Documentation ¶
Overview ¶
Gomega is the Ginkgo BDD-style testing framework's preferred matcher library.
The godoc documentation describes Gomega's API. More comprehensive documentation (with examples!) is available at http://onsi.github.io/gomega/
Gomega on Github: http://github.com/onsi/gomega
Learn more about Ginkgo online: http://onsi.github.io/ginkgo
Ginkgo on Github: http://github.com/onsi/ginkgo
Gomega is MIT-Licensed
Index ¶
- Constants
- func RegisterFailHandler(handler OmegaFailHandler)
- func RegisterTestingT(t GomegaTestingT)
- func SetDefaultConsistentlyDuration(t time.Duration)
- func SetDefaultConsistentlyPollingInterval(t time.Duration)
- func SetDefaultEventuallyPollingInterval(t time.Duration)
- func SetDefaultEventuallyTimeout(t time.Duration)
- type Actual
- type AsyncActual
- func Consistently(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
- func ConsistentlyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
- func Eventually(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
- func EventuallyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
- type DeprecatedOmegaMatcher
- type GomegaTestingT
- type OmegaFailHandler
- type OmegaMatcher
- func BeAssignableToTypeOf(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func BeClosed() OmegaMatcher
- func BeEmpty() OmegaMatcher
- func BeEquivalentTo(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func BeFalse() OmegaMatcher
- func BeNil() OmegaMatcher
- func BeNumerically(comparator string, compareTo ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func BeTrue() OmegaMatcher
- func BeZero() OmegaMatcher
- func ContainElement(element interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func ContainSubstring(substr string, args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func Equal(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func HaveKey(key interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func HaveLen(count int) OmegaMatcher
- func HaveOccurred() OmegaMatcher
- func MatchError(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func MatchJSON(json interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func MatchRegexp(regexp string, args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
- func Panic() OmegaMatcher
- func Receive(args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
Constants ¶
const GOMEGA_VERSION = "0.9"
Variables ¶
This section is empty.
Functions ¶
func RegisterFailHandler ¶
func RegisterFailHandler(handler OmegaFailHandler)
RegisterFailHandler connects Ginkgo to Gomega. When a matcher fails the fail handler passed into RegisterFailHandler is called.
func RegisterTestingT ¶
func RegisterTestingT(t GomegaTestingT)
RegisterTestingT connects Gomega to Golang's XUnit style Testing.T tests. You'll need to call this at the top of each XUnit style test:
func TestFarmHasCow(t *testing.T) { RegisterTestingT(t) f := farm.New([]string{"Cow", "Horse"}) Expect(f.HasCow()).To(BeTrue(), "Farm should have cow") }
Note that this *testing.T is registered *globally* by Gomega (this is why you don't have to pass `t` down to the matcher itself). This means that you cannot run the XUnit style tests in parallel as the global fail handler cannot point to more than one testing.T at a time.
(As an aside: Ginkgo gets around this limitation by running parallel tests in different *processes*).
func SetDefaultConsistentlyDuration ¶
Set the default duration for Consistently. Consistently will verify that your condition is satsified for this long.
func SetDefaultConsistentlyPollingInterval ¶
Set the default polling interval for Consistently.
func SetDefaultEventuallyPollingInterval ¶
Set the default polling interval for Eventually.
func SetDefaultEventuallyTimeout ¶
Set the default timeout duration for Eventually. Eventually will repeatedly poll your condition until it succeeds, or until this timeout elapses.
Types ¶
type Actual ¶
type Actual interface { Should(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool ShouldNot(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool To(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool ToNot(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool NotTo(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool }
Actual is returned by Ω and Expect and compares the actual value to the matcher passed to the Should/ShouldNot and To/ToNot/NotTo methods.
Typically Should/ShouldNot are used with Ω and To/ToNot/NotTo are used with Expect though this is not enforced.
All methods take a variadic optionalDescription argument. This is passed on to fmt.Sprintf() and is used to annotate failure messages.
All methods return a bool that is true if hte assertion passed and false if it failed.
Example:
Ω(farm.HasCow()).Should(BeTrue(), "Farm %v should have a cow", farm)
func Expect ¶
func Expect(actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) Actual
Expect wraps an actual value allowing assertions to be made on it:
Expect("foo").To(Equal("foo"))
If Expect is passed more than one argument it will pass the *first* argument to the matcher. All subsequent arguments will be required to be nil/zero.
