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pytest cannot import module while python can

I am working on a package in Python. I use virtualenv. I set the path to the root of the module in a .pth path in my virtualenv, so that I can import modules of the package while developing the code and do testing (Question 1: is it a good way to do?). This works fine (here is an example, this is the behavior I want):

(VEnvTestRc) zz@zz:~/Desktop/GitFolders/rc$ python
Python 2.7.12 (default, Jul  1 2016, 15:12:24) 
[GCC 5.4.0 20160609] on linux2
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from rc import ns
>>> exit()
(VEnvTestRc) zz@zz:~/Desktop/GitFolders/rc$ python tests/test_ns.py 
issued command: echo hello
command output: hello

However, if I try to use PyTest, I get some import error messages:

(VEnvTestRc) zz@zz:~/Desktop/GitFolders/rc$ pytest
=========================================== test session starts ============================================
platform linux2 -- Python 2.7.12, pytest-3.0.5, py-1.4.31, pluggy-0.4.0
rootdir: /home/zz/Desktop/GitFolders/rc, inifile: 
collected 0 items / 1 errors 

================================================== ERRORS ==================================================
________________________________ ERROR collecting tests/test_ns.py ________________________________
ImportError while importing test module '/home/zz/Desktop/GitFolders/rc/tests/test_ns.py'.
Hint: make sure your test modules/packages have valid Python names.
Traceback:
tests/test_ns.py:2: in <module>
    from rc import ns
E   ImportError: cannot import name ns
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Interrupted: 1 errors during collection !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
========================================= 1 error in 0.09 seconds ==========================================
(VEnvTestRc) zz@zz:~/Desktop/GitFolders/rc$ which pytest
/home/zz/Desktop/VirtualEnvs/VEnvTestRc/bin/pytest

I am a bit puzzled, it looks like this indicates an import error, but Python does it fine so why is there a problem specifically with PyTest? Any suggestion to the reason / remedy (Question 2)? I googled and stack-overflowed the 'ImportError: cannot import' error for PyTest, but the hits I got were related to missing python path and remedy to this, which does not seem to be the problem here. Any suggestions?

This also might be some missing import issue

C
Community

Found the answer:

DO NOT put a __init__.py file in a folder containing TESTS if you plan on using pytest. I had one such file, deleting it solved the problem.

This was actually buried in the comments to the second answer of PATH issue with pytest 'ImportError: No module named YadaYadaYada' so I did not see it, hope it gets more visibility here.


Funny. I had the same issue and I had to add init.py to my tests folder.
Yeah, this is not a general solution (even though it was in your case), to understand why this should be read: docs.pytest.org/en/latest/goodpractices.html#test-package-name
This information is WRONG and misleading! After adding init.py into the test folder everything worked fine
@LeonardoOstan it may be wrong for you, but it doesn't mean this information is wrong in general. In my case it solved the issue.
This is wrong now. My tests are located in project_root/tests/ and source code in project_root/myapp/, I placed an init file in project_root/tests/__init__.py to be able to import the helper module project_root/tests/helper.py in project_root/tests/test_foo.py. Inside project_root/ I can run tests with python -m pytest -vv tests/.
T
Tom

I can't say I understand why this works, but I had the same problem and the tests work fine if I run python -m pytest.

I'm in a virtualenv, with pytest also available globally:

(proj)tom@neon ~/dev/proj$ type -a python
python is /home/tom/.virtualenvs/proj/bin/python
python is /usr/bin/python

(proj)tom@neon ~/dev/proj$ python -V
Python 3.5.2

(proj)tom@neon ~/dev/proj$ type -a pytest
pytest is /home/tom/.virtualenvs/proj/bin/pytest
pytest is /usr/bin/pytest

(proj)tom@neon ~/dev/proj$ pytest --version
This is pytest version 3.5.0, imported from /home/tom/.virtualenvs/proj/lib/python3.5/site-packages/pytest.py

Also did the job for me, the thing is,, it's get run by the python version defined instead of your v.env.
one reason might be that python -m pytest [...] "will also add the current directory to sys.path."
Had the same in Windows 10, and running python -m pytest solved it
This worked for as well inside my virtual environment I had to run python3 -m pytest
Based on the comment by @minusf I'm using PYTHONPATH=.:./src pytest as a make target.
N
Neuron

