ESpec is inspired by RSpec and the main idea is to be close to its perfect DSL.
- Test organization with
describe,context,it, and etc blocks - Familiar matchers:
eq,be_close_to,raise_exception, etc - Possibility to add custom matchers
- RSpec expectation syntax:
- With
expecthelper:expect(smth1).to eq(smth2)oris_expected.to eq(smth)whensubjectis defined; - With old-style
should:smth1 |> should eq smth2orshould eq smthwhensubjectis defined.
- With
beforeandfinallyblocks (like RSpecbeforeandafter)let,let!andsubject- Shared examples.
- Mocks with Meck.
- Doc specs
- Installation
- Run specs
- Context blocks
- Examples
- 'before' and 'finally'
- 'double-underscore'
- 'let' and 'subject'
- Shared examples
- Async examples
- Matchers
- Custom matchers
- Mocks
- Doc specs
- Configuration and options
Add espec to dependencies in the mix.exs file:
def deps do
...
{:espec, "~> 0.6.0", only: :test},
#{:espec, github: "antonmi/espec", only: :test}, to get the latest version
...
endmix deps.getThen run:
MIX_ENV=test mix espec.initThe task creates spec/spec_helper.exs and spec/example_spec.exs.
Set preferred_cli_env for espec in the mix.exs file:
def project do
...
preferred_cli_env: [espec: :test]
...
endOr run with MIX_ENV=test.
Place your _spec.exs files into spec folder. use ESpec in the 'spec module'.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
it do: expect(1+1).to eq(2)
it do: (1..3) |> should have 2
endmix especRun specific spec:
mix espec spec/some_spec.exs:25You can specify the line number for example or context.
Read the help:
MIX_ENV=test mix help especThere are three macros with the same functionality: context, describe, and example_group.
Context can have description and options.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
example_group do
context "Some context" do
it do: expect("abc").to match(~r/b/)
end
describe "Some another context with opts", focus: true do
it do: 5 |> should be_between(4,6)
end
end
endAvailable options are:
skip: trueorskip: "Reason"- skips examples in the context;focus: true- sets focus to run with--focusoption.
There are also xcontext, xdescribe, xexample_group macros to skip example groups.
And fcontext, fdescribe, fexample_group for focused groups.
'spec' module is also a context with module name as description. One can add options for this context after yse ESpec:
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec, skip: "Skip all examples in the module"
...
end example, it, and specify macros define the 'spec example'.
defmodule SomeSpec do
example do: expect([1,2,3]).to have_max(3)
it "Test with description" do
4.2 |> should be_close_to(4, 0.5)
end
specify "Test with options", [pending: true], do: "pending"
endYou can use skip, pending or focus options to control evaluation.
There are also macros:
xit,xexample,xspecify- to skip;fit,fexample,fspecify,focus- to focus;pending/1,example/1,it/1,specify/1- for pending examples.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
xit "skip", do: "skipped"
focus "Focused", do: "Focused example"
it "pending example"
pending "it is also pending example"
endbefore blocks are evaluated before the example and finally runs after the example.
The blocks can return {:ok, key: value, ...}, so the keyword list will be saved in the ditionary and can be accessed in other before blocks, in the example, and in finally blocks through 'double-underscore' __:
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
before do: {:ok, a: 1}
context "Context" do
before do: {:ok, b: __[:a] + 1}
finally do: "#{__[:b]} == 2"
it do: __.a |> should eq 1
it do: __.b |> should eq 2
finally do: "This finally will not be run. Define 'finally' before the example"
end
end Note, that finally blocks must be defined before the example.
You can configure 'global' before and finally in spec_helper.exs:
ESpec.start
ESpec.configure fn(config) ->
config.before fn -> {:ok, answer: 42} end #can assign values in dictionary
config.finally fn(__) -> __.answer end #can access assigns
endThese functions will be called before and after each example which ESpec runs.
__ is used to share data between spec blocks. You can access data by __.some_key or __[:some_key].
__.some_key will raise exception if the key 'some_key' does not exist, while __[:some_key] will return nil.
The __ variable appears in your before, finally, in config.before and config.finally, in let and example blocks.
before and finally blocks (including 'global') can modify the dictionay when return {:ok, key: value}.
