httpx2-pytest (this project) builds on the design and API of pytest-httpx by Colin Bounouar — the established pytest plugin for mocking HTTPX. That project defined the httpx_mock fixture and request-matching model many test suites already rely on. This fork carries that approach forward for HTTPX2 and aims to stay compatible with pytest-httpx: same fixture names, markers, and httpx_mock.add_response / add_callback patterns so you can migrate from HTTPX with minimal test changes.
pytest-httpx2 by Erik Lundberg is another HTTPX2 option, built on respx. It is not a drop-in replacement for pytest-httpx — the API and configuration differ from Colin’s plugin. Choose it if you prefer respx-style routing; choose httpx2-pytest if you want pytest-httpx–like behavior on HTTPX2.
This project mocks HTTPX2 — a next-generation HTTP client for Python maintained by Pydantic. HTTPX2 continues the work started by the HTTPX community: a requests-compatible API with sync and async clients, HTTP/1.1 and HTTP/2 support, strict timeouts, and full type annotations.
HTTPX2 is the reliably maintained path forward for applications that depended on HTTPX, including timely security updates for a library in the critical path of many production systems. Documentation lives at httpx2.pydantic.dev.
pip install httpx2import httpx2
response = httpx2.get("https://www.example.org/")httpx2-pytest patches HTTPX2 transports so your tests never hit the network unless you opt out. Use import httpx2 in your application and test code; the httpx_mock fixture intercepts httpx2.Client and httpx2.AsyncClient requests the same way pytest-httpx did for HTTPX.
pip install httpx2-pytestNote
This project targets HTTPX2 instead of HTTPX, in the spirit of pytest-httpx. The mocking API and httpx_mock fixture name are unchanged for compatibility with existing test suites.
Once installed, the httpx_mock or httpx2_mock pytest fixture will make sure every httpx2 request will be replied to with user provided responses (unless some hosts are explicitly skipped). Both fixtures share the same implementation.
You can register responses for both sync and async HTTPX2 requests.
import pytest
import httpx2
def test_something(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
@pytest.mark.asyncio
async def test_something_async(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
async with httpx2.AsyncClient() as client:
response = await client.get("https://test_url")If all registered responses are not sent back during test execution, the test case will fail at teardown (unless you turned assert_all_responses_were_requested option off).
Default response is a HTTP/1.1 200 (OK) without any body.
In case more than one response match request, the first one not yet sent (according to the registration order) will be sent.
In case all matching responses have been sent once, the request will not be considered as matched (unless you turned can_send_already_matched_responses option on).
You can add criteria so that response will be sent only in case of a more specific matching.
url parameter can either be a string, a python re.Pattern instance or a httpx2.URL instance.
Matching is performed on the full URL, query parameters included.
Order of parameters in the query string does not matter, however order of values do matter if the same parameter is provided more than once.
import httpx2
import re
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_url(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url="https://test_url?a=1&b=2")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response1 = client.delete("https://test_url?a=1&b=2")
response2 = client.get("https://test_url?b=2&a=1")
def test_url_as_pattern(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url=re.compile(".*test.*"))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
def test_url_as_httpx2_url(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url=httpx2.URL("https://test_url", params={"a": "1", "b": "2"}))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url?a=1&b=2")Use a python re.Pattern instance to ignore query parameters while matching on the URL.
import httpx2
import re
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_url_as_pattern_ignoring_query_parameters(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url=re.compile("https://test_url/something.*"))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url/something?a=1&b=2")
assert response.content == b""Use match_params to partially match query parameters without having to provide a regular expression as url.
If this parameter is provided, url parameter must not contain any query parameter.
All query parameters have to be provided. You can however use unittest.mock.ANY to do partial matching.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
from unittest.mock import ANY
def test_partial_params_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url="https://test_url", match_params={"a": 1, "b": ANY})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url?a=1&b=2")
def test_partial_multi_params_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(url="https://test_url", match_params={"a": ["1", 3], "b": ["2", ANY]})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url?a=1&b=2&a=3&b=4")Use method parameter to specify the HTTP method (POST, PUT, DELETE, PATCH, HEAD) to reply to.
method parameter must be a string. It will be upper-cased, so it can be provided lower cased.
