python-libfaketime is a wrapper of libfaketime for python. Some brief details:
- Linux and OS X, Pythons 3.8 through 3.12, pypy and pypy3
- Mostly compatible with freezegun.
- Microsecond resolution.
- Accepts datetimes and strings that can be parsed by dateutil.
- Not threadsafe.
- Will break profiling. A workaround: use
libfaketime.{begin, end}_callback
to disable/enable your profiler (nosetest example).
$ pip install libfaketime
import datetime
from libfaketime import fake_time, reexec_if_needed
# libfaketime needs to be preloaded by the dynamic linker.
# This will exec the same command, but with the proper environment variables set.
# You can also skip this and manually manage your env (see "How to avoid re-exec").
reexec_if_needed()
def test_datetime_now():
# fake_time can be used as a context_manager
with fake_time('1970-01-01 00:00:01'):
# Every calls to a date or datetime function returns the mocked date
assert datetime.datetime.utcnow() == datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1)
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1)
assert time.time() == 1
# fake_time can also be used as a decorator
@fake_time('1970-01-01 00:00:01', tz_offset=12)
def test_datetime_now_with_offset():
# datetime.utcnow returns the mocked datetime without offset
assert datetime.datetime.utcnow() == datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 0, 0, 1)
# datetime.now returns the mocked datetime with the offset passed to fake_time
assert datetime.datetime.now() == datetime.datetime(1970, 1, 1, 12, 0, 1)
By default, reexec_if_needed
removes the LD_PRELOAD
variable after the
re-execution, to keep your environment as clean as possible. You might want it
to stick around, for example when using parallelized tests that use subprocess
like pytest-xdist
, and simply for tests where subprocess is called. To
keep them around, pass remove_vars=False
like:
reexec_if_needed(remove_vars=False)
To avoid displaying the informative text when re-executing, you can set the
quiet
parameter:
reexec_if_needed(quiet=True)
A common time can be shared between several execution contexts by using a file to store the time to mock, instead of environment variables. This is useful to control the time of a running process for instance. Here is a schematized use case:
reexec_if_needed(remove_vars=False)
with fake_time("1970-01-01 00:00:00", timestamp_file="/tmp/timestamp"):
subprocess.run("/some/server/process")
with fake_time("2000-01-01 00:00:00", timestamp_file="/tmp/timestamp"):
assert request_the_server_process_date() == "2000-01-01 00:00:00"
libfaketime tends to be significantly faster than freezegun. Here's the output of a totally unscientific benchmark on my laptop:
$ python benchmark.py
re-exec with libfaketime dependencies
timing 1000 executions of <class 'libfaketime.fake_time'>
0.021755 seconds
$ python benchmark.py freezegun
timing 1000 executions of <function freeze_time at 0x10aaa1140>
6.561472 seconds
The pytest-libfaketime plugin will automatically configure python-libfaketime for you:
$ pip install pytest-libfaketime
Alternatively, you can reexec manually from inside the pytest_configure hook:
# conftest.py
import os
import libfaketime
def pytest_configure():
libfaketime.reexec_if_needed()
_, env_additions = libfaketime.get_reload_information()
os.environ.update(env_additions)
In your tox configuration file, under the testenv
bloc, add the libfaketime environment variables to avoid re-execution:
setenv =
LD_PRELOAD = {envsitepackagesdir}/libfaketime/vendor/libfaketime/src/libfaketime.so.1
DONT_FAKE_MONOTONIC = 1
FAKETIME_DID_REEXEC = true
python-libfaketime should have the same behavior as freezegun when running on supported code. To migrate to it, you can run:
find . -type f -name "*.py" -exec sed -i 's/freezegun/libfaketime/g' "{}" \;
In some cases - especially when your tests start other processes - re-execing can cause unexpected problems. To avoid this, you can preload the necessary environment variables yourself. The necessary environment for your system can be found by running python-libfaketime
on the command line:
$ python-libfaketime
export LD_PRELOAD="/home/foo/<snip>/vendor/libfaketime/src/libfaketime.so.1"
export DONT_FAKE_MONOTONIC="1"
export FAKETIME_NO_CACHE="1"
export FAKETIME_DID_REEXEC=true
You can easily put this in a script like:
$ eval $(python-libfaketime)
$ pytest # ...or any other code that imports libfaketime
Contributions are welcome! You should compile libfaketime before running tests:
git submodule init --update
# For Linux:
env FAKETIME_COMPILE_CFLAGS="-UFAKE_STAT -UFAKE_UTIME -UFAKE_SLEEP" make -C libfaketime/vendor/libfaketime
# For macOS
env make -C libfaketime/vendor/libfaketime
Then you can install requirements with pip install -r requirements.txt
and use pytest
and tox
to run the tests.
Calling uuid.uuid1()
multiple times while in a fake_time context can result in a deadlock when an OS-level uuid library is available.
To avoid this, python-libtaketime will monkeypatch uuid._uuid_generate_time (or similar, it varies by version) to None inside a fake_time context.
This may slow down uuid1 generation but should not affect correctness.