* fix(research): preserve Discuss spin-off primer during context trimming
trim_for_context() kept only system_msgs[:1] as essential and dropped the
rest under budget pressure. A research "Discuss" spin-off seeds the report
as a system message that sits after the preface system messages, so it
landed in extra_system and was the first thing evicted once the chat grew
— the conversation then lost its grounding and drifted off task.
Treat any system message carrying research_spinoff_from metadata as
essential, alongside the leading system prompt, so the seeded report
survives trimming. maybe_compact already retains all system messages.
Tests: tests/test_context_compactor.py::TestResearchPrimerPreserved
* fix(research): ground Discuss spin-off chats on the seeded report
build_chat_context injected global memory (pinned + hybrid-retrieved) and
personal-doc RAG every turn, keyed off the user-level memory_enabled pref
and a request-scoped use_rag flag — never the session. A research spin-off,
whose primer declares the report the sole knowledge base, thus had
unrelated keyword-matched facts pulled in ("wrong data") competing with the
report; its rag=False flag was also ignored (use_rag defaulted on).
Add _session_is_research_spinoff(sess) (detects the primer research_spinoff_from
metadata; handles ChatMessage and dict forms) and, for such sessions,
disable memory injection and force RAG off.
Tests: tests/test_chat_helpers.py spin-off detection cases
---------
Co-authored-by: Dan (cirim) <claude@cirim.org>
Test Suite Notes
Purpose
This file documents the shared test helpers and the review expectations that go
with them. The suite is being refactored incrementally, so this is a working
reference for that effort - not a claim that the suite is already fully
organized. Read it before adding a new helper or before reviewing a PR that
touches tests/helpers/.
For the broader rules - test taxonomy, determinism/isolation rules, the
behavioral-vs-source-text policy, and helper/factory extraction rules - see
TESTING_STANDARD.md. This file is the concrete helper
reference; that file is the standard the refactor works toward.
Running focused subsets (taxonomy markers)
tests/conftest.py tags every test at collection time with two markers derived
from its filename by tests/_taxonomy.py: an area_* marker (e.g.
area_security) and a finer sub_* marker (e.g. sub_owner_scope). This adds
markers only - it moves no files and changes no test behavior. Use them to run a
focused slice:
python3 -m pytest -m area_security
python3 -m pytest -m "area_services and sub_cookbook"
Areas are security, routes, services, cli, js, helpers, unit, and
uncategorized. Classification is conservative and token-based: a file that
matches no area keyword falls back to area_uncategorized with its filename as
the sub-area. The area_* names are registered in pyproject.toml; the dynamic
sub_* names are registered before collection by pytest_configure in
tests/conftest.py, so unknown-mark warnings still flag genuine typos.
For common focused runs, use tests/run_focus.py. It validates area and
sub-area names, accepts sub-areas with or without the sub_ prefix, and passes
extra pytest arguments after --:
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area security
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area services --sub-area cookbook
python3 tests/run_focus.py --sub-area sub_cookbook
python3 tests/run_focus.py --keyword taxonomy
python3 tests/run_focus.py --last-failed
python3 tests/run_focus.py --dry-run --area services --sub-area cookbook
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area services -- --maxfail=1 -q
Fast lane and duration visibility
--fast runs the fast lane: the tests that are not marked slow (it adds the
marker expression not slow). It composes with --area/--sub-area using
and. Because no tests may be marked slow yet, --fast can initially match
the full focused selection; it becomes a real speed-up as slow marks are added
from duration evidence. Use it for quick local or reviewer feedback; it does not
replace broader focused or full-suite validation before merge.
--durations N and --durations-min FLOAT add pytest's slowest-test reporting
so you can see where time goes. They are reporting only and do not count as a
focus selector, so --durations must be combined with a real selector
(--area, --sub-area, --keyword, --last-failed, or --fast).
Activate or otherwise use the project Python environment before running these
commands. The examples use python3 intentionally to avoid hard-coding a local
venv path.
python3 tests/run_focus.py --fast
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area services --fast
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area services --durations 25
python3 tests/run_focus.py --area services --fast --durations 25 --durations-min 0.05
The slow marker is opt-in. Mark a test slow only with duration evidence
(from --durations), not by guessing - see the fast-lane policy in
TESTING_STANDARD.md. --fast is for quick reviewer feedback and must not
replace the full suite before merge. A slow mark only excludes a test from the
fast lane; the test stays runnable directly, e.g.:
python3 -m pytest tests/test_auth_config_lock_concurrency.py
python3 -m pytest -m slow
Order-sensitivity reporting (report-only)
tests/run_order_report.py runs pytest with the collected test items shuffled
by a seeded RNG, to surface order-sensitive tests (hidden coupling through
shared import state, module caches, databases, etc.). It is report-only: it is
not wired into CI, adds no gate, and changes no normal pytest collection or
ordering - the shuffle exists only inside this runner. The seed is always
printed, and pytest targets/options go after a literal --:
python3 tests/run_order_report.py --seed 123 -- tests/cli/ -q
python3 tests/run_order_report.py -- tests/cli/ -q # generates and prints a seed
The same seed reproduces the same order when the reported working directory, pytest target arguments, and test environment are also the same. The runner prints all command arguments with shell-safe POSIX quoting and uses the invoking Python interpreter.
