Bats Concepts
Internal
Overview
Shell scripts can be tested easier if the functionality is broken into many small, reusable and independently testable functions.
A library of such functions can be tested by sourcing the library into the BATS test and run the functions as their usual calling layer would invoke them.
Test
An individual test is placed into a @test-annotated code block.
@test "something" {
run my-command status
[[ ${status} -eq 0 ]]
[[ ${output} =~ We[[:space:]]are[[:space:]]good ]]
}
The label that follows @test may include spaces.
The functionality to be tested, most likely a function, must be executed with "run", as shown above. If executed that way, ${status} and ${output} are updated accordingly.
Tests are executed in the order they're specified in the file.
In all tests, $0 is /usr/local/Cellar/bats/0.4.0/libexec/bats-exec-test (or however BATS was installed on the system)
Displaying from Test
@test "something" {
run ...
echo ${status}
}
Test Environment
BATS uses exec to run each @test block as a separate subprocess. This makes it possible to export environment variables and even functions in one @test without affecting the other @tests or polluting the current shell session.
Run a Command and Check the Status and Output
some_command=....
[...]
run ${some_command}
[[ ${status} -eq 0 ]]
[[ ${output} =~ .*Stack[[:space:]]test[[:space:]]is[[:space:]]stable[[:space:]]and[[:space:]]running* ]]
${status}
[[ ${status} -eq 0 ]] || { echo ${output}; exit 1; }
${output}
$(output)
coalesce lines:
some_command=....
[...]
run ${some_command}
[[ ${output} =~ .*Stack[[:space:]]test[[:space:]]is[[:space:]]stable[[:space:]]and[[:space:]]running* ]]
[[ -z ${output} ]] || { echo ${output}; exit 1; }
${lines}
For multi-line output, individual lines can be accessed with:
${lines[0]} ${lines[1]} ...
As in ${output}'s case, sdtout and stderr are coalesced.
Setup/Teardown
If the BATS script includes setup() and teardown() functions, they are automatically executed by BATS before and after each test block runs.
function setup() {
...
}
function teardown() {
...
}
Libraries being Tested and Helpers
Like any shell script or library, BATS test scripts can include helper libraries to share common code across tests. Libraries can be placed in the same test directory as the BATS scripts or in the test/libs directory, and loaded with the "load" function. The "load" function takes a path to a Bash file relative to the script being tested and sources that file. Files must end with the prefix .bash, but the path to the file passed to the load function can't include the prefix.
Also see:
Environment Variables
BATS_TEST_DIRNAME
The directory in which the Bats test file is located.