| /* |
| Ginkgo is a BDD-style testing framework for Golang |
| |
| The godoc documentation describes Ginkgo's API. More comprehensive documentation (with examples!) is available at http://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/ |
| |
| Ginkgo's preferred matcher library is [Gomega](http://github.com/onsi/gomega) |
| |
| Ginkgo on Github: http://github.com/onsi/ginkgo |
| |
| Ginkgo is MIT-Licensed |
| */ |
| package ginkgo |
| |
| import ( |
| "flag" |
| "fmt" |
| "io" |
| "net/http" |
| "os" |
| "strings" |
| "time" |
| |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/config" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/codelocation" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/failer" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/remote" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/suite" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/testingtproxy" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/internal/writer" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/reporters" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/reporters/stenographer" |
| "github.com/onsi/ginkgo/types" |
| ) |
| |
| const GINKGO_VERSION = config.VERSION |
| const GINKGO_PANIC = ` |
| Your test failed. |
| Ginkgo panics to prevent subsequent assertions from running. |
| Normally Ginkgo rescues this panic so you shouldn't see it. |
| |
| But, if you make an assertion in a goroutine, Ginkgo can't capture the panic. |
| To circumvent this, you should call |
| |
| defer GinkgoRecover() |
| |
| at the top of the goroutine that caused this panic. |
| ` |
| const defaultTimeout = 1 |
| |
| var globalSuite *suite.Suite |
| var globalFailer *failer.Failer |
| |
| func init() { |
| config.Flags(flag.CommandLine, "ginkgo", true) |
| GinkgoWriter = writer.New(os.Stdout) |
| globalFailer = failer.New() |
| globalSuite = suite.New(globalFailer) |
| } |
| |
| //GinkgoWriter implements an io.Writer |
| //When running in verbose mode any writes to GinkgoWriter will be immediately printed |
| //to stdout. Otherwise, GinkgoWriter will buffer any writes produced during the current test and flush them to screen |
| //only if the current test fails. |
| var GinkgoWriter io.Writer |
| |
| //The interface by which Ginkgo receives *testing.T |
| type GinkgoTestingT interface { |
| Fail() |
| } |
| |
| //GinkgoRandomSeed returns the seed used to randomize spec execution order. It is |
| //useful for seeding your own pseudorandom number generators (PRNGs) to ensure |
| //consistent executions from run to run, where your tests contain variability (for |
| //example, when selecting random test data). |
| func GinkgoRandomSeed() int64 { |
| return config.GinkgoConfig.RandomSeed |
| } |
| |
| //GinkgoParallelNode returns the parallel node number for the current ginkgo process |
| //The node number is 1-indexed |
| func GinkgoParallelNode() int { |
| return config.GinkgoConfig.ParallelNode |
| } |
| |
| //Some matcher libraries or legacy codebases require a *testing.T |
| //GinkgoT implements an interface analogous to *testing.T and can be used if |
| //the library in question accepts *testing.T through an interface |
| // |
| // For example, with testify: |
| // assert.Equal(GinkgoT(), 123, 123, "they should be equal") |
| // |
| // Or with gomock: |
| // gomock.NewController(GinkgoT()) |
| // |
| // GinkgoT() takes an optional offset argument that can be used to get the |
| // correct line number associated with the failure. |
| func GinkgoT(optionalOffset ...int) GinkgoTInterface { |
| offset := 3 |
| if len(optionalOffset) > 0 { |
| offset = optionalOffset[0] |
| } |
| return testingtproxy.New(GinkgoWriter, Fail, offset) |
| } |
| |
| //The interface returned by GinkgoT(). This covers most of the methods |
| //in the testing package's T. |
| type GinkgoTInterface interface { |
| Fail() |
| Error(args ...interface{}) |
| Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) |
| FailNow() |
| Fatal(args ...interface{}) |
| Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) |
| Log(args ...interface{}) |
| Logf(format string, args ...interface{}) |
| Failed() bool |
| Parallel() |
| Skip(args ...interface{}) |
| Skipf(format string, args ...interface{}) |
| SkipNow() |
| Skipped() bool |
| } |
| |
| //Custom Ginkgo test reporters must implement the Reporter interface. |
| // |
| //The custom reporter is passed in a SuiteSummary when the suite begins and ends, |
| //and a SpecSummary just before a spec begins and just after a spec ends |
| type Reporter reporters.Reporter |
| |
| //Asynchronous specs are given a channel of the Done type. You must close or write to the channel |
| //to tell Ginkgo that your async test is done. |
| type Done chan<- interface{} |
| |
| //GinkgoTestDescription represents the information about the current running test returned by CurrentGinkgoTestDescription |
