wiki/content/20200826191127-tests.md

4.5 KiB

date id title
20200826 d8edb970-fe2c-4774-b325-2f932b262ef5 Tests in Golang

Rules

Test writing rules:

  • It needs to be in a file with a name like `xxxtest.go`
  • The test funciton must start with the word `Test`
  • The test function takes one argument only `t *testing.T`
package main

import "testing"

func TestHello(t *testing.T) {
    assertCorrectMessage := func(t *testing.T, got, want string) {
        t.Helper()
        if got != want {
            t.Errorf("got %q want %q", got, want)
        }
    }

    t.Run("saying hello to people", func(t *testing.T) {
        got := Hello("Chris", "")
        want := "Hello, Chris"
        assertCorrectMessage(t, got, want)
    })

    t.Run("empty string defaults to 'World'", func(t *testing.T) {
        got := Hello("", "")
        want := "Hello, World"
        assertCorrectMessage(t, got, want)
    })

    t.Run("in Spanish", func(t *testing.T) {
        got := Hello("Elodie", "Spanish")
        want := "Hola, Elodie"
        assertCorrectMessage(t, got, want)
    })

    t.Run("in French", func(t *testing.T) {
        got := Hello("Jean Pierre", "French")
        want := "Bonjour, Jean Pierre"
        assertCorrectMessage(t, got, want)
    })

    t.Run("in Dutch", func(t *testing.T) {
        got := Hello("Frans", "Dutch")
        want := "Hoi, Frans"
        assertCorrectMessage(t, got, want)
    })

}

Examples

Examples can also be added to test.go files.

func ExampleAdd() {
    sum := Add(1, 5)
    fmt.Println(sum)
    // Output: 6
}

Example function will not be execute if the comment is removed

Benchmarking

Benchmarks are a first-class feature of Go, fantastic stuff!

func BenchmarkRepeat(b *testing.B) {
    for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
        Repeat("a")
    }
}

Following command runs benchmarks:

go test -bench=.

Tools

Coverage

Coverage is built in as well:

go test -cover

Race conditions

In Go you can detect race conditions by adding the -race argument:

go test -race

DeepEqual

For `slices` & friends you can use `reflect.DeepEqual` to compare variables in tests

func TestSumAll(t *testing.T) {

    got := SumAll([]int{1, 2}, []int{0, 9})
    want := []int{3, 9}

    if !reflect.DeepEqual(got, want) {
        t.Errorf("got %v want %v", got, want)
    }
}

TableDrivenTests

Writing good tests is not trivial, but in many situations a lot of ground can be covered with table-driven tests: Each table entry is a complete test case with inputs and expected results, and sometimes with additional information such as a test name to make the test output easily readable. If you ever find yourself using copy and paste when writing a test, think about whether refactoring into a table-driven test or pulling the copied code out into a helper function might be a better option.

Given a table of test cases, the actual test simply iterates through all table entries and for each entry performs the necessary tests. The test code is written once and amortized over all table entries, so it makes sense to write a careful test with good error messages.

var flagtests = []struct {
    in  string
    out string
}{
    {"%a", "[%a]"},
    {"%-a", "[%-a]"},
    {"%+a", "[%+a]"},
    {"%#a", "[%#a]"},
    {"% a", "[% a]"},
    {"%0a", "[%0a]"},
    {"%1.2a", "[%1.2a]"},
    {"%-1.2a", "[%-1.2a]"},
    {"%+1.2a", "[%+1.2a]"},
    {"%-+1.2a", "[%+-1.2a]"},
    {"%-+1.2abc", "[%+-1.2a]bc"},
    {"%-1.2abc", "[%-1.2a]bc"},
}
func TestFlagParser(t *testing.T) {
    var flagprinter flagPrinter
    for _, tt := range flagtests {
        t.Run(tt.in, func(t *testing.T) {
            s := Sprintf(tt.in, &flagprinter)
            if s != tt.out {
                t.Errorf("got %q, want %q", s, tt.out)
            }
        })
    }
}

Fatals

Sometimes you want to throw fatal errors in tests to prevent problems, for example in case `nil` is returned and you need to do stuff with the return value in later tests:

func assertError(t *testing.T, got error, want error) {
    t.Helper()
    if got == nil {
        t.Fatal("didn't get an error but wanted one")
    }

    if got != want {
        t.Errorf("got %q, want %q", got, want)
    }
}

Handy packages

  • httptest1
  • quick2

Footnotes