The zope.interface.verify module provides functions that test whether a given interface is implemented by a class or provided by an object, resp.
This is covered by unit tests defined in zope.interface.tests.test_verify.
An object provides an interface if
This doctest currently covers only the latter item.
Attributes of the object, be they defined by its class or added by its __init__ method, will be recognized:
>>> from zope.interface import Interface, Attribute, implements
>>> from zope.interface.exceptions import BrokenImplementation
>>> class IFoo(Interface):
... x = Attribute("The X attribute")
... y = Attribute("The Y attribute")
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... x = 1
... def __init__(self):
... self.y = 2
>>> from zope.interface.verify import verifyObject
>>> verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
True
If either attribute is missing, verification will fail:
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... x = 1
>>> try:
... verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
... except BrokenImplementation, e:
... print str(e)
An object has failed to implement interface <InterfaceClass ...IFoo>
The y attribute was not provided.
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... def __init__(self):
... self.y = 2
>>> try:
... verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
... except BrokenImplementation, e:
... print str(e)
An object has failed to implement interface <InterfaceClass ...IFoo>
The x attribute was not provided.
If an attribute is implemented as a property that raises an AttributeError when trying to get its value, the attribute is considered missing:
>>> class IFoo(Interface):
... x = Attribute('The X attribute')
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... @property
... def x(self):
... raise AttributeError
>>> try:
... verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
... except BrokenImplementation, e:
... print str(e)
An object has failed to implement interface <InterfaceClass ...IFoo>
The x attribute was not provided.
Any other exception raised by a property will propagate to the caller of verifyObject:
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... @property
... def x(self):
... raise Exception
>>> verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
Traceback (most recent call last):
Exception
Of course, broken properties that are not required by the interface don’t do any harm:
>>> class Foo(object):
... implements(IFoo)
... x = 1
... @property
... def y(self):
... raise Exception
>>> verifyObject(IFoo, Foo())
True