Github.com/stretchr/testify
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External
Internal
Overview
Installation
go get github.com/stretchr/testify
Programming Model
Assertions
package yours
import (
"testing"
tassert "github.com/stretchr/testify/assert"
)
func TestSomething(t *testing.T) {
assert := tassert.New(t)
// assert equality
assert.Equal(123, 123, "they should be equal")
// assert inequality
assert.NotEqual(123, 456, "they should not be equal")
// assert for nil (good for errors)
assert.Nil(object)
// assert for not nil (good when you expect something)
if assert.NotNil(object) {
// now we know that object isn't nil, we are safe to make
// further assertions without causing any errors
assert.Equal("Something", object.Value)
}
}
To check that an error has the expected message:
err := ...
assert.NotNil(err)
assert.Equal(err.Error(), "expected message")
Mocks
Mocking with Testify is based on the assumption that we want to construct mock instances to replace in testing real instances defined by interfaces. We define such a mock instance, we instantiate it with new()
or &SomeInterfaceMock{}
, we configure it (Testify calls this "setting up expectations"), we pass it to the code that needs to be tested, we run the code, and then we ensure the code behave correctly. We can also "assert expectations" on the mock.
...
type MockMyService struct {
mock.Mock
}
func (m * MockMyService) Start() error {
...
}
...
mockMyService := new(MockMyService)