Matching is performed on equality.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_post(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(method="POST")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.post("https://test_url")
def test_put(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(method="PUT")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.put("https://test_url")
def test_delete(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(method="DELETE")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.delete("https://test_url")
def test_patch(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(method="PATCH")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.patch("https://test_url")
def test_head(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(method="HEAD")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.head("https://test_url")proxy_url parameter can either be a string, a python re.Pattern instance or a httpx2.URL instance.
Matching is performed on the full proxy URL, query parameters included.
Order of parameters in the query string does not matter, however order of values do matter if the same parameter is provided more than once.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_proxy_url(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(proxy_url="http://test_proxy_url?b=1&a=2")
with httpx2.Client(proxy="http://test_proxy_url?a=2&b=1") as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")Use match_headers parameter to specify the HTTP headers (as a dict) to reply to.
Matching is performed on equality for each provided header.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_headers_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_headers={'User-Agent': 'python-httpx2/2.2.0'})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")Use match_content parameter to specify the full HTTP body (as bytes) to reply to.
Matching is performed on equality.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_content_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_content=b"This is the body")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.post("https://test_url", content=b"This is the body")Use match_json parameter to specify the JSON decoded HTTP body to reply to.
Matching is performed on equality. You can however use unittest.mock.ANY to do partial matching.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
from unittest.mock import ANY
def test_json_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_json={"a": "json", "b": 2})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.post("https://test_url", json={"a": "json", "b": 2})
def test_partial_json_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_json={"a": "json", "b": ANY})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.post("https://test_url", json={"a": "json", "b": 2})Note that match_content or match_files cannot be provided if match_json is also provided.
Use match_files and match_data parameters to specify the full multipart body to reply to.
Matching is performed on equality.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_multipart_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_files={"name": ("file_name", b"File content")}, match_data={"field": "value"})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.post("https://test_url", files={"name": ("file_name", b"File content")}, data={"field": "value"})Note that match_content or match_json cannot be provided if match_files is also provided.
Use match_extensions parameter to specify the extensions (as a dict) to reply to.
Matching is performed on equality for each provided extension.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_extensions_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_extensions={'test': 'value'})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url", extensions={"test": "value"})Use match_extensions parameter to specify the timeouts (as a dict) to reply to.
Matching is performed on the full timeout dict equality.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_timeout_matching(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(match_extensions={'timeout': {'connect': 10, 'read': 10, 'write': 10, 'pool': 10}})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url", timeout=10)Use json parameter to add a JSON response using python values.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_json(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(json=[{"key1": "value1", "key2": "value2"}])
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").json() == [{"key1": "value1", "key2": "value2"}]Note that the content-type header will be set to application/json by default in the response.
Use text parameter to reply with a custom body by providing UTF-8 encoded string.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_str_body(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(text="This is my UTF-8 content")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").text == "This is my UTF-8 content"Use content parameter to reply with a custom body by providing bytes.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_bytes_body(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(content=b"This is my bytes content")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").content == b"This is my bytes content"Use html parameter to reply with a custom body by providing UTF-8 encoded string.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_html_body(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(html="<body>This is <p> HTML content</body>")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").text == "<body>This is <p> HTML content</body>"Use stream parameter (as httpx2.SyncByteStream or httpx2.AsyncByteStream) to stream chunks that you specify.
Note that pytest_httpx2.IteratorStream can be used to provide an iterable.
import httpx2
import pytest
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock, IteratorStream
def test_sync_streaming(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(stream=IteratorStream([b"part 1", b"part 2"]))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
with client.stream(method="GET", url="https://test_url") as response:
assert list(response.iter_raw()) == [b"part 1", b"part 2"]
@pytest.mark.asyncio
async def test_async_streaming(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(stream=IteratorStream([b"part 1", b"part 2"]))
async with httpx2.AsyncClient() as client:
async with client.stream(method="GET", url="https://test_url") as response:
assert [part async for part in response.aiter_raw()] == [b"part 1", b"part 2"]Use the httpx2 MultipartStream via the stream parameter to send a multipart response.
