Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Package check is a rich testing extension for Go's testing package.
For details about the project, see:
http://labix.org/gocheck
Extensions to the go-check unittest framework.
NOTE: see https://github.com/go-check/check/pull/6 for reasons why these checkers live here.
Index ¶
- Variables
- func List(suite interface{}, runConf *RunConf) []string
- func ListAll(runConf *RunConf) []string
- func Suite(suite interface{}) interface{}
- func TestingT(testingT *testing.T)
- type C
- func (c *C) Assert(obtained interface{}, checker Checker, args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) Check(obtained interface{}, checker Checker, args ...interface{}) bool
- func (c *C) Error(args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) Errorf(format string, args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) ExpectFailure(reason string)
- func (c *C) Fail()
- func (c *C) FailNow()
- func (c *C) Failed() bool
- func (c *C) Fatal(args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) GetTestLog() string
- func (c *C) Log(args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) Logf(format string, args ...interface{})
- func (c *C) MkDir() string
- func (c *C) Output(calldepth int, s string) error
- func (c *C) Parallel()
- func (c *C) ResetTimer()
- func (c *C) SetBytes(n int64)
- func (c *C) Skip(reason string)
- func (c *C) StartTimer()
- func (c *C) StopTimer()
- func (c *C) Succeed()
- func (c *C) SucceedNow()
- func (c *C) TestName() string
- type Checker
- type CheckerInfo
- type CommentInterface
- type Result
- type RunConf
Constants ¶
This section is empty.
Variables ¶
var BytesEquals = &bytesEquals{}
BytesEquals checker compares two bytes sequence using bytes.Equal.
For example:
c.Assert(b, BytesEquals, []byte("bar"))
Main difference between DeepEquals and BytesEquals is that BytesEquals treats `nil` as empty byte sequence while DeepEquals doesn't.
c.Assert(nil, BytesEquals, []byte("")) // succeeds c.Assert(nil, DeepEquals, []byte("")) // fails
var CustomVerboseFlag bool
var Greater = &valueCompare{Name: "Greater", Func: greater, Operator: ">"}
var GreaterEqual = &valueCompare{Name: "GreaterEqual", Func: greaterEqual, Operator: ">="}
var HasKey = &hasKey{}
The HasKey checker verifies that the obtained map contains the given key.
For example:
c.Assert(myMap, HasKey, "foo")
var Less = &valueCompare{Name: "Less", Func: less, Operator: "<"}
var LessEqual = &valueCompare{Name: "LessEqual", Func: lessEqual, Operator: "<="}
Functions ¶
func List ¶
List returns the names of the test functions in the given suite that will be run with the provided run configuration.
func ListAll ¶
ListAll returns the names of all the test functions registered with the Suite function that will be run with the provided run configuration.
Types ¶
type C ¶
type C struct {
// contains filtered or unexported fields
}
func (*C) Assert ¶
Assert ensures that the first value matches the expected value according to the provided checker. If they do not match, an error is logged, the test is marked as failed, and the test execution stops.
Some checkers may not need the expected argument (e.g. IsNil).
Extra arguments provided to the function are logged next to the reported problem when the matching fails.
func (*C) Check ¶
Check verifies if the first value matches the expected value according to the provided checker. If they do not match, an error is logged, the test is marked as failed, and the test execution continues.
Some checkers may not need the expected argument (e.g. IsNil).
Extra arguments provided to the function are logged next to the reported problem when the matching fails.
func (*C) Error ¶
func (c *C) Error(args ...interface{})
Error logs an error into the test error output and marks the test as failed. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprint.
func (*C) Errorf ¶
Errorf logs an error into the test error output and marks the test as failed. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprintf.
func (*C) ExpectFailure ¶
ExpectFailure informs that the running test is knowingly broken for the provided reason. If the test does not fail, an error will be reported to raise attention to this fact. This method is useful to temporarily disable tests which cover well known problems until a better time to fix the problem is found, without forgetting about the fact that a failure still exists.
func (*C) Fail ¶
func (c *C) Fail()
Fail marks the currently running test as failed.
Something ought to have been previously logged so the developer can tell what went wrong. The higher level helper functions will fail the test and do the logging properly.
func (*C) FailNow ¶
func (c *C) FailNow()
FailNow marks the currently running test as failed and stops running it. Something ought to have been previously logged so the developer can tell what went wrong. The higher level helper functions will fail the test and do the logging properly.
func (*C) Fatal ¶
func (c *C) Fatal(args ...interface{})
Fatal logs an error into the test error output, marks the test as failed, and stops the test execution. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprint.
func (*C) Fatalf ¶
Fatlaf logs an error into the test error output, marks the test as failed, and stops the test execution. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprintf.
func (*C) GetTestLog ¶
GetTestLog returns the current test error output.
func (*C) Log ¶
func (c *C) Log(args ...interface{})
Log logs some information into the test error output. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprint.
func (*C) Logf ¶
Log logs some information into the test error output. The provided arguments are assembled together into a string with fmt.Sprintf.
func (*C) MkDir ¶
Create a new temporary directory which is automatically removed after the suite finishes running.
func (*C) Output ¶
Output enables *C to be used as a logger in functions that require only the minimum interface of *log.Logger.
func (*C) Parallel ¶
func (c *C) Parallel()
Parallel will mark the test run parallel within a test suite.
func (*C) ResetTimer ¶
func (c *C) ResetTimer()
ResetTimer sets the elapsed benchmark time to zero. It does not affect whether the timer is running.
func (*C) SetBytes ¶
SetBytes informs the number of bytes that the benchmark processes on each iteration. If this is called in a benchmark it will also report MB/s.
func (*C) Skip ¶
Skip skips the running test for the provided reason. If run from within SetUpTest, the individual test being set up will be skipped, and if run from within SetUpSuite, the whole suite is skipped.
