bats-assert
is a helper library providing common assertions for
Bats.
Assertions are functions that perform a test and output relevant
information on failure to help debugging. They return 1 on failure and 0
otherwise. Output, formatted for readability, is
sent to the standard error to make assertions usable outside of @test
blocks too.
Assertions testing exit code and output operate on the results of the
most recent invocation of run
.
Dependencies:
bats-support
(formerlybats-core
) - output formatting
See the shared documentation to learn how to install and load this library.
Fail if the given expression evaluates to false.
Note: The expression must be a simple command. Compound
commands, such as [[
, can be used only when executed
with bash -c
.
@test 'assert()' {
touch '/var/log/test.log'
assert [ -e '/var/log/test.log' ]
}
On failure, the failed expression is displayed.
-- assertion failed --
expression : [ -e /var/log/test.log ]
--
Fail if the given expression evaluates to true.
Note: The expression must be a simple command. Compound
commands, such as [[
, can be used only when executed
with bash -c
.
@test 'refute()' {
rm -f '/var/log/test.log'
refute [ -e '/var/log/test.log' ]
}
On failure, the successful expression is displayed.
-- assertion succeeded, but it was expected to fail --
expression : [ -e /var/log/test.log ]
--
Fail if the two parameters, actual and expected value respectively, do not equal.
@test 'assert_equal()' {
assert_equal 'have' 'want'
}
On failure, the expected and actual values are displayed.
-- values do not equal --
expected : want
actual : have
--
If either value is longer than one line both are displayed in multi-line format.
Fail and display details if the expected value is not contained in the provided array. Details include both values.
@test 'assert_contains()' {
local items=(one two three)
assert_contains "four" "${items[@]}"
}
On failure, the expected and array values are displayed.
-- item was not found in the array --
expected : four
actual : one two three
--
If either value is longer than one line both are displayed in multi-line format.
Fail if $status
is not 0.
@test 'assert_success() status only' {
run bash -c "echo 'Error!'; exit 1"
assert_success
}
On failure, $status
and $output
are displayed.
-- command failed --
status : 1
output : Error!
--
If $output
is longer than one line, it is displayed in multi-line
format.
Fail if $status
is 0.
@test 'assert_failure() status only' {
run echo 'Success!'
assert_failure
}
On failure, $output
is displayed.
-- command succeeded, but it was expected to fail --
output : Success!
--
If $output
is longer than one line, it is displayed in multi-line
format.
When one parameter is specified, fail if $status
does not equal the
expected status specified by the parameter.
@test 'assert_failure() with expected status' {
run bash -c "echo 'Error!'; exit 1"
assert_failure 2
}
On failure, the expected and actual status, and $output
are displayed.
-- command failed as expected, but status differs --
expected : 2
actual : 1
output : Error!
--
If $output
is longer than one line, it is displayed in multi-line
format.
This function helps to verify that a command or function produces the
correct output by checking that the specified expected output matches
the actual output. Matching can be literal (default), partial or regular
expression. This function is the logical complement of refute_output
.
By default, literal matching is performed. The assertion fails if
$output
does not equal the expected output.
@test 'assert_output()' {
run echo 'have'
assert_output 'want'
}
The expected output can be specified with a heredoc or standard input as well.
@test 'assert_output() with pipe' {
run echo 'have'
echo 'want' | assert_output
}
On failure, the expected and actual output are displayed.
-- output differs --
expected : want
actual : have
--
If either value is longer than one line both are displayed in multi-line format.
Partial matching can be enabled with the --partial
option (-p
for
short). When used, the assertion fails if the expected substring is
not found in $output
.
@test 'assert_output() partial matching' {
run echo 'ERROR: no such file or directory'
assert_output --partial 'SUCCESS'
}
On failure, the substring and the output are displayed.
-- output does not contain substring --
substring : SUCCESS
output : ERROR: no such file or directory
--
This option and regular expression matching (--regexp
or -e
) are
mutually exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Regular expression matching can be enabled with the --regexp
option
(-e
for short). When used, the assertion fails if the extended
regular expression does not match $output
.
