package assert import ( "bufio" "bytes" "encoding/json" "fmt" "math" "reflect" "regexp" "runtime" "strings" "time" "unicode" "unicode/utf8" "github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew" "github.com/pmezard/go-difflib/difflib" ) // TestingT is an interface wrapper around *testing.T type TestingT interface { Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) } // Comparison a custom function that returns true on success and false on failure type Comparison func() (success bool) /* Helper functions */ // ObjectsAreEqual determines if two objects are considered equal. // // This function does no assertion of any kind. func ObjectsAreEqual(expected, actual interface{}) bool { if expected == nil || actual == nil { return expected == actual } return reflect.DeepEqual(expected, actual) } // ObjectsAreEqualValues gets whether two objects are equal, or if their // values are equal. func ObjectsAreEqualValues(expected, actual interface{}) bool { if ObjectsAreEqual(expected, actual) { return true } actualType := reflect.TypeOf(actual) if actualType == nil { return false } expectedValue := reflect.ValueOf(expected) if expectedValue.IsValid() && expectedValue.Type().ConvertibleTo(actualType) { // Attempt comparison after type conversion return reflect.DeepEqual(expectedValue.Convert(actualType).Interface(), actual) } return false } /* CallerInfo is necessary because the assert functions use the testing object internally, causing it to print the file:line of the assert method, rather than where the problem actually occurred in calling code.*/ // CallerInfo returns an array of strings containing the file and line number // of each stack frame leading from the current test to the assert call that // failed. func CallerInfo() []string { pc := uintptr(0) file := "" line := 0 ok := false name := "" callers := []string{} for i := 0; ; i++ { pc, file, line, ok = runtime.Caller(i) if !ok { // The breaks below failed to terminate the loop, and we ran off the // end of the call stack. break } // This is a huge edge case, but it will panic if this is the case, see #180 if file == "" { break } f := runtime.FuncForPC(pc) if f == nil { break } name = f.Name() // testing.tRunner is the standard library function that calls // tests. Subtests are called directly by tRunner, without going through // the Test/Benchmark/Example function that contains the t.Run calls, so // with subtests we should break when we hit tRunner, without adding it // to the list of callers. if name == "testing.tRunner" { break } parts := strings.Split(file, "/") dir := parts[len(parts)-2] file = parts[len(parts)-1] if (dir != "assert" && dir != "mock" && dir != "require") || file == "mock_test.go" { callers = append(callers, fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", file, line)) } // Drop the package segments := strings.Split(name, ".") name = segments[len(segments)-1] if isTest(name, "Test") || isTest(name, "Benchmark") || isTest(name, "Example") { break } } return callers } // Stolen from the `go test` tool. // isTest tells whether name looks like a test (or benchmark, according to prefix). // It is a Test (say) if there is a character after Test that is not a lower-case letter. // We don't want TesticularCancer. func isTest(name, prefix string) bool { if !strings.HasPrefix(name, prefix) { return false } if len(name) == len(prefix) { // "Test" is ok return true } rune, _ := utf8.DecodeRuneInString(name[len(prefix):]) return !unicode.IsLower(rune) } // getWhitespaceString returns a string that is long enough to overwrite the default // output from the go testing framework. func getWhitespaceString() string { _, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(1) if !ok { return "" } parts := strings.Split(file, "/") file = parts[len(parts)-1] return strings.Repeat(" ", len(fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d: ", file, line))) } func messageFromMsgAndArgs(msgAndArgs ...interface{}) string { if len(msgAndArgs) == 0 || msgAndArgs == nil { return "" } if len(msgAndArgs) == 1 { return msgAndArgs[0].(string) } if len(msgAndArgs) > 1 { return fmt.Sprintf(msgAndArgs[0].(string), msgAndArgs[1:]...) } return "" } // Aligns the provided message so that all lines after the first line start at the same location as the first line. // Assumes that the first line starts at the correct location (after carriage return, tab, label, spacer and tab). // The longestLabelLen parameter specifies the length of the longest label in the output (required becaues this is the // basis on which the alignment occurs). func indentMessageLines(message string, longestLabelLen int) string { outBuf := new(bytes.Buffer) for i, scanner := 0, bufio.NewScanner(strings.NewReader(message)); scanner.Scan(); i++ { // no need to align first line because it starts at the correct location (after the label) if i != 0 { // append alignLen+1 spaces to align with "{{longestLabel}}:" before adding tab outBuf.WriteString("\n\r\t" + strings.Repeat(" ", longestLabelLen+1) + "\t") } outBuf.WriteString(scanner.Text()) } return outBuf.String() } type failNower interface { FailNow() } // FailNow fails test func FailNow(t TestingT, failureMessage string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { Fail(t, failureMessage, msgAndArgs...) // We cannot extend TestingT with FailNow() and // maintain backwards compatibility, so we fallback // to panicking when FailNow is not available in // TestingT. // See issue #263 if t, ok := t.