| // FullTestText: a concatenation of ComponentTexts and the TestText |
| // ComponentTexts: a list of all texts for the Describes & Contexts leading up to the current test |
| // TestText: the text in the actual It or Measure node |
| // IsMeasurement: true if the current test is a measurement |
| // FileName: the name of the file containing the current test |
| // LineNumber: the line number for the current test |
| // Failed: if the current test has failed, this will be true (useful in an AfterEach) |
| type GinkgoTestDescription struct { |
| FullTestText string |
| ComponentTexts []string |
| TestText string |
| |
| IsMeasurement bool |
| |
| FileName string |
| LineNumber int |
| |
| Failed bool |
| Duration time.Duration |
| } |
| |
| //CurrentGinkgoTestDescripton returns information about the current running test. |
| func CurrentGinkgoTestDescription() GinkgoTestDescription { |
| summary, ok := globalSuite.CurrentRunningSpecSummary() |
| if !ok { |
| return GinkgoTestDescription{} |
| } |
| |
| subjectCodeLocation := summary.ComponentCodeLocations[len(summary.ComponentCodeLocations)-1] |
| |
| return GinkgoTestDescription{ |
| ComponentTexts: summary.ComponentTexts[1:], |
| FullTestText: strings.Join(summary.ComponentTexts[1:], " "), |
| TestText: summary.ComponentTexts[len(summary.ComponentTexts)-1], |
| IsMeasurement: summary.IsMeasurement, |
| FileName: subjectCodeLocation.FileName, |
| LineNumber: subjectCodeLocation.LineNumber, |
| Failed: summary.HasFailureState(), |
| Duration: summary.RunTime, |
| } |
| } |
| |
| //Measurement tests receive a Benchmarker. |
| // |
| //You use the Time() function to time how long the passed in body function takes to run |
| //You use the RecordValue() function to track arbitrary numerical measurements. |
| //The RecordValueWithPrecision() function can be used alternatively to provide the unit |
| //and resolution of the numeric measurement. |
| //The optional info argument is passed to the test reporter and can be used to |
| // provide the measurement data to a custom reporter with context. |
| // |
| //See http://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/#benchmark_tests for more details |
| type Benchmarker interface { |
| Time(name string, body func(), info ...interface{}) (elapsedTime time.Duration) |
| RecordValue(name string, value float64, info ...interface{}) |
| RecordValueWithPrecision(name string, value float64, units string, precision int, info ...interface{}) |
| } |
| |
| //RunSpecs is the entry point for the Ginkgo test runner. |
| //You must call this within a Golang testing TestX(t *testing.T) function. |
| // |
| //To bootstrap a test suite you can use the Ginkgo CLI: |
| // |
| // ginkgo bootstrap |
| func RunSpecs(t GinkgoTestingT, description string) bool { |
| specReporters := []Reporter{buildDefaultReporter()} |
| return RunSpecsWithCustomReporters(t, description, specReporters) |
| } |
| |
| //To run your tests with Ginkgo's default reporter and your custom reporter(s), replace |
| //RunSpecs() with this method. |
| func RunSpecsWithDefaultAndCustomReporters(t GinkgoTestingT, description string, specReporters []Reporter) bool { |
| specReporters = append(specReporters, buildDefaultReporter()) |
| return RunSpecsWithCustomReporters(t, description, specReporters) |
| } |
| |
| //To run your tests with your custom reporter(s) (and *not* Ginkgo's default reporter), replace |
| //RunSpecs() with this method. Note that parallel tests will not work correctly without the default reporter |
| func RunSpecsWithCustomReporters(t GinkgoTestingT, description string, specReporters []Reporter) bool { |
| writer := GinkgoWriter.(*writer.Writer) |
| writer.SetStream(config.DefaultReporterConfig.Verbose) |
| reporters := make([]reporters.Reporter, len(specReporters)) |
| for i, reporter := range specReporters { |
| reporters[i] = reporter |
| } |
| passed, hasFocusedTests := globalSuite.Run(t, description, reporters, writer, config.GinkgoConfig) |
| if passed && hasFocusedTests && strings.TrimSpace(os.Getenv("GINKGO_EDITOR_INTEGRATION")) == "" { |
| fmt.Println("PASS | FOCUSED") |
| os.Exit(types.GINKGO_FOCUS_EXIT_CODE) |
| } |
| return passed |
| } |
| |
| func buildDefaultReporter() Reporter { |
| remoteReportingServer := config.GinkgoConfig.StreamHost |
| if remoteReportingServer == "" { |
| stenographer := stenographer.New(!config.DefaultReporterConfig.NoColor, config.GinkgoConfig.FlakeAttempts > 1) |
| return reporters.NewDefaultReporter(config.DefaultReporterConfig, stenographer) |
| } else { |
| return remote.NewForwardingReporter(remoteReportingServer, &http.Client{}, remote.NewOutputInterceptor()) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| //Skip notifies Ginkgo that the current spec was skipped. |
| func Skip(message string, callerSkip ...int) { |
| skip := 0 |
