2 unstable releases
0.2.0 | Aug 19, 2024 |
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0.1.0 | Jun 27, 2023 |
#82 in Testing
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64KB
1.5K
SLoC
murf
is a Mocking and Unit test Framework for Rust, that was inspired by the gmock framework implemented by google.
murf
is currently development and heavily used by internal projects of the peeriot organization. We thought that murf
may be useful for other developers as well, so we decided to make it open source. We think it is helpful for RUST developers.
If the solution appeals to you we would of course be very happy about your contribution to the project.
We also appreciate any feedback on the solution. It helps us to improve the crate.
We are looking forward to your feedback :)
Features
murf
has a wide list of features. To get a better overview here are the most important once:
murf
uses proc marcos to generate a mocked versions of your traits and types. This makes it very easy to use.murf
is only a dev-dependency. Which keeps your productive code clean.murf
usesMatcher
(used to check the arguments of an expected function call) andAction
(action that is executed for an expected function call) traits (as known from gmock) you can use to implement custom behaviour. This makes it very easy to extend.murf
uses a handle which you can use to add more expectations while the actual mock object was already passed to the code under test. This makes is more flexible.murf
is able to deal with local references as function arguments as well as return values.murf
is able to handle differentself
arguments and return types (like&Self
,&mut Self
,Box<Self>
,Pin<&mut Self>
,Arc<Self>
and more)murf
supports generic traits and associated typesmurf
supports default actions for the mocked methodsmurf
is able to handle expectations in a defined sequencemurf
supports checkpoints to validate all expectations at a given pointmurf
is able to handle a call count for a defined expectation (with support for ranges)murf
supports mocking associated functions as well (so you can mock constructors likeMyTrait::new()
)
How to use
The following section will give simple code examples how to use murf
in your environment to create mocked objects. For more detailed examples please have a look into the tests
directory. For each feature that is supported by murf
we have at least one example that shows how to use it.
Simple example
The following example shows a service that uses a trait to execute some code. This trait is then mocked using murf
and passed to service instead a real implementation. So the code of the service can be tested against the trait.
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call, matcher::eq, action::Return};
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
/// A service that uses [`MyTrait`]
struct Service<T: MyTrait> {
inner: T,
}
impl<T: MyTrait> Service<T> {
fn new(inner: T) -> Self {
Self { inner }
}
fn exec(&self) -> usize {
self.inner.exec(4)
}
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
}
fn main() {
let mock = MyStruct::mock();
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(4))).will_once(Return(104));
let service = Service::new(mock);
assert_eq!(104, service.exec());
}
Using handles
Instead of defining all expectations before the mocked object is passed to the code under test, you can use a so called handle to control and manipulate the mocked object.
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call, matcher::eq, action::Return};
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
/// A service that uses [`MyTrait`]
struct Service<T: MyTrait> {
inner: T,
}
impl<T: MyTrait> Service<T> {
fn new(inner: T) -> Self {
Self { inner }
}
fn exec(&self) -> usize {
self.inner.exec(4)
}
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
}
fn main() {
let (handle, mock) = MyStruct::mock_with_handle();
// Move the mocked object to the service
let service = Service::new(mock);
// Use the handle to control the mocked object
expect_method_call!(handle as MyTrait, exec(eq(4))).will_once(Return(104));
expect_method_call!(handle as MyTrait, exec(eq(4))).will_once(Return(105));
assert_eq!(104, service.exec());
assert_eq!(105, service.exec());
handle.checkpoint();
expect_method_call!(handle as MyTrait, exec(eq(4))).will_once(Return(106));
assert_eq!(106, service.exec());
}
Using sequences
By default expectations are not bound to a specific order. As long as all defined expectations are executes with the correct parameters, once the handle is dropped, no error is raised. To bind expectations to a specific order you can use Sequence
or InSequence
.
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call, InSequence, action::Return};
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
}
fn main() {
let seq = InSequence::default();
let mock = MyStruct::mock();
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(_)).will_once(Return(4));
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(_)).will_once(Return(5));
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(_)).will_once(Return(6));
assert_eq!(4, mock.exec(1));
assert_eq!(5, mock.exec(2));
assert_eq!(6, mock.exec(3));
}
Using call counts
From time to time it might be also interesting to restrict the expected call count for an expectation. This can be done by using the times
method of the expectation builder.
If you use times
in combination with Sequence
the number of calls to an expectation needs to match the expected call count before the next expectation in the sequence is considered active.
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call, InSequence};
use murf::matcher::eq;
use murf::action::Return;
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, x: usize) -> usize;
}
}
fn main() {
let seq = InSequence::default();
let mock = MyStruct::mock();
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(1)))
.times(..2) // 0-1 times
.will_repeatedly(Return(4));
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(2)))
.times(1..) // at least one time
.will_repeatedly(Return(5));
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(3)))
.times(2..) // at least two times
.will_repeatedly(Return(6));
assert_eq!(5, mock.exec(2));
assert_eq!(6, mock.exec(3));
assert_eq!(6, mock.exec(3));
}
Using matchers
To specify what arguments are expected for a call you can use so called Matcher
s. If you are not interested in verifying a certain argument you can use the any
matcher or simply a _
in the expect_method_call!
macro.
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call};
use murf::matcher::{str_starts_with, eq};
use murf::action::Return;
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, a: usize, b: &str, c: usize);
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, a: usize, b: &str, c: usize);
}
}
fn main() {
let mock = MyStruct::mock();
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(1), str_starts_with("Hello"), _));
mock.exec(1, "Hello World :)", 1234);
}
Nesting matchers
Matchers can also be nested. This is useful for example if you want to manipulate an argument before it is passed to the actual matcher.
use std::ops::Deref;
use murf::{mock, expect_method_call};
use murf::matcher::{deref, eq};
use murf::action::Return;
/// Simple trait that executes something once `exec` is called.
trait MyTrait {
fn exec(&self, a: Wrapