23d2fb24ac
test_health.py: @pytest.fixture on an `async def` function is rejected by pytest-asyncio 1.x strict mode. Switched to @pytest_asyncio.fixture. backend/app/models/import_settings.py: My constraint name was 'ck_import_settings_singleton' and Base.metadata's naming convention applies 'ck_<table>_<name>' on top, so the final ORM name was 'ck_import_settings_ck_import_settings_singleton' (double prefix). The migration creates the DB constraint as 'ck_import_settings_singleton' via raw alembic, so they didn't match. Fix: bare name 'singleton' in the model → convention produces 'ck_import_settings_singleton', matching the migration's literal name. tests/test_tasks_register.py: Celery's include=[...] parameter on the constructor is lazy — task modules aren't imported until a worker boots. The test only imported the Celery instance, so the @celery.task decorators in scan.py / import_file.py / thumbnail.py never ran. Fix: explicit `import` of those modules for side-effect at the top of the test file. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
22 lines
455 B
Python
22 lines
455 B
Python
"""Health endpoint smoke test."""
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import pytest
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import pytest_asyncio
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from backend.app import create_app
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@pytest_asyncio.fixture
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async def client():
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app = create_app()
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async with app.test_client() as c:
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yield c
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@pytest.mark.asyncio
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async def test_health_returns_ok(client):
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response = await client.get("/api/health")
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assert response.status_code == 200
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body = await response.get_json()
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assert body == {"status": "ok"}
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