The nightmare in testing would be false positive. “Every thing is passing! Amazing!” until at an unknown time in the future all the mines explode together and blow your team to hell.
There are many reasons that tests could fail silently.
Today, I’m going to talk about one very basic reason: don’t know which are tests.
Most people join a Go project half-way. Most people learn a language by using it in a real life.
Therefore, when someone had set up the project with a test framework like testify, you would most likely think methods like the following are tests.
func (suite *ExampleTestSuite) TestExample() { suite.Equal(5, suite.VariableThatShouldStartAtFive) }
You then add another method like TestAnotherCase and find it works. You think you’re crystal clear about what are tests.
A “test” you’re talking may not be the same test a Go package is talking.
From the built in testing package, a test is any function of the form
func TestXxx(*testing.T)
Of course, since the built-in testing package has limited features, most projects are using testify/suite or other similar third-party package as their test framework. What is a test from the testify/suite's point of view?
add any methods that start with "Test" to add tests
See, we have two different definitions of a test.
When using some tools like mockery, you’ll read the following
you won't have to worry about forgetting the AssertExpectations method call anymore … The AssertExpectations method is registered to be called at the end of the tests
Great! “So I only need to create a mock and the package will notify me when expected behaviors happen”.
That’s where the trap is.
When mockery says at the end of the tests, it actually means the definition from testing , not the definition from testify/suite.
So when you have the following code, you’ll see both TestA and TestB pass even they should both fail because the mock setup in TestA is used in TestB.
package mockandsubtest import ( "fmt" "testing" "github.com/stretchr/testify/suite" ) // Prod code type ExternalService interface { Work() } type Server struct { externalService ExternalService } func NewServer(externalService ExternalService) *Server { return &Server{ externalService: externalService, } } // Test code type ServerSuite struct { suite.Suite ExternalService *MockExternalService Server } func TestServerSuite(t *testing.T) { suite.Run(t, &ServerSuite{}) } // Run before all test cases func (s *ServerSuite) SetupSuite() { s.ExternalService = NewMockExternalService(s.T()) s.Server = Server{externalService: s.ExternalService} } // In this test, Work is set up to be called once but not called func (s *ServerSuite) TestA() { fmt.Println("TestA is running") s.ExternalService.EXPECT().Work().Times(1) } // In this test, Work is called once unexpectedly func (s *ServerSuite) TestB() { fmt.Println("TestB is running") s.Server.externalService.Work() }
The result of running the above code is
TestA is running TestB is running PASS
It turns out only TestServerSuite is considered as a test from testing and mockery's point of view. That’s why the AssertExpectations is called at the end of TestServerSuite , even though TestA and TestB are internally executed by testify/suite.
From mockery's point of view, s.ExternalService is expected to be called once and actually called once in the lifecycle of TestServerSuite. So the expectation is fulfilled.
There are two ways to bridge the gap between testify/suite and testing.
The first way is creating a new mock before each test method like the following.
func (suite *ExampleTestSuite) TestExample() { suite.Equal(5, suite.VariableThatShouldStartAtFive) }
Sometimes, it’s not practical in your project due to many reasons like setting up a server instance for each test case is too expensive. Then you can try the other direction, which is manually asserting after each test.
The second one is adding a call of AssertExpectations at the end of each test method. For example, call AssertExpectations in TearDownTest , which is executed after each test method.
func TestXxx(*testing.T)
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