Reach out to httpx2 developers if you need this publicly exposed as this is not a standard use case.
import httpx2
from httpx2._multipart import MultipartStream
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_multipart_body(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(stream=MultipartStream(data={"key1": "value1"}, files={"file1": b"content of file 1"}, boundary=b"2256d3a36d2a61a1eba35a22bee5c74a"))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").text == '''--2256d3a36d2a61a1eba35a22bee5c74a\r
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="key1"\r
\r
value1\r
--2256d3a36d2a61a1eba35a22bee5c74a\r
Content-Disposition: form-data; name="file1"; filename="upload"\r
Content-Type: application/octet-stream\r
\r
content of file 1\r
--2256d3a36d2a61a1eba35a22bee5c74a--\r
'''Use status_code parameter to specify the HTTP status code (as an int) of the response.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_status_code(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(status_code=404)
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").status_code == 404Use headers parameter to specify the extra headers of the response.
Any valid httpx2 headers type is supported, you can submit headers as a dict (str or bytes), a list of 2-tuples (str or bytes) or a httpx2.Headers instance.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_headers_as_str_dict(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(headers={"X-Header1": "Test value"})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").headers["x-header1"] == "Test value"
def test_headers_as_str_tuple_list(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(headers=[("X-Header1", "Test value")])
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").headers["x-header1"] == "Test value"
def test_headers_as_httpx2_headers(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(headers=httpx2.Headers({b"X-Header1": b"Test value"}))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").headers["x-header1"] == "Test value"Cookies are sent in the set-cookie HTTP header.
You can then send cookies in the response by setting the set-cookie header with the value following key=value format.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_cookie(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(headers={"set-cookie": "key=value"})
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
assert dict(response.cookies) == {"key": "value"}
def test_cookies(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(headers=[("set-cookie", "key=value"), ("set-cookie", "key2=value2")])
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
assert dict(response.cookies) == {"key": "value", "key2": "value2"}Use http_version parameter to specify the HTTP protocol version (as a string) of the response.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_http_version(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(http_version="HTTP/2.0")
with httpx2.Client() as client:
assert client.get("https://test_url").http_version == "HTTP/2.0"You can perform custom manipulation upon request reception by registering callbacks.
Callback should expect one parameter, the received httpx2.Request.
If all callbacks are not executed during test execution, the test case will fail at teardown (unless you turned assert_all_responses_were_requested option off).
Note that callbacks are considered as responses, and thus are selected the same way.
Meaning that you can transpose httpx_mock.add_response calls in the related examples into httpx_mock.add_callback.
Callback should return a httpx2.Response instance.
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_dynamic_response(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
def custom_response(request: httpx2.Request):
return httpx2.Response(
status_code=200, json={"url": str(request.url)},
)
httpx_mock.add_callback(custom_response)
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
assert response.json() == {"url": "https://test_url"}Alternatively, callbacks can also be asynchronous.
As in the following sample simulating network latency on some responses only.
import asyncio
import httpx2
import pytest
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
@pytest.mark.asyncio
async def test_dynamic_async_response(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
async def simulate_network_latency(request: httpx2.Request):
await asyncio.sleep(1)
return httpx2.Response(
status_code=200, json={"url": str(request.url)},
)
httpx_mock.add_callback(simulate_network_latency)
httpx_mock.add_response()
async with httpx2.AsyncClient() as client:
responses = await asyncio.gather(
# Response will be received after one second
client.get("https://test_url"),
# Response will instantly be received (1 second before the first request)
client.get("https://test_url")
)You can simulate HTTPX2 exception throwing by raising an exception in your callback or use httpx_mock.add_exception with the exception instance.
This can be useful if you want to assert that your code handles HTTPX2 exceptions properly.
import httpx2
import pytest
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_exception_raising(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_exception(httpx2.ReadTimeout("Unable to read within timeout"))
with httpx2.Client() as client:
with pytest.raises(httpx2.ReadTimeout):
client.get("https://test_url")The default behavior is to instantly raise a httpx2.TimeoutException in case no matching response can be found.
