================ Unit Testing ================ Testing with Django ------------------- The first problem you'll run in to when trying to write a test that runs a task is that Django's test runner doesn't use the same database as your celery daemon is using. If you're using the database backend, this means that your tombstones won't show up in your test database and you won't be able to get the return value or check the status of your tasks. There are two ways to get around this. You can either take advantage of ``CELERY_ALWAYS_EAGER = True`` to skip the daemon, or you can avoid testing anything that needs to check the status or result of a task. Using a custom test runner to test with celery ---------------------------------------------- If you're going the ``CELERY_ALWAYS_EAGER`` route, which is probably better than just never testing some parts of your app, a custom Django test runner does the trick. Celery provides a simple test runner, but it's easy enough to roll your own if you have other things that need to be done. http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/topics/testing/#defining-a-test-runner For this example, we'll use the ``djcelery.contrib.test_runner`` to test the ``add`` task from the `User Guide: Tasks`_ examples in the Celery documentation. .. _`User Guide: Tasks`: http://docs.celeryq.org/en/latest/userguide/tasks.html To enable the test runner, set the following settings: .. code-block:: python TEST_RUNNER = 'djcelery.contrib.test_runner.CeleryTestSuiteRunner' Then we can put the tests in a ``tests.py`` somewhere: .. code-block:: python from django.test import TestCase from myapp.tasks import add class AddTestCase(TestCase): def testNoError(self): """Test that the ``add`` task runs with no errors, and returns the correct result.""" result = add.delay(8, 8) self.assertEquals(result.get(), 16) self.assertTrue(result.successful()) This test assumes that you put your example ``add`` task in ``maypp.tasks`` so adjust the import for wherever you put the class.