(failNower); ok { t.FailNow() } else { panic("test failed and t is missing `FailNow()`") } return false } // Fail reports a failure through func Fail(t TestingT, failureMessage string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { content := []labeledContent{ {"Error Trace", strings.Join(CallerInfo(), "\n\r\t\t\t")}, {"Error", failureMessage}, } message := messageFromMsgAndArgs(msgAndArgs...) if len(message) > 0 { content = append(content, labeledContent{"Messages", message}) } t.Errorf("\r" + getWhitespaceString() + labeledOutput(content...)) return false } type labeledContent struct { label string content string } // labeledOutput returns a string consisting of the provided labeledContent. Each labeled output is appended in the following manner: // // \r\t{{label}}:{{align_spaces}}\t{{content}}\n // // The initial carriage return is required to undo/erase any padding added by testing.T.Errorf. The "\t{{label}}:" is for the label. // If a label is shorter than the longest label provided, padding spaces are added to make all the labels match in length. Once this // alignment is achieved, "\t{{content}}\n" is added for the output. // // If the content of the labeledOutput contains line breaks, the subsequent lines are aligned so that they start at the same location as the first line. func labeledOutput(content ...labeledContent) string { longestLabel := 0 for _, v := range content { if len(v.label) > longestLabel { longestLabel = len(v.label) } } var output string for _, v := range content { output += "\r\t" + v.label + ":" + strings.Repeat(" ", longestLabel-len(v.label)) + "\t" + indentMessageLines(v.content, longestLabel) + "\n" } return output } // Implements asserts that an object is implemented by the specified interface. // // assert.Implements(t, (*MyInterface)(nil), new(MyObject), "MyObject") func Implements(t TestingT, interfaceObject interface{}, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { interfaceType := reflect.TypeOf(interfaceObject).Elem() if !reflect.TypeOf(object).Implements(interfaceType) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("%T must implement %v", object, interfaceType), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // IsType asserts that the specified objects are of the same type. func IsType(t TestingT, expectedType interface{}, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if !ObjectsAreEqual(reflect.TypeOf(object), reflect.TypeOf(expectedType)) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Object expected to be of type %v, but was %v", reflect.TypeOf(expectedType), reflect.TypeOf(object)), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // Equal asserts that two objects are equal. // // assert.Equal(t, 123, 123, "123 and 123 should be equal") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). // // Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the // referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses). func Equal(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if !ObjectsAreEqual(expected, actual) { diff := diff(expected, actual) expected, actual = formatUnequalValues(expected, actual) return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Not equal: \n"+ "expected: %s\n"+ "received: %s%s", expected, actual, diff), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // formatUnequalValues takes two values of arbitrary types and returns string // representations appropriate to be presented to the user. // // If the values are not of like type, the returned strings will be prefixed // with the type name, and the value will be enclosed in parenthesis similar // to a type conversion in the Go grammar. func formatUnequalValues(expected, actual interface{}) (e string, a string) { if reflect.TypeOf(expected) != reflect.TypeOf(actual) { return fmt.Sprintf("%T(%#v)", expected, expected), fmt.Sprintf("%T(%#v)", actual, actual) } return fmt.Sprintf("%#v", expected), fmt.Sprintf("%#v", actual) } // EqualValues asserts that two objects are equal or convertable to the same types // and equal. // // assert.EqualValues(t, uint32(123), int32(123), "123 and 123 should be equal") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func EqualValues(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if !ObjectsAreEqualValues(expected, actual) { diff := diff(expected, actual) expected, actual = formatUnequalValues(expected, actual) return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Not equal: \n"+ "expected: %s\n"+ "received: %s%s", expected, actual, diff), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // Exactly asserts that two objects are equal is value and