func (*C) StartTimer ¶
func (c *C) StartTimer()
StartTimer starts timing a test. This function is called automatically before a benchmark starts, but it can also used to resume timing after a call to StopTimer.
func (*C) StopTimer ¶
func (c *C) StopTimer()
StopTimer stops timing a test. This can be used to pause the timer while performing complex initialization that you don't want to measure.
func (*C) Succeed ¶
func (c *C) Succeed()
Succeed marks the currently running test as succeeded, undoing any previous failures.
func (*C) SucceedNow ¶
func (c *C) SucceedNow()
SucceedNow marks the currently running test as succeeded, undoing any previous failures, and stops running the test.
type Checker ¶
type Checker interface { Info() *CheckerInfo Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) }
The Checker interface must be provided by checkers used with the Assert and Check verification methods.
var DeepEquals Checker = &deepEqualsChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "DeepEquals", Params: []string{"obtained", "expected"}}, }
The DeepEquals checker verifies that the obtained value is deep-equal to the expected value. The check will work correctly even when facing slices, interfaces, and values of different types (which always fail the test).
For example:
c.Assert(value, DeepEquals, 42) c.Assert(array, DeepEquals, []string{"hi", "there"})
var Equals Checker = &equalsChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "Equals", Params: []string{"obtained", "expected"}}, }
The Equals checker verifies that the obtained value is equal to the expected value, according to usual Go semantics for ==.
For example:
c.Assert(value, Equals, 42)
var ErrorMatches Checker = errorMatchesChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "ErrorMatches", Params: []string{"value", "regex"}}, }
The ErrorMatches checker verifies that the error value is non nil and matches the regular expression provided.
For example:
c.Assert(err, ErrorMatches, "perm.*denied")
var FitsTypeOf Checker = &fitsTypeChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "FitsTypeOf", Params: []string{"obtained", "sample"}}, }
The FitsTypeOf checker verifies that the obtained value is assignable to a variable with the same type as the provided sample value.
For example:
c.Assert(value, FitsTypeOf, int64(0)) c.Assert(value, FitsTypeOf, os.Error(nil))
var HasLen Checker = &hasLenChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "HasLen", Params: []string{"obtained", "n"}}, }
The HasLen checker verifies that the obtained value has the provided length. In many cases this is superior to using Equals in conjuction with the len function because in case the check fails the value itself will be printed, instead of its length, providing more details for figuring the problem.
For example:
c.Assert(list, HasLen, 5)
var Implements Checker = &implementsChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "Implements", Params: []string{"obtained", "ifaceptr"}}, }
The Implements checker verifies that the obtained value implements the interface specified via a pointer to an interface variable.
For example:
var e os.Error c.Assert(err, Implements, &e)
var IsFalse Checker = &isBoolValueChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "IsFalse", Params: []string{"obtained"}}, false, }
The IsFalse checker verifies that the obtained value is false.
For example:
c.Assert(value, IsFalse)
var IsNil Checker = &isNilChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "IsNil", Params: []string{"value"}}, }
The IsNil checker tests whether the obtained value is nil.
For example:
c.Assert(err, IsNil)
var IsTrue Checker = &isBoolValueChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "IsTrue", Params: []string{"obtained"}}, true, }
The IsTrue checker verifies that the obtained value is true.
For example:
c.Assert(value, IsTrue)
var Matches Checker = &matchesChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "Matches", Params: []string{"value", "regex"}}, }
The Matches checker verifies that the string provided as the obtained value (or the string resulting from obtained.String()) matches the regular expression provided.
For example:
c.Assert(err, Matches, "perm.*denied")
var NotNil Checker = ¬NilChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "NotNil", Params: []string{"value"}}, }
The NotNil checker verifies that the obtained value is not nil.
For example:
c.Assert(iface, NotNil)
This is an alias for Not(IsNil), made available since it's a fairly common check.
var PanicMatches Checker = &panicMatchesChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "PanicMatches", Params: []string{"function", "expected"}}, }
The PanicMatches checker verifies that calling the provided zero-argument function will cause a panic with an error value matching the regular expression provided.
For example:
c.Assert(func() { f(1, 2) }, PanicMatches, `open.*: no such file or directory`).
var Panics Checker = &panicsChecker{ &CheckerInfo{Name: "Panics", Params: []string{"function", "expected"}}, }
The Panics checker verifies that calling the provided zero-argument function will cause a panic which is deep-equal to the provided value.
For example:
c.Assert(func() { f(1, 2) }, Panics, &SomeErrorType{"BOOM"}).
type CheckerInfo ¶
See the Checker interface.
func (*CheckerInfo) Info ¶
func (info *CheckerInfo) Info() *CheckerInfo
type CommentInterface ¶
type CommentInterface interface {
CheckCommentString() string
}
CommentInterface must be implemented by types that attach extra information to failed checks. See the Commentf function for details.
func Commentf ¶
func Commentf(format string, args ...interface{}) CommentInterface
Commentf returns an infomational value to use with Assert or Check calls. If the checker test fails, the provided arguments will be passed to fmt.Sprintf, and will be presented next to the logged failure.
For example:
c.Assert(v, Equals, 42, Commentf("Iteration #%d failed.", i))
Note that if the comment is constant, a better option is to simply use a normal comment right above or next to the line, as it will also get printed with any errors:
c.Assert(l, Equals, 8192) // Ensure buffer size is correct (bug #123)
type Result ¶
type Result struct { Succeeded int Failed int Skipped int Panicked int FixturePanicked int ExpectedFailures int Missed int // Not even tried to run, related to a panic in the fixture. RunError error // Houston, we've got a problem. WorkDir string // If KeepWorkDir is true }