Awesome
Lazytest
** Not under active development **
** Latest stable release is on the stable branch **
Lazytest: Generic testing backend for Clojure
by Stuart Sierra, http://stuartsierra.com/
Copyright (c) Stuart Sierra, 2010. All rights reserved. The use and distribution terms for this software are covered by the Eclipse Public License 1.0 (http://opensource.org/licenses/eclipse-1.0.php) which can be found in the file LICENSE.html at the root of this distribution. By using this software in any fashion, you are agreeing to be bound by the terms of this license. You must not remove this notice, or any other, from this software.
One Backend, Many Testing Styles
Lazytest aims to be a generic library that can support many different modes and styles of testing. It defines a few generic representations for executable tests (see "Lazytest Internals", below). Any testing code that can be compiled into these representations can take advantage of Lazytest's running and reporting tools.
Getting Started with Leiningen
Note: These instructions require JDK 6.
Copy the sample project in modules/sample-leiningen-project
Put your app sources in src/
and your test sources in test/
Then run:
lein clean
lein deps
java -cp "src:test:classes:lib/*" lazytest.watch src test
And watch your tests run automatically whenever you save a file.
Type CTRL+C to stop.
To run your tests just once and stop, run:
java -cp "src:test:classes:lib/*" lazytest.main src test
Getting Started with Maven
Copy the sample project in modules/sample-maven-project
Put your app sources in src/main/clojure/
and your test sources in src/test/clojure/
Then run:
mvn lazytest:watch
And watch your tests run automatically whenever you save a file.
Type CTRL+C to stop.
To run your tests just once and stop, run:
mvn lazytest:run
Testing with 'deftest'
The lazytest.deftest
namespace is a drop-in replacement for the
clojure.test
library. Each test is a function defined with the deftest
macro,
making assertions with the is
macro:
(ns examples.readme.deftest
(:use [lazytest.deftest :only (deftest it thrown? thrown-with-msg?)]))
(deftest t-addition-with-integers
;; arbitrary code may be executed here
(is (= 4 (+ 2 2)))
(is (= 7 (+ 3 4))))
Testing with 'describe'
The lazytest.describe
namespace mimics the behavior-driven testing
style popularized by libraries such as RSpec.
Use the describe
macro to create a group of tests. Start the group
with a documentation string.
(ns examples.readme.groups
(:use [lazytest.describe :only (describe it)]))
(describe "This application" ...)
If you put a symbol before (or instead of) the string, the full name of the Var or Class to which that symbol resolves will be prepended to the doc string:
(describe + "with integers" ...)
;; resulting doc string is "#'clojure.core/+ with integers"
Within a describe
group, use the it
macro to create a single test
example. Start your example with a documentation string describing
what should happen, followed by an expression to test what you think
should be true.
(describe + "with integers"
(it "computes the sum of 1 and 2"
(= 3 (+ 1 2)))
(it "computes the sum of 3 and 4"
(= 7 (+ 3 4))))
Each it
example may only contain one expression, which must return
logical true to indicate the test passed or logical false to indicate
it failed.
Nested Test Groups
Test groups may be nested inside other groups with the testing
macro, which has the same syntax as describe
but does not define a
top-level Var:
(ns examples.readme.nested
(:use [lazytest.describe :only (describe it testing)]))
(describe "Addition"
(testing "of integers"
(it "computes small sums"
(= 3 (+ 1 2)))
(it "computes large sums"
(= 7000 (+ 3000 4000))))
(testing "of floats"
(it "computes small sums"
(> 0.00001 (Math/abs (- 0.3 (+ 0.1 0.2)))))
(it "computes large sums"
(> 0.00001 (Math/abs (- 3000.0 (+ 1000.0 2000.0)))))))
Arbitrary Code in an Example
You can create an example that executes arbitrary code with the
do-it
macro. Wrap each assertion expression in the
lazytest.expect/expect
macro.
(ns examples.readme.do-it
(:use [lazytest.describe :only (describe do-it)]
[lazytest.expect :only (expect)]))
(describe "Arithmetic"
(do-it "after printing"
(expect (= 4 (+ 2 2)))
(println "Hello, World!")
(expect (= -1 (- 4 5)))))
The expect
macro is like assert
but carries more information about
the failure. It throws an exception if the expression does not
evaluate to logical true.
If the code inside the do-it
macro runs to completion without
throwing an exception, the test example is considered to have passed.
Focusing on Individual Tests and Suites
The describe
, testing
, it
, and do-it
macros all take an
optional metadata map immediately after the docstring.
Adding :focus true
to this map will cause only that test/suite to
be run. Removing it will return to the normal behavior (run all
tests).
When using deftest
, you can put :focus true
metadata on the symbol
name of your test:
(deftest ^:focus my-test
...)
Generating Random Test Data
The lazytest.random
namespace provides functions for generating
random input data for your tests.
Lazytest Internals
The smallest unit of testing is a test case, which is a function
(see lazytest.test-case/test-case
). When the function is called, it
may throw an exception to indicate failure. If it does not throw an
exception, it is assumed to have passed. The return value of a test
case is always ignored. Running a test case may have side effects.
The macros lazytest.describe/it
and lazytest.describe/do-it
create
test cases.
Tests cases are organized into suites. A test suite is a function
(see lazytest.suite/suite
) that returns a test sequence. A test
sequence (see lazytest.suite/test-seq
) is a sequence, possibly lazy,
of test cases and/or test suites. Suites, therefore, may be nested
inside other suites, but nothing may be nested inside a test case.
The macros lazytest.describe/describe
and
lazytest.describe/testing
create test suites.
A test suite function may NOT have side effects; it is only used to generate test cases and/or other test suites.
A test runnner is responsible for expanding suites (see
lazytest.suite/expand-suite
) and running test cases (see
lazytest.test-case/try-test-case
). It may also provide feedback on
the success of tests as they run. Two built-in runners are provided,
see lazytest.runner.console/run-tests
and
lazytest.runner.debug/run-tests
.
The test runner also returns a sequence of results, which are either
suite results (see lazytest.suite/suite-result
) or test case
results (see lazytest.test-case/test-case-result
). That sequence
of results is passed to a reporter, which formats results for
display to the user. One example reporter is provided, see
lazytest.report.nested/report
.
Making Emacs Indent Tests Properly
Put the following in .emacs
(eval-after-load 'clojure-mode
'(define-clojure-indent
(describe 'defun)
(testing 'defun)
(given 'defun)
(using 'defun)
(with 'defun)
(it 'defun)
(do-it 'defun)))