The exception message will display the request and every registered responses to help you identify any possible mismatch.
import httpx2
import pytest
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_requests_were_expected=False)
def test_timeout(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
with httpx2.Client() as client:
with pytest.raises(httpx2.TimeoutException):
client.get("https://test_url")The best way to ensure the content of your requests is still to use the match_headers and / or match_content parameters when adding a response.
In the same spirit, ensuring that no request was issued does not necessarily require any code (unless you turned assert_all_requests_were_expected option off).
In any case, you always have the ability to retrieve the requests that were issued.
As in the following samples:
import httpx2
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_many_requests(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response1 = client.get("https://test_url")
response2 = client.get("https://test_url")
requests = httpx_mock.get_requests()
def test_single_request(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
with httpx2.Client() as client:
response = client.get("https://test_url")
request = httpx_mock.get_request()
def test_no_request(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
assert not httpx_mock.get_request()You can add criteria so that requests will be returned only in case of a more specific matching.
Note that requests are selected the same way as responses.
Meaning that you can transpose httpx_mock.add_response calls in the related examples into httpx_mock.get_requests or httpx_mock.get_request.
The httpx_mock marker is available and can be used to change the default behavior of the httpx_mock fixture.
Refer to available options for an exhaustive list of options that can be set per test, per module or even on the whole test suite.
import pytest
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_responses_were_requested=False)
def test_something(httpx_mock):
...import pytest
pytestmark = pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_responses_were_requested=False)This should be set in the root conftest.py file.
import pytest
def pytest_collection_modifyitems(session, config, items):
for item in items:
item.add_marker(pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_responses_were_requested=False))Important
Note that there currently is a bug in pytest where pytest_collection_modifyitems will actually add the marker AFTER its module and class registration.
Meaning the order is currently: module -> class -> test suite -> test
instead of: test suite -> module -> class -> test
By default, httpx2-pytest will ensure that every response was requested during test execution.
If you want to add an optional response, you can use the is_optional parameter when registering a response or a callback.
def test_fewer_requests_than_expected(httpx_mock):
# Even if this response never received a corresponding request, the test will not fail at teardown
httpx_mock.add_response(is_optional=True)If you don't have control over the response registration process (shared fixtures),
and you want to allow fewer requests than what you registered responses for,
you can use the httpx_mock marker assert_all_responses_were_requested option.
Caution
Use this option at your own risk of not spotting regression (requests not sent) in your code base!
import pytest
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_responses_were_requested=False)
def test_fewer_requests_than_expected(httpx_mock):
# Even if this response never received a corresponding request, the test will not fail at teardown
httpx_mock.add_response()Note that the is_optional parameter will take precedence over the assert_all_responses_were_requested option.
Meaning you can still register a response that will be checked for execution at teardown even if assert_all_responses_were_requested was set to False.
import pytest
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_responses_were_requested=False)
def test_force_expected_request(httpx_mock):
# Even if the assert_all_responses_were_requested option is set, the test will fail at teardown if this is not matched
httpx_mock.add_response(is_optional=False)By default, httpx2-pytest will ensure that every request that was issued was expected.
You can use the httpx_mock marker assert_all_requests_were_expected option to allow more requests than what you registered responses for.
Caution
Use this option at your own risk of not spotting regression (unexpected requests) in your code base!
import pytest
import httpx2
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(assert_all_requests_were_expected=False)
def test_more_requests_than_expected(httpx_mock):
with httpx2.Client() as client:
# Even if this request was not expected, the test will not fail at teardown
with pytest.raises(httpx2.TimeoutException):
client.get("https://test_url")By default, httpx2-pytest will ensure that every request that was issued was expected.
If you want to add a response once, while allowing it to match more than once, you can use the is_reusable parameter when registering a response or a callback.
import httpx2
def test_more_requests_than_responses(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response(is_reusable=True)
with httpx2.Client() as client:
client.get("https://test_url")
# Even if only one response was registered, the test will not fail at teardown as this request will also be matched
client.get("https://test_url")If you don't have control over the response registration process (shared fixtures),
and you want to allow multiple requests to match the same registered response,
you can use the httpx_mock marker can_send_already_matched_responses option.
