Module implementing result related model objects.
During test execution these objects are created internally by various runners. At that time they can be inspected and modified by listeners__.
When results are parsed from XML output files after execution to be able to
create logs and reports, these objects are created by the
:func:~.resultbuilder.ExecutionResult factory method.
At that point they can be inspected and modified by pre-Rebot modifiers__.
The :func:~.resultbuilder.ExecutionResult factory method can also be used
by custom scripts and tools. In such usage it is often easiest to inspect and
modify these objects using the :mod:visitor interface <robot.model.visitor>.
If classes defined here are needed, for example, as type hints, they can
be imported via the :mod:robot.running module.
__ http://robotframework.org/robotframework/latest/RobotFrameworkUserGuide.html#listener-interface __ http://robotframework.org/robotframework/latest/RobotFrameworkUserGuide.html#programmatic-modification-of-results
    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a datetime or as a None if not set.
If start time is not set, it is calculated based :attr:end_time
and :attr:elapsed_time if possible.
Can be set either directly as a datetime or as a string in ISO 8601
format.
New in Robot Framework 6.1. Heavily enhanced in Robot Framework 7.0.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a datetime or as a None if not set.
If end time is not set, it is calculated based :attr:start_time
and :attr:elapsed_time if possible.
Can be set either directly as a datetime or as a string in ISO 8601
format.
New in Robot Framework 6.1. Heavily enhanced in Robot Framework 7.0.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Total execution time as a timedelta.
If not set, calculated based on :attr:start_time and :attr:end_time
if possible. If that fails, calculated based on the elapsed time of
child items.
Can be set either directly as a timedelta or as an integer or a float
representing seconds.
New in Robot Framework 6.1. Heavily enhanced in Robot Framework 7.0.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
|  | 
              Bases: Var, StatusMixin, DeprecatedAttributesMixin
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
property
  
¶
    Item id in format like s1-t3-k1.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
id is None only in these special cases:
- Keyword uses a placeholder for setuporteardownwhen asetuporteardownis not actually used.
- With :class:~robot.model.control.Ifand :class:~robot.model.control.Tryinstances representing IF/TRY structure roots.
    Child keywords and messages as a :class:~.Body object.
Typically empty. Only contains something if running VAR has failed due to a syntax error or listeners have logged messages or executed keywords.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
              Bases: Return, StatusMixin, DeprecatedAttributesMixin
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
property
  
¶
    Item id in format like s1-t3-k1.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
id is None only in these special cases:
- Keyword uses a placeholder for setuporteardownwhen asetuporteardownis not actually used.
- With :class:~robot.model.control.Ifand :class:~robot.model.control.Tryinstances representing IF/TRY structure roots.
    Child keywords and messages as a :class:~.Body object.
Typically empty. Only contains something if running RETURN has failed due to a syntax error or listeners have logged messages or executed keywords.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
              Bases: Continue, StatusMixin, DeprecatedAttributesMixin
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
property
  
¶
    Item id in format like s1-t3-k1.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
id is None only in these special cases:
- Keyword uses a placeholder for setuporteardownwhen asetuporteardownis not actually used.
- With :class:~robot.model.control.Ifand :class:~robot.model.control.Tryinstances representing IF/TRY structure roots.
    Child keywords and messages as a :class:~.Body object.
Typically empty. Only contains something if running CONTINUE has failed due to a syntax error or listeners have logged messages or executed keywords.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
              Bases: Break, StatusMixin, DeprecatedAttributesMixin
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
property
  
¶
    Item id in format like s1-t3-k1.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
id is None only in these special cases:
- Keyword uses a placeholder for setuporteardownwhen asetuporteardownis not actually used.
- With :class:~robot.model.control.Ifand :class:~robot.model.control.Tryinstances representing IF/TRY structure roots.
    Child keywords and messages as a :class:~.Body object.
Typically empty. Only contains something if running BREAK has failed due to a syntax error or listeners have logged messages or executed keywords.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
              Bases: Error, StatusMixin, DeprecatedAttributesMixin
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
property
  
¶
    Item id in format like s1-t3-k1.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
id is None only in these special cases:
- Keyword uses a placeholder for setuporteardownwhen asetuporteardownis not actually used.
- With :class:~robot.model.control.Ifand :class:~robot.model.control.Tryinstances representing IF/TRY structure roots.
    Messages as a :class:~.Body object.
Typically contains the message that caused the error.
|  | 
              Bases: Keyword, StatusMixin
Represents an executed library or user keyword.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'NOT RUN', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
|  | 
    Possible keyword body as a :class:~.Body object.
Body can consist of child keywords, messages, and control structures such as IF/ELSE. Library keywords typically have an empty body.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
property
  
