xesite/vendor/gopkg.in/check.v1/checkers.go

525 lines
14 KiB
Go

package check
import (
"fmt"
"reflect"
"regexp"
"strings"
"github.com/kr/pretty"
)
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// CommentInterface and Commentf helper, to attach extra information to checks.
type comment struct {
format string
args []interface{}
}
// Commentf returns an infomational value to use with Assert or Check calls.
// If the checker test fails, the provided arguments will be passed to
// fmt.Sprintf, and will be presented next to the logged failure.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(v, Equals, 42, Commentf("Iteration #%d failed.", i))
//
// Note that if the comment is constant, a better option is to
// simply use a normal comment right above or next to the line, as
// it will also get printed with any errors:
//
// c.Assert(l, Equals, 8192) // Ensure buffer size is correct (bug #123)
//
func Commentf(format string, args ...interface{}) CommentInterface {
return &comment{format, args}
}
// CommentInterface must be implemented by types that attach extra
// information to failed checks. See the Commentf function for details.
type CommentInterface interface {
CheckCommentString() string
}
func (c *comment) CheckCommentString() string {
return fmt.Sprintf(c.format, c.args...)
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// The Checker interface.
// The Checker interface must be provided by checkers used with
// the Assert and Check verification methods.
type Checker interface {
Info() *CheckerInfo
Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string)
}
// See the Checker interface.
type CheckerInfo struct {
Name string
Params []string
}
func (info *CheckerInfo) Info() *CheckerInfo {
return info
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Not checker logic inverter.
// The Not checker inverts the logic of the provided checker. The
// resulting checker will succeed where the original one failed, and
// vice-versa.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(a, Not(Equals), b)
//
func Not(checker Checker) Checker {
return &notChecker{checker}
}
type notChecker struct {
sub Checker
}
func (checker *notChecker) Info() *CheckerInfo {
info := *checker.sub.Info()
info.Name = "Not(" + info.Name + ")"
return &info
}
func (checker *notChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
result, error = checker.sub.Check(params, names)
result = !result
if result {
// clear error message if the new result is true
error = ""
}
return
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// IsNil checker.
type isNilChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The IsNil checker tests whether the obtained value is nil.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(err, IsNil)
//
var IsNil Checker = &isNilChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "IsNil", Params: []string{"value"}},
}
func (checker *isNilChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
return isNil(params[0]), ""
}
func isNil(obtained interface{}) (result bool) {
if obtained == nil {
result = true
} else {
switch v := reflect.ValueOf(obtained); v.Kind() {
case reflect.Chan, reflect.Func, reflect.Interface, reflect.Map, reflect.Ptr, reflect.Slice:
return v.IsNil()
}
}
return
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// NotNil checker. Alias for Not(IsNil), since it's so common.
type notNilChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The NotNil checker verifies that the obtained value is not nil.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(iface, NotNil)
//
// This is an alias for Not(IsNil), made available since it's a
// fairly common check.
//
var NotNil Checker = &notNilChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "NotNil", Params: []string{"value"}},
}
func (checker *notNilChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
return !isNil(params[0]), ""
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Equals checker.
func diffworthy(a interface{}) bool {
t := reflect.TypeOf(a)
switch t.Kind() {
case reflect.Array, reflect.Map, reflect.Slice, reflect.Struct, reflect.String, reflect.Ptr:
return true
}
return false
}
// formatUnequal will dump the actual and expected values into a textual
// representation and return an error message containing a diff.
func formatUnequal(obtained interface{}, expected interface{}) string {
// We do not do diffs for basic types because go-check already
// shows them very cleanly.
if !diffworthy(obtained) || !diffworthy(expected) {
return ""
}
// Handle strings, short strings are ignored (go-check formats
// them very nicely already). We do multi-line strings by
// generating two string slices and using kr.Diff to compare
// those (kr.Diff does not do string diffs by itself).