Note: The anchors ^
and $
bind to the beginning and the end of the
entire output (not individual lines), respectively.
@test 'assert_output() regular expression matching' {
run echo 'Foobar 0.1.0'
assert_output --regexp '^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$'
}
On failure, the regular expression and the output are displayed.
-- regular expression does not match output --
regexp : ^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$
output : Foobar 0.1.0
--
An error is displayed if the specified extended regular expression is invalid.
This option and partial matching (--partial
or -p
) are mutually
exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
This function helps to verify that a command or function produces the
correct output by checking that the specified unexpected output does not
match the actual output. Matching can be literal (default), partial or
regular expression. This function is the logical complement of
assert_output
.
By default, literal matching is performed. The assertion fails if
$output
equals the unexpected output.
@test 'refute_output()' {
run echo 'want'
refute_output 'want'
}
-The unexpected output can be specified with a heredoc or standard input as well.
@test 'refute_output() with pipe' {
run echo 'want'
echo 'want' | refute_output
}
On failure, the output is displayed.
-- output equals, but it was expected to differ --
output : want
--
If output is longer than one line it is displayed in multi-line format.
Partial matching can be enabled with the --partial
option (-p
for
short). When used, the assertion fails if the unexpected substring is
found in $output
.
@test 'refute_output() partial matching' {
run echo 'ERROR: no such file or directory'
refute_output --partial 'ERROR'
}
On failure, the substring and the output are displayed.
-- output should not contain substring --
substring : ERROR
output : ERROR: no such file or directory
--
This option and regular expression matching (--regexp
or -e
) are
mutually exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Regular expression matching can be enabled with the --regexp
option
(-e
for short). When used, the assertion fails if the extended
regular expression matches $output
.
Note: The anchors ^
and $
bind to the beginning and the end of the
entire output (not individual lines), respectively.
@test 'refute_output() regular expression matching' {
run echo 'Foobar v0.1.0'
refute_output --regexp '^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$'
}
On failure, the regular expression and the output are displayed.
-- regular expression should not match output --
regexp : ^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$
output : Foobar v0.1.0
--
An error is displayed if the specified extended regular expression is invalid.
This option and partial matching (--partial
or -p
) are mutually
exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Similarly to assert_output
, this function helps to verify that a
command or function produces the correct output. It checks that the
expected line appears in the output (default) or in a specific line of
it. Matching can be literal (default), partial or regular expression.
This function is the logical complement of refute_line
.
Warning: Due to a bug in Bats, empty lines are
discarded from ${lines[@]}
, causing line indices to change and
preventing testing for empty lines.
By default, the entire output is searched for the expected line. The
assertion fails if the expected line is not found in ${lines[@]}
.
@test 'assert_line() looking for line' {
run echo $'have-0\nhave-1\nhave-2'
assert_line 'want'
}
On failure, the expected line and the output are displayed.
Warning: The output displayed does not contain empty lines. See the Warning above for more.
-- output does not contain line --
line : want
output (3 lines):
have-0
have-1
have-2
--
If output is not longer than one line, it is displayed in two-column format.
When the --index <idx>
option is used (-n <idx>
for short) , the
expected line is matched only against the line identified by the given
index. The assertion fails if the expected line does not equal
${lines[<idx>]}
.
@test 'assert_line() specific line' {
run echo $'have-0\nhave-1\nhave-2'
assert_line --index 1 'want-1'
}
On failure, the index and the compared lines are displayed.
-- line differs --
index : 1
expected : want-1
actual : have-1
--
Partial matching can be enabled with the --partial
option (-p
for
short). When used, a match fails if the expected substring is not
found in the matched line.
@test 'assert_line() partial matching' {
run echo $'have 1\nhave 2\nhave 3'
assert_line --partial 'want'
}
On failure, the same details are displayed as for literal matching, except that the substring replaces the expected line.
