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Bashtub 🛁 - Unit test framework for Bash

Build Status

Bashtub is a tiny unit test framework for Bash. You can specify the test caes as as assertion-based test cases likes xUnit. Bashtub colorfully outputs the results of the test. When test passed

success

and when tests failed, it bashtub outputs the information of the failures,

failure

Requirements

  • Bash 3.2+

Installation

curl -o ~/bin/bashtub https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ueokande/bashtub/v0.2/bin/bashtub
chmod +x ~/bin/bashtub

where the path ~/bin must be included in $PATH. Then test to run the bashtub.

bashtub   # output 0 examples

Writing tests

Test cases are declared in the function that start with testcase_. Bashtub automatically finds the testcase in the loaded file. The tests are written as assertion-based test cases likes xUnit.

Minimal test

The first, simple example is the following :

# examples/first_test_case.sh
lorem_ipsum='lorem ipsum dolor sit amet'

testcase_first_word() {
  first_word=$(echo $lorem_ipsum | cut -f1 -d' ')
  assert_equal 'lorem' $first_word
}

testcase_word_count() {
  number_of_words=$(echo $lorem_ipsum | wc -w)
  assert_match 5 $number_of_words
}

The first test case testcase_word_count checks if the first word in $lorem_ipsum is lorem. The second test case testcase_word_count checks the number of words in $lorem_ipsum. You can see another assertions in assertions

To run your tests, invoke bashtub in terminal with test files.

bashtub examples/first_test_case.sh

You can observe the results of test, such as number of test-cases, information of failures.

subject helper method

subject helper method captures the stdout, stderr and exit code from command specified in parameters. Let hello_in is the function that translates `hello' to each language, and outputs to stdout. If specified language is not supported, it outputs an error to stderr and returns 1.

# examples/subject_test.sh
hello_in() {
  case $1 in
  english) echo Hello;;
  italian) echo Ciao;;
  *) echo unsupported $1 >&2; return 1;;
  esac
  return 0
}

The example of the usage of subject is in the below code. In this example, the test case checks the stdout in normal operation, and stderr and exit code in exception operation.

# examples/subject_test.sh

testcase_translate_to_english() {
  subject hello_in english
  assert_equal 0 $status
  assert_match 'Hello' "$stdout"
}

testcase_translate_to_unsupported_language() {
  subject hello_in bash
  assert_equal 1 $status
  assert_match 'bash' "$stderr"
}

Note that $stdout is quoted, because the outputs are expand to multiple parameter without double-quote.

assertions

Bashtub provides some convenient assertions.

assert_equal

assert_equal expected actual

It asserts that the actual is equal to expected.

assert_match

assert_match regex actual

It asserts that the actual mathces with regex.

assert_true/assert_false

assert_true command
assert_false command

assert_true and assert_false assert that the exit code of the command are true and false, respectively. Using assert_true is equivalent to using using subject and asserting that $status is 0. The following codes return same result.

assert_true command
subject command
assert_equal 0 $status

before and after functions

To initialize and detialize the test environment, use before_each, after_each, before_all, and after_all methods. before_each and after_each functions are invoked before and after each test cases. before_all and after_all function is invoked before/after suite of test cases. Most typically usage of these methods are creating an temporary file in bofore function and remove that in after function. This two methods are excellent with mktemp command.

# examples/before_and_after.sh
before_each() {
  TMPDIR=$(mktemp -d)
}

after_each() {
  rm -rf "$TMPDIR"
}

testcase_file_is_empty() {
  local tmpfile=$(mktemp -p $TMPDIR)
  subject file $tmpfile
  assert_match "empty" "$stdout"
}

You can find another examples in example directory.

License

MIT

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Tiny unittest framework for Bash.

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