diff --git a/changelog/12966.doc.rst b/changelog/12966.doc.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..8a440c2ec0f --- /dev/null +++ b/changelog/12966.doc.rst @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +Clarify :ref:`filterwarnings` docs on filter precedence/order when using multiple :ref:`@pytest.mark.filterwarnings ` marks. diff --git a/doc/en/how-to/capture-warnings.rst b/doc/en/how-to/capture-warnings.rst index 44ed87508a3..65a43cec6e8 100644 --- a/doc/en/how-to/capture-warnings.rst +++ b/doc/en/how-to/capture-warnings.rst @@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ is performed. -You can use the ``@pytest.mark.filterwarnings`` to add warning filters to specific test items, +You can use the :ref:`@pytest.mark.filterwarnings ` mark to add warning filters to specific test items, allowing you to have finer control of which warnings should be captured at test, class or even module level: @@ -147,10 +147,30 @@ even module level: assert api_v1() == 1 +You can specify multiple filters with separate decorators: + +.. code-block:: python + + # Ignore "api v1" warnings, but fail on all other warnings + @pytest.mark.filterwarnings("ignore:api v1") + @pytest.mark.filterwarnings("error") + def test_one(): + assert api_v1() == 1 + +.. important:: + + Regarding decorator order and filter precedence: + it's important to remember that decorators are evaluated in reverse order, + so you have to list the warning filters in the reverse order + compared to traditional :py:func:`warnings.filterwarnings` and :option:`-W option ` usage. + This means in practice that filters from earlier :ref:`@pytest.mark.filterwarnings ` decorators + take precedence over filters from later decorators, as illustrated in the example above. + + Filters applied using a mark take precedence over filters passed on the command line or configured -by the ``filterwarnings`` ini option. +by the :confval:`filterwarnings` ini option. -You may apply a filter to all tests of a class by using the ``filterwarnings`` mark as a class +You may apply a filter to all tests of a class by using the :ref:`filterwarnings ` mark as a class decorator or to all tests in a module by setting the :globalvar:`pytestmark` variable: .. code-block:: python @@ -159,6 +179,13 @@ decorator or to all tests in a module by setting the :globalvar:`pytestmark` var pytestmark = pytest.mark.filterwarnings("error") +.. note:: + + If you want to apply multiple filters + (by assigning a list of :ref:`filterwarnings ` mark to :globalvar:`pytestmark`), + you must use the traditional :py:func:`warnings.filterwarnings` ordering approach (later filters take precedence), + which is the reverse of the decorator approach mentioned above. + *Credits go to Florian Schulze for the reference implementation in the* `pytest-warnings`_ *plugin.*