type. // // assert.Exactly(t, int32(123), int64(123), "123 and 123 should NOT be equal") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Exactly(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { aType := reflect.TypeOf(expected) bType := reflect.TypeOf(actual) if aType != bType { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Types expected to match exactly\n\r\t%v != %v", aType, bType), msgAndArgs...) } return Equal(t, expected, actual, msgAndArgs...) } // NotNil asserts that the specified object is not nil. // // assert.NotNil(t, err, "err should be something") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NotNil(t TestingT, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if !isNil(object) { return true } return Fail(t, "Expected value not to be nil.", msgAndArgs...) } // isNil checks if a specified object is nil or not, without Failing. func isNil(object interface{}) bool { if object == nil { return true } value := reflect.ValueOf(object) kind := value.Kind() if kind >= reflect.Chan && kind <= reflect.Slice && value.IsNil() { return true } return false } // Nil asserts that the specified object is nil. // // assert.Nil(t, err, "err should be nothing") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Nil(t TestingT, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if isNil(object) { return true } return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected nil, but got: %#v", object), msgAndArgs...) } var numericZeros = []interface{}{ int(0), int8(0), int16(0), int32(0), int64(0), uint(0), uint8(0), uint16(0), uint32(0), uint64(0), float32(0), float64(0), } // isEmpty gets whether the specified object is considered empty or not. func isEmpty(object interface{}) bool { if object == nil { return true } else if object == "" { return true } else if object == false { return true } for _, v := range numericZeros { if object == v { return true } } objValue := reflect.ValueOf(object) switch objValue.Kind() { case reflect.Map: fallthrough case reflect.Slice, reflect.Chan: { return (objValue.Len() == 0) } case reflect.Struct: switch object.(type) { case time.Time: return object.(time.Time).IsZero() } case reflect.Ptr: { if objValue.IsNil() { return true } switch object.(type) { case *time.Time: return object.(*time.Time).IsZero() default: return false } } } return false } // Empty asserts that the specified object is empty. I.e. nil, "", false, 0 or either // a slice or a channel with len == 0. // // assert.Empty(t, obj) // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Empty(t TestingT, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { pass := isEmpty(object) if !pass { Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Should be empty, but was %v", object), msgAndArgs...) } return pass } // NotEmpty asserts that the specified object is NOT empty. I.e. not nil, "", false, 0 or either // a slice or a channel with len == 0. // // if assert.NotEmpty(t, obj) { // assert.Equal(t, "two", obj[1]) // } // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NotEmpty(t TestingT, object interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { pass := !isEmpty(object) if !pass { Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Should NOT be empty, but was %v", object), msgAndArgs...) } return pass } // getLen try to get length of object. // return (false, 0) if impossible. func getLen(x interface{}) (ok bool, length int) { v := reflect.ValueOf(x) defer func() { if e := recover(); e != nil { ok = false } }() return true, v.Len() } // Len asserts that the specified object has specific length. // Len also fails if the object has a type that len() not accept. // // assert.Len(t, mySlice, 3, "The size of slice is not 3") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Len(t TestingT, object interface{}, length int, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { ok, l := getLen(object) if !ok { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" could not be applied builtin len()", object), msgAndArgs...) } if l != length { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" should have %d item(s), but has %d", object, length, l), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // True asserts that the specified value is true. // // assert.True(t, myBool, "myBool should be true") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func True(t TestingT, value bool, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if value != true { return Fail(t, "Should be true", msgAndArgs...) } return true } // False asserts that the specified value is false. // // assert.False(t, myBool, "myBool should be false") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func False(t TestingT, value bool, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if value != false { return Fail(t, "Should be false", msgAndArgs...) } return true } // NotEqual asserts that the specified values are NOT equal. // // assert.NotEqual(t, obj1, obj2, "two objects shouldn't be equal") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). // // Pointer variable equality is determined based