This is convenient if you want to make an assertion on a method/function that returns a value and an error - a common patter in Go.
For example, given a function with signature:
func MyAmazingThing() (int, error)
Then:
Expect(MyAmazingThing()).Should(Equal(3))
Will succeed only if `MyAmazingThing()` returns `(3, nil)`
Expect and Ω are identical
func ExpectWithOffset ¶
ExpectWithOffset wraps an actual value allowing assertions to be made on it:
ExpectWithOffset(1, "foo").To(Equal("foo"))
Unlike `Expect` and `Ω`, `ExpectWithOffset` takes an additional integer argument this is used to modify the call-stack offset when computing line numbers.
This is most useful in helper functions that make assertions. If you want Gomega's error message to refer to the calling line in the test (as opposed to the line in the helper function) set the first argument of `ExpectWithOffset` appropriately.
func Ω ¶
func Ω(actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) Actual
Ω wraps an actual value allowing assertions to be made on it:
Ω("foo").Should(Equal("foo"))
If Ω is passed more than one argument it will pass the *first* argument to the matcher. All subsequent arguments will be required to be nil/zero.
This is convenient if you want to make an assertion on a method/function that returns a value and an error - a common patter in Go.
For example, given a function with signature:
func MyAmazingThing() (int, error)
Then:
Ω(MyAmazingThing()).Should(Equal(3))
Will succeed only if `MyAmazingThing()` returns `(3, nil)`
Ω and Expect are identical
type AsyncActual ¶
type AsyncActual interface { Should(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool ShouldNot(matcher interface{}, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool }
AsyncActual is returned by Eventually and Consistently and polls the actual value passed into Eventually against the matcher passed to the Should and ShouldNot methods.
Both Should and ShouldNot take a variadic optionalDescription argument. This is passed on to fmt.Sprintf() and is used to annotate failure messages. This allows you to make your failure messages more descriptive
Both Should and ShouldNot return a boolean that is true if the assertion passed and false if it failed.
Example:
Eventually(myChannel).Should(Receive(), "Something should have come down the pipe.") Consistently(myChannel).ShouldNot(Receive(), "Nothing should have come down the pipe.")
func Consistently ¶
func Consistently(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
Consistently wraps an actual value allowing assertions to be made on it. The assertion is tried periodically and is required to pass for a period of time.
Both the total time and polling interval are configurable as optional arguments: The first optional argument is the duration that Consistently will run for The second optional argument is the polling interval
Both intervals can either be specified as time.Duration, parsable duration strings or as floats/integers. In the last case they are interpreted as seconds.
If Consistently is passed an actual that is a function taking no arguments and returning at least one value, then Consistently will call the function periodically and try the matcher against the function's first return value.
If the function returns more than one value, then Consistently will pass the first value to the matcher and assert that all other values are nil/zero. This allows you to pass Consistently a function that returns a value and an error - a common pattern in Go.
Consistently is useful in cases where you want to assert that something *does not happen* over a period of tiem. For example, you want to assert that a goroutine does *not* send data down a channel. In this case, you could:
Consistently(channel).ShouldNot(Receive())
Consistently's default duration is 100ms, and its default polling interval is 10ms
func ConsistentlyWithOffset ¶
func ConsistentlyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
ConsistentlyWithOffset operates like Consistnetly but takes an additional initial argument to indicate an offset in the call stack. This is useful when building helper functions that contain matchers. To learn more, read about `ExpectWithOffset`.
func Eventually ¶
func Eventually(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
Eventually wraps an actual value allowing assertions to be made on it. The assertion is tried periodically until it passes or a timeout occurs.
Both the timeout and polling interval are configurable as optional arguments: The first optional argument is the timeout The second optional argument is the polling interval
Both intervals can either be specified as time.Duration, parsable duration strings or as floats/integers. In the last case they are interpreted as seconds.
If Eventually is passed an actual that is a function taking no arguments and returning at least one value, then Eventually will call the function periodically and try the matcher against the function's first return value.