I just solved this by removing the __init__.py in my project root:

.
├── __init__.py <--- removed
├── models
│   ├── __init__.py
│   ├── address.py
│   ├── appointment.py
│   └── client.py
├── requirements.txt
├── setup.cfg
├── tests
│   ├── __init__.py
│   ├── models
│   │   ├── __init__.py
│   │   ├── appointment_test.py
│   │   └── client_test.py
│   └── other_test.py
└── script.py

The accepted answer __init__.py file in a folder containing TESTS did not solve my problem. This one worked. I guess it's because of the file hierarchy.
I have removed __init__.py file. I was still facing issue. Adding conftest.py file to the root directory worked for me.
I'd expect conftest.py to be in /tests not the root
This solution worked for me but does anyone know this would cause an import error?
This was also what fixed it for me! In my case I think the issue was also that the my project structure was proj_folder as a root and it had two children proj_folder/project_folder and proj_folder/tests (so same name for project root and subdirectory). So then in one of the test files in test i had an import like: from proj_folder import main. Now, because I had an init in the project root, pytest was attempting to get a main module that was actually in project_folder/project_folder!
M
Mark

I had the same problem but for another reason than the ones mentioned:

I had py.test installed globally, while the packages were installed in a virtual environment.

The solution was to install pytest in the virtual environment. (In case your shell hashes executables, as Bash does, use hash -r, or use the full path to py.test)


Just realized I had the same sneaky issue, using anaconda. I forgot to add pytest in the virtualenv created by conda, yet pytest it is available in anaconda's root environment. Therefore pytest could be found, but not any package installed in the environment.
I had the same issue. pytest was installed globally and not in the virtualenv. pip3 install pytest inside virtualenv fixed the issue.
I even had it installed in my venv but for some reason it wasn't picking it up. (which pytest showed the wrong version) Deactivating and reactivating the venv fixed everything.
D
David Buck

Had a similar issue and it worked when I added __init__.py file under tests directory.


And, conftest.py as well in my case.
N
Neuron

Simply put an empty conftest.py file in the project root directory, because when pytest discovers a conftest.py, it modifies sys.path so it can import stuff from the conftest module. A general directory structure can be:

Root
├── conftest.py
├── module1
│   ├── __init__.py
│   └── sample.py
└── tests
    └── test_sample.py

This is the best answer. Forget all that __init__.py craziness.
Didn't work for me. All very odd.
Didn't work for me as well.
Worked for me. I believe this is the long-term solution for anyone who has it working with python -m pytest but doesn't want to add the extra verbiage every time
P
Patrick

In my case I am working in a container and unfortuantely pytest has the tendency to use python2.7 rather than my python3 interpreter of choice.

In my case this worked:

python3 -m pytest

My folder structure

/
app/
-module1.py
-module2.py
-tests/
--test_module1.py
--test_module2.py
requirements.txt
README.md

l
lucasamaral

This problem will happen if you have a tests.py file and a tests folder with tests/__init__.py.

During the collection pytest finds the folder, but when it tries to import the test files from the folder, tests.py file will cause the import problem.

To fix simply remove the tests.py file and put all your tests inside the tests/ folder.

For your specific case the fix will be precisely:

Remove the file /home/zz/Desktop/GitFolders/rc/tests.py

Make sure /home/zz/Desktop/GitFolders/rc/tests/__init__.py is present


m
mike rodent

ANOTHER SUGGESTION

I explored this question and various others on SO and elsewhere... all the stuff about adding (or removing) an empty __init__.py in and/or conftest.py in various parts of the project directory structure, all the stuff about PYTHONPATH, etc., etc.: NONE of these solutions worked for me, in what is actually a very simple situation, and which shouldn't be causing any grief.

I regard this as a flaw in pytest's current setup. In fact I got a message recently from someone on SO who clearly knew his stuff. He said that pytest is not designed to work with (as per Java/Groovy/Gradle) separate "src" and "test" directory structures, and that test files should be mingled in amongst the application directories and files. This perhaps goes some way to providing an explanation ... however, tests, particularly integration/functional tests, don't always necessarily correspond neatly to particular directories, and I think pytest should give users more choice in this regard.

