Awesome
assert.sh
Assert.sh is intended to give the assertion mechanism to shell scripts with well-known assert functions like assert_eq
, assert_array_eq
, or assert_empty
.
Inspired by Assert class of JUnit
Install & Usage
> $ git clone https://github.com/torokmark/assert.sh.git; cd assert.sh
> $ source assert.sh
> $ assert_eq "hello" "world"
> $ echo "$?"
# => 1
I. Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/torokmark/assert.sh.git
Or copy the assert.sh where your project is located.
II. Edit the script where you would like to use asserts and paste the next line on the top:
source './assert.sh'
III. Now assert functions are available for use.
assert_eq "hello" "world"
0 return status is considered true and anything else is considered false.
List of assert functions
assert_eq
takes two strings and checks whether they are the same based on the character strings.assert_not_eq
is the opposite ofassert_eq
.assert_true
takes a parameter and returns 0 confirming the parameter is true.assert_false
takes a parameter and decides whether it is false.assert_array_eq
takes two arrays and compare them by items.assert_array_not_eq
takes two arrays and return 0 if the items are not the same on the same index.assert_empty
takes a string and returns 0 if it is emptyassert_not_empty
is the opposite ofassert_empty
.assert_contain
checks whether the first argument contains the second one.assert_not_contain
check whether the first argument does not contain the second one.assert_gt
checks whether the first param is greater than the second.assert_ge
checks whether the first param is greator than or equal to the second one.assert_lt
checks whether the first param is less than the second one.assert_le
checks whether the first param is less than or equal to the second one.
How to write tests
Example:
source "./assert.sh"
local expected actual
expected="Hello"
actual="World!"
assert_eq "$expected" "$actual" "not equivalent!"
# => x Hello == World :: not equivalent!
source "./assert.sh"
local expected actual
expected="Hello"
actual="Hello"
assert_eq "$expected" "$actual"
if [ "$?" == 0 ]; then
log_success "assert_eq returns 0 if two words are equal"
else
log_failure "assert_eq should return 0"
fi
If the return status ($?
) of assert_eq
is equal to 0
, which is considered true according to the convention.
If the assert function returns 1
, the expected and actual values are differred.