on the equality of the // referenced values (as opposed to the memory addresses). func NotEqual(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if ObjectsAreEqual(expected, actual) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Should not be: %#v\n", actual), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // containsElement try loop over the list check if the list includes the element. // return (false, false) if impossible. // return (true, false) if element was not found. // return (true, true) if element was found. func includeElement(list interface{}, element interface{}) (ok, found bool) { listValue := reflect.ValueOf(list) elementValue := reflect.ValueOf(element) defer func() { if e := recover(); e != nil { ok = false found = false } }() if reflect.TypeOf(list).Kind() == reflect.String { return true, strings.Contains(listValue.String(), elementValue.String()) } if reflect.TypeOf(list).Kind() == reflect.Map { mapKeys := listValue.MapKeys() for i := 0; i < len(mapKeys); i++ { if ObjectsAreEqual(mapKeys[i].Interface(), element) { return true, true } } return true, false } for i := 0; i < listValue.Len(); i++ { if ObjectsAreEqual(listValue.Index(i).Interface(), element) { return true, true } } return true, false } // Contains asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map contains the // specified substring or element. // // assert.Contains(t, "Hello World", "World", "But 'Hello World' does contain 'World'") // assert.Contains(t, ["Hello", "World"], "World", "But ["Hello", "World"] does contain 'World'") // assert.Contains(t, {"Hello": "World"}, "Hello", "But {'Hello': 'World'} does contain 'Hello'") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Contains(t TestingT, s, contains interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { ok, found := includeElement(s, contains) if !ok { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" could not be applied builtin len()", s), msgAndArgs...) } if !found { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" does not contain \"%s\"", s, contains), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // NotContains asserts that the specified string, list(array, slice...) or map does NOT contain the // specified substring or element. // // assert.NotContains(t, "Hello World", "Earth", "But 'Hello World' does NOT contain 'Earth'") // assert.NotContains(t, ["Hello", "World"], "Earth", "But ['Hello', 'World'] does NOT contain 'Earth'") // assert.NotContains(t, {"Hello": "World"}, "Earth", "But {'Hello': 'World'} does NOT contain 'Earth'") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NotContains(t TestingT, s, contains interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { ok, found := includeElement(s, contains) if !ok { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" could not be applied builtin len()", s), msgAndArgs...) } if found { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("\"%s\" should not contain \"%s\"", s, contains), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // Condition uses a Comparison to assert a complex condition. func Condition(t TestingT, comp Comparison, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { result := comp() if !result { Fail(t, "Condition failed!", msgAndArgs...) } return result } // PanicTestFunc defines a func that should be passed to the assert.Panics and assert.NotPanics // methods, and represents a simple func that takes no arguments, and returns nothing. type PanicTestFunc func() // didPanic returns true if the function passed to it panics. Otherwise, it returns false. func didPanic(f PanicTestFunc) (bool, interface{}) { didPanic := false var message interface{} func() { defer func() { if message = recover(); message != nil { didPanic = true } }() // call the target function f() }() return didPanic, message } // Panics asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc panics. // // assert.Panics(t, func(){ // GoCrazy() // }, "Calling GoCrazy() should panic") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Panics(t TestingT, f PanicTestFunc, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if funcDidPanic, panicValue := didPanic(f); !funcDidPanic { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("func %#v should panic\n\r\tPanic value:\t%v", f, panicValue), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // NotPanics asserts that the code inside the specified PanicTestFunc does NOT panic. // // assert.NotPanics(t, func(){ // RemainCalm() // }, "Calling RemainCalm() should NOT panic") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NotPanics(t TestingT, f PanicTestFunc, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if funcDidPanic, panicValue := didPanic(f); funcDidPanic { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("func %#v should not panic\n\r\tPanic value:\t%v", f, panicValue), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // WithinDuration asserts that the two times are within duration delta of each other. // // assert.WithinDuration(t, time.Now(), time.Now(), 10*time.Second, "The difference should not be more than 10s") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func WithinDuration(t TestingT, expected, actual time.Time, delta time.Duration, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { dt := expected.Sub(actual) if dt < -delta || dt > delta { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Max difference between %v and %v allowed is %v, but difference was %v", expected, actual, delta, dt), msgAndArgs...) } return true } func toFloat(x interface{}) (float64, bool) { var xf float64 xok := true switch xn := x.