ginkgo
godotenv
ginkgo | godotenv | |
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13 | 17 | |
7,931 | 7,526 | |
- | - | |
8.8 | 3.7 | |
4 days ago | about 1 month ago | |
Go | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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ginkgo
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Writing tests for a Kubernetes Operator
Ginkgo: a testing framework based on the concept of "Behavior Driven Development" (BDD)
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We moved our Cloud operations to a Kubernetes Operator
We were also able to leverage Ginkgo's parallel testing runtime to run our integration tests on multiple concurrent processes. This provided multiple benefits: we could run our entire integration test suite in under 10 minutes and also reuse the same suite to load test the operator in a production-like environment. Using these tests, we were able to identify hot spots in the code that needed further optimization and experimented with ways to save API calls to ease the load on our own Kubernetes API server while also staying under various AWS rate limits. It was only after running these tests over and over again that I felt confident enough to deploy the operator to our dev and prod clusters.
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Recommendations for Learning Test-Driven Development (TDD) in Go?
A bit off-topic, but i really like the ginkgo BDD framework
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Start test names with “should” (2020)
You obviously are not familiar with the third circle of golang continuous integration hell that is ginkgo+gomega:
https://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/#adding-specs-to-a-suite
It’s actually worse than that example suggests. Stuff like Expect(“type safety”).ShouldBe(GreaterThan(13)) throws runtime errors.
The semantics of parallel test runs weren’t defined anywhere the last time I checked.
Anyway, you’ll be thinking back fondly to the days of TestShouldReplaceChildrenWhenUpdatingInstance because now you need to write nested function calls like:
Context(“instances”, func …)
Describe(“that are being updated”, …)
Expect(“should replace children”, …)
And to invoke that from the command line, you need to write a regex against whatever undocumented and unprinted string it internally concatenates together to uniquely describe the test.
Also, they dump color codes to stdout without checking that they are writing to a terminal, so there will be line noise all over whatever automated test logs you produce, or if you pipe stdout to a file.
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ginkgo integration with jira/elasticsearch/webex/slack
If you are using Ginkgo for your e2e, this library might of help.
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Testing frameworks, which to use?
https://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/ offers a simple way to create tables with different scenarios useful to generate different test cases based on a file like a yml without to need to develop useless code. Maybe at start seems to be a little verbose but depends how you design the test case.
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Testza - A modern test framework with pretty output
What are people’s thoughts on testing frameworks? I’ve heard that most devs only use the testing package in the standard library and the testify package for assertions— I assume this is because Go is meant to be lightweight and scalable, and adding external dependencies basically goes against that. But I’ve also seen devs use packages like ginkgo to make tests more structured and readable. What do you guys think?
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What are your favorite packages to use?
Ginkgo Behavioural test framework
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Air – Live reload when developing with Go
If you write your tests with Ginkgo [0] its CLI can do this for you. It also has nice facilities to quickly disable a test or portion of a test by pretending an X to the test function name, or to focus a test (only run that test) by prepending an F. It’s pretty nice.
[0]: https://onsi.github.io/ginkgo/
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Half a million lines of Go at The Khan Academy
The BDD testing framework Ginko [1] has some "weird" / unidiomatic patterns, yet it is very popular
https://github.com/onsi/ginkgo
godotenv
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Autenticação com Golang e AWS Cognito
Primeiro vamos carregar nossas envs com o pacote godotenv, depois iniciamos nosso cognito client, passando o COGNITO_CLIENT_ID, que pegamos anteriormente, depois iniciamos o gin e criamos um server, isso é o suficiente.
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Tools besides Go for a newbie
IDE: use whatever make you productive. I personally use vscode. VCS: git, as golang communities use github heavily as base for many libraries. AFAIK Linter: use staticcheck for linting as it looks like mostly used linting tool in go, supported by many also. In Vscode it will be recommended once you install go plugin. Libraries/Framework: actually the standard libraries already included many things you need, decent enough for your day-to-day development cycles(e.g. `net/http`). But here are things for extra: - Struct fields validator: validator - Http server lib: chi router , httprouter , fasthttp (for non standard http implementations, but fast) - Web Framework: echo , gin , fiber , beego , etc - Http client lib: most already covered by stdlib(net/http), so you rarely need extra lib for this, but if you really need some are: resty - CLI: cobra - Config: godotenv , viper - DB Drivers: sqlx , postgre , sqlite , mysql - nosql: redis , mongodb , elasticsearch - ORM: gorm , entgo , sqlc(codegen) - JS Transpiler: gopherjs - GUI: fyne - grpc: grpc - logging: zerolog - test: testify , gomock , dockertest - and many others you can find here
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Reading Environment Variable from a .env file on a Server
In his code it is done using https://github.com/joho/godotenv
- Libraries you use most of your projects?
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Restful API with Golang practical approach
envconfig: Library for managing configuration data from environment variables (https://github.com/joho/godotenv)
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Is this clear why its useful?
There is already a more complete, safer and neatly written godotenv alternative. It may be taken as an educational inspiration for next attempts.
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I need some help setting up variables for the sake of my sanity
Chances are you are going to set them in you real server, and most likely you will going to use Linux for that. So for local development create a .env file with those in there. And at the start of you program, load them. You can use https://github.com/joho/godotenv Don’t share that file of course, and don’t put it in git.
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How can I "source" a bash script?
Maybe https://github.com/joho/godotenv can help
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passwords, secrets, keys - best practice
joho/godotenv
- I'm looking for a good alternativ to Viper
What are some alternatives?
Testify - A toolkit with common assertions and mocks that plays nicely with the standard library
viper - Go configuration with fangs
GoConvey - Go testing in the browser. Integrates with `go test`. Write behavioral tests in Go.
gotenv - Load environment variables from `.env` or `io.Reader` in Go.
godog - Cucumber for golang
structs - Golang struct operations.
goblin - Minimal and Beautiful Go testing framework
xferspdy - Xferspdy provides binary diff and patch library in golang. [Mentioned in Awesome Go, https://github.com/avelino/awesome-go]
httpexpect - End-to-end HTTP and REST API testing for Go.
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
gocheck - Rich testing for the Go language
delve - Delve is a debugger for the Go programming language.