aStr, aOK := obtained.(string)
bStr, bOK := expected.(string)
if aOK && bOK {
l1 := strings.Split(aStr, "\n")
l2 := strings.Split(bStr, "\n")
// the "2" here is a bit arbitrary
if len(l1) > 2 && len(l2) > 2 {
diff := pretty.Diff(l1, l2)
return fmt.Sprintf(`String difference:
%s`, formatMultiLine(strings.Join(diff, "\n"), false))
}
// string too short
return ""
}
// generic diff
diff := pretty.Diff(obtained, expected)
if len(diff) == 0 {
// No diff, this happens when e.g. just struct
// pointers are different but the structs have
// identical values.
return ""
}
return fmt.Sprintf(`Difference:
%s`, formatMultiLine(strings.Join(diff, "\n"), false))
}
type equalsChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The Equals checker verifies that the obtained value is equal to
// the expected value, according to usual Go semantics for ==.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(value, Equals, 42)
//
var Equals Checker = &equalsChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "Equals", Params: []string{"obtained", "expected"}},
}
func (checker *equalsChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
defer func() {
if v := recover(); v != nil {
result = false
error = fmt.Sprint(v)
}
}()
result = params[0] == params[1]
if !result {
error = formatUnequal(params[0], params[1])
}
return
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// DeepEquals checker.
type deepEqualsChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The DeepEquals checker verifies that the obtained value is deep-equal to
// the expected value. The check will work correctly even when facing
// slices, interfaces, and values of different types (which always fail
// the test).
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(value, DeepEquals, 42)
// c.Assert(array, DeepEquals, []string{"hi", "there"})
//
var DeepEquals Checker = &deepEqualsChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "DeepEquals", Params: []string{"obtained", "expected"}},
}
func (checker *deepEqualsChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
result = reflect.DeepEqual(params[0], params[1])
if !result {
error = formatUnequal(params[0], params[1])
}
return
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// HasLen checker.
type hasLenChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The HasLen checker verifies that the obtained value has the
// provided length. In many cases this is superior to using Equals
// in conjunction with the len function because in case the check
// fails the value itself will be printed, instead of its length,
// providing more details for figuring the problem.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(list, HasLen, 5)
//
var HasLen Checker = &hasLenChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "HasLen", Params: []string{"obtained", "n"}},
}
func (checker *hasLenChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
n, ok := params[1].(int)
if !ok {
return false, "n must be an int"
}
value := reflect.ValueOf(params[0])
switch value.Kind() {
case reflect.Map, reflect.Array, reflect.Slice, reflect.Chan, reflect.String:
default:
return false, "obtained value type has no length"
}
return value.Len() == n, ""
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// ErrorMatches checker.
type errorMatchesChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The ErrorMatches checker verifies that the error value
// is non nil and matches the regular expression provided.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(err, ErrorMatches, "perm.*denied")
//
var ErrorMatches Checker = errorMatchesChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "ErrorMatches", Params: []string{"value", "regex"}},
}
func (checker errorMatchesChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, errStr string) {
if params[0] == nil {
return false, "Error value is nil"
}
err, ok := params[0].(error)
if !ok {
return false, "Value is not an error"
}
params[0] = err.Error()
names[0] = "error"
return matches(params[0], params[1])
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Matches checker.
type matchesChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The Matches checker verifies that the string provided as the obtained
// value (or the string resulting from obtained.String()) matches the
// regular expression provided.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(err, Matches, "perm.*denied")
//
var Matches Checker = &matchesChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "Matches", Params: []string{"value", "regex"}},
}
func (checker *matchesChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
return matches(params[0], params[1])
}
func matches(value, regex interface{}) (result bool, error string) {
reStr, ok := regex.(string)
if !ok {
return false, "Regex must be a string"
}
valueStr, valueIsStr := value.(string)
if !valueIsStr {
if valueWithStr, valueHasStr := value.(fmt.Stringer); valueHasStr {
valueStr, valueIsStr = valueWithStr.String(), true
}
}
if valueIsStr {
matches, err := regexp.MatchString("^"+reStr+"$", valueStr)
if err != nil {
return false, "Can't compile regex: " + err.Error()
}
return matches, ""
}
return false, "Obtained value is not a string and has no .String()"
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Panics checker.
type panicsChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The Panics checker verifies that calling the provided zero-argument
// function will cause a panic which is deep-equal to the provided value.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(func() { f(1, 2) }, Panics, &SomeErrorType{"BOOM"}).