| if len(callerSkip) > 0 { |
| skip = callerSkip[0] |
| } |
| |
| globalFailer.Skip(message, codelocation.New(skip+1)) |
| panic(GINKGO_PANIC) |
| } |
| |
| //Fail notifies Ginkgo that the current spec has failed. (Gomega will call Fail for you automatically when an assertion fails.) |
| func Fail(message string, callerSkip ...int) { |
| skip := 0 |
| if len(callerSkip) > 0 { |
| skip = callerSkip[0] |
| } |
| |
| globalFailer.Fail(message, codelocation.New(skip+1)) |
| panic(GINKGO_PANIC) |
| } |
| |
| //GinkgoRecover should be deferred at the top of any spawned goroutine that (may) call `Fail` |
| //Since Gomega assertions call fail, you should throw a `defer GinkgoRecover()` at the top of any goroutine that |
| //calls out to Gomega |
| // |
| //Here's why: Ginkgo's `Fail` method records the failure and then panics to prevent |
| //further assertions from running. This panic must be recovered. Ginkgo does this for you |
| //if the panic originates in a Ginkgo node (an It, BeforeEach, etc...) |
| // |
| //Unfortunately, if a panic originates on a goroutine *launched* from one of these nodes there's no |
| //way for Ginkgo to rescue the panic. To do this, you must remember to `defer GinkgoRecover()` at the top of such a goroutine. |
| func GinkgoRecover() { |
| e := recover() |
| if e != nil { |
| globalFailer.Panic(codelocation.New(1), e) |
| } |
| } |
| |
| //Describe blocks allow you to organize your specs. A Describe block can contain any number of |
| //BeforeEach, AfterEach, JustBeforeEach, It, and Measurement blocks. |
| // |
| //In addition you can nest Describe, Context and When blocks. Describe, Context and When blocks are functionally |
| //equivalent. The difference is purely semantic -- you typical Describe the behavior of an object |
| //or method and, within that Describe, outline a number of Contexts and Whens. |
| func Describe(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus the tests within a describe block using FDescribe |
| func FDescribe(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using PDescribe |
| func PDescribe(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using XDescribe |
| func XDescribe(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //Context blocks allow you to organize your specs. A Context block can contain any number of |
| //BeforeEach, AfterEach, JustBeforeEach, It, and Measurement blocks. |
| // |
| //In addition you can nest Describe, Context and When blocks. Describe, Context and When blocks are functionally |
| //equivalent. The difference is purely semantic -- you typical Describe the behavior of an object |
| //or method and, within that Describe, outline a number of Contexts and Whens. |
| func Context(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus the tests within a describe block using FContext |
| func FContext(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using PContext |
| func PContext(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using XContext |
| func XContext(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode(text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //When blocks allow you to organize your specs. A When block can contain any number of |
| //BeforeEach, AfterEach, JustBeforeEach, It, and Measurement blocks. |
| // |
| //In addition you can nest Describe, Context and When blocks. Describe, Context and When blocks are functionally |
| //equivalent. The difference is purely semantic -- you typical Describe the behavior of an object |
| //or method and, within that Describe, outline a number of Contexts and Whens. |
| func When(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode("when "+text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus the tests within a describe block using FWhen |
| func FWhen(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode("when "+text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using PWhen |
| func PWhen(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode("when "+text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark the tests within a describe block as pending using XWhen |
| func XWhen(text string, body func()) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushContainerNode("when "+text, body, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //It blocks contain your test code and assertions. You cannot nest any other Ginkgo blocks |
| //within an It block. |
| // |
| //Ginkgo will normally run It blocks synchronously. To perform asynchronous tests, pass a |
| //function that accepts a Done channel. When you do this, you can also provide an optional timeout. |
| func It(text string, body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus individual Its using FIt |
| func FIt(text string, body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Its as pending using PIt |
