shelltestrunner
Easy, repeatable testing of CLI programs/commands
https://github.com/simonmichael/shelltestrunner
Version on this page: | 1.9.0.1 |
LTS Haskell 23.0: | 1.10 |
Stackage Nightly 2024-12-09: | 1.10 |
Latest on Hackage: | 1.10 |
shelltestrunner-1.9.0.1@sha256:beb5b9d66fdb527d231ff8e15fdf4bd73b18ae5b7cb66b6687b3c6cfc88bcfa4,2205
Module documentation for 1.9.0.1
There are no documented modules for this package.
Install | Usage | Options | Test formats | Support/Contribute | Credits
shelltestrunner (executable: shelltest
) is a portable
command-line tool for testing command-line programs, or general shell
commands, released under GPLv3+. It reads simple test specifications
defining a command to run, some input, and the expected output,
stderr, and exit status. It can run tests in parallel, selectively,
with a timeout, in color, etc.
Projects using it include
hledger,
Agda,
and
berp.
Install
There may be a new-enough packaged version on your platform. Eg:
Debian/Ubuntu: | apt install shelltestrunner |
Gentoo: | emerge shelltestrunner |
Or, build the latest release on any major platform:
stack: | get stack, stack install shelltestrunner-1.9.0.1 |
cabal: | cabal update; cabal install shelltestrunner-1.9.0.1 |
Usage
Here’s a minimal test file containing one shell test:
# A comment. Testing bash's builtin "echo" command (if /bin/sh is bash)
echo
>>>= 0
They’re called “shell test” because any shell (/bin/sh
on POSIX, CMD
on Windows)
command line can be tested.
Each test begins with the command to test, followed by optional stdin input,
expected stdout and/or stderr output, and ends with the expected exit status.
Here’s another file containing two tests:
# Test that the "cat" program copies its input to stdout,
# nothing appears on stderr, and exit status is 0.
cat
<<<
foo
>>>
foo
>>>2
>>>= 0
# Test that cat prints an error containing "unrecognized option" or
# "illegal option" and exits with non-zero status if given a bad flag.
cat --no-such-flag
>>>2 /(unrecognized|illegal) option/
>>>= !0
To run these tests:
$ shelltest echo.test cat.test
:echo.test: [OK]
:cat.test:1: [OK]
:cat.test:2: [OK]
Test Cases Total
Passed 3 3
Failed 0 0
Total 3 3
That’s the basics! There are also some alternate test formats you’ll read about below.
Options
$ shelltest --help
shelltest 1.9.0.1
shelltest [OPTIONS] [TESTFILES|TESTDIRS]
Common flags:
-l --list List all parsed tests and stop
-a --all Don't truncate output, even if large
-c --color Show colored output if your terminal supports it
-d --diff Show expected output mismatches in diff format
-p --precise Show expected/actual output precisely (eg whitespace)
-h --hide-successes Show only test failures
--xmlout=FILE Specify file to store test results in xml format.
-D --defmacro=D=DEF Specify a macro that is evaluated by preprocessor
before the test files are parsed. D stands for macro
definition that is replaced with the value of DEF.
-i --include=PAT Include tests whose name contains this glob pattern
-x --exclude=STR Exclude test files whose path contains STR
--execdir Run tests from within the test file's directory
--extension=EXT File suffix of test files (default: .test)
-w --with=EXECUTABLE Replace the first word of (unindented) test commands
-o --timeout=SECS Number of seconds a test may run (default: no limit)
-j --threads=N Number of threads for running tests (default: 1)
--debug Show debug info, for troubleshooting
--debug-parse Show test file parsing info and stop
-? --help Display help message
-V --version Print version information
--numeric-version Print just the version number
shelltest
accepts one or more test file or directory arguments.
A directory means all files below it named *.test
(customisable with --extension
).
Test commands are run with /bin/sh
on POSIX systems and with CMD
on Windows.
By default, they are run in the directory in which you ran shelltest
;
with --execdir
they will run in each test file’s directory instead.
--include
selects only tests whose name (file name plus intra-file sequence number) matches a
.gitignore-style pattern,
while --exclude
skips tests based on their file path.
These can be used eg to focus on a particular test, or to skip tests intended for a different platform.
-D/--defmacro
defines a macro that is replaced by preprocessor before any tests are parsed and run.
-w/--with
replaces the first word of all test commands with something
else, which can be useful for testing alternate versions of a
program. Commands which have been prefixed by an extra space will
not be affected by this option.
--hide-successes
gives quieter output, reporting only failed tests.
Long flags can be abbreviated to a unique prefix.
For example, the command:
$ shelltest tests -i args -c -j8 -o1 -DCONF_FILE=test/myconf.cfq --hide
- runs the tests defined in any
*.test
file in or below thetests/
directory - whose names contain “
args
” - in colour if possible
- with up to 8 tests running in parallel
- allowing no more than 1 second for each test
- replacing the text “
CONF_FILE
” in all tests with “test/myconf.cfq
” - reporting only the failures.
Test formats
shelltestrunner 1.9 adds some experimental new test file formats, described below. These need more real-world testing and may evolve further, but they will remain supported or will have a migration path.
