Django : Testing if the page has redirected to the desired url
Django 1.4:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.4/topics/testing/#django.test.TestCase.assertRedirects
Django 2.0:
https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/2.0/topics/testing/tools/#django.test.SimpleTestCase.assertRedirects
SimpleTestCase.assertRedirects(response, expected_url, status_code=302, target_status_code=200, msg_prefix='', fetch_redirect_response=True)
Asserts that the response returned a status_code redirect status, redirected to expected_url (including any GET data), and that the final page was received with target_status_code.
If your request used the follow argument, the expected_url and target_status_code will be the url and status code for the final point of the redirect chain.
If fetch_redirect_response is False, the final page won’t be loaded. Since the test client can’t fetch external URLs, this is particularly useful if expected_url isn’t part of your Django app.
Scheme is handled correctly when making comparisons between two URLs. If there isn’t any scheme specified in the location where we are redirected to, the original request’s scheme is used. If present, the scheme in expected_url is the one used to make the comparisons to.
You could also follow the redirect with:
response = self.client.get('/myprofile/data/some_id/', follow=True)
which would mirror the user experience in the browser and make assertions of what you expect to find there, such as:
self.assertContains(response, "You must be logged in", status_code=401)
You can check response['Location']
and see if it matchs with the expected url. Check also that status code is 302.