mockery
Testify
Our great sponsors
mockery | Testify | |
---|---|---|
20 | 64 | |
5,608 | 22,019 | |
2.5% | 1.6% | |
8.6 | 8.6 | |
2 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Go | Go | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mockery
-
I Write Tests in Go
I'm far too lazy to write mocks by hand in go. You can generate a mock for a given interface with mockery https://github.com/vektra/mockery
-
go-ecommerce-microservices: A practical e-commerce microservices, built with cqrs, event sourcing, vertical slice architecture, event-driven architecture.
Some of the features: - ✅ Using Vertical Slice Architecture as a high level architecture - ✅ Using Event Driven Architecture on top of RabbitMQ Message Broker with a custom [Event Bus](pkg/messaging/bus/) - ✅ Using Event Sourcing in Audit Based services like [Orders Service](services/orders/) - ✅ Using CQRS Pattern and Mediator Patternon top of Go-MediatR library - ✅ Using Dependency Injection and Inversion of Controlon top of uber-go/fx library - ✅ Using RESTFul api with Echo framework and using swagger with swaggo/swag library - ✅ Using Postgres and EventStoreDB to write databases with fully supports transactions(ACID) - ✅ Using MongoDB and Elastic Search for read databases (NOSQL) - ✅ Using OpenTelemetry for collection Distributed Tracing with using Jaeger and Zipkin - ✅ Using OpenTelemetry for collection Metrics with using Prometheus and Grafana - ✅ Using Unit Test for testing small units with mocking dependent classes and using Mockery for mocking dependencies - ✅ Using End2End Test and Integration Test for testing features with all of their real dependeinces using docker containers (cleanup tests) and testcontainers-go library
- Direction of mockery: absorb different styles of mocks into this project · vektra mockery · Discussion #671
-
Go: Write Mock Test cases using Mockery and
Read mockery documentation: https://vektra.github.io/mockery/
-
Mocking unexported interfaces?
https://github.com/vektra/mockery is the better mocking framework in my biased opinion. The Google maintainers for gomock seem to have neglected the project.
-
I want to contribute to open source but don't know where to start
There are some one liner changes you can implement in https://github.com/vektra/mockery
-
Is gomock still maintained and recommended?
When there's just one heavyweight dependency you're interacting with, perhaps a one-off stub/fake is simpler, but I would posit that auto-generated mocks via things like mockery + go:generate leave less test code to maintain vs. perhaps many stubs across the project.
-
vektra/mockery: v2.21.0 includes "packages" config section, allowing 5x faster mock generation and more fine-grained control over mocks
Please take a look at the documentation linked here, and the related discussion topic that spawned this.
-
Issue implementing interface method that returns another interface
As you can see, the package has a chained method Logical().Write() . Since I want to create tests for PublicFunctionIWantToTest, I want to pass down all the functionality as interface so that I can use https://vektra.github.io/mockery/ to create mocks for it.
- FEEDBACK REQUESTED: Deprecation of automatic interface discovery · Discussion #549 · vektra/mockery
Testify
-
What 3rd-party libraries do you use often/all the time?
github.com/stretchr/testify
-
Testing calls to Daily's REST API in Go
I then verify that there are no issues with writing the body with require.NoError() from the testify toolkit. This will ensure the test fails if something happens to go wrong at this point.
-
Gopher Pythonista #1: Moving From Python To Go
For testing purposes, Go provides a go test command that automatically discovers tests within your application and supports features such as caching and code coverage. However, if you require more advanced testing capabilities such as suites or mocking, you will need to install a toolkit like testify. Overall, while Go provides a highly effective testing experience, it's worth noting that writing tests in Python using pytest is arguably one of the most enjoyable testing experiences I have encountered across all programming languages.
- Why elixir over Golang
-
How to start a Go project in 2023
Things I can't live without in a new Go project in no particular order:
- https://github.com/golangci/golangci-lint - meta-linter
- https://goreleaser.com - automate release workflows
- https://magefile.org - build tool that can version your tools
- https://github.com/ory/dockertest/v3 - run containers for e2e testing
- https://github.com/ecordell/optgen - generate functional options
- https://golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer - generate String()
- https://mvdan.cc/gofumpt - stricter gofmt
- https://github.com/stretchr/testify - test assertion library
- https://github.com/rs/zerolog - logging
- https://github.com/spf13/cobra - CLI framework
FWIW, I just lifted all the tools we use for https://github.com/authzed/spicedb
We've also written some custom linters that might be useful for other folks: https://github.com/authzed/spicedb/tree/main/tools/analyzers
-
Do you wrap testing libraries?
Im thinking in wrap or not the library https://github.com/stretchr/testify to do my tests.
-
[Go] How to unit test for exception handling?
Are you limited to the std lib, or can you use testify? You can require things like require.Error()
-
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
-
Is gomock still maintained and recommended?
To answer OP directly, I am largely quite happy with mockery (and testify) to write expressive tests.
-
Golang, GraphQL y Postgress
Como herramientas te recomiendo: FastJson https://github.com/valyala/fastjson : Si necesitas leer jsons Testify https://github.com/stretchr/testify : Para mockear y testear
What are some alternatives?
gomock - GoMock is a mocking framework for the Go programming language.
ginkgo - A Modern Testing Framework for Go
counterfeiter - A tool for generating self-contained, type-safe test doubles in go
GoConvey - Go testing in the browser. Integrates with `go test`. Write behavioral tests in Go.
minimock - Powerful mock generation tool for Go programming language
gomega - Ginkgo's Preferred Matcher Library
go-sqlmock - Sql mock driver for golang to test database interactions
hoverfly - Lightweight service virtualization/ API simulation / API mocking tool for developers and testers
gotest.tools - A collection of packages to augment the go testing package and support common patterns.
moq - Interface mocking tool for go generate
go-cmp - Package for comparing Go values in tests