¶
    Keyword's messages.
Starting from Robot Framework 4.0 this is a list generated from messages
in :attr:body.
property
  
¶
    Keyword name in format owner.name.
Just name if :attr:owner is not set. In practice this is the
case only with user keywords in the suite file.
Cannot be set directly. Set :attr:name and :attr:owner separately
instead.
Notice that prior to Robot Framework 7.0, the name attribute contained
the full name and keyword and owner names were in kwname and libname,
respectively.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Deprecated since Robot Framework 7.0. Use :attr:name instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Deprecated since Robot Framework 7.0. Use :attr:owner instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Deprecated since Robot Framework 7.0. Use :attr:source_name instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Keyword setup as a :class:Keyword object.
See :attr:teardown for more information. New in Robot Framework 7.0.
property
  
¶
    Check does a keyword have a setup without creating a setup object.
See :attr:has_teardown for more information. New in Robot Framework 7.0.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Keyword teardown as a :class:Keyword object.
Teardown can be modified by setting attributes directly::
| 1 2 |  | 
Alternatively the :meth:config method can be used to set multiple
attributes in one call::
| 1 |  | 
The easiest way to reset the whole teardown is setting it to None.
It will automatically recreate the underlying Keyword object::
| 1 |  | 
This attribute is a Keyword object also when a keyword has no teardown
but in that case its truth value is False. If there is a need to just
check does a keyword have a teardown, using the :attr:has_teardown
attribute avoids creating the Keyword object and is thus more memory
efficient.
New in Robot Framework 4.0. Earlier teardown was accessed like
keyword.keywords.teardown. :attr:has_teardown is new in Robot
Framework 4.1.2.
property
  
¶
    Check does a keyword have a teardown without creating a teardown object.
A difference between using if kw.has_teardown: and if kw.teardown:
is that accessing the :attr:teardown attribute creates a :class:Keyword
object representing a teardown even when the keyword actually does not
have one. This typically does not matter, but with bigger suite structures
having lots of keywords it can have a considerable effect on memory usage.
New in Robot Framework 4.1.2.
|  | 
              Bases: TestCase[Keyword], StatusMixin
Represents results of a single test case.
See the base class for documentation of attributes not documented here.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    True when :attr:status is 'SKIP', False otherwise.
Setting to False value is ambiguous and raises an exception.
classmethod
  
¶
Create this object based on data in a dictionary.
Data can be got from the :meth:to_dict method or created externally.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create this object based on JSON data.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string (or bytes) containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
The JSON data is first converted to a Python dictionary and the object
created using the :meth:from_dict method.
Notice that the source is considered to be JSON data if it is
a string and contains {. If you need to use { in a file system
path, pass it in as a pathlib.Path instance.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
    
property
      writable
  
¶
Test setup as a :class:~.model.keyword.Keyword object.
This attribute is a Keyword object also when a test has no setup
but in that case its truth value is False.
Setup can be modified by setting attributes directly::
| 1 2 |  | 
Alternatively the :meth:config method can be used to set multiple
attributes in one call::
| 1 |  | 
The easiest way to reset the whole setup is setting it to None.
It will automatically recreate the underlying Keyword object::
| 1 |  | 
New in Robot Framework 4.0. Earlier setup was accessed like
test.keywords.setup.
property
  
¶
    Check does a suite have a setup without creating a setup object.
A difference between using if test.has_setup: and if test.setup:
is that accessing the :attr:setup attribute creates a :class:Keyword
object representing the setup even when the test actually does not have
one. This typically does not matter, but with bigger suite structures
containing a huge about of tests it can have an effect on memory usage.
New in Robot Framework 5.0.
property
      writable
  
¶
Test teardown as a :class:~.model.keyword.Keyword object.
See :attr:setup for more information.
property
  
¶
    Check does a test have a teardown without creating a teardown object.
See :attr:has_setup for more information.
New in Robot Framework 5.0.
property
  
¶
    Test case id in format like s1-t3.
See :attr:TestSuite.id <robot.model.testsuite.TestSuite.id> for
more information.
property
  
¶
    Deprecated since Robot Framework 7.0. Use :attr:full_name instead.
|  | 
    
|  | 
              Bases: TestSuite[Keyword, TestCase], StatusMixin
Represents results of a single test suite.
See the base class for documentation of attributes not documented here.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
                    
