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Ghost

Go Reference

Ghost does test assertions in Go.

This is early-stage software, and some breaking changes are still expected.

Features

  • Utilities that stay out of your way: Ghost extends standard library testing without trying to replace it. Set up your test in one line of code, and you're good to go.
  • Generics-friendly logic: All built-in assertions were designed with generics in mind. Shift failures left, and let your compiler tell you when assertions aren't set up correctly.
  • Test output that knows your code: Ghost uses AST parsing to read your source code and print out the most useful information for you.
  • Assertions that can be composed, extended, and reused: Easily write custom test assertions that are as simple to use as the built-ins. Every assertion can transformed to express whatever you need to.

Quick Start

Start each test by calling g := ghost.New(t). Then, write your assertions:

func TestMyFunc(t *testing.T) {
  g := ghost.New(t)

  got, err := MyFunc()
  g.NoError(err)

  g.MustNot(be.Nil(got))
  g.Should(be.Equal(got.SomeString, "my value"))
  g.Should(be.SliceLen(got.SomeSlice, 3))
}

func TestMyFunc_error(t *testing.T) {
  g := ghost.New(t)

  got, err := MyFunc()

  g.Should(be.Zero(got))
  g.Should(be.ErrorEqual(err, "an error occurred"))
}

Usage

Checks

Ghost comes with four main checks: Should, ShouldNot, Must, and MustNot.

Should and ShouldNot check whether an assertion has succeeded, failing the test otherwise. Like t.Error, the test is allowed to proceed if the assertion fails:

g.Should(be.Equal(got, want))
g.ShouldNot(be.Nil(val))

Both functions also return a boolean indicating whether the check was successful, allowing you to safely chain assertion logic:

if g.Should(be.SliceLen(mySlice, 1)) {
  g.Should(be.Equal(mySlice[0], "foo"))
}

Must and MustNot work similarly, but end test execution if the assertion does not pass, analogous to t.Fatal:

g.Must(be.True(ok))
g.MustNot(be.Nil(val))

For convenience, a NoError check is also available, which fails and ends test execution for non-nil errors:

g.NoError(err)

// Equivalent to:
g.MustNot(be.Error(err))

Assertions

An assertion is any function that returns a ghost.Result.

Standard Assertions

A set of standard assertions are available in github.com/rliebz/ghost/be.

These cover common use cases, such as simple and deep equality, slice/map/string operations, error and panic handling, and JSON equality.

g.Should(be.True(true))
g.ShouldNot(be.False(true))

g.Should(be.Equal(1+1, 2))
g.Should(be.DeepEqual([]string{"a", "b"}, []string{"a", "b"}))

g.Should(be.SliceContaining([]int{1, 2, 3}, 2))
g.Should(be.StringContaining("foobar", "foo"))

g.Should(be.Panic(func() { panic("oh no") }))

var err error
g.NoError(err)
g.Must(be.Nil(err))
g.MustNot(be.Error(err))

err = errors.New("test error: oh no")
g.Should(be.Error(err))
g.Should(be.ErrorEqual(err, "test error: oh no"))
g.Should(be.ErrorContaining(err, "oh no"))

g.Should(be.JSONEqual(`{"b": 1, "a": 0}`, `{"a": 0, "b": 1}`))
g.ShouldNot(be.JSONEqual(`{"a":1}`, `{"a":2}`))

For the full list available, see the documentation.

Assertion Composers

Ghost allows assertions to be composed into powerful expressions.

One composer is be.Eventually, which retries an assertion over time until it either succeeds or times out:

g.Should(be.Eventually(func() ghost.Result {
  return be.True(val.IsSettled(ctx))
}, 3*time.Second, 100*time.Millisecond))

Another composer is be.Not, which negates the result of an assertion:

g.Should(be.Not(be.True(ok)))
g.Must(be.Not(be.Nil(val)))

While be.Not in a simple assertion would simply be a more verbose version of of ShouldNot or MustNot, the real benefit becomes obvious when you combine composers together:

g.Should(be.Eventually(func() ghost.Result {
  return be.Not(be.Equal(a, b))
}, 3*time.Second, 100*time.Millisecond))

For details on other composers such as be.Any or be.All, see the godoc.

Custom Assertions

Custom assertions are easy to write and easy to use.

A very basic custom assertion might look like this:

func BeThirteen(i int) ghost.Result {
	return ghost.Result{
		Ok:      i == 13,
		Message: fmt.Sprintf("value is %d", i),
	}
}

Custom assertions can be used with the built-in checks:

i := 13
g.Should(BeThirteen(i))

One of the key features that makes test output readable is understanding the AST to be able to print better failure messages. Use ghostlib to pretty print the AST values of assertion arguments:

func BeThirteen(i int) ghost.Result {
	args := ghostlib.ArgsFromAST(i)

	return ghost.Result{
		Ok:      i == 13,
		Message: fmt.Sprintf("%v is %d", args[0], i),
	}
}

And instantly get helpful, descriptive error messages:

g.Should(BeThirteen(myInt)) // "myInt is 0"
g.Should(BeThirteen(5 + 6)) // "5 + 6 is 11"

Philosophy

Ghost Does Assertions

Go's testing package is fantastic; Ghost doesn't try to do anything that the standard library already does.

Test suites, mocking, logging, and non-assertion failures are all out of scope.

Both "Hard" and "Soft" Assertions Should Be Easy

Some testing libraries lock you into stopping test execution on assertion failure. Ghost makes it easy to switch between both, and doesn't make you change the way you set tests up based on which of the two you use:

g := ghost.New(t)             // universal test setup

// ...

g.Should(be.Equal(myInt, 13)) // soft assertion
g.Must(be.True(ok))           // hard assertion

Arguments Should Be Predictable

Arguments to assertions should go in an intuitive, predictable order. By convention:

  1. "Got" comes before "want".
  2. "Haystack" comes before "needle".
  3. All other arguments come last.

Ghost Does Assertions

Go's testing package is fantastic; Ghost doesn't try to do anything that the standard library already does.

Test suites, mocking, logging, and non-assertion failures are all out of scope.

About

Ghost does test assertions in Go.

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