ExUnit.Callbacks View Source
Defines ExUnit callbacks.
This module defines the setup/1
, setup/2
, setup_all/1
, and
setup_all/2
callbacks, as well as the on_exit/2
, start_supervised/2
and stop_supervised/1
functions.
The setup callbacks are defined via macros and each one can
optionally receive a map with test state and metadata, usually
referred to as context
. The context to be used in the tests can be
optionally extended by the setup callbacks by returning a properly
structured value (see below).
The setup_all
callbacks are invoked only once per module, before any
test is run. All setup
callbacks are run before each test. No callback
is run if the test case has no tests or all tests have been filtered out.
setup
and setup_all
callbacks can be defined by a block, by passing
an atom naming a one-arity function, or by passing a list of such
atoms. Both can opt to receive the current context by specifying it
as parameter if defined by a block. Functions used to define a test
setup must accept the context as single argument.
A test module can define multiple setup
and setup_all
callbacks,
and they are invoked in order of appearance.
start_supervised/2
is used to start processes under a supervisor. The
supervisor is linked to the current test process. The supervisor as well
as all child processes are guaranteed to terminate before any on_exit/2
callback runs.
on_exit/2
callbacks are registered on demand, usually to undo an action
performed by a setup callback. on_exit/2
may also take a reference,
allowing the callback to be overridden in the future. A registered on_exit/2
callback will always run, while failures in setup
and setup_all
will stop
all remaining setup callbacks from executing.
Finally, setup_all
callbacks run in a separate process per module, while
all setup
callbacks run in the same process as the test itself. on_exit/2
callbacks always run in a separate process, as implied by their name. The
test process always exits with reason :shutdown
, which means any process
linked to the test process will also exit, although asynchronously. Therefore
it is preferred to use start_supervised/2
to guarantee synchronous termination.
Here is a rundown of the life-cycle of the test process:
- the test process is spawned
- it runs
setup/2
callbacks - it runs the test itself
- it stops all supervised processes
- the test process exits with reason
:shutdown
on_exit/2
callbacks are executed in a separate process
Context
If setup_all
or setup
return a keyword list, a map, or {:ok,
keywords | map}
, the keyword list or map will be merged into the
current context and will be available in all subsequent setup_all
,
setup
, and the test
itself.
Returning :ok
leaves the context unchanged (in setup
and setup_all
callbacks).
Returning anything else from setup_all
will force all tests to fail,
while a bad response from setup
causes the current test to fail.
Examples
defmodule AssertionTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: true
# "setup_all" is called once per module before any test runs
setup_all do
IO.puts "Starting AssertionTest"
# Context is not updated here
:ok
end
# "setup" is called before each test
setup do
IO.puts "This is a setup callback for #{inspect self()}"
on_exit fn ->
IO.puts "This is invoked once the test is done. Process: #{inspect self()}"
end
# Returns extra metadata to be merged into context
[hello: "world"]
# Similarly, any of the following would work:
# {:ok, [hello: "world"]}
# %{hello: "world"}
# {:ok, %{hello: "world"}}
end
# Same as above, but receives the context as argument
setup context do
IO.puts "Setting up: #{context.test}"
:ok
end
# Setups can also invoke a local or imported function that returns a context
setup :invoke_local_or_imported_function
test "always pass" do
assert true
end
test "uses metadata from setup", context do
assert context[:hello] == "world"
assert context[:from_named_setup] == true
end
defp invoke_local_or_imported_function(context) do
[from_named_setup: true]
end
end
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Defines a callback that runs once the test exits
Defines a callback to be run before each test in a case
Defines a callback to be run before each test in a case
Defines a callback to be run before all tests in a case
Defines a callback to be run before all tests in a case
Starts a child process under the test supervisor
Same as start_supervised/2
but returns the PID on success and raises if
not started properly
Stops a child process started via start_supervised/2
Link to this section Functions
on_exit(name_or_ref \\ make_ref(), callback) View Source
Defines a callback that runs once the test exits.
callback
is a function that receives no arguments and
runs in a separate process than the caller.
on_exit/2
is usually called from setup
and setup_all
callbacks, often to undo the action performed during the setup.