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution start time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:start_time should be used instead.
property
      writable
  
¶
    Execution end time as a string or as a None if not set.
The string format is %Y%m%d %H:%M:%S.%f.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:end_time should be used instead.
property
  
¶
    Total execution time in milliseconds.
Considered deprecated starting from Robot Framework 7.0.
:attr:elapsed_time should be used instead.
          Serialize this object into JSON.
The object is first converted to a Python dictionary using the
:meth:to_dict method and then the dictionary is converted to JSON.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting JSON data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
JSON formatting can be configured using optional parameters that
are passed directly to the underlying json__ module. Notice that
the defaults differ from what json uses.
With robot.running model objects new in Robot Framework 6.1,
with robot.result new in Robot Framework 7.0.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/json.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Configure model object with given attributes.
obj.config(name='Example', doc='Something') is equivalent to setting
obj.name = 'Example' and obj.doc = 'Something'.
New in Robot Framework 4.0.
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a shallow copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.copy(name='New name').
See also :meth:deepcopy. The difference between copy and
deepcopy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
Return a deep copy of this object.
:param attributes: Attributes to be set to the returned copy.
    For example, obj.deepcopy(name='New name').
See also :meth:copy. The difference between deepcopy and
copy is the same as with the methods having same names in
the copy__ module.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/copy.html
Source code in src/robot/model/modelobject.py
              
    
staticmethod
  
¶
    Create suite name based on the given source.
This method is used by Robot Framework itself when it builds suites.
External parsers and other tools that want to produce suites with
names matching names created by Robot Framework can use this method as
well. This method is also used if :attr:name is not set and someone
accesses it.
The algorithm is as follows:
- If the source is Noneor empty, return an empty string.
- Get the base name of the source. Read more below.
- Remove possible prefix separated with __.
- Convert underscores to spaces.
- If the name is all lower case, title case it.
The base name of files is got by calling Path.stem__ that drops
the file extension. It typically works fine, but gives wrong result
if the extension has multiple parts like in tests.robot.zip.
That problem can be avoided by giving valid file extension or extensions
as the optional extension argument.
Examples::
| 1 2 3 |  | 
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/pathlib.html#pathlib.PurePath.stem
Source code in src/robot/model/testsuite.py
              
property
      writable
  
¶
    Suite name.
If name is not set, it is constructed from source. If source is not set,
name is constructed from child suite names by concatenating them with
&. If there are no child suites, name is an empty string.
    Adjust suite source and child suite sources, recursively.
:param relative_to: Make suite source relative to the given path. Calls
    pathlib.Path.relative_to()__ internally. Raises ValueError
    if creating a relative path is not possible.
:param root: Make given path a new root directory for the source. Raises
    ValueError if suite source is absolute.
Adjusting the source is especially useful when moving data around as JSON::
| 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 |  | 
New in Robot Framework 6.1.
__ https://docs.python.org/3/library/pathlib.html#pathlib.PurePath.relative_to
Source code in src/robot/model/testsuite.py
              
property
  
¶
    Suite name prefixed with the full name of the possible parent suite.
Just :attr:name of the suite if it has no :attr:parent.
property
  
¶
    Deprecated since Robot Framework 7.0. Use :attr:full_name instead.
    Validate that suite execution mode is set consistently.
Raise an exception if the execution mode is not set (i.e. the :attr:rpa
attribute is None) and child suites have conflicting execution modes.
The execution mode is returned. New in RF 6.1.1.
Source code in src/robot/model/testsuite.py
              
property
      writable
  
¶
Suite setup.
This attribute is a Keyword object also when a suite has no setup
but in that case its truth value is False. The preferred way to
check does a suite have a setup is using :attr:has_setup.
Setup can be modified by setting attributes directly::
| 1 2 |  | 
Alternatively the :meth:config method can be used to set multiple
attributes in one call::
| 1 |  | 
The easiest way to reset the whole setup is setting it to None.
It will automatically recreate the underlying Keyword object::
| 1 |  | 
New in Robot Framework 4.0. Earlier setup was accessed like
suite.keywords.setup.
property
  
¶
    Check does a suite have a setup without creating a setup object.
A difference between using if suite.has_setup: and if suite.setup:
is that accessing the :attr:setup attribute creates a :class:Keyword
object representing the setup even when the suite actually does not have
one. This typically does not matter, but with bigger suite structures
it can have some effect on memory usage.
New in Robot Framework 5.0.
property
  
