pyfakefs
implements a fake file system that mocks the Python file system modules.
Using pyfakefs
, your tests operate on a fake file system in memory without
touching the real disk. The software under test requires no modification to
work with pyfakefs
.
pyfakefs
creates a new empty in-memory file system at each test start, which replaces
the real filesystem during the test. Think of pyfakefs as making a per-test temporary
directory, except for an entire file system.
pyfakefs
is tested with current versions of Linux, Windows and macOS.
There are several ways to invoke pyfakefs
:
- using the
fs
fixture withpytest
- deriving from
fake_filesystem_unittest.TestCase
forunittest
- using
fake_filesystem_unittest.Patcher
as context manager - using the
fake_filesystem_unittest.patchfs
decorator on a single test
Refer to the usage documentation for more information.
- Release documentation covers the latest released version
- Development documentation for the current main branch
- Release 3.7 documentation for the last version supporting Python 2.7
- Release Notes
- Contributing Guide - contributions are welcome!
Apart from automatically mocking most file-system functions, pyfakefs provides some additional features:
- mapping files and directories from the real file system into the fake filesystem
- configuration and tracking of the file system size
- pause and resume of patching to be able to use the real file system inside a test step
- (limited) emulation of other OSes (Linux, macOS or Windows)
- configuration to behave as if running as a non-root user while running under root
pyfakefs will not work with Python libraries that use C libraries to access the file system. This is because pyfakefs cannot patch the underlying C libraries' file access functions--the C libraries will always access the real file system. Refer to the documentation for more information about the limitations of pyfakefs.
pyfakefs.py was initially developed at Google by Mike Bland as a modest fake implementation of core Python modules. It was introduced to all of Google in September 2006. At last count, pyfakefs was used in over 20,000 Python tests at Google.
Google released pyfakefs to the public in 2011 as a Google Code project.
Support for unittest
and doctest
was added in a fork by user jmcgeheeiv
,
further corrections were made in a separate fork with user shiffdane
, and after
the shutdown of Google Code
was announced, John McGehee merged all three Google Code projects together
here on GitHub. In 2022, the repository has been transferred to
pytest-dev to ensure continuous maintenance.