| func PIt(text string, _ ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, func() {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Its as pending using XIt |
| func XIt(text string, _ ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, func() {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //Specify blocks are aliases for It blocks and allow for more natural wording in situations |
| //which "It" does not fit into a natural sentence flow. All the same protocols apply for Specify blocks |
| //which apply to It blocks. |
| func Specify(text string, body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus individual Specifys using FSpecify |
| func FSpecify(text string, body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Specifys as pending using PSpecify |
| func PSpecify(text string, is ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, func() {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Specifys as pending using XSpecify |
| func XSpecify(text string, is ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushItNode(text, func() {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //By allows you to better document large Its. |
| // |
| //Generally you should try to keep your Its short and to the point. This is not always possible, however, |
| //especially in the context of integration tests that capture a particular workflow. |
| // |
| //By allows you to document such flows. By must be called within a runnable node (It, BeforeEach, Measure, etc...) |
| //By will simply log the passed in text to the GinkgoWriter. If By is handed a function it will immediately run the function. |
| func By(text string, callbacks ...func()) { |
| preamble := "\x1b[1mSTEP\x1b[0m" |
| if config.DefaultReporterConfig.NoColor { |
| preamble = "STEP" |
| } |
| fmt.Fprintln(GinkgoWriter, preamble+": "+text) |
| if len(callbacks) == 1 { |
| callbacks[0]() |
| } |
| if len(callbacks) > 1 { |
| panic("just one callback per By, please") |
| } |
| } |
| |
| //Measure blocks run the passed in body function repeatedly (determined by the samples argument) |
| //and accumulate metrics provided to the Benchmarker by the body function. |
| // |
| //The body function must have the signature: |
| // func(b Benchmarker) |
| func Measure(text string, body interface{}, samples int) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushMeasureNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeNone, codelocation.New(1), samples) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can focus individual Measures using FMeasure |
| func FMeasure(text string, body interface{}, samples int) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushMeasureNode(text, body, types.FlagTypeFocused, codelocation.New(1), samples) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Maeasurements as pending using PMeasure |
| func PMeasure(text string, _ ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushMeasureNode(text, func(b Benchmarker) {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //You can mark Maeasurements as pending using XMeasure |
| func XMeasure(text string, _ ...interface{}) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushMeasureNode(text, func(b Benchmarker) {}, types.FlagTypePending, codelocation.New(1), 0) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //BeforeSuite blocks are run just once before any specs are run. When running in parallel, each |
| //parallel node process will call BeforeSuite. |
| // |
| //BeforeSuite blocks can be made asynchronous by providing a body function that accepts a Done channel |
| // |
| //You may only register *one* BeforeSuite handler per test suite. You typically do so in your bootstrap file at the top level. |
| func BeforeSuite(body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.SetBeforeSuiteNode(body, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //AfterSuite blocks are *always* run after all the specs regardless of whether specs have passed or failed. |
| //Moreover, if Ginkgo receives an interrupt signal (^C) it will attempt to run the AfterSuite before exiting. |
| // |
| //When running in parallel, each parallel node process will call AfterSuite. |
| // |
| //AfterSuite blocks can be made asynchronous by providing a body function that accepts a Done channel |
| // |
| //You may only register *one* AfterSuite handler per test suite. You typically do so in your bootstrap file at the top level. |
| func AfterSuite(body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.SetAfterSuiteNode(body, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //SynchronizedBeforeSuite blocks are primarily meant to solve the problem of setting up singleton external resources shared across |
| //nodes when running tests in parallel. For example, say you have a shared database that you can only start one instance of that |
