value != actual[key]:
mismatched.append('%s, expected: %s, actual: %s' %
(safe_repr(key), safe_repr(value),
safe_repr(actual[key])))
if not (missing or mismatched):
return
standardMsg = ''
if missing:
standardMsg = 'Missing: %s' % ','.join(safe_repr(m) for m in
missing)
if mismatched:
if standardMsg:
standardMsg += '; '
standardMsg += 'Mismatched values: %s' % ','.join(mismatched)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertItemsEqual(self, expected_seq, actual_seq, msg=None):
"""An unordered sequence specific comparison. It asserts that
actual_seq and expected_seq have the same element counts.
Equivalent to::
self.assertEqual(Counter(iter(actual_seq)),
Counter(iter(expected_seq)))
Asserts that each element has the same count in both sequences.
Example:
- [0, 1, 1] and [1, 0, 1] compare equal.
- [0, 0, 1] and [0, 1] compare unequal.
"""
first_seq, second_seq = list(expected_seq), list(actual_seq)
with warnings.catch_warnings():
if sys.py3kwarning:
# Silence Py3k warning raised during the sorting
for _msg in ["(code|dict|type) inequality comparisons",
"builtin_function_or_method order comparisons",
"comparing unequal types"]:
warnings.filterwarnings("ignore", _msg, DeprecationWarning)
try:
first = collections.Counter(first_seq)
second = collections.Counter(second_seq)
except TypeError:
# Handle case with unhashable elements
differences = _count_diff_all_purpose(first_seq, second_seq)
else:
if first == second:
return
differences = _count_diff_hashable(first_seq, second_seq)
if differences:
standardMsg = 'Element counts were not equal:\n'
lines = ['First has %d, Second has %d: %r' % diff for diff in differences]
diffMsg = '\n'.join(lines)
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diffMsg)
msg = self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg)
self.fail(msg)
def assertMultiLineEqual(self, first, second, msg=None):
"""Assert that two multi-line strings are equal."""
self.assertIsInstance(first, basestring,
'First argument is not a string')
self.assertIsInstance(second, basestring,
'Second argument is not a string')
if first != second:
# don't use difflib if the strings are too long
if (len(first) > self._diffThreshold or
len(second) > self._diffThreshold):
self._baseAssertEqual(first, second, msg)
firstlines = first.splitlines(True)
secondlines = second.splitlines(True)
if len(firstlines) == 1 and first.strip('\r\n') == first:
firstlines = [first + '\n']
secondlines = [second + '\n']
standardMsg = '%s != %s' % (safe_repr(first, True),
safe_repr(second, True))
diff = '\n' + ''.join(difflib.ndiff(firstlines, secondlines))
standardMsg = self._truncateMessage(standardMsg, diff)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertLess(self, a, b, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a < b), but with a nicer default message."""
if not a < b:
standardMsg = '%s not less than %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertLessEqual(self, a, b, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a <= b), but with a nicer default message."""
if not a <= b:
standardMsg = '%s not less than or equal to %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertGreater(self, a, b, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a > b), but with a nicer default message."""
if not a > b:
standardMsg = '%s not greater than %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertGreaterEqual(self, a, b, msg=None):
"""Just like self.assertTrue(a >= b), but with a nicer default message."""
if not a >= b:
standardMsg = '%s not greater than or equal to %s' % (safe_repr(a), safe_repr(b))
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIsNone(self, obj, msg=None):
"""Same as self.assertTrue(obj is None), with a nicer default message."""
if obj is not None:
standardMsg = '%s is not None' % (safe_repr(obj),)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIsNotNone(self, obj, msg=None):
"""Included for symmetry with assertIsNone."""
if obj is None:
standardMsg = 'unexpectedly None'
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertIsInstance(self, obj, cls, msg=None):
"""Same as self.assertTrue(isinstance(obj, cls)), with a nicer
default message."""
if not isinstance(obj, cls):
standardMsg = '%s is not an instance of %r' % (safe_repr(obj), cls)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertNotIsInstance(self, obj, cls, msg=None):
"""Included for symmetry with assertIsInstance."""
if isinstance(obj, cls):
standardMsg = '%s is an instance of %r' % (safe_repr(obj), cls)
self.fail(self._formatMessage(msg, standardMsg))
def assertRaisesRegexp(self, expected_exception, expected_regexp,
callable_obj=None, *args, **kwargs):
"""Asserts that the message in a raised exception matches a regexp.
Args:
expected_exception: Exception class expected to be raised.
expected_regexp: Regexp (re pattern object or string) expected
to be found in error message.
callable_obj: Function to be called.
args: Extra args.
kwargs: Extra kwargs.
"""
context = _AssertRaisesContext(expected_exception, self, expected_regexp)
if callable_obj is None:
return context
with context:
callable_obj(*args, **kwargs)
def assertRegexpMatches(self, text, expected_regexp, msg=None):
"""Fail the test unless the text matches the regular expression."""
if isinstance(expected_regexp, basestring):
expected_regexp = re.compile(expected_regexp)
if not expected_regexp.search(text):
msg = msg or "Regexp didn't match"
msg = '%s: %r not found in %r' % (msg, expected_regexp.pattern, text)
raise self.failureException(msg)
def assertNotRegexpMatches(self, text, unexpected_regexp, msg=None):
"""Fail the test if the text matches the regular expression."""
if isinstance(unexpected_regexp, basestring):
unexpected_regexp = re.compile(unexpected_regexp)
match = unexpected_regexp.search(text)
if match:
msg = msg or "Regexp matched"
msg = '%s: %r matches %r in %r' % (msg,
text[match.start():match.end()],
unexpected_regexp.pattern,
text)
raise self.failureException(msg)
class FunctionTestCase(TestCase):
"""A test case that wraps a test function.
This is useful for slipping pre-existing test functions into the
unittest framework. Optionally, set-up and tidy-up functions can be
supplied. As with TestCase, the tidy-up ('tearDown') function will
always be called if the set-up ('setUp') function ran successfully.
"""
def __init__(self, testFunc, setUp=None, tearDown=None, description=None):
super(FunctionTestCase, self).__init__()
self._setUpFunc = setUp
self._tearDownFunc = tearDown
self._testFunc = testFunc
self._description = description
def setUp(self):
if self._setUpFunc is not None:
self._setUpFunc()
def tearDown(self):
if self._tearDownFunc is not None:
self._tearDownFunc()
def runTest(self):
self._testFunc()
def id(self):
return self._testFunc.__name__
def __eq__(self, other):
if not isinstance(other, self.__class__):
return NotImplemented
return self._setUpFunc == other._setUpFunc and \
self._tearDownFunc == other._tearDownFunc and \
self._testFunc == other._testFunc and \
self._description == other._description
def __ne__(self, other):
return not self == other
def __hash__(self):
return hash((type(self), self._setUpFunc, self._tearDownFunc,
self._testFunc, self._description))
def __str__(self):
return "%s (%s)" % (strclass(self.__class__),
self._testFunc.__name__)
def __repr__(self):
return "<%s tec=%s>" % (strclass(self.__class__),
self._testFunc)
def shortDescription(self):
if self._description is not None:
return self._description
doc = self._testFunc.__doc__
return doc and doc.split("\n")[0].strip() or None