goldie
is a golden file test utility for Go projects. It's typically used for
testing responses with larger data bodies.
The concept is straight forward. Valid response data is stored in a "golden file". The actual response data will be byte compared with the golden file and the test will fail if there is a difference.
Updating the golden file can be done by running go test -update ./...
.
See the GoDoc for API reference and configuration options.
Install the latest version, v2, with:
go get -u github.com/sebdah/goldie/v2
For the older v1 release, please use:
go get -u github.com/sebdah/goldie
The below example fetches data from a REST API. The last line in the test is the
actual usage of goldie
. It takes the HTTP response body and asserts that it's
what is present in the golden test file.
func TestExample(t *testing.T) {
recorder := httptest.NewRecorder()
req, err := http.NewRequest("GET", "/example", nil)
assert.Nil(t, err)
handler := http.HandlerFunc(ExampleHandler)
handler.ServeHTTP()
g := goldie.New(t)
g.Assert(t, "example", recorder.Body.Bytes())
}
If some values in the golden file can change depending on the test, you can use
golang template in the golden file and pass the data to AssertWithTemplate
.
This is a {{ .Type }} file.
func TestTemplateExample(t *testing.T) {
recorder := httptest.NewRecorder()
req, err := http.NewRequest("POST", "/example/Golden", nil)
assert.Nil(t, err)
handler := http.HandlerFunc(ExampleHandler)
handler.ServeHTTP()
data := struct {
Type string
}{
Type: "Golden",
}
g := goldie.New(t)
g.AssertWithTemplate(t, "example", data, recorder.Body.Bytes())
}
Then run your test with the -update
flag the first time to store the result.
go test -update ./...
For any consecutive runs where you actually want to compare the data, simply
drop the -update
flag.
go test ./...
If you are asserting JSON and XML data, you can use the handy AssertJson
and
AssertXml
functions that will nicely indent the golden validation files for
better readability.
Using -update
along with -clean
flag will clear the fixture directory before updating golden files.
go test -update -clean ./...
goldie
supports a number of configuration options that will alter the behavior
of the library. These options should be passed into the goldie.New()
method.
func TestNewExample(t *testing.T) {
g := goldie.New(
t,
goldie.WithFixtureDir("test-fixtures"),
goldie.WithNameSuffix(".golden.json"),
goldie.WithDiffEngine(goldie.ColoredDiff),
goldie.WithTestNameForDir(true),
)
g.Assert(t, "example", []byte("my example data"))
}
Option | Comment | Default |
---|---|---|
WithFixtureDir |
Set fixture dir name | testdata |
WithNameSuffix |
Suffix for fixture files. | .golden |
WithDirPerms |
Directory permissions for fixtures | 0755 |
WithFilePerms |
File permissions for fixtures | 0644 |
WithDiffEngine |
Diff engine to use for diff output | ClassicDiff |
WithDiffFn |
Custom diff logic to be used | None |
WithIgnoreTemplateErrors |
Ignore errors from templates | false |
WithTestNameForDir |
Create a folder with the tests name for the fixtures | false |
WithSubTestNameForDir |
Create a folder with the sub tests name for the fixtures | false |
Goldie has three output modes; classic diff (default), colored diffs and simple mode.
You can select your preferred output using the WithDiffEngine
option:
g.New(
t,
goldie.WithDiffEngine(goldie.ColoredDiff), // Simple, ColoredDiff, ClassicDiff
)
With the release of Goldie v2.0.0 we are introducing features that will break backwards compatibility with older versions of the test helper. A few things have changed:
There is a new default directory for fixtures, testdata
. This directory is a
better default as it is more widely used in the Go community (including the
standard library). See issue #10
for details.
With the introduction of the functional options we also introduced goldie.New
,
which is initializing Goldie. Assert*
and other methods are now accessed like:
g := goldie.New(t)
g.Assert(t, ...)
Yes, please! Pull requests are most welcome. On the wish list:
- Unit tests.
The name comes from the fact that it's for Go and handles golden file testing. But yes, it may not be the best name in the world.
This is based on the great Advanced Go testing talk by @mitchellh.
MIT
Copyright 2016 Sebastian Dahlgren sebastian.dahlgren@gmail.com
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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