¶
    Check does a suite have a teardown without creating a teardown object.
See :attr:has_setup for more information.
New in Robot Framework 5.0.
property
  
¶
    An automatically generated unique id.
The root suite has id s1, its child suites have ids s1-s1,
s1-s2, ..., their child suites get ids s1-s1-s1, s1-s1-s2,
..., s1-s2-s1, ..., and so on.
The first test in a suite has an id like s1-t1, the second has an
id s1-t2, and so on. Similarly, keywords in suites (setup/teardown)
and in tests get ids like s1-k1, s1-t1-k1, and s1-s4-t2-k5.
property
  
¶
    Yields all tests this suite and its child suites contain.
New in Robot Framework 6.1.
property
  
¶
    Total number of the tests in this suite and in its child suites.
    Add and/or remove specified tags to the tests in this suite.
:param add: Tags to add as a list or, if adding only one,
    as a single string.
:param remove: Tags to remove as a list or as a single string.
    Can be given as patterns where * and ? work as wildcards.
:param persist: Add/remove specified tags also to new tests added
    to this suite in the future.
Source code in src/robot/model/testsuite.py
              
Select test cases and remove others from this suite.
Parameters have the same semantics as --suite, --test,
--include, and --exclude command line options. All of them
can be given as a list of strings, or when selecting only one, as
a single string.
Child suites that contain no tests after filtering are automatically removed.
Example::
| 1 2 |  | 
Source code in src/robot/model/testsuite.py
              
    Removes all child suites not containing any tests, recursively.
|  | 
property
  
¶
    'PASS', 'FAIL' or 'SKIP' depending on test statuses.
- If any test has failed, status is 'FAIL'.
- If no test has failed but at least some test has passed, status is 'PASS'.
- If there are no failed or passed tests, status is 'SKIP'. This covers both the case when all tests have been skipped and when there are no tests.
property
  
¶
|  | 
Suite statistics as a :class:~robot.model.totalstatistics.TotalStatistics object.
Recreated every time this property is accessed, so saving the results to a variable and inspecting it is often a good idea::
| 1 2 3 4 |  | 
    Remove keywords based on the given condition.
:param how: Which approach to use when removing keywords. Either
    ALL, PASSED, FOR, WUKS, or NAME:<pattern>.
For more information about the possible values see the documentation
of the --removekeywords command line option.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
    
A shortcut to configure a suite using one method call.
Can only be used with the root test suite.
:param options: Passed to
    :class:~robot.result.configurer.SuiteConfigurer that will then
    set suite attributes, call :meth:filter, etc. as needed.
Example::
| 1 2 |  | 
Not to be confused with :meth:config method that suites, tests,
and keywords have to make it possible to set multiple attributes in
one call.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
    
    
classmethod
  
¶
    Create suite based on result data in a dictionary.
data can either contain only the suite data got, for example, from
the :meth:to_dict method, or it can contain full result data with
execution errors and other such information in addition to the suite data.
In the latter case only the suite data is used, though.
Support for full result data is new in Robot Framework 7.2.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create suite based on results in JSON.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
Supports JSON produced by :meth:to_json that contains only the suite
information, as well as full result JSON that contains also execution
errors and other information. In the latter case errors and all other
information is silently ignored, though. If that is a problem,
:class:~robot.result.resultbuilder.ExecutionResult should be used
instead.
Support for full result JSON is new in Robot Framework 7.2.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
          
    Serialize suite into XML.
The format is the same that is used with normal output.xml files, but
the <robot> root node is omitted and the result contains only
the <suite> structure.
The file parameter controls what to do with the resulting XML data.
It can be:
- None(default) to return the data as a string,
- an open file object where to write the data to, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a file where to write the data using UTF-8 encoding.
A serialized suite can be recreated by using the :meth:from_xml method.
New in Robot Framework 7.0.
Source code in src/robot/result/model.py
              
classmethod
  
¶
    Create suite based on results in XML.
The data is given as the source parameter. It can be:
- a string containing the data directly,
- an open file object where to read the data from, or
- a path (pathlib.Pathor string) to a UTF-8 encoded file to read.
Supports both normal output.xml files and files containing only the
<suite> structure created, for example, with the :meth:to_xml
method. When using normal output.xml files, possible execution errors
listed in <errors> are silently ignored. If that is a problem,
:class:~robot.result.resultbuilder.ExecutionResult should be used
instead.
New in Robot Framework 7.0.