An RSpec inspired minimal testing framework for Rust.
Add speculate to the dev-dependencies section of your Cargo.toml:
[dev-dependencies]
speculate = "0.1"And add the following to the top of the Rust file you want to add tests for:
#[cfg(test)]
extern crate speculate;
#[cfg(test)]
use speculate::speculate; // Must be imported into the current scope.Speculate provides the speculate! syntax extension.
Inside speculate! { ... }, you can have any "Item", like static, const,
fn, etc, and 5 special types of blocks:
-
describe(or its aliascontext) - to group tests in a hierarchy, for readability. Can be arbitrarily nested. -
before- contains setup code that's inserted before every sibling and nesteditandbenchblocks. -
after- contains teardown code that's inserted after every sibling and nesteditandbenchblocks. -
it(or its aliastest) - contains tests.For example:
it "can add 1 and 2" { assert_eq!(1 + 2, 3); }
You can optionally add attributes to this block:
#[ignore] test "ignore" { assert_eq!(1, 2); } #[should_panic] test "should panic" { assert_eq!(1, 2); } #[should_panic(expected = "foo")] test "should panic with foo" { panic!("foo"); }
-
bench- contains benchmarks.For example:
bench "xor 1 to 1000" |b| { b.iter(|| (0..1000).fold(0, |a, b| a ^ b)); }
extern crate speculate;
use speculate::speculate;
speculate! {
const ZERO: i32 = 0;
fn add(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
a + b
}
describe "math" {
const ONE: i32 = 1;
fn sub(a: i32, b: i32) -> i32 {
a - b
}
before {
let two = ONE + ONE;
}
it "can add stuff" {
assert_eq!(ONE, add(ZERO, ONE));
assert_eq!(two, add(ONE, ONE));
}
it "can subtract stuff" {
assert_eq!(ZERO, sub(ONE, ONE));
assert_eq!(ONE, sub(two, ONE));
}
}
}MIT