A generated-seed run starts with output like:
[order-report] working directory: /path/to/odysseus
[order-report] shuffling test order with seed 284734921
[order-report] reproduce from this working directory with the same test environment:
[order-report] reproduce with: /path/to/odysseus/.venv/bin/python /path/to/odysseus/tests/run_order_report.py --seed 284734921 -- tests/cli/ -q
Run the printed command from the reported working directory to reproduce the same fixed-seed order:
[order-report] working directory: /path/to/odysseus
[order-report] shuffling test order with seed 284734921
[order-report] reproduce from this working directory with the same test environment:
[order-report] reproduce with: /path/to/odysseus/.venv/bin/python /path/to/odysseus/tests/run_order_report.py --seed 284734921 -- tests/cli/ -q
Pytest output remains visible between the report header and footer. A failing run ends with pytest's normal failure report followed by:
FAILED tests/example_test.py::test_example - AssertionError
[order-report] seed 284734921: pytest exit code 1 (report-only; fix order-sensitive failures in separate scoped PRs)
Failures discovered this way are real isolation bugs: fix them in separate
scoped PRs - do not silence them with skip/xfail, and do not "fix" them by
depending on a particular order.
The runner propagates pytest's exit code, so it composes with normal local workflows; "report-only" means it is not a CI gate, not that failures are swallowed.
Core principles
- Keep PRs small and homogeneous: one kind of change per PR.
- Prefer explicit local setup over hidden global fixtures.
- Avoid expanding the root
conftest.pyunless absolutely necessary. - Do not mix file moves with logic changes in the same PR.
- Do not weaken tests with
skip/xfailjust to make CI pass. - Validate the focused files you changed, plus any neighboring or order-sensitive groups they interact with.
Helper conventions
The helpers below live under tests/helpers/. They exist to remove repeated
boilerplate that already appeared across multiple tests. Reach for one only when
your test matches its intended use; do not stretch a helper to cover a new case.
tests.helpers.cli_loader.load_script
Use when a test needs to import a script under scripts/ without repeating
SourceFileLoader / importlib.util boilerplate.
- Intended for script/CLI tests that load a single file from
scripts/. - Not for arbitrary package imports - use a normal
importfor those. - When migrating an existing test to it, keep the existing stubs and assertions
unchanged. Any
sys.modulesstubs the script needs at import time must still be injected (e.g. viamonkeypatch) before callingload_script.
tests.helpers.import_state.clear_module
Use when a test must drop one cached module and its parent-package attribute before a fresh import.
- Clears
sys.modules[name]. - Clears the parent-package attribute when present.
- Good replacement for local
sys.modules.pop(...)+delattr(parent, child)blocks.
tests.helpers.import_state.preserve_import_state
Use when a test temporarily installs stubs into sys.modules and needs
deterministic cleanup afterward.
- Context manager: restores both
sys.modulesentries and parent-package attributes on exit (normal or exception). - Useful around module-level stubs or temporary imports.
- Prefer narrow, explicit module names over broad ones.
tests.helpers.import_state.clear_fake_database_modules
Use only for the guarded fake/stub database cleanup pattern.
- Preserves a real-looking
core.database(one with a string__file__). - Removes a fake/stub
core.databaseand the relatedsrc.databasestate. - Do not use as a general database reset fixture.
tests.helpers.import_state.clear_fake_endpoint_resolver_modules
Use only for the guarded fake/stub src.endpoint_resolver cleanup pattern.
- Preserves real resolver modules (those with a truthy
__file__). - Evicts fake/stub resolver modules and the dependent route modules that were cached against them.
- Accepts explicit extra dependent module names to evict alongside the defaults.
tests.helpers.sqlite_db.make_temp_sqlite
Use for the repeated file-backed temp sqlite setup in tests.
- Only constructs
(SessionLocal, engine, tmpfile)from the repeated block. - Does not patch modules and does not clean up the temp file.
- The caller must bind
SessionLocalexplicitly onto whatever module the code under test reads, and must keep the returned objects alive. - Do not use it as a general DB fixture framework.
tests.helpers.db_stubs.make_core_db_stub
Use for small import-time core.database stubs with a placeholder
SessionLocal.
- Pass model names via
modelswhen MagicMock attributes are sufficient. - Pass
attributeswhen an import needs exact placeholder values. - Set
install_core_package=Trueonly when the test also needs a fake parentcoremodule stub. - Keep custom fake sessions and route-specific database behavior local.
What not to abstract yet
Some remaining patterns should stay as-is for now rather than being forced into helpers:
- Large mixed files such as security/review regression files.
- Broad setup-oriented
sys.modulesstub installers. - One-off custom module patching.
- Custom DB session, route, and app setup.
Validation expectations
Run validation locally before opening or approving a PR. Practical checks:
git diff --check- catch whitespace and conflict-marker errors.python3 -m py_compile <changed files>- confirm changed files compile.- Focused
pyteston the changed test files. pyteston neighboring or order-sensitive test groups that share import state with the changed files.grepfor the old boilerplate when replacing it, to confirm no stragglers remain.- A fresh audit worktree when changing the helpers themselves, so stale
__pycache__or import state cannot mask a regression.
Current roadmap
- Import-state cleanup - complete.
- Document helper conventions (this file).
- Pilot the repeated import-time
core.databasestub helper. - Add further tiny helpers only when the repeated semantics are clear.
- Start low-risk file moves only after helper conventions are documented.
- Avoid moving high-risk security/route regression files first.