| /* |
| 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 |
| */ |
| package gomega |
| |
| import ( |
| "fmt" |
| "reflect" |
| "time" |
| |
| "github.com/onsi/gomega/internal/assertion" |
| "github.com/onsi/gomega/internal/asyncassertion" |
| "github.com/onsi/gomega/internal/testingtsupport" |
| "github.com/onsi/gomega/types" |
| ) |
| |
| const GOMEGA_VERSION = "1.4.0" |
| |
| const nilFailHandlerPanic = `You are trying to make an assertion, but Gomega's fail handler is nil. |
| If you're using Ginkgo then you probably forgot to put your assertion in an It(). |
| Alternatively, you may have forgotten to register a fail handler with RegisterFailHandler() or RegisterTestingT(). |
| Depending on your vendoring solution you may be inadvertently importing gomega and subpackages (e.g. ghhtp, gexec,...) from different locations. |
| ` |
| |
| var globalFailHandler types.GomegaFailHandler |
| |
| var defaultEventuallyTimeout = time.Second |
| var defaultEventuallyPollingInterval = 10 * time.Millisecond |
| var defaultConsistentlyDuration = 100 * time.Millisecond |
| var defaultConsistentlyPollingInterval = 10 * time.Millisecond |
| |
| //RegisterFailHandler connects Ginkgo to Gomega. When a matcher fails |
| //the fail handler passed into RegisterFailHandler is called. |
| func RegisterFailHandler(handler types.GomegaFailHandler) { |
| globalFailHandler = handler |
| } |
| |
| //RegisterTestingT connects Gomega to Golang's XUnit style |
| //Testing.T tests. It is now deprecated and you should use NewGomegaWithT() instead. |
| // |
| //Legacy Documentation: |
| // |
| //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. |
| // |
| // NewGomegaWithT() does not have this limitation |
| // |
| // (As an aside: Ginkgo gets around this limitation by running parallel tests in different *processes*). |
| func RegisterTestingT(t types.GomegaTestingT) { |
| RegisterFailHandler(testingtsupport.BuildTestingTGomegaFailHandler(t)) |
| } |
| |
| //InterceptGomegaHandlers runs a given callback and returns an array of |
| //failure messages generated by any Gomega assertions within the callback. |
| // |
| //This is accomplished by temporarily replacing the *global* fail handler |
| //with a fail handler that simply annotates failures. The original fail handler |
| //is reset when InterceptGomegaFailures returns. |
| // |
| //This is most useful when testing custom matchers, but can also be used to check |
| //on a value using a Gomega assertion without causing a test failure. |
| func InterceptGomegaFailures(f func()) []string { |
| originalHandler := globalFailHandler |
| failures := []string{} |
| RegisterFailHandler(func(message string, callerSkip ...int) { |
| failures = append(failures, message) |
| }) |
| f() |
| RegisterFailHandler(originalHandler) |
| return failures |
| } |
| |
| //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 |
| func Ω(actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) GomegaAssertion { |
| return ExpectWithOffset(0, actual, extra...) |
| } |
| |
| //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 Expect(actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) GomegaAssertion { |
| return ExpectWithOffset(0, actual, extra...) |
| } |
| |
| //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 ExpectWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) GomegaAssertion { |
| if globalFailHandler == nil { |
| panic(nilFailHandlerPanic) |
| } |
| return assertion.New(actual, globalFailHandler, offset, extra...) |
| } |
| |
| //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 Eventually(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| return EventuallyWithOffset(0, actual, intervals...) |
| } |
| |
| //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`. |
| func EventuallyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| if globalFailHandler == nil { |
| panic(nilFailHandlerPanic) |
| } |
| timeoutInterval := defaultEventuallyTimeout |
| pollingInterval := defaultEventuallyPollingInterval |
| if len(intervals) > 0 { |
| timeoutInterval = toDuration(intervals[0]) |
| } |
| if len(intervals) > 1 { |
| pollingInterval = toDuration(intervals[1]) |
| } |
| return asyncassertion.New(asyncassertion.AsyncAssertionTypeEventually, actual, globalFailHandler, timeoutInterval, pollingInterval, offset) |
| } |
| |
| //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 Consistently(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| return ConsistentlyWithOffset(0, actual, intervals...) |
| } |
| |
| //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 ConsistentlyWithOffset(offset int, actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| if globalFailHandler == nil { |
| panic(nilFailHandlerPanic) |
| } |
| timeoutInterval := defaultConsistentlyDuration |
| pollingInterval := defaultConsistentlyPollingInterval |
| if len(intervals) > 0 { |
| timeoutInterval = toDuration(intervals[0]) |
| } |
| if len(intervals) > 1 { |
| pollingInterval = toDuration(intervals[1]) |
| } |
