python-dbusmock 0.16.1-1 source package in Ubuntu

Changelog

python-dbusmock (0.16.1-1) unstable; urgency=medium

  * New upstream release.

 -- Martin Pitt <email address hidden>  Thu, 22 Oct 2015 17:30:57 +0200

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Uploaded by:
Debian Python Modules Team
Uploaded to:
Sid
Original maintainer:
Debian Python Modules Team
Architectures:
all
Section:
misc
Urgency:
Medium Urgency

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Xenial: [FULLYBUILT] amd64

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python-dbusmock_0.16.1-1.dsc 2.3 KiB 017c221633441e21ceabee8e6a6b5523fdbfeb3c4678d1d76c9f2cd8d9cabe6b
python-dbusmock_0.16.1.orig.tar.gz 66.9 KiB bb2104b6c7f86b2d07905fa627a50ed3ba08ee9e88803591c5d5890b49450d0e
python-dbusmock_0.16.1-1.debian.tar.xz 3.9 KiB 9a2aca7d5cfaab3a7acfff441989f6fd91a8067a296a0546ec5c147eb57c2c7c

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Binary packages built by this source

python-dbusmock: mock D-Bus objects for tests (Python 2)

 With python-dbusmock you can easily create mock objects on D-Bus. This is
 useful for writing tests for software which talks to D-Bus services such as
 upower, systemd, ConsoleKit, gnome-session or others, and it is hard (or
 impossible without root privileges) to set the state of the real services to
 what you expect in your tests.
 .
 Mock objects look like the real API (or at least the parts that you actually
 need), but they do not actually do anything (or only some action that you
 specify yourself). You can configure their state, behaviour and responses as
 you like in your test, without making any assumptions about the real system
 status.
 .
 You can use this with any programming language, as you can run the mocker as a
 normal program. The actual setup of the mock (adding objects, methods,
 properties, etc.) all happen via D-Bus methods on the
 org.freedesktop.DBus.Mock interface. You just don't have the convenience
 D-Bus launch API that way.

python3-dbusmock: mock D-Bus objects for tests (Python 3)

 With python-dbusmock you can easily create mock objects on D-Bus. This is
 useful for writing tests for software which talks to D-Bus services such as
 upower, systemd, ConsoleKit, gnome-session or others, and it is hard (or
 impossible without root privileges) to set the state of the real services to
 what you expect in your tests.
 .
 Mock objects look like the real API (or at least the parts that you actually
 need), but they do not actually do anything (or only some action that you
 specify yourself). You can configure their state, behaviour and responses as
 you like in your test, without making any assumptions about the real system
 status.
 .
 You can use this with any programming language, as you can run the mocker as a
 normal program. The actual setup of the mock (adding objects, methods,
 properties, etc.) all happen via D-Bus methods on the
 org.freedesktop.DBus.Mock interface. You just don't have the convenience
 D-Bus launch API that way.