(type) { case uint8: xf = float64(xn) case uint16: xf = float64(xn) case uint32: xf = float64(xn) case uint64: xf = float64(xn) case int: xf = float64(xn) case int8: xf = float64(xn) case int16: xf = float64(xn) case int32: xf = float64(xn) case int64: xf = float64(xn) case float32: xf = float64(xn) case float64: xf = float64(xn) default: xok = false } return xf, xok } // InDelta asserts that the two numerals are within delta of each other. // // assert.InDelta(t, math.Pi, (22 / 7.0), 0.01) // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func InDelta(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, delta float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { af, aok := toFloat(expected) bf, bok := toFloat(actual) if !aok || !bok { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Parameters must be numerical"), msgAndArgs...) } if math.IsNaN(af) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Actual must not be NaN"), msgAndArgs...) } if math.IsNaN(bf) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected %v with delta %v, but was NaN", expected, delta), msgAndArgs...) } dt := af - bf if dt < -delta || dt > delta { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Max difference between %v and %v allowed is %v, but difference was %v", expected, actual, delta, dt), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // InDeltaSlice is the same as InDelta, except it compares two slices. func InDeltaSlice(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, delta float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if expected == nil || actual == nil || reflect.TypeOf(actual).Kind() != reflect.Slice || reflect.TypeOf(expected).Kind() != reflect.Slice { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Parameters must be slice"), msgAndArgs...) } actualSlice := reflect.ValueOf(actual) expectedSlice := reflect.ValueOf(expected) for i := 0; i < actualSlice.Len(); i++ { result := InDelta(t, actualSlice.Index(i).Interface(), expectedSlice.Index(i).Interface(), delta) if !result { return result } } return true } func calcRelativeError(expected, actual interface{}) (float64, error) { af, aok := toFloat(expected) if !aok { return 0, fmt.Errorf("expected value %q cannot be converted to float", expected) } if af == 0 { return 0, fmt.Errorf("expected value must have a value other than zero to calculate the relative error") } bf, bok := toFloat(actual) if !bok { return 0, fmt.Errorf("expected value %q cannot be converted to float", actual) } return math.Abs(af-bf) / math.Abs(af), nil } // InEpsilon asserts that expected and actual have a relative error less than epsilon // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func InEpsilon(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { actualEpsilon, err := calcRelativeError(expected, actual) if err != nil { return Fail(t, err.Error(), msgAndArgs...) } if actualEpsilon > epsilon { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Relative error is too high: %#v (expected)\n"+ " < %#v (actual)", actualEpsilon, epsilon), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // InEpsilonSlice is the same as InEpsilon, except it compares each value from two slices. func InEpsilonSlice(t TestingT, expected, actual interface{}, epsilon float64, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if expected == nil || actual == nil || reflect.TypeOf(actual).Kind() != reflect.Slice || reflect.TypeOf(expected).Kind() != reflect.Slice { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Parameters must be slice"), msgAndArgs...) } actualSlice := reflect.ValueOf(actual) expectedSlice := reflect.ValueOf(expected) for i := 0; i < actualSlice.Len(); i++ { result := InEpsilon(t, actualSlice.Index(i).Interface(), expectedSlice.Index(i).Interface(), epsilon) if !result { return result } } return true } /* Errors */ // NoError asserts that a function returned no error (i.e. `nil`). // // actualObj, err := SomeFunction() // if assert.NoError(t, err) { // assert.Equal(t, actualObj, expectedObj) // } // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NoError(t TestingT, err error, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if err != nil { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Received unexpected error:\n%+v", err), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // Error asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`). // // actualObj, err := SomeFunction() // if assert.Error(t, err, "An error was