qubes-linux-template-builder/tests/assert
Jason Mehring f597ff760f Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file
Added ability to specify more than one TEMPLATE_FLAVOR (Primary plus others)
Added ability for all TEMPLATE_FLAVORS and others to be able to hook into scripts (pre / post)
Addeed tests for above functionality
With these changes TEMPLATE_FLAVORS can be self contained and not polute code space
2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
..
.travis.yml Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
assert.sh Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
COPYING Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
COPYING.LESSER Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
README.rst Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00
tests.sh Added ability to be able to relocate TEMPLATE_FLAVORS to any directory via configuration file 2014-10-21 09:12:05 -04:00

###########
 assert.sh
###########

**assert.sh** is test-driven development in the Bourne again shell.

:Version: 1.0.2
:Author: Robert Lehmann
:License: LGPLv3
:Requirements: `bc -- an arbitrary precision calculator language
               <http://www.gnu.org/software/bc/manual/bc.html>`_
               (installed on all POSIX-compliant systems)

.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/lehmannro/assert.sh.svg?branch=master
   :target: https://travis-ci.org/lehmannro/assert.sh

Example
=======

::

  . assert.sh

  # `echo test` is expected to write "test" on stdout
  assert "echo test" "test"
  # `seq 3` is expected to print "1", "2" and "3" on different lines
  assert "seq 3" "1\n2\n3"
  # exit code of `true` is expected to be 0
  assert_raises "true"
  # exit code of `false` is expected to be 1
  assert_raises "false" 1
  # end of test suite
  assert_end examples

If you had written the above snippet into ``tests.sh`` you could invoke it
without any extra hassle::

  $ ./tests.sh
  all 4 examples tests passed in 0.014s.

Watch out to have ``tests.sh`` executable (``chmod +x tests.sh``), otherwise
you need to invoke it with ``bash tests.sh``

Now, we will add a failing test case to our suite::

  # expect `exit 127` to terminate with code 128
  assert_raises "exit 127" 128

Remember to insert test cases before ``assert_end`` (or write another
``assert_end`` to the end of your file). Otherwise test statistics will be
omitted.

When run, the output is::

  test #5 "exit 127" failed:
          program terminated with code 127 instead of 128
  1 of 5 examples tests failed in 0.019s.


Features
========

+ lightweight interface: ``assert`` and ``assert_raises`` *only*
+ minimal setup -- source ``assert.sh`` and you're done
+ test grouping in individual suites
+ time benchmarks with real-time display of test progress
+ run all tests, stop on first failure, or collect numbers only

Use case
========

You wrote an application. Following sane development practices, you want to
protect yourself against introducing errors with a test suite. Even though most
languages have excellent testing tools, modifying process state (input ``stdin``,
command line arguments ``argv``, environment variables) is awkard in most
languages. The shell was made to do just that, so why don't run the tests in
your shell?

Reference
=========

+ ``assert <command> [stdout] [stdin]``

  Check for an expected output when running your command. `stdout` supports all
  control sequences printf(1) interprets, eg. ``\n`` for a newline. The default
  `stdout` is assumed to be empty.

+ ``assert_raises <command> [exitcode] [stdin]``

  Verify `command` terminated with the expected status code. The default
  `exitcode` is assumed to be 0.

+ ``assert_end [suite]``

  Finalize a test suite and print statistics.

Command line options
--------------------

See ``assert.sh --help`` for command line options on test runners.

  -v, --verbose    Generate real-time output for every individual test run.
  -x, --stop       Stop running tests after the first failure.
                   (Default: run all tests.)
  -i, --invariant  Do not measure runtime for suites. Useful mainly to parse
                   test output.
  -d, --discover   Collect test suites and number of tests only; don't run any
                   tests.
  -c, --continue   Do not modify exit code depending on overall suite status.
  -h               Show brief usage information and exit.
  --help           Show usage manual and exit.

Environment variables
---------------------

================= ====================
variable          corresponding option
================= ====================
``$DEBUG``        ``--verbose``
``$STOP``         ``--stop``
``$INVARIANT``    ``--invariant``
``$DISCOVERONLY`` ``--discover-only``
``$CONTINUE``     ``--continue``
================= ====================

Changelog
=========

master
  * Added support for ``set -e`` environments (closes `#6
    <https://github.com/lehmannro/assert.sh/pull/6>`_, thanks David Schoen.)
  * Modified exit code automatically in case *any* test failed in the suite.
  * Added ``--continue`` flag to avoid tinkering with the exit code.

1.0.2
  * Fixed Mac OS compatibility (closes `#3
    <https://github.com/lehmannro/assert.sh/issues/3>`_.)

1.0.1
  * Added support for ``set -u`` environments (closes `#1
    <https://github.com/lehmannro/assert.sh/issues/1>`_.)
  * Fixed several leaks of stderr.
  * Fixed propagation of options to nested test suites.

Related projects
================

`ShUnit`__
  ShUnit is a testing framework of the xUnit family for Bourne derived shells.
  It is quite feature-rich but requires a whole lot of boilerplate to write a
  basic test suite.  *assert.sh* aims to be lightweight and easy to setup.

__ http://shunit.sourceforge.net/

`shUnit2`__
  shUnit2 is a modern xUnit-style testing framework. It comes with a bunch of
  magic to remove unneccessary verbosity. It requires extra care when crafting
  test cases with many subprocess invocations as you have to fall back to shell
  features to fetch results.  *assert.sh* wraps this functionality out of the
  box.

__ http://code.google.com/p/shunit2/

`tap-functions`__
  A Test Anything Protocol (TAP) producer with an inherently natural-language-
  style API.  Unfortunately it's only of draft quality and decouples the test
  runner from analysis, which does not allow for *assert.sh* features such as
  ``--collect-only`` and ``--stop``.

__ http://testanything.org/wiki/index.php/Tap-functions

`stub.sh`__
  Helpers to fake binaries and bash builtins. It supports mocking features such
  as expecting a certain number of invocations and plays well with *assert.sh*.

__ https://github.com/jimeh/stub.sh