5,4 КиБ
Godog
Godog is an open source behavior-driven development framework for go programming language. What is behavior-driven development, you ask? It’s the idea that you start by writing human-readable sentences that describe a feature of your application and how it should work, and only then implement this behavior in software.
The project is inspired by behat and cucumber and is based on cucumber gherkin3 parser.
Godog does not intervene with the standard go test command and it's behavior. You can leverage both frameworks to functionally test your application while maintaining all test related source code in _test.go files.
Godog acts similar compared to go test command. It builds all package sources to a single main package file and replaces main func with it's own and runs the build to test described application behavior in feature files. Production builds remain clean without any test related source code.
The public API is small and should be stable for the future releases. Something may be added or exported, but not changed most likely. I'll try to respect backward compatibility as much as possible.
Install
go get github.com/DATA-DOG/godog/cmd/godog
Example
Imagine we have a godog cart to serve godogs for dinner. At first, we describe our feature in plain text:
# file: /tmp/godog/godog.feature
Feature: eat godogs
In order to be happy
As a hungry gopher
I need to be able to eat godogs
Scenario: Eat 5 out of 12
Given there are 12 godogs
When I eat 5
Then there should be 7 remaining
As a developer, your work is done as soon as you’ve made the program behave as described in the Scenario.
If you run godog godog.feature
inside the /tmp/godog directory.
You should see that the steps are undefined:
It gives you undefined step snippets to implement in your test context. You may copy these snippets into godog_test.go file.
Now if you run the tests again. You should see that the definition is now pending. You may change ErrPending to nil and the scenario will pass successfully.
Since we need a working implementation, we may start by implementing what is necessary. We only need a number of godogs for now.
/* file: /tmp/godog/godog.go */
package main
var Godogs int
func main() { /* usual main func */ }
Now lets finish our step implementations in order to test our feature requirements:
/* file: /tmp/godog/godog_test.go */
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/DATA-DOG/godog"
)
func thereAreGodogs(available int) error {
Godogs = available
return nil
}
func iEat(num int) error {
if Godogs < num {
return fmt.Errorf("you cannot eat %d godogs, there are %d available", num, Godogs)
}
Godogs -= num
return nil
}
func thereShouldBeRemaining(remaining int) error {
if Godogs != remaining {
return fmt.Errorf("expected %d godogs to be remaining, but there is %d", remaining, Godogs)
}
return nil
}
func featureContext(s godog.Suite) {
s.Step(`^there are (\d+) godogs$`, thereAreGodogs)
s.Step(`^I eat (\d+)$`, iEat)
s.Step(`^there should be (\d+) remaining$`, thereShouldBeRemaining)
s.BeforeScenario(func(interface{}) {
Godogs = 0 // clean the state before every scenario
})
}
Now when you run the godog godog.feature
again, you should see:
Note: we have hooked to BeforeScenario event in order to reset state. You may hook into more events, like AfterStep to test against an error and print more details about the error or state before failure. Or BeforeSuite to prepare a database.
Documentation
See godoc for general API details.
See .travis.yml for supported go versions.
See godog -h
for general command options.
See implementation examples:
- rest API server implementation and tests
- ls command implementation and tests
FAQ
Q: Where can I configure common options globally?
A: You can't. Alias your common or project based commands: alias godog-wip="godog --format=progress --tags=@wip"
Contributions
Feel free to open a pull request. Note, if you wish to contribute an extension to public (exported methods or types) - please open an issue before to discuss whether these changes can be accepted. All backward incompatible changes are and will be treated cautiously.
License
All package dependencies are MIT or BSD licensed.
Godog is licensed under the three clause BSD license