The example bellow illustrate the life-cycle of __:
spec_helper.exs
ESpec.start
ESpec.configure fn(config) ->
config.before fn -> {:ok, answer: 42} end # __ == %{anwser: 42}
config.finally fn(__) -> IO.puts __.answer end # it will print 46
endsome_spec.exs:
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
before do: {:ok, answer: __.answer + 1} # __ == %{anwser: 43}
finally do: {:ok, answer: __.answer + 1} # __ == %{anwser: 46}
context do
before do: {:ok, answer: __.answer + 1} # __ == %{anwser: 43}
finally do: {:ok, answer: __.answer + 1} # __ == %{anwser: 45}
it do: __.answer |> should eq 44
end
end So, 'config.finally' will print 46.
Pay attention to how finally blocks are defined and evaluated.
let and let! have the same behaviour as in RSpec. Both defines memoizable functions in 'spec module'. The value will be cached across multiple calls in the same example but not across examples. let is not evaluated until the first time the function it defines is invoked. Use let! to force the invocation before each example.
The __ is available in 'lets' but neither let nor let! can modify the dictionary.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
before do: {:ok, a: 1}
let! :a, do: __.a
let :b, do: __.a + 1
it do: expect(a).to eq(1)
it do: expect(b).to eq(2)
end subject and subject! are just aliases for let :subject, do: smth and let! :subject, do: smth. You can use is_expected macro (or a simple should expression) when subject is defined.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
subject(1+1)
it do: is_expected.to eq(2)
it do: should eq 2
context "with block" do
subject do: 2+2
it do: is_expected.to_not eq(2)
it do: should_not eq 2
end
end One can reuse the examples defined in spec module.
defmodule SharedSpec do
use ESpec, shared: true
subject __.hello
it do: should eq("world!")
endshared: true marks examples in the module as shared, so the examples will be skipped untile you reuse them.
You can use the examples with it_behaes_like macro:
defmodule UseSharedSpec do
use ESpec
before do: {:ok, hello: "world!"}
it_behaves_like(SharedSpec)
end There is an async: true option you can set for the context or for the individual example:
defmodule AsyncSpec do
use ESpec, async: true
it do: "async example"
context "Sync", async: false do
it do: "sync example"
it "async again", async: true do
"async"
end
end
endThe examples will be partioned into two queries. Examples in asynchronous query will be executed in parallel in different processes.
Don't use async: true if you change the global state in your specs!
expect(actual).to eq(expected) # passes if actual == expected
expect(actual).to eql(expected) # passes if actual === expectedCan be used with :>, :<, :>=, :<=, and etc.
expect(actual).to be operator, value Passes if apply(Kernel, operator, [actual, value]) == true
expect(actual).to match(~r/expression/)
expect(actual).to match("string")There are many helpers to test enumerable collections:
expect(collection).to be_empty #Enum.count(collection) == 0
... have(value) #Enum.member?(collection, value)
... have_all(fun) #Enum.all?(collection, func)
... have_any(fun) #Enum.any?(collection, func)
... have_at(position, value) #Enum.at?(collection, position) == value
... have_count(value) #Enum.count(collection) == value
... have_size(value) #alias
... have_length(value) #alias
... have_count_by(fun, value) #Enum.count(collection, func) == value
... have_max(value) #Enum.max(collection) == value
... have_max_by(fun, value) #Enum.max_by(collection, fun) == value
... have_min(value) #Enum.min(collection) == value
... have_min_by(fun, value) #Enum.min_by(collection, fun) == valueexpect(list).to have_first(value) #List.first(list) == value
... have_last(value) #List.last(list) == value
... have_hd #hd(list) == value
... have_tl #tl(list) == valueexpect(string).to have_first(value) #String.first(string) == value
... have_last(value) #String.last(string) == value
... start_with(value) #String.starts_with?(string, value)
... end_with(value) #String.end_with?(string, value)
... have(value) #String.contains?(string, value)
... have_at(pos, value) #String.at(string, pos) == value
... have_length(value) #Stirng.length(string) == value
... have_size(value) #alias
... have_count(value) #alias
... be_valid_string #String.valid?(string)
... be_printable #String.printable?(string)expect(dict).to have_key(value) #Dict.has_key?(value)
expect(dict).to have_value(value) #Enum.member?(Dict.values(dict), value)expect(:espec).to be_atom #is_atom(:espec) == true
... be_binary
... be_bitstring
... be_boolean
... ...
... ...
