In order to use sql-mock with BigQuery, ensure you have the GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
environment variable correctly set to point to a service account file.
You need to service account file in order to let SQL Mock connect to BigQuery while running the tests.
import datetime
from sql_mock.bigquery import column_mocks as col
from sql_mock.bigquery.table_mocks import BigQueryTableMock
from sql_mock.table_mocks import table_meta
# Define table mocks for your data model that inherit from BigQueryTableMock
@table_meta(table_ref='data.users')
class UserTable(BigQueryTableMock):
user_id = col.Int(default=1)
user_name = col.String(default='Mr. T')
@table_meta(table_ref='data.subscriptions')
class SubscriptionTable(BigQueryTableMock):
subscription_id = col.Int(default=1)
period_start_date = col.Date(default=datetime.date(2023, 9, 5))
period_end_date = col.Date(default=datetime.date(2023, 9, 5))
user_id = col.Int(default=1)
# Define a mock table for your expected results
class SubscriptionCountTable(BigQueryTableMock):
subscription_count = col.Int(default=1)
user_id = col.Int(default=1)
# Your original SQL query
query = """
SELECT
count(*) AS subscription_count,
user_id
FROM data.users
LEFT JOIN data.subscriptions USING(user_id)
GROUP BY user_id
"""
# Create mock data for the 'data.users' and 'data.subscriptions' tables
users = UserTable.from_dicts([{'user_id': 1}, {'user_id': 2}])
subscriptions = SubscriptionTable.from_dicts([
{'subscription_id': 1, 'user_id': 1},
{'subscription_id': 2, 'user_id': 1},
{'subscription_id': 2, 'user_id': 2},
])
# Define your expected results
expected = [
{'user_id': 1, 'subscription_count': 2},
{'user_id': 2, 'subscription_count': 1}
]
# Simulate the SQL query using SQL Mock
res = SubscriptionCountTable.from_mocks(
query=query,
input_data=[users, subscriptions]
)
# Assert the results
res.assert_equal(expected)