Example:
Eventually(func() int { return thingImPolling.Count() }).Should(BeNumerically(">=", 17))
Note that this example could be rewritten:
Eventually(thingImPolling.Count).Should(BeNumerically(">=", 17))
If the function returns more than one value, then Eventually will pass the first value to the matcher and assert that all other values are nil/zero. This allows you to pass Eventually a function that returns a value and an error - a common pattern in Go.
For example, consider a method that returns a value and an error:
func FetchFromDB() (string, error)
Then
Eventually(FetchFromDB).Should(Equal("hasselhoff"))
Will pass only if the the returned error is nil and the returned string passes the matcher.
Eventually's default timeout is 1 second, and its default polling interval is 10ms
func EventuallyWithOffset ¶
func EventuallyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) AsyncActual
EventuallyWithOffset operates like Eventually but takes an additional initial argument to indicate an offset in the call stack. This is useful when building helper functions that contain matchers. To learn more, read about `ExpectWithOffset`.
type DeprecatedOmegaMatcher ¶
type DeprecatedOmegaMatcher interface {
Match(actual interface{}) (success bool, message string, err error)
}
The DeprecatedOmegaMatcher interface is... deprecated. It will be removed in v1.0
The new OmegaMatcher interface allows for lazy failure message evaluation.
type GomegaTestingT ¶
type GomegaTestingT interface {
Errorf(format string, args ...interface{})
}
A simple *testing.T interface wrapper
type OmegaFailHandler ¶
type OmegaMatcher ¶
type OmegaMatcher interface { Match(actual interface{}) (success bool, err error) FailureMessage(actual interface{}) (message string) NegatedFailureMessage(actual interface{}) (message string) }
All Gomega matchers must implement the OmegaMatcher interface
For details on writing custom matchers, check out: http://onsi.github.io/gomega/#adding_your_own_matchers
func BeAssignableToTypeOf ¶
func BeAssignableToTypeOf(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
BeAssignableToTypeOf succeeds if actual is assignable to the type of expected. It will return an error when one of the values is nil.
Ω(0).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(0)) // Same values Ω(5).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(-1)) // different values same type Ω("foo").Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf("bar")) // different values same type Ω(struct{ Foo string }{}).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(struct{ Foo string }{}))
func BeClosed ¶
func BeClosed() OmegaMatcher
BeClosed succeeds if actual is a closed channel. It is an error to pass a non-channel to BeClosed, it is also an error to pass nil
In order to check whether or not the channel is closed, Gomega must try to read from the channel (even in the `ShouldNot(BeClosed())` case). You should keep this in mind if you wish to make subsequent assertions about values coming down the channel.
Also, if you are testing that a *buffered* channel is closed you must first read all values out of the channel before asserting that it is closed (it is not possible to detect that a buffered-channel has been closed until all its buffered values are read).
Finally, as a corollary: it is an error to check whether or not a send-only channel is closed.
func BeEmpty ¶
func BeEmpty() OmegaMatcher
BeEmpty succeeds if actual is empty. Actual must be of type string, array, map, chan, or slice.
func BeEquivalentTo ¶
func BeEquivalentTo(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
BeEquivalentTo is more lax than Equal, allowing equality between different types. This is done by converting actual to have the type of expected before attempting equality with reflect.DeepEqual. It is an error for actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
func BeNumerically ¶
func BeNumerically(comparator string, compareTo ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
BeNumerically performs numerical assertions in a type-agnostic way. Actual and expected should be numbers, though the specific type of number is irrelevant (floa32, float64, uint8, etc...).
There are six, self-explanatory, supported comparators:
Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("==", 1)) Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("~", 0.999, 0.01)) Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically(">", 0.9)) Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically(">=", 1.0)) Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("<", 3)) Ω(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("<=", 1.0))
func BeZero ¶
func BeZero() OmegaMatcher
BeZero succeeds if actual is the zero value for its type or if actual is nil.
func ContainElement ¶
func ContainElement(element interface{}) OmegaMatcher
ContainElement succeeds if actual contains the passed in element. By default ContainElement() uses Equal() to perform the match, however a matcher can be passed in instead:
Ω([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ContainElement(ContainSubstring("Bar")))
Actual must be an array, slice or map. For maps, containElement searches through the map's values.
func ContainSubstring ¶
func ContainSubstring(substr string, args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
ContainSubstring succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that contains the passed-in regexp. Optional arguments can be provided to construct the substring via fmt.Sprintf().