With this option, in case all matching responses have been sent at least once, the last one (according to the registration order) will be sent.
Caution
Use this option at your own risk of not spotting regression (requests issued more than the expected number of times) in your code base!
import pytest
import httpx2
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(can_send_already_matched_responses=True)
def test_more_requests_than_responses(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
with httpx2.Client() as client:
client.get("https://test_url")
# Even if only one response was registered, the test will not fail at teardown as this request will also be matched
client.get("https://test_url")By default, httpx2-pytest will mock every request.
But, for instance, in case you want to write integration tests with other servers, you might want to let some requests go through.
To do so, you can use the httpx_mock marker should_mock option and provide a callable expecting the httpx2.Request as parameter and returning a boolean.
Returning True will ensure that the request is handled by httpx2-pytest (mocked), False will let the request pass through (not mocked).
import pytest
import httpx2
@pytest.mark.httpx_mock(should_mock=lambda request: request.url.host != "www.my_local_test_host")
def test_partial_mock(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response()
with httpx2.Client() as client:
# This request will NOT be mocked
response1 = client.get("https://www.my_local_test_host/sub?param=value")
# This request will be mocked
response2 = client.get("https://test_url")Here is how to migrate from well-known testing libraries to httpx2-pytest.
| Feature | responses | httpx2-pytest |
|---|---|---|
| Add a response | responses.add() |
httpx_mock.add_response() |
| Add a callback | responses.add_callback() |
httpx_mock.add_callback() |
| Retrieve requests | responses.calls |
httpx_mock.get_requests() |
Undocumented parameters means that they are unchanged between responses and httpx2-pytest.
Below is a list of parameters that will require a change in your code.
| Parameter | responses | httpx2-pytest |
|---|---|---|
| method | method=responses.GET |
method="GET" |
| body (as bytes) | body=b"sample" |
content=b"sample" |
| body (as str) | body="sample" |
text="sample" |
| status code | status=201 |
status_code=201 |
| headers | adding_headers={"name": "value"} |
headers={"name": "value"} |
| content-type header | content_type="application/custom" |
headers={"content-type": "application/custom"} |
| Match the full query | match_querystring=True |
The full query is always matched when providing the url parameter. |
Sample adding a response with responses:
from responses import RequestsMock
def test_response(responses: RequestsMock):
responses.add(
method=responses.GET,
url="https://test_url",
body=b"This is the response content",
status=400,
)Sample adding the same response with httpx2-pytest:
from pytest_httpx2 import HTTPXMock
def test_response(httpx_mock: HTTPXMock):
httpx_mock.add_response(
method="GET",
url="https://test_url",
content=b"This is the response content",
status_code=400,
)| Feature | aioresponses | httpx2-pytest |
|---|---|---|
| Add a response | aioresponses.method() |
httpx_mock.add_response(method="METHOD") |
| Add a callback | aioresponses.method() |
httpx_mock.add_callback(method="METHOD") |
Undocumented parameters means that they are unchanged between responses and httpx2-pytest.
Below is a list of parameters that will require a change in your code.
| Parameter | responses | httpx2-pytest |
|---|---|---|
| body (as bytes) | body=b"sample" |
content=b"sample" |
| body (as str) | body="sample" |
text="sample" |
| body (as JSON) | payload=["sample"] |
json=["sample"] |
| status code | status=201 |
status_code=201 |
Sample adding a response with aioresponses:
import pytest
from aioresponses import aioresponses
@pytest.fixture
def mock_aioresponse():
with aioresponses() as m:
yield m
def test_response(mock_aioresponse):
mock_aioresponse.get(
url="https://test_url",
body=b"This is the response content",
status=400,
)Sample adding the same response with httpx2-pytest:
def test_response(httpx_mock):
httpx_mock.add_response(
method="GET",
url="https://test_url",
content=b"This is the response content",
status_code=400,
)