expected") { // assert.Equal(t, err, expectedError) // } // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Error(t TestingT, err error, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if err == nil { return Fail(t, "An error is expected but got nil.", msgAndArgs...) } return true } // EqualError asserts that a function returned an error (i.e. not `nil`) // and that it is equal to the provided error. // // actualObj, err := SomeFunction() // assert.EqualError(t, err, expectedErrorString, "An error was expected") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func EqualError(t TestingT, theError error, errString string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if !Error(t, theError, msgAndArgs...) { return false } expected := errString actual := theError.Error() // don't need to use deep equals here, we know they are both strings if expected != actual { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Error message not equal:\n"+ "expected: %q\n"+ "received: %q", expected, actual), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // matchRegexp return true if a specified regexp matches a string. func matchRegexp(rx interface{}, str interface{}) bool { var r *regexp.Regexp if rr, ok := rx.(*regexp.Regexp); ok { r = rr } else { r = regexp.MustCompile(fmt.Sprint(rx)) } return (r.FindStringIndex(fmt.Sprint(str)) != nil) } // Regexp asserts that a specified regexp matches a string. // // assert.Regexp(t, regexp.MustCompile("start"), "it's starting") // assert.Regexp(t, "start...$", "it's not starting") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func Regexp(t TestingT, rx interface{}, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { match := matchRegexp(rx, str) if !match { Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expect \"%v\" to match \"%v\"", str, rx), msgAndArgs...) } return match } // NotRegexp asserts that a specified regexp does not match a string. // // assert.NotRegexp(t, regexp.MustCompile("starts"), "it's starting") // assert.NotRegexp(t, "^start", "it's not starting") // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func NotRegexp(t TestingT, rx interface{}, str interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { match := matchRegexp(rx, str) if match { Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expect \"%v\" to NOT match \"%v\"", str, rx), msgAndArgs...) } return !match } // Zero asserts that i is the zero value for its type and returns the truth. func Zero(t TestingT, i interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if i != nil && !reflect.DeepEqual(i, reflect.Zero(reflect.TypeOf(i)).Interface()) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Should be zero, but was %v", i), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // NotZero asserts that i is not the zero value for its type and returns the truth. func NotZero(t TestingT, i interface{}, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { if i == nil || reflect.DeepEqual(i, reflect.Zero(reflect.TypeOf(i)).Interface()) { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Should not be zero, but was %v", i), msgAndArgs...) } return true } // JSONEq asserts that two JSON strings are equivalent. // // assert.JSONEq(t, `{"hello": "world", "foo": "bar"}`, `{"foo": "bar", "hello": "world"}`) // // Returns whether the assertion was successful (true) or not (false). func JSONEq(t TestingT, expected string, actual string, msgAndArgs ...interface{}) bool { var expectedJSONAsInterface, actualJSONAsInterface interface{} if err := json.Unmarshal([]byte(expected), &expectedJSONAsInterface); err != nil { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Expected value ('%s') is not valid json.\nJSON parsing error: '%s'", expected, err.Error()), msgAndArgs...) } if err := json.Unmarshal([]byte(actual), &actualJSONAsInterface); err != nil { return Fail(t, fmt.Sprintf("Input ('%s') needs to be valid json.\nJSON parsing error: '%s'", actual, err.Error()), msgAndArgs...) } return Equal(t, expectedJSONAsInterface, actualJSONAsInterface, msgAndArgs...) } func typeAndKind(v interface{}) (reflect.Type, reflect.Kind) { t := reflect.TypeOf(v) k := t.Kind() if k == reflect.Ptr { t = t.Elem() k = t.Kind() } return t, k } // diff returns a diff of both values as long as both are of the same type and // are a struct, map, slice or array. Otherwise it returns an empty string. func diff(expected interface{}, actual interface{}) string { if expected == nil || actual == nil { return "" } et, ek := typeAndKind(expected) at, _ := typeAndKind(actual) if et != at { return "" } if ek != reflect.Struct && ek != reflect.Map && ek != reflect.Slice && ek != reflect.Array { return "" } e := spewConfig.Sdump(expected) a := spewConfig.Sdump(actual) diff, _ := difflib.GetUnifiedDiffString(difflib.UnifiedDiff{ A: difflib.SplitLines(e), B: difflib.SplitLines(a), FromFile: "Expected", FromDate: "", ToFile: "Actual", ToDate: "", Context: 1, }) return "\n\nDiff:\n" + diff } var spewConfig = spew.ConfigState{ Indent: " ", DisablePointerAddresses: true, DisableCapacities: true, SortKeys: true, }