helm_unittest_test
A single helm-unittest suite file.
Backend: pants.backend.experimental.helm
source
source
type: str
required
A single file that belongs to this target.
Path is relative to the BUILD file's directory, e.g. source='example.ext'
.
dependencies
dependencies
type: Iterable[str] | None
default: None
Addresses to other targets that this target depends on, e.g. ['helloworld/subdir:lib', 'helloworld/main.py:lib', '3rdparty:reqs#django']
.
This augments any dependencies inferred by Pants, such as by analyzing your imports. Use pants dependencies
or pants peek
on this target to get the final result.
See Targets and BUILD files for more about how addresses are formed, including for generated targets. You can also run pants list ::
to find all addresses in your project, or pants list dir
to find all addresses defined in that directory.
If the target is in the same BUILD file, you can leave off the BUILD file path, e.g. :tgt
instead of helloworld/subdir:tgt
. For generated first-party addresses, use ./
for the file path, e.g. ./main.py:tgt
; for all other generated targets, use :tgt#generated_name
.
You may exclude dependencies by prefixing with !
, e.g. ['!helloworld/subdir:lib', '!./sibling.txt']
. Ignores are intended for false positives with dependency inference; otherwise, simply leave off the dependency from the BUILD file.
description
description
type: str | None
default: None
A human-readable description of the target.
Use pants list --documented ::
to see all targets with descriptions.
strict
strict
type: bool | None
default: None
If set to true, parses the UnitTest suite files strictly.
tags
tags
type: Iterable[str] | None
default: None
Arbitrary strings to describe a target.
For example, you may tag some test targets with 'integration_test' so that you could run pants --tag='integration_test' test ::
to only run on targets with that tag.
timeout
timeout
type: int | None
default: None
A timeout (in seconds) used by each test file belonging to this target.
If unset, will default to [test].timeout_default
; if that option is also unset, then the test will never time out. Will never exceed [test].timeout_maximum
. Only applies if the option --test-timeouts
is set to true (the default).
Updated about 1 month ago