| return asyncassertion.New(asyncassertion.AsyncAssertionTypeConsistently, actual, globalFailHandler, timeoutInterval, pollingInterval, offset) |
| } |
| |
| //Set the default timeout duration for Eventually. Eventually will repeatedly poll your condition until it succeeds, or until this timeout elapses. |
| func SetDefaultEventuallyTimeout(t time.Duration) { |
| defaultEventuallyTimeout = t |
| } |
| |
| //Set the default polling interval for Eventually. |
| func SetDefaultEventuallyPollingInterval(t time.Duration) { |
| defaultEventuallyPollingInterval = t |
| } |
| |
| //Set the default duration for Consistently. Consistently will verify that your condition is satsified for this long. |
| func SetDefaultConsistentlyDuration(t time.Duration) { |
| defaultConsistentlyDuration = t |
| } |
| |
| //Set the default polling interval for Consistently. |
| func SetDefaultConsistentlyPollingInterval(t time.Duration) { |
| defaultConsistentlyPollingInterval = t |
| } |
| |
| //GomegaAsyncAssertion 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.") |
| type GomegaAsyncAssertion interface { |
| Should(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| ShouldNot(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| } |
| |
| //GomegaAssertion 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) |
| type GomegaAssertion interface { |
| Should(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| ShouldNot(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| |
| To(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| ToNot(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| NotTo(matcher types.GomegaMatcher, optionalDescription ...interface{}) bool |
| } |
| |
| //OmegaMatcher is deprecated in favor of the better-named and better-organized types.GomegaMatcher but sticks around to support existing code that uses it |
| type OmegaMatcher types.GomegaMatcher |
| |
| //GomegaWithT wraps a *testing.T and provides `Expect`, `Eventually`, and `Consistently` methods. This allows you to leverage |
| //Gomega's rich ecosystem of matchers in standard `testing` test suites. |
| // |
| //Use `NewGomegaWithT` to instantiate a `GomegaWithT` |
| type GomegaWithT struct { |
| t types.GomegaTestingT |
| } |
| |
| //NewGomegaWithT takes a *testing.T and returngs a `GomegaWithT` allowing you to use `Expect`, `Eventually`, and `Consistently` along with |
| //Gomega's rich ecosystem of matchers in standard `testing` test suits. |
| // |
| // func TestFarmHasCow(t *testing.T) { |
| // g := GomegaWithT(t) |
| // |
| // f := farm.New([]string{"Cow", "Horse"}) |
| // g.Expect(f.HasCow()).To(BeTrue(), "Farm should have cow") |
| // } |
| func NewGomegaWithT(t types.GomegaTestingT) *GomegaWithT { |
| return &GomegaWithT{ |
| t: t, |
| } |
| } |
| |
| //See documentation for Expect |
| func (g *GomegaWithT) Expect(actual interface{}, extra ...interface{}) GomegaAssertion { |
| return assertion.New(actual, testingtsupport.BuildTestingTGomegaFailHandler(g.t), 0, extra...) |
| } |
| |
| //See documentation for Eventually |
| func (g *GomegaWithT) Eventually(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| timeoutInterval := defaultEventuallyTimeout |
| pollingInterval := defaultEventuallyPollingInterval |
| if len(intervals) > 0 { |
| timeoutInterval = toDuration(intervals[0]) |
| } |
| if len(intervals) > 1 { |
| pollingInterval = toDuration(intervals[1]) |
| } |
| return asyncassertion.New(asyncassertion.AsyncAssertionTypeEventually, actual, testingtsupport.BuildTestingTGomegaFailHandler(g.t), timeoutInterval, pollingInterval, 0) |
| } |
| |
| //See documentation for Consistently |
| func (g *GomegaWithT) Consistently(actual interface{}, intervals ...interface{}) GomegaAsyncAssertion { |
| timeoutInterval := defaultConsistentlyDuration |
| pollingInterval := defaultConsistentlyPollingInterval |
| if len(intervals) > 0 { |
| timeoutInterval = toDuration(intervals[0]) |
| } |
| if len(intervals) > 1 { |
| pollingInterval = toDuration(intervals[1]) |
| } |
| return asyncassertion.New(asyncassertion.AsyncAssertionTypeConsistently, actual, testingtsupport.BuildTestingTGomegaFailHandler(g.t), timeoutInterval, pollingInterval, 0) |
| } |
| |
| func toDuration(input interface{}) time.Duration { |
| duration, ok := input.(time.Duration) |
| if ok { |
| return duration |
| } |
| |
| value := reflect.ValueOf(input) |
| kind := reflect.TypeOf(input).Kind() |
| |
| if reflect.Int <= kind && kind <= reflect.Int64 { |
| return time.Duration(value.Int()) * time.Second |
| } else if reflect.Uint <= kind && kind <= reflect.Uint64 { |
| return time.Duration(value.Uint()) * time.Second |
| } else if reflect.Float32 <= kind && kind <= reflect.Float64 { |
| return time.Duration(value.Float() * float64(time.Second)) |
| } else if reflect.String == kind { |
| duration, err := time.ParseDuration(value.String()) |
| if err != nil { |
| panic(fmt.Sprintf("%#v is not a valid parsable duration string.", input)) |
| } |
| return duration |
| } |
| |
| panic(fmt.Sprintf("%v is not a valid interval. Must be time.Duration, parsable duration string or a number.", input)) |
| } |