func Equal ¶
func Equal(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
Equal uses reflect.DeepEqual to compare actual with expected. Equal is strict about types when performing comparisons. It is an error for both actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
func HaveKey ¶
func HaveKey(key interface{}) OmegaMatcher
HaveKey succeeds if actual is a map with the passed in key. By default HaveKey uses Equal() to perform the match, however a matcher can be passed in instead:
Ω(map[string]string{"Foo": "Bar", "BazFoo": "Duck"}).Should(HaveKey(MatchRegexp(`.+Foo$`)))
func HaveLen ¶
func HaveLen(count int) OmegaMatcher
HaveLen succeeds if actual has the passed-in length. Actual must be of type string, array, map, chan, or slice.
func HaveOccurred ¶
func HaveOccurred() OmegaMatcher
HaveOccurred succeeds if actual is a non-nil error The typical Go error checking pattern looks like:
err := SomethingThatMightFail() Ω(err).ShouldNot(HaveOccurred())
func MatchError ¶
func MatchError(expected interface{}) OmegaMatcher
MatchError succeeds if actual is a non-nil error that matches the passed in string/error.
These are valid use-cases:
Ω(err).Should(MatchError("an error")) //asserts that err.Error() == "an error" Ω(err).Should(MatchError(SomeError)) //asserts that err == SomeError (via reflect.DeepEqual)
It is an error for err to be nil or an object that does not implement the Error interface
func MatchJSON ¶
func MatchJSON(json interface{}) OmegaMatcher
MatchJSON succeeds if actual is a string or stringer of JSON that matches the expected JSON. The JSONs are decoded and the resulting objects is compared via reflect.DeepEqual so things like key-ordering and whitespace shouldn't matter.
func MatchRegexp ¶
func MatchRegexp(regexp string, args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
MatchRegexp succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that matches the passed-in regexp. Optional arguments can be provided to construct a regexp via fmt.Sprintf().
func Panic ¶
func Panic() OmegaMatcher
Panic succeeds if actual is a function that, when invoked, panics. Actual must be a function that takes no arguments and returns no results.
func Receive ¶
func Receive(args ...interface{}) OmegaMatcher
Receive succeeds if there is a message to be received on actual. Actual must be a channel (and cannot be a send-only channel) -- anything else is an error.
Receive returns immediately and never blocks:
- If there is nothing on the channel `c` then Ω(c).Should(Receive()) will fail and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will pass.
- If the channel `c` is closed then *both* Ω(c).Should(Receive()) and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will error.
- If there is something on the channel `c` ready to be read, then Ω(c).Should(Receive()) will pass and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will fail.
If you have a go-routine running in the background that will write to channel `c` you can:
Eventually(c).Should(Receive())
This will timeout if nothing gets sent to `c` (you can modify the timeout interval as you normally do with `Eventually`)
A similar use-case is to assert that no go-routine writes to a channel (for a period of time). You can do this with `Consistently`:
Consistently(c).ShouldNot(Receive())
You can pass `Receive` a matcher. If you do so, it will match the received object against the matcher. For example:
Ω(c).Should(Receive(Equal("foo")))
When given a matcher, `Receive` will always fail if there is nothing to be received on the channel.
Passing Receive a matcher is especially useful when paired with Eventually:
Eventually(c).Should(Receive(ContainSubstring("bar")))
will repeatedly attempt to pull values out of `c` until a value matching "bar" is received.
Finally, if you want to have a reference to the value *sent* to the channel you can pass the `Receive` matcher a pointer to a variable of the appropriate type:
var myThing thing Eventually(thingChan).Should(Receive(&myThing)) Ω(myThing.Sprocket).Should(Equal("foo")) Ω(myThing.IsValid()).Should(BeTrue())
Source Files ¶
Directories ¶
Path | Synopsis |
---|---|
Package gbytes provides a buffer that supports incrementally detecting input.
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Package gbytes provides a buffer that supports incrementally detecting input. |
Package gexec provides support for testing external processes.
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Package gexec provides support for testing external processes. |
Package ghttp supports testing HTTP clients by providing a test server (simply a thin wrapper around httptest's server) that supports registering multiple handlers.
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Package ghttp supports testing HTTP clients by providing a test server (simply a thin wrapper around httptest's server) that supports registering multiple handlers. |
Gomega matchers
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Gomega matchers |