... be_tuple
... be_function
... be_function(arity)expect(function).to raise_exception
expect(function).to raise_exception(ErrorModule)
expect(function).to raise_exception(ErrorModule, "message")expect(function).to throw_term
expect(function).to throw_term(term)Test if call of function1 change the function2 returned value to smth or from to smth
expect(function1).to change(function2, to)
expect(function1).to change(function2, from, to)
##Custom matchers
You can define your own matchers!
The only functions you should implement is match/2, success_message/4, and error_message.
Read the wiki page for detailed instructions.
There is an example custom_assertion_spec.exs.
ESpec uses Meck to mock functions. You can mock the module with 'allow accept':
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
before do: allow(SomeModule).to accept(:func, fn(a,b) -> a+b end)
it do: expect(SomeModule.func(1, 2)).to eq(3)
endBehind the scenes it makes the following:
:meck.new(module, [:non_strict, :passthrough])
:meck.expect(module, name, function)Find the explanation aboute the :non_strict and :passthrough options here
All the mocked modules are unloaded whith :meck.unload(modules) after each example.
You can also pass a list of atom-function pairs to the accept function:
allow(SomeModule).to accept(f1: fn -> :f1 end, f2: fn -> :f2 end)There is also an expectation to check if the module accepted a function call:
accepted(func, args \\ :any, opts \\ [pid: :any, count: :any])So, the options are:
- test if the function is called with some particular arguments of with
any; - specify the
pidof the process which called the function; - test the count of function calls.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
before do
allow(SomeModule).to accept(:func, fn(a,b) -> a+b end)
SomeModule.func(1, 2)
end
it do: expect(SomeModule).to accepted(:func)
it do: expect(SomeModule).to accepted(:func, [1,2])
describe "with options" do
defmodule Server do
def call(a, b) do
ESpec.SomeModule.func(a, b)
ESpec.SomeModule.func(a, b)
end
end
before do
pid = spawn(Server, :call, [1, 2])
:timer.sleep(100)
{:ok, pid: pid}
end
it do: expect(ESpec.SomeModule).to accepted(:func, [1,2], pid: __.pid, count: 2)
end
endaccepted assertion checks :meck.history(SomeModule). See meck documentation.
Don't use async: true when using mocks!
ESpec has functionality similar to ExUnit.DocTest.
Read more about docs syntax here
The functionality is implemented by two modules:
ESpec.DocExample parses module documentation and ESpec.DocTest creates 'spec' examples for it.
ESpec.DocExample functions is just copy-paste of ExUnit.Doctest parsing functionality.
ESpec.DocTest implement doctest macro which identical to ExUnit analogue.
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
doctest MySuperModule
end There are three options (similar to ExUnit.DocTest):
:except - generate specs for all functions except those listed (list of {function, arity} tuples).
defmodule SomeSpec do
use ESpec
doctest MySuperModule, except: [fun: 1, func: 2]
end :only — generate specs only for functions listed (list of {function, arity} tuples).
And :import to test a function defined in the module without referring to the module name.Default is false. Use this option with care because you can clash with another modules.
There are three types of specs can be generated based on docs.
- Examples where input and output can be evaluated. For example:
@doc """
iex> Enum.map [1, 2, 3], fn(x) ->
...> x * 2
...> end
[2,4,6]
"""Such examples will be converted to:
it "Example description" do
expect(input).to eq(output)
end - Examples which return complex structure so Elixir prints it as
#Name<...>.:
@doc """
iex> Enum.into([a: 10, b: 20], HashDict.new)
#HashDict<[b: 20, a: 10]>
"""The examples will be converted to:
it "Example description" do
expect(inspect input).to eq(output)
end- Examples with exceptions:
@doc """
iex(1)> String.to_atom((fn() -> 1 end).())
** (ArgumentError) argument error
"""The examples will be tested as:
it "Example description" do
expect(fn -> input end).to raise_exception(error_module, error_message)
end`MIX_ENV=test mix help espec`You can change (in mix.exs file) the folder where your specs are and the pattern to match the files.
def project do
...
spec_paths: ["my_specs", "espec"],
spec_pattern: "*_espec.exs",
...
endOne can run specs with coverage:
mix espec --coverFind the results in /cover folder.
ESpec, like ExUnit, uses very simple wrapper around OTP's cover. But you can override this.
Take a look to coverex as a perfect example.