Structure of my project:

project_root
    src
        core
            __init__.py
            __main__.py
            my_other_file.py 
    tests
        basic_tests
            test_first_tests.py

The import problem posed: very simply, __main__.py has a line import my_other_file. This (not surprisingly) works OK when I just run the app, i.e. run python src/core from the root directory.

But when I run pytest with a test which imports __main__.py I get

ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'my_other_file'

on the line in __main__.py that tries to import "my_other_file". Note that the problem here, in my case, is that, in the course of a pytest test, one application file fails to find another application file in the same package.

USING PYTHONPATH
After a lot of experimentation, and putting an __init__.py file and a confest.py file in just about every directory I could find (I think the crucial files were __init__.py added to "tests" and "basic_tests", see above directory structure), and then setting PYTHONPATH to as follows

PYTHONPATH=D:\My Documents\software projects\EclipseWorkspace\my_project\src\core

... I found it worked. Imports in the testing files had to be tweaked a bit, the general pattern being from core import app, project, but the test files were able to "see" core, and crucially there was no need to mess around with the import commands in the app files.

HOWEVER... for some reason the tests now run much slower using this method! Compared to my solution below, where the core package can be seen to be loaded just once, my suspicion is that the PYTHONPATH solution probably results in vast amounts of code being reloaded again and again. I can't yet confirm this, but I can't see any other explanation.

THE ALTERNATIVE My alternative fairly simple solution is this:

1 - in __init__.py in that application package (i.e. directory "core"), put the following two lines:

import pathlib, sys
sys.path.append(str(pathlib.Path(__file__).parent))

NB normally there isn't anything in an __init__.py of course. It turns out, as I confirmed by experimentation, that pytest usually (see update below) executes __init__.py in this situation, after pytest has done whatever it has done to mess up the sys.path entries.

2 - UPDATE 2022-01: The original solution I had found involved putting a conftest.py file in the application directory(ies) - without which things didn't work. This is obviously undesirable. I find that another solution is to put this code in your conftest.py file in your root directory:

def pytest_configure(config):
    import src.core # NB this causes `src/core/__init__.py` to run
    # set up any "aliases" (optional...)
    import sys
    sys.modules['core'] = sys.modules['src.core']

... indeed, from my experiments, the effect of putting conftest.py in the application directory seems to be that pytest then runs __init__.py in that directory. This appears to imply that the module is being imported...

(previous suggestion:)
yes, you also HAVE to include an empty "conftest.py" file in the directory "core". Hopefully this should be the only conftest.py you'll need: I experimented with all this, and putting one in the root directory was not necessary (nor did it solve the problem without the suggested code in __init__.py).

3 - finally, in my test function, before calling core.__main__ in my example, I have to import the file I know is about to be imported:

import core.my_other_file
import core.__main__ 

If you do this in the first test in your file, you will find that sys.modules is set up for all other tests in that file. Better yet, put import core.my_other_file at the very start of the file, before the first test. Unfortunately, from core import * does not seem to work.

Later: this method has some idiosyncracies and limitations. For example, although the -k switch works OK to filter in/out tests or entire files, if you do something like pytest tests/tests_concerning_module_x, it appears that core.__init__.py does NOT get run... so the files in the core module are once again mutually unimportable during testing. Other limitations will probably come to light...

As I say, I regard this as a flaw in pytest's setup. I have absolutely no idea what pytest does to establish a common-sense setup for sys.path, but it's obviously getting it wrong. There should be no need to rely on PYTHONPATH, or whatever, and if indeed this is the "official" solution, the documentation on this subject is sorely lacking.

NB this suggestion of mine has a problem: by adding to sys.path every time pytest runs __init__.py in a module, it means that this new path thereafter becomes permanent in sys.path, both during testing and, more worryingly, during runs of the application itself, if there is anything which actually calls __init__.py. (Incidentally, just going python src/core (as in my example) does NOT cause this to happen. But other things might.)

