1 unstable release

0.3.0 Apr 3, 2023
0.2.0 Mar 27, 2023
0.1.0 Mar 5, 2023

#412 in Testing

Download history 14/week @ 2024-02-26 19/week @ 2024-03-11 48/week @ 2024-04-01

67 downloads per month
Used in tearup_macro

MIT license

23KB
483 lines

tearup

A macro test helper to help you to write integration tests.

Basically:

  • execute a fn setup() before your test
  • execute a fn teardown() after the test end
  • with a panic catch and wait mechanisms if you need some

Install

Add the following to your Cargo.toml

[dependencies]
tearup = "0.2"

Usage

The macros #[tearup(MyContext)] executes the setup then the method annoted and finally the teardown. The #[tearup_test(MyContext)] act the same + add the #[test] on the method.

#[tearup_test(WebContext)]
fn it_should_do_this(address: Address) {
    // assert something
}

#[tearup_test(DbContext)]
async fn it_should_do_that(mut db: DbConnection, address: Address) {
    // assert something
}

To do this you'll need to implement Context trait with both setup and teardown methods.

use async_trait::async_trait;
use tearup::tearup_test;

// Define your context
struct YourContext {
    something_you_need_in_teardown: SomethingYouSetup,
}

#[async_trait]
impl Context for YourContext {
    async fn setup(shared_context: &mut SharedContext) -> Self {
        /* --> do your setup here <-- */

        // Register struct that you want to access in your test
        shared_context.register(SomethingYouNeedInTest{});

        // You still can store things in your struct for the treardown step
        Self { something_you_need_in_teardown: SomethingYouSetup{} }
    }

    async fn teardown(mut self, shared_context: &mut SharedContext) {
        /* --> clean your stuff here <-- */

        // You still have access to the shared context
        shared_context.get::<SomethingYouNeedInTest>();
        // Same for self
        self.something_you_need_in_teardown;
    }
}

/// Type you need to access in test (registered in the SharedContext) must implement `Clone`
#[derive(Clone)]
struct SomethingYouNeedInTest;

struct SomethingYouSetup;

You can also combine your contexts with ContextCombinator:

type Both = ConcurrentContextCombinator<YourContext, AnotherContext>;
#[tearup_test(Both)]
fn it_should_do_this(mut something_you_need_in_test: DbConnection, something_from_the_other_context: Address) {
    // assert something
}

type MoreCombinaison = ConcurrentContextCombinator<YourContext, AnotherContext>;
#[tearup_test(MoreCombinaison)]
fn it_should_do_that(mut something_you_need_in_test: DbConnection, something_from_the_other_context: Address) {
    // assert something
}

Examples

More examples here

Dependencies

~1.2–2.9MB
~59K SLoC