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cognitect-labs / Test Runner

Licence: epl-2.0

Programming Languages

clojure
4091 projects

test-runner

test-runner is a small library for discovering and running tests in projects using native Clojure deps (i.e, those that use only Clojure's built-in dependency tooling, not Leiningen/boot/etc.)

Rationale

Clojure's 1.9 release included standalone tools for dependency resolution, classpath construction, and launching processes. Clojure also ships with a straightforward testing library, clojure.test.

Using these tools, however, there was no standard way to discover and run unit tests. Including a heavyweight project tool such as Leiningen or Boot just for the purpose of testing is overkill. Projects can build their own ad-hoc test runners, but these tend to lack features that will eventually be desired, and tend towards the "quick and dirty," besides being nonstandard from project to project.

This library aims to fill in the gap and provide a standardized, easy-to-use entry point for discovering and running unit and property-based tests while remaining a lightweight entry in Clojure's suite of decomplected project management tools.

Usage

Include a dependency on this project in your deps.edn. You will probably wish to put it in test alias. You can also include the main namespace invocation using Clojure's :main-opts key. For example:

:aliases {:test {:extra-paths ["test"]
                 :extra-deps {com.cognitect/test-runner {:git/url "https://github.com/cognitect-labs/test-runner.git"
                                                         :sha "209b64504cb3bd3b99ecfec7937b358a879f55c1"}}
                 :main-opts ["-m" "cognitect.test-runner"]}}

Then, invoke Clojure via the command line, invoking the test alias:

Note: this assume Clojure tools >= 1.10.1.697. On older versions, use -A instead.

clj -M:test

This will scan your project's test directory for any tests defined using clojure.test and run them.

You may also supply any of the additional command line options:

  -d, --dir DIRNAME            Name of the directory containing tests. Defaults to "test".
  -n, --namespace SYMBOL       Symbol indicating a specific namespace to test.
  -r, --namespace-regex REGEX  Regex for namespaces to test. Defaults to #".*-test$"
                               (i.e, only namespaces ending in '-test' are evaluated)
  -v, --var SYMBOL             Symbol indicating the fully qualified name of a specific test.
  -i, --include KEYWORD        Run only tests that have this metadata keyword.
  -e, --exclude KEYWORD        Exclude tests with this metadata keyword.
  -H, --test-help              Display this help message

All options may be repeated multiple times, for a logical OR effect. For example, the following invocation will run all tests in the foo.bar and foo.baz namespaces, in the test and src directories:

clj -M:test -d test -d src -n foo.bar -n foo.baz

Using Inclusions and Exclusions

You can use inclusions and exclusions to run only a subset of your tests, identified by metadata on the test var.

For example, you could tag your integration tests like so:

(deftest ^:integration test-live-system
  (is (= 200 (:status (http/get "http://example.com")))))

Then to run only integration tests, you could do:

clj -M:test -i :integration

Or to run all tests except for integration tests:

clj -M:test -e :integration

If both inclusions and exclusions are present, exclusions take priority over inclusions.

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