Format name | Description | Delimiters, in order |
---|---|---|
format 1 | command first, exit status is required | (none) <<< >>> >>>2 >>>= |
format 2 | input first, can be reused by multiple tests, some delimiters can be omitted | <<< $$$ >>> >>>2 >>>= |
format 3 | like format 2, but with shorter delimiters | < $ > >2 >= |
shelltestrunner tries to parse each file first with format 2, then format 3, then format 1. All tests within a file should use the same format. I suggest choosing format 3 (short delimiters), switching to format 2 when longer delimiters are needed.
Format 1
Test files contain one or more individual tests, each consisting of a one-line shell command, optional input, expected standard output and/or error output, and a (required) exit status.
# COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES
COMMAND LINE
<<<
INPUT
>>>
EXPECTED OUTPUT (OR >>> /REGEXP/)
>>>2
EXPECTED STDERR (OR >>>2 /REGEXP/)
>>>= EXPECTED EXIT STATUS (OR >>>= /REGEXP/)
When not specified, stdout/stderr are ignored. A space before the command protects it from -w/–with.
Examples: above, shelltestrunner, hledger, berp, cblrepo.
Format 2
(shelltestrunner 1.9+) This improves on format 1 in two ways: it allows tests to reuse the same input, and it allows delimiters to often be omitted.
Test files contain one or more test groups. A test group consists of some optional standard input and one or more tests. Each test is a one-line shell command followed by optional expected standard output, error output and/or numeric exit status, separated by delimiters.
# COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES
<<<
INPUT
$$$ COMMAND LINE
>>>
EXPECTED OUTPUT (OR >>> /REGEX/)
>>>2
EXPECTED STDERR (OR >>>2 /REGEX/)
>>>= EXPECTED EXIT STATUS (OR >>>= /REGEX/ OR >>>=)
# COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES
ADDITIONAL TESTS FOR THIS INPUT
ADDITIONAL TEST GROUPS WITH DIFFERENT INPUT
All test parts are optional except the command line. If not specified, stdout and stderr are expected to be empty and exit status is expected to be zero.
Two spaces between $$$
and the command protects it from -w/–with.
The <<<
delimiter is optional for the first input in a file.
Without it, input begins at the first non-blank/comment line.
Input ends at the $$$
delimiter. You can’t put a comment before the first $$$
.
The >>>
delimiter is optional except when matching via regex.
Expected output/stderr extends to the next >>>2
or >>>=
if present,
or to the last non-blank/comment line before the next <<<
or $$$
or file end.
/REGEX/
regular expression patterns may be used instead of
specifying the expected output in full. The regex syntax is
regex-tdfa’s, plus
you can put !
before /REGEX/
to negate the match.
The exit status is a
number, normally 0 for a successful exit. This too can be prefixed
with !
to negate the match, or you can use a /REGEX/
pattern.
A >>>=
with nothing after it ignores the exit status.
Examples:
All delimiters explicit:
# cat copies its input to stdout
<<<
foo
$$$ cat
>>>
foo
# or, given a bad flag, prints a platform-specific error and exits with non-zero status
$$$ cat --no-such-flag
>>>2 /(unrecognized|illegal) option/
>>>= !0
# echo ignores the input and prints a newline.
# We need the >>>= (or a >>>2) to delimit the whitespace which
# would otherwise be ignored.
$$$ echo
>>>
>>>=
Non-required <<<
and >>>
delimiters omitted:
foo
$$$ cat
foo
$$$ cat --no-such-flag
>>>2 /(unrecognized|illegal) option/
>>>= !0
$$$ echo
>>>=
Format 3
(shelltestrunner 1.9+) The same as format 2, but with more convenient short delimiters: < $ > >2 >=.
# COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES
<
INPUT
$ COMMAND LINE
>
EXPECTED OUTPUT (OR > /REGEX/)
>2
EXPECTED STDERR (OR >2 /REGEX/)
>= EXPECTED EXIT STATUS (OR >= /REGEX/ OR >=)
# COMMENTS OR BLANK LINES
ADDITIONAL TESTS FOR THIS INPUT
ADDITIONAL TEST GROUPS WITH DIFFERENT INPUT
Examples:
All delimiters explicit:
# cat copies its input to stdout
<
foo
$ cat
>
foo
# or, given a bad flag, prints a platform-specific error and exits with non-zero status
$ cat --no-such-flag
>2 /(unrecognized|illegal) option/
>= !0
# echo ignores the input and prints a newline.
# We use an explicit >= (or >2) to delimit the whitespace which
# would otherwise be ignored.
$ echo
>
>=
Non-required <
and >
delimiters omitted:
foo
$ cat
foo
$ cat --no-such-flag
>2 /(unrecognized|illegal) option/
>= !0
$ echo
>
>2
Support/Contribute
Feedback, testing, code, documentation, packaging, blogging, and funding are most welcome.
Credits
Simon Michael wrote shelltestrunner, inspired by John Wiegley’s tests for Ledger.
Code contributors include: Taavi Väljaots, John Macfarlane, Andrés Sicard-Ramírez, Iustin Pop, Trygve Laugstøl, Bernie Pope, Sergei Trofimovich, John Chee.
shelltestrunner depends on several fine libraries, in particular Max Bolingbroke’s test-framework, and of course on the Glorious Haskell Compiler.
The Blade Runner font is by Phil Steinschneider.