-- no output line contains substring --
substring : want
output (3 lines):
have 1
have 2
have 3
--
This option and regular expression matching (--regexp
or -e
) are
mutually exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Regular expression matching can be enabled with the --regexp
option
(-e
for short). When used, a match fails if the extended regular
expression does not match the line being tested.
Note: As expected, the anchors ^
and $
bind to the beginning and
the end of the matched line, respectively.
@test 'assert_line() regular expression matching' {
run echo $'have-0\nhave-1\nhave-2'
assert_line --index 1 --regexp '^want-[0-9]$'
}
On failure, the same details are displayed as for literal matching, except that the regular expression replaces the expected line.
-- regular expression does not match line --
index : 1
regexp : ^want-[0-9]$
line : have-1
--
An error is displayed if the specified extended regular expression is invalid.
This option and partial matching (--partial
or -p
) are mutually
exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Similarly to refute_output
, this function helps to verify that a
command or function produces the correct output. It checks that the
unexpected line does not appear in the output (default) or in a specific
line of it. Matching can be literal (default), partial or regular
expression. This function is the logical complement of assert_line
.
Warning: Due to a bug in Bats, empty lines are
discarded from ${lines[@]}
, causing line indices to change and
preventing testing for empty lines.
By default, the entire output is searched for the unexpected line. The
assertion fails if the unexpected line is found in ${lines[@]}
.
@test 'refute_line() looking for line' {
run echo $'have-0\nwant\nhave-2'
refute_line 'want'
}
On failure, the unexpected line, the index of its first match and the output with the matching line highlighted are displayed.
Warning: The output displayed does not contain empty lines. See the Warning above for more.
-- line should not be in output --
line : want
index : 1
output (3 lines):
have-0
> want
have-2
--
If output is not longer than one line, it is displayed in two-column format.
When the --index <idx>
option is used (-n <idx>
for short) , the
unexpected line is matched only against the line identified by the given
index. The assertion fails if the unexpected line equals
${lines[<idx>]}
.
@test 'refute_line() specific line' {
run echo $'have-0\nwant-1\nhave-2'
refute_line --index 1 'want-1'
}
On failure, the index and the unexpected line are displayed.
-- line should differ --
index : 1
line : want-1
--
Partial matching can be enabled with the --partial
option (-p
for
short). When used, a match fails if the unexpected substring is found
in the matched line.
@test 'refute_line() partial matching' {
run echo $'have 1\nwant 2\nhave 3'
refute_line --partial 'want'
}
On failure, in addition to the details of literal matching, the
substring is also displayed. When used with --index <idx>
the
substring replaces the unexpected line.
-- no line should contain substring --
substring : want
index : 1
output (3 lines):
have 1
> want 2
have 3
--
This option and regular expression matching (--regexp
or -e
) are
mutually exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
Regular expression matching can be enabled with the --regexp
option
(-e
for short). When used, a match fails if the extended regular
expression matches the line being tested.
Note: As expected, the anchors ^
and $
bind to the beginning and
the end of the matched line, respectively.
@test 'refute_line() regular expression matching' {
run echo $'Foobar v0.1.0\nRelease date: 2015-11-29'
refute_line --index 0 --regexp '^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$'
}
On failure, in addition to the details of literal matching, the regular
expression is also displayed. When used with --index <idx>
the regular
expression replaces the unexpected line.
-- regular expression should not match line --
index : 0
regexp : ^Foobar v[0-9]+\.[0-9]+\.[0-9]$
line : Foobar v0.1.0
--
An error is displayed if the specified extended regular expression is invalid.
This option and partial matching (--partial
or -p
) are mutually
exclusive. An error is displayed when used simultaneously.
For functions that have options, --
disables option parsing for the
remaining arguments to allow using arguments identical to one of the
allowed options.
assert_output -- '-p'
Specifying --
as an argument is similarly simple.
refute_line -- '--'