However, on_exit/2
may also be called dynamically, where a
reference can be used to guarantee the callback will be invoked
only once.
setup(block) View Source (macro)
Defines a callback to be run before each test in a case.
Accepts a block or the name of a one-arity function in the form of an atom, or a list of such atoms.
Can return values to be merged into the context, to set up the state for tests. For more details, see the "Context" section shown above.
Examples
def clean_up_tmp_directory(context) do
# perform setup
:ok
end
setup :clean_up_tmp_directory
setup do
[conn: Plug.Conn.build_conn()]
end
setup(context, block) View Source (macro)
Defines a callback to be run before each test in a case.
Accepts a block or the name of a one-arity function in the form of an atom, or a list of such atoms.
Can return values to be merged into the context
, to set up the state for
tests. For more details, see the "Context" section shown above.
Examples
setup context do
[conn: Plug.Conn.build_conn()]
end
setup_all(block) View Source (macro)
Defines a callback to be run before all tests in a case.
Accepts a block or the name of a one-arity function in the form of an atom, or a list of such atoms.
Can return values to be merged into the context
, to set up the state for
tests. For more details, see the "Context" section shown above.
Examples
def clean_up_tmp_directory(context) do
# perform setup
:ok
end
# block
setup_all do
[conn: Plug.Conn.build_conn()]
end
# one-arity function name
setup_all :clean_up_tmp_directory
setup_all(context, block) View Source (macro)
Defines a callback to be run before all tests in a case.
Accepts a block or the name of a one-arity function in the form of an atom, or a list of such atoms.
Can return values to be merged into the context
, to set up the state for
tests. For more details, see the "Context" section shown above.
Examples
setup_all context do
[conn: Plug.Conn.build_conn()]
end
start_supervised(child_spec_or_module, opts \\ [])
View Source
(since 1.5.0)
start_supervised(
Supervisor.child_spec() | module() | {module(), term()},
keyword()
) :: Supervisor.on_start_child()
start_supervised( Supervisor.child_spec() | module() | {module(), term()}, keyword() ) :: Supervisor.on_start_child()
Starts a child process under the test supervisor.
It expects a child specification or a module, similar to the ones
given to Supervisor.start_link/2
. For example, if your application
starts a supervision tree by running:
Supervisor.start_link([MyServer, {OtherSupervisor, ...}], ...)
You can start those processes under test in isolation by running:
start_supervised(MyServer)
start_supervised({OtherSupervisor, :initial_value})
A keyword list can also be given if there is a need to change the child specification for the given child process:
start_supervised({MyServer, :initial_value}, restart: :temporary)
See the Supervisor
module for a discussion on child specifications
and the available specification keys.
The advantage of starting a process under the test supervisor is that
it is guaranteed to exit before the next test starts. Furthermore,
because the child process is supervised, it will be restarted in case
of crashes according to the :restart
strategy in the child
specification, even if stopped manually. Therefore, to guarantee a
process started with start_supervised/2
terminates without restarts,
see stop_supervised/1
.
This function returns {:ok, pid}
in case of success, otherwise it
returns {:error, reason}
.
start_supervised!(child_spec_or_module, opts \\ []) View Source (since 1.6.0)
Same as start_supervised/2
but returns the PID on success and raises if
not started properly.
stop_supervised(id)
View Source
(since 1.5.0)
stop_supervised(id :: term()) :: :ok | {:error, :not_found}
stop_supervised(id :: term()) :: :ok | {:error, :not_found}
Stops a child process started via start_supervised/2
.
This function expects the id
in the child specification.
For example:
{:ok, _} = start_supervised(MyServer)
:ok = stop_supervised(MyServer)
It returns :ok
if there is a supervised process with such
id
, {:error, :not_found}
otherwise.