Crates.io | polish |
lib.rs | polish |
version | 0.9.9 |
source | src |
created_at | 2017-04-30 17:11:59.934881 |
updated_at | 2018-01-17 03:05:33.490249 |
description | Test-Driven Development done right |
homepage | https://github.com/AlKass/polish |
repository | https://github.com/AlKass/polish |
max_upload_size | |
id | 12558 |
size | 282,150 |
Polish is Test-Driven Development done right
The crates.io
package is kept up-to-date with all the major changes which means you can use it by simply including the following in your Cargo.toml
under your dependencies
section:
polish = "*"
Replace
*
with the version number shown in the crates.io badge above
But if you'd like to use nightly (most recent) releases, you can include the GitHub
package repo instead:
polish = { git = "https://github.com/alkass/polish", branch = "master" }
The simplest test case can take the following form:
extern crate polish;
use polish::test_case::{TestRunner, TestCaseStatus, TestCase};
use polish::logger::Logger;
fn my_test_case(logger: &mut Logger) -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case code goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED // Other valid statuses are (FAILED, SKIPPED, and UNKNOWN)
}
fn main() {
let test_case = TestCase::new("Test Case Title", "Test Case Criteria", Box::new(my_test_case));
TestRunner::new().run_test(test_case);
}
This produces the following:
The example listed above is available here
You can also pass a Rust closure
instead of a function pointer as so:
extern crate polish;
use polish::test_case::{TestRunner, TestCaseStatus, TestCase};
use polish::logger::Logger;
fn main() {
let test_case = TestCase::new("Test Case Title", "Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case code goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
}));
TestRunner::new().run_test(test_case);
}
The example listed above is available here
You can run multiple test cases as follows:
extern crate polish;
use polish::test_case::{TestRunner, TestCaseStatus, TestCase};
use polish::logger::Logger;
fn main() {
let mut runner = TestRunner::new();
runner.run_test(TestCase::new("1st Test Case Title", "Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case code goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
})));
runner.run_test(TestCase::new("2nd Test Case Title", "Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case code goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
})));
runner.run_test(TestCase::new("3rd Test Case Title", "Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case code goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
})));
}
But a more convenient way would be to pass a Vector
of your test cases to run_tests
as so:
extern crate polish;
use polish::test_case::{TestRunner, TestCaseStatus, TestCase};
use polish::logger::Logger;
fn main() {
let my_tests = vec![
TestCase::new("1st Test Case Title", "1st Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
})),
TestCase::new("2nd Test Case Title", "2nd Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case goes here
TestCaseStatus::UNKNOWN
})),
TestCase::new("3rd Test Case Title", "3rd Test Case Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case goes here
TestCaseStatus::FAILED
}))];
TestRunner::new().run_tests(my_tests);
}
This produces the following:
The example listed above is available here
You may choose to have a set of test cases as part of an object to test that object itself. For that, a clean way of writing your test cases would be to implement the Testable
trait. Following is an example:
extern crate polish;
use polish::test_case::{TestRunner, TestCaseStatus, TestCase, Testable};
use polish::logger::Logger;
struct MyTestCase;
impl Testable for MyTestCase {
fn tests(self) -> Vec<TestCase> {
vec![
TestCase::new("Some Title #1", "Testing Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case goes here
TestCaseStatus::PASSED
})),
TestCase::new("Some Title #2", "Testing Criteria", Box::new(|logger: &mut Logger| -> TestCaseStatus {
// TODO: Your test case goes here
TestCaseStatus::SKIPPED
}))]
}
}
fn main() {
TestRunner::new().run_tests_from_class(MyTestCase {});
}
This produces the following:
The example listed above is available here
Attributes allow you to change the behaviour of how your test cases are run. For instance, by default, your TestRunner
instance will run all your test cases regardless of whether any have failed. If you, however, want this behaviour changed, you will need to specifically tell your TestRunner
instance to stop the process at the first failure.
THIS FEATURE IS STILL WORK-IN-PROGRESS. THIS DOCUMENT WILL BE UPDATED WITH TECHNICAL DETAILS ONCE THE FEATURE IS COMPLETE.
The logger object that's passed to each test case offers 4 logging functions (pass
, fail
, warn
, and info
). Each of these functions take a message
argument of type String
which allows you to use the format!
macro to format your logs, e.g.:
logger.info(format!("{} + {} = {}", 1, 2, 1 + 2));
logger.pass(format!("{id}: {message}", id = "alkass", message = "this is a message"));
logger.warn(format!("about to fail"));
logger.fail(format!("failed with err_code: {code}", code = -1));
This produces the following:
The example listed above is available here
If your test case return status is
UNKNOWN
and you've printed at least onefail
log from within the test case function, your test case result will be marked asFAILED
. Otherwise, your test case will be marked asPASSED
.