#fixture #unit-testing #fixtures

macro s_test_fixture

s_test_fixture or simple test fixture is a macro library to implement test fixture with no hassle

9 releases

0.1.8 Feb 6, 2022
0.1.7 Oct 16, 2021
0.1.4 Sep 30, 2021

#883 in Procedural macros

28 downloads per month

MIT license

14KB
161 lines

s_test_fixture

s_test_fixture or simple test fixture is a macro library to implement test fixtures with no hassle.

Usage

There are four macros: before, after, before_each, after_each. The function pass as arguments must return ().

before and after are simply added before the test function.

before_each and after_each behave in a similar manner and stack with before and after macro. It has to be noted that the scope of the function pass as argument matter, it has to be visible inside the test module.

before

#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
    use s_test_fixture::before;
    #[test]
    #[before(function_to_run(2))]
    fn test() {
        let a = 2;
        something();
        assert_eq!(a,2);
        println!("ending");

    }
    
    fn something(){}

    fn function_to_run(i:i32){
        println!("I did {} thing(s)",i);
    }
}

will return

I did 2 thing(s)
ending

after

#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
    use s_test_fixture::after;
    #[test]
    #[after(function_to_run(66))]
    fn test() -> Result<(), ()> {
        println!("before");
        let i = -55;
        something();
        if i == 0 {
            something();
            Ok(())
        } else if i == 2 {
            something();
            return Ok(());
        } else {
            panic!("oh no!");
            Ok(())
        }
    }
    
    fn something(){}

    fn function_to_run(i:i32){
        println!("I did {} thing(s)",i);
    }
}

will return

before
{panic statement}
I did 66 thing(s)

before_each

use s_test_fixture::{before_each,after, before};

#[cfg(test)]
#[before_each(function_to_run(78))]
mod tests {
    use super::*;
    #[test]
    #[before(function_to_run(2))]
    fn test() {
        let a = 2;
        something();
        assert_eq!(a,2);
        println!("ending");

    }
    
    fn something(){}

    fn function_to_run(i:i32){
        println!("I did {} thing(s)",i);
    }
}

will return

I did 2 thing(s)
I did 78 thing(s)
ending

Test

run cargo test -- --test-threads 1

Dependencies

~1.5MB
~37K SLoC