This repository contains source code for Docker image designed to help you run your Tox tests with all available Python versions in Docker container.
Docker image is hosted on Docker Hub and build automatically after every push to master branch.
We usually add the newest Pythons to all supported Fedora releases. We also have to remove the oldest ones from time to time. These are the reasons why we move this container image from Fedora N to N+1 when N goes EOL.
On top of stable Fedora, this Docker image contains:
- Python 2.7, 3.6, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.10, 3.11, 3.12, 3.13, 3.14
- Pypy2, Pypy3.9 and Pypy3.10
- python3-pip
- gcc, gcc-c++, git-core and make
- tox
- virtualenv
The image works very well with both Docker and Podman so you can use containers management tool you prefer.
If you want to use this Docker image as environmet for your test, use this command:
cd example_project
docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
py27 create: /src/.tox/py27
py27 installdeps: pytest < 3.3
py27 installed: py==1.5.3,pytest==3.2.5
py27 runtests: PYTHONHASHSEED='85819776'
py27 runtests: commands[0] | pytest
==== test session starts ====
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.18, pytest-3.2.5, py-1.5.3, pluggy-0.4.0
rootdir: /src, inifile:
collected 10 items
test_fac.py ..........
==== 10 passed in 0.02 seconds ====
py35 create: /src/.tox/py35
py35 installdeps: pytest < 3.3
py35 installed: py==1.5.3,pytest==3.2.5
py35 runtests: PYTHONHASHSEED='1223497559'
py35 runtests: commands[0] | pytest
==== test session starts ====
platform linux -- Python 3.5.10, pytest-3.2.5, py-1.5.3, pluggy-0.4.0
rootdir: /src, inifile:
collected 10 items
test_fac.py ..........
==== 10 passed in 0.04 seconds ====
... etc ...
This command will download an image from Docker hub for you
Unable to find image 'fedorapython/fedora-python-tox:latest' locally
Trying to pull repository docker.io/fedorapython/fedora-python-tox ...
sha256:d4b51931dd86a33552b6a08f39575db336b606f4ccebbc48f390d7f728367a6f: Pulling from docker.io/fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
Command and argument description:
docker run
- run docker image--rm
- automatically remove the container when it exits-i
- keep STDIN open even if not attached-t
- allocate a pseudo-TTY-v $PWD:/src
- mount your current working directory to /src inside container-w
- use /src (mountpoint) as working directory inside containerfedorapython/fedora-python-tox
- name of Docker image
Tox is run automatically with this container. How cool!
You also can limit Tox tests by passing environment variable to Docker. For example:
cd example_project
docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src -e TOXENV=pypy3 fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
pypy3 create: /src/.tox/pypy3
pypy3 installdeps: pytest
pypy3 installed: cffi==1.10.1,greenlet==0.4.12,py==1.4.34,pytest==3.2.2,readline==6.2.4.1
pypy3 runtests: PYTHONHASHSEED='68938415'
pypy3 runtests: commands[0] | pytest
==== test session starts ====
platform linux -- Python 3.5.3[pypy-5.8.0-beta], pytest-3.2.2, py-1.4.34, pluggy-0.4.0
rootdir: /src, inifile:
collected 10 items
test_fac.py ..........
==== passed in 0.24 seconds ====
pypy3: commands succeeded
congratulations :)
You can adjust the behavior of tox by setting TOX_PARAMS variable with any combination of CLI parameters. It's useful for example for parallel run of your tests.
docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src -e TOX_PARAMS="-p auto" fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
✔ OK py37 in 1.664 seconds
✔ OK py35 in 1.893 seconds
✔ OK py27 in 1.902 seconds
✔ OK py38 in 1.913 seconds
✔ OK py36 in 1.987 seconds
✔ OK pypy in 2.904 seconds
✔ OK pypy3 in 3.688 seconds
__________________________________________ summary ___________________________________________
py27: commands succeeded
py35: commands succeeded
py36: commands succeeded
py37: commands succeeded
py38: commands succeeded
pypy: commands succeeded
pypy3: commands succeeded
congratulations :)
Instead of mounting local folder with source code into container, you can provide HTTPS URL of your GIT repository and it will be cloned automatically.
For example:
docker run --rm -it -e GIT_URL=https://github.com/fedora-python/pyp2rpm.git fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
Cloning into 'temp_project_dir'...
remote: Counting objects: 3075, done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (5/5), done.
remote: Total 3075 (delta 1), reused 3 (delta 1), pack-reused 3069
Receiving objects: 100% (3075/3075), 2.97 MiB | 2.57 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (2188/2188), done.
GLOB sdist-make: /temp_project_dir/setup.py
py27 create: /temp_project_dir/.tox/py27
... etc ...
Sometimes, your tests need some system packages (such as C libraries).
You can install them via dnf
by setting the $DNF_INSTALL
environment variable:
docker run --rm -it -v $PWD:/src -w /src -e DNF_INSTALL="libyaml-devel libgit2-devel" fedorapython/fedora-python-tox
...
Installed:
http-parser-2.9.3-2.fc32.x86_64 libgit2-1.0.1-2.fc32.x86_64
libgit2-devel-1.0.1-2.fc32.x86_64 libssh2-1.9.0-5.fc32.x86_64
libyaml-devel-0.2.2-3.fc32.x86_64 openssl-devel-1:1.1.1g-1.fc32.x86_64
pcre2-devel-10.35-4.fc32.x86_64 pcre2-utf16-10.35-4.fc32.x86_64
pcre2-utf32-10.35-4.fc32.x86_64 zlib-devel-1.2.11-21.fc32.x86_64
Complete!
py27 create: /src/.tox/py27
...
You can install packages by any RPM Provides, for example:
- Fedora package names, e.g.
libgit2-devel
, - pkgconfig names, e.g.
pkgconfig(libgit2)
, or - commands, e.g.
/usr/bin/cowsay
.
If your tox.ini
file is not in the root directory of your project, set WORKDIR
to the path you want to cd to before the tests are executed.
docker run --rm -it -e TOXENV=py310-minimal -e GIT_URL=https://github.com/trezor/trezor-firmware.git -e WORKDIR=python fedora-python-tox
MIT