To cater for this I have a clunky but effective solution:

import pathlib, sys, traceback
frame_list = traceback.extract_stack()
if len(frame_list) > 2:
    path_parts = pathlib.Path(frame_list[2].filename).parts
    sys_platform = sys.platform
    if sys_platform.startswith('win'):
        if len(path_parts) > 2 and path_parts[-3:-1] == ('Scripts', 'pytest.exe'):
            sys.testing_context = True
            sys.path.append(str(pathlib.Path(__file__).parent))
    elif sys_platform.startswith('lin'):
        if len(path_parts) > 2 and path_parts[-3:-1] == ('_pytest', 'config'):
            sys.testing_context = True
            sys.path.append(str(pathlib.Path(__file__).parent))

This is based on my examination of the stacktrace when pytest runs something, in a W10 context and Linux Mint 20 context. It means that in an application run there will be no messing with sys.path.

Of course, this may break with future versions of pytest. My version is 6.2.5.


m
monojohnny

I solved my problem by setting the PYTHONPATH in Environment Variables for the specific configuration I'm running my tests with.

While you're viewing the test file on PyCharm:

Ctrl + Shift + A Type Edit Configurations Set your PYTHONPATH under Environment > Environment variables.

UPDATE

Move into your project's directory root Create a virtual environment Activate your newly created virtual environment Set the variable $PYTHONPATH to the root of your project and export it:

export PYTHONPATH=$(pwd)

Do not remove the __init__.py from the tests/ directory or from the src/ directory.

Also note:

The root of your directory is not a python module so do NOT add an __init__.py

conftest.py is not necessary in the root of your project.

The $PYTHONPATH var will only be available during the current terminal/console session; so you will need to set this each time. (You can follow the steps previous to this update if you are working in pycharm).


As an explicit example, I set the Environment variables: field in my PyCharm pytest run configuration to PYTHONPATH=/my_projects_root_dir:$PYTHONPATH.
This solved the issue for me: "The root of your directory is not a python module so do NOT add an init.py" By just removing the init.py, got me running again.
This worked for me. I don't understand why setting the pythonpath configuration option doesn't do the trick[1]. Also, in my case I have no init.py in the tests folders. [1]: docs.pytest.org/en/7.1.x/reference/…
r
rustysys-dev

I had a similar issue, exact same error, but different cause. I was running the test code just fine, but against an old version of the module. In the previous version of my code one class existed, while the other did not. After updating my code, I should have run the following to install it.

sudo pip install ./ --upgrade

Upon installing the updated module running pytest produced the correct results (because i was using the correct code base).


This worked for me! My module was at the same time installed as a library in the docker container I was using to run pytest. When running the python interpreter it would find the updated code, but pytest would continue to find the code as it was when the library was first installed. Running pip install ./ --upgrade updated the installed version of the lib with the latest code, and enabled pytest to find this latest version too.
Same for me, conda update --all resolved the problem
G
Galuoises

Please check here: https://docs.pytest.org/en/documentation-restructure/background/pythonpath.html

I has an issue with pytest (that was solved using python -m pytest); the error was

FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/usr/local/lib/python3.9/site-packages/...

I found the problem was missing __init__.py in tests/ and tests/subfolders.


Didn't work for me
J
JoeyZhao

In my case, the import error occurred because the package is pointing to another package/directory with the same name and its path is one level above the folder I actually wanted. I think this also explains why some people need to remove _ init _.py while others need to add back.

I just put print(the_root_package.__path__) (after import the_root_package) in both python console and pytest scripts to compare the difference

BOTTOM LINE: When you do python, the package you import may be different from the package when you run pytest.


K
Kjeld Flarup

Install the packages into Your virtual environment. Then start a new shell and source Your virtual environment again.


N
Neuron

I had placed all my tests in a tests folder and was getting the same error. I solved this by adding an __init__.py in that folder like so:

.
|-- Pipfile
|-- Pipfile.lock
|-- README.md
|-- api
|-- app.py
|-- config.py
|-- migrations
|-- pull_request_template.md
|-- settings.py
`-- tests
    |-- __init__.py <------
    |-- conftest.py
    `-- test_sample.py

Didn't work for me.
what error did you get @mikerodent
M
Majd Al-okeh

Here's a medium article! describing the problem!

