beady
A macro for writing tests in a Behaviour Driven (BD) style. Inspired by Catch2.
- Simple (doesn't really do anything except rearrange your tests)
- Provides helpful output for when tests fail
- Works with
tokio::test(and other custom test attributes)
Example
use scenario;
Running cargo test we can see that this scenario has generated three tests:
running 3 tests
test pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::then::the_vec_should_have_one_element::and::the_element_should_be_the_pushed_value ... ok
test pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::and::the_vec_is_cleared::then::the_vec_should_be_empty ... ok
test pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::then::the_vec_should_have_one_element ... ok
test result: ok. 3 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 3 filtered out; finished in 0.00s
And if we make one of our asserts intentionally fail then we see a full description of the failing scenario alongside the panic message:
test pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::then::the_vec_should_have_one_element::and::the_element_should_be_the_pushed_value ... FAILED
failures:
---- pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::then::the_vec_should_have_one_element::and::the_element_should_be_the_pushed_value stdout ----
Scenario: pushing an element to a vec
Given: an empty vec
When: an element is pushed to the vec
Then: the vec should have one element
and: the element should be the pushed value
thread 'pushing_an_element_to_a_vec::given::an_empty_vec::when::an_element_is_pushed_to_the_vec::then::the_vec_should_have_one_element::and::the_element_should_be_the_pushed_value' panicked at 'assertion failed: `(left == right)`
left: `7`,
right: `8`'
Usage
Inspired by the BDD-style test cases from Catch2, you can annotate a test with #[scenario] to make it into a BDD-style test. Within the test you can then use 'given_, 'when_, and 'then_ prefixes to label blocks and structure your test cases. Dependent clauses can be specified with the 'and_given_, 'and_when_, and 'and_then_ prefixes.