//
//
var Panics Checker = &panicsChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "Panics", Params: []string{"function", "expected"}},
}
func (checker *panicsChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
f := reflect.ValueOf(params[0])
if f.Kind() != reflect.Func || f.Type().NumIn() != 0 {
return false, "Function must take zero arguments"
}
defer func() {
// If the function has not panicked, then don't do the check.
if error != "" {
return
}
params[0] = recover()
names[0] = "panic"
result = reflect.DeepEqual(params[0], params[1])
}()
f.Call(nil)
return false, "Function has not panicked"
}
type panicMatchesChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The PanicMatches checker verifies that calling the provided zero-argument
// function will cause a panic with an error value matching
// the regular expression provided.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(func() { f(1, 2) }, PanicMatches, `open.*: no such file or directory`).
//
//
var PanicMatches Checker = &panicMatchesChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "PanicMatches", Params: []string{"function", "expected"}},
}
func (checker *panicMatchesChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, errmsg string) {
f := reflect.ValueOf(params[0])
if f.Kind() != reflect.Func || f.Type().NumIn() != 0 {
return false, "Function must take zero arguments"
}
defer func() {
// If the function has not panicked, then don't do the check.
if errmsg != "" {
return
}
obtained := recover()
names[0] = "panic"
if e, ok := obtained.(error); ok {
params[0] = e.Error()
} else if _, ok := obtained.(string); ok {
params[0] = obtained
} else {
errmsg = "Panic value is not a string or an error"
return
}
result, errmsg = matches(params[0], params[1])
}()
f.Call(nil)
return false, "Function has not panicked"
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// FitsTypeOf checker.
type fitsTypeChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The FitsTypeOf checker verifies that the obtained value is
// assignable to a variable with the same type as the provided
// sample value.
//
// For example:
//
// c.Assert(value, FitsTypeOf, int64(0))
// c.Assert(value, FitsTypeOf, os.Error(nil))
//
var FitsTypeOf Checker = &fitsTypeChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "FitsTypeOf", Params: []string{"obtained", "sample"}},
}
func (checker *fitsTypeChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
obtained := reflect.ValueOf(params[0])
sample := reflect.ValueOf(params[1])
if !obtained.IsValid() {
return false, ""
}
if !sample.IsValid() {
return false, "Invalid sample value"
}
return obtained.Type().AssignableTo(sample.Type()), ""
}
// -----------------------------------------------------------------------
// Implements checker.
type implementsChecker struct {
*CheckerInfo
}
// The Implements checker verifies that the obtained value
// implements the interface specified via a pointer to an interface
// variable.
//
// For example:
//
// var e os.Error
// c.Assert(err, Implements, &e)
//
var Implements Checker = &implementsChecker{
&CheckerInfo{Name: "Implements", Params: []string{"obtained", "ifaceptr"}},
}
func (checker *implementsChecker) Check(params []interface{}, names []string) (result bool, error string) {
obtained := reflect.ValueOf(params[0])
ifaceptr := reflect.ValueOf(params[1])
if !obtained.IsValid() {
return false, ""
}
if !ifaceptr.IsValid() || ifaceptr.Kind() != reflect.Ptr || ifaceptr.Elem().Kind() != reflect.Interface {
return false, "ifaceptr should be a pointer to an interface variable"
}
return obtained.Type().Implements(ifaceptr.Elem().Type()), ""
}