The issue is which pytest you are using and your use of a virtual environment. If you have installed pytest system-wide, in other words, outside of a virtual environment, pytest has a nasty habit of only looking outside your virtual environment for modules! If your project is using a module that is only installed in your virtual environment, and you’re using a system-wide pytest, it won’t find the module, even if you’ve activated the virtual environment.1

Here’s the step-by-step:1

Exit any virtual environment Use Pip to uninstall pytest Activate your project’s virtual environment Install pytest inside the virtual environment pytest will now find your virtual-environment-only packages!


Didn't work for me
B
Brig

I was getting this using VSCode. I have a conda environment. I don't think the VScode python extension could see the updates I was making.

python c:\Users\brig\.vscode\extensions\ms-python.python-2019.9.34911\pythonFiles\testing_tools\run_adapter.py discover pytest -- -s --cache-clear test
Test Discovery failed:

I had to run pip install ./ --upgrade


That pip command returns an error: Directory './' is not installable. Neither 'setup.py' nor 'pyproject.toml' found.
m
matt6frey

I was experiencing this issue today and solved it by calling python -m pytest from the root of my project directory.

Calling pytest from the same location still caused issues.

My Project dir is organized as:

api/
 - server/
  - tests/
      - test_routes.py
  - routes/
      - routes.py
 - app.py

The module routes was imported in my test_routes.py as: from server.routes.routes import Routes

Hope that helps!


Thanks for the reminder, I've had to use the trick in the past and it's in the pytest documentation.
t
th3lourde

I disagree with the posts saying that you must remove any __init__.py files. What you must instead do is alter the sys.path.

Run an experiment where you print sys.path when running the code normally. Then print sys.path while running the code via pytest. I think you will find that there is a difference between these two paths, hence why pytest breaks.

To fix this, insert the path from the first experiment at the 0th index of the second.

Let '/usr/exampleUser/Documents/foo' be the first element of print(sys.path) for experiment 1.

Below is code that should fix your issue:

import sys sys.path[0] = '/usr/exampleUser/Documents/foo'

Put this at the top of your file, before your actual import statement.

Source: I was dealing with this myself and the above process solved it.


The only solution from listed here that worked for me.
m
martin.zaenker

Another special case:

I had the problem using tox. So my program ran fine, but unittests via tox kept complaining. After installing packages (needed for the program) you need to additionally specify the packages used in the unittests in the tox.ini

[testenv]
deps =
    package1
    package2 
...

G
Giulio Caccin

The answer above not work for me. I just solved it by appending the absolute path of the module which not found to the sys.path at top of the test_xxx.py (your test module), like:

import sys
sys.path.append('path')

Instead of putting these lines at the top of my test_main.py, I put it in conftest.py in my test directory, and it worked. Thanks for providing a programmatic solution, instead of file litter.
A
Amit Talmor

If it is related to python code that was originally developed in python 2.7 and now migrated into python 3.x than the problem is probably related to an import issue.

e.g. when importing an object from a file: base that is located in the same directory this will work in python 2.x:

from base import MyClass

in python 3.x you should replace with base full path or .base not doing so will cause the above problem. so try:

from .base import MyClass

s
satnhak

Yet another massive win for Python's import system. I think the reason there is no consensus is that what works probably depends on your environment and the tools you are using on top of it.

I'm using this from VS Code, in the test explorer under Windows in a conda environment, Python 3.8.

The setup I have got to work is:

mypkg/
    __init__.py
    app.py
    view.py
tests/
    test_app.py
    test_view.py

Under this setup intellisense works and so does test discovery.

Note that I originally tried the following, as recommended here.

src/
    mypkg/
        __init__.py
        app.py
        view.py
tests/
    test_app.py
    test_view.py

I could find no way of getting this to work from VS Code because the src folder just blew the mind of the import system. I can imagine there is a way of getting this to work from the command line. As a relatively new convert to Python programming it gives me a nostalgic feeling of working with COM, but being slightly less fun.


D
Daisy

I find the answer in there :Click here

If you have other project structure, place the conftest.py in the package root dir (the one that contains packages but is not a package itself, so does not contain an init.py)


Q
QOPS

update PYTHONPATH till src folder

export PYTHONPATH=/tmp/pycharm_project_968/src

C
Charan Reddy

For anyone who tried everything and still getting error,I have a work around.

In the folder where pytest is installed,go to pytest-env folder.

Open pyvenv.cfg file.

In the file change include-system-site-packages from false to true.

home = /usr/bin
include-system-site-packages = true
version = 3.6.6

Hope it works .Don't forget to up vote.


No such folder. There's only pytest under site-packages, and no .cfg file. Strange.
e
erickfis

My 2 cents on this: pytest will fail at chance if you are not using virtual environments. Sometimes it will just work, sometimes not.

Therefore, the solution is:

remove pytest with pip uninstall

create your venv

activate your venv

pip install your project path in editable mode, so it will be treated by pytest as a module (otherwise, pytest wont find your internal imports). You will need a setup.py file for that

install your packages, including pytest

finally, run your tests

The code, using windows PowerShell:

pip uninstall pytest
python.exe -m venv my_env
.\my_env\Scripts\activate
(my_env) pip install -e .
(my_env) pip install pytest pytest-html pandas numpy

Then finally

(my_env) pytest --html="my_testing_report.html"

An example of setup.py, for pip install -e:

import setuptools

setuptools.setup(
    name='my_package',
    version='devel',
    author='erickfis',
    author_email='erickfis@gmail.com',
    description='My package',
    long_description='My gooood package',
    packages=setuptools.find_packages(),
    classifiers=[
        'Programming Language :: Python :: 3',
        'Operating System :: OS Independent',
    ],
    include_package_data=True
)

N
Nairum

If you run Pytest from a terminal:

Run pytest with the --import-mode=append command-line flag.

Argument description in the official documentation: https://docs.pytest.org/en/stable/pythonpath.html

UPD: Before I also wrote how to do the same if you use PyCharm, but community does not like extendend answers, so I removed additional information that probably was helpful to someone who have a similar issue.


OP doesn't mention pycharm anywhere.
@DannyDannyDanny I gave a command line command for the OP. The second option is just in case, maybe it will help someone.
Didn't work for me
I'm trying to run this from PyCharm and having this issue. Would love that info
A
Alaa M.

In my case the problem was that the filename and the class name were exactly the same: FrameAnalyzer.py and FrameAnalyzer respectively. Once I changed the filename to frame_analyzer.py, everything worked.


N
Neuron

Kept everything same and just added a blank test file at the root folder .. Solved it

Here are the findings, this problem really bugged me for a while. My folder structure was

mathapp/
    - server.py  
    - configuration.py 
    - __init__.py 
    - static/ 
       - home.html  
tests/            
    - functional 
       - test_errors.py 
    - unit  
       - test_add.py

and pytest would complain with the ModuleNotFoundError and gives the hint:

make sure your test modules/packages have valid Python names.

I introduced a mock test file at the same level as mathsapp and tests directory. The file contained nothing. Now pytest does not complain.

Result without the file

$ pytest
============================= test session starts =============================
platform win32 -- Python 3.8.2, pytest-5.4.2, py-1.8.1, pluggy-0.13.1
rootdir: C:\mak2006\workspace\0github\python-rest-app-cont
collected 1 item / 1 error

=================================== ERRORS ====================================
_______________ ERROR collecting tests/functional/test_func.py ________________
ImportError while importing test module 'C:\mainak\workspace\0github\python-rest-app-cont\tests\functional\test_func.py'.
Hint: make sure your test modules/packages have valid Python names.
Traceback:
tests\functional\test_func.py:4: in <module>
    from mathapp.service import sum
E   ModuleNotFoundError: No module named 'mathapp'
=========================== short test summary info ===========================
ERROR tests/functional/test_func.py
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Interrupted: 1 error during collection !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
============================== 1 error in 0.24s ===============================

Results with the file

$ pytest
============================= test session starts =============================
platform win32 -- Python 3.8.2, pytest-5.4.2, py-1.8.1, pluggy-0.13.1
rootdir: C:\mak2006\workspace\0github\python-rest-app-cont
collected 2 items

tests\functional\test_func.py .                                          [ 50%]
tests\unit\test_unit.py .                                                [100%]

============================== 2 passed in 0.11s ==============================

this worked for me after a long time with this issue. seems like pytest is treating the project root as wherever it finds the first test file? surely this is a bug?
Wow this worked for me. I still have to use python3 -m pytest but adding a blank test file solved the issue.
What is "a blank test file"?