| //must be used in your tests. When running in parallel, only one node should set up the database and all other nodes should wait |
| //until that node is done before running. |
| // |
| //SynchronizedBeforeSuite accomplishes this by taking *two* function arguments. The first is only run on parallel node #1. The second is |
| //run on all nodes, but *only* after the first function completes succesfully. Ginkgo also makes it possible to send data from the first function (on Node 1) |
| //to the second function (on all the other nodes). |
| // |
| //The functions have the following signatures. The first function (which only runs on node 1) has the signature: |
| // |
| // func() []byte |
| // |
| //or, to run asynchronously: |
| // |
| // func(done Done) []byte |
| // |
| //The byte array returned by the first function is then passed to the second function, which has the signature: |
| // |
| // func(data []byte) |
| // |
| //or, to run asynchronously: |
| // |
| // func(data []byte, done Done) |
| // |
| //Here's a simple pseudo-code example that starts a shared database on Node 1 and shares the database's address with the other nodes: |
| // |
| // var dbClient db.Client |
| // var dbRunner db.Runner |
| // |
| // var _ = SynchronizedBeforeSuite(func() []byte { |
| // dbRunner = db.NewRunner() |
| // err := dbRunner.Start() |
| // Ω(err).ShouldNot(HaveOccurred()) |
| // return []byte(dbRunner.URL) |
| // }, func(data []byte) { |
| // dbClient = db.NewClient() |
| // err := dbClient.Connect(string(data)) |
| // Ω(err).ShouldNot(HaveOccurred()) |
| // }) |
| func SynchronizedBeforeSuite(node1Body interface{}, allNodesBody interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.SetSynchronizedBeforeSuiteNode( |
| node1Body, |
| allNodesBody, |
| codelocation.New(1), |
| parseTimeout(timeout...), |
| ) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //SynchronizedAfterSuite blocks complement the SynchronizedBeforeSuite blocks in solving the problem of setting up |
| //external singleton resources shared across nodes when running tests in parallel. |
| // |
| //SynchronizedAfterSuite accomplishes this by taking *two* function arguments. The first runs on all nodes. The second runs only on parallel node #1 |
| //and *only* after all other nodes have finished and exited. This ensures that node 1, and any resources it is running, remain alive until |
| //all other nodes are finished. |
| // |
| //Both functions have the same signature: either func() or func(done Done) to run asynchronously. |
| // |
| //Here's a pseudo-code example that complements that given in SynchronizedBeforeSuite. Here, SynchronizedAfterSuite is used to tear down the shared database |
| //only after all nodes have finished: |
| // |
| // var _ = SynchronizedAfterSuite(func() { |
| // dbClient.Cleanup() |
| // }, func() { |
| // dbRunner.Stop() |
| // }) |
| func SynchronizedAfterSuite(allNodesBody interface{}, node1Body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.SetSynchronizedAfterSuiteNode( |
| allNodesBody, |
| node1Body, |
| codelocation.New(1), |
| parseTimeout(timeout...), |
| ) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //BeforeEach blocks are run before It blocks. When multiple BeforeEach blocks are defined in nested |
| //Describe and Context blocks the outermost BeforeEach blocks are run first. |
| // |
| //Like It blocks, BeforeEach blocks can be made asynchronous by providing a body function that accepts |
| //a Done channel |
| func BeforeEach(body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushBeforeEachNode(body, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //JustBeforeEach blocks are run before It blocks but *after* all BeforeEach blocks. For more details, |
| //read the [documentation](http://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/#separating_creation_and_configuration_) |
| // |
| //Like It blocks, BeforeEach blocks can be made asynchronous by providing a body function that accepts |
| //a Done channel |
| func JustBeforeEach(body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushJustBeforeEachNode(body, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| //AfterEach blocks are run after It blocks. When multiple AfterEach blocks are defined in nested |
| //Describe and Context blocks the innermost AfterEach blocks are run first. |
| // |
| //Like It blocks, AfterEach blocks can be made asynchronous by providing a body function that accepts |
| //a Done channel |
| func AfterEach(body interface{}, timeout ...float64) bool { |
| globalSuite.PushAfterEachNode(body, codelocation.New(1), parseTimeout(timeout...)) |
| return true |
| } |
| |
| func parseTimeout(timeout ...float64) time.Duration { |
| if len(timeout) == 0 { |
| return time.Duration(defaultTimeout * int64(time.Second)) |
| } else { |
| return time.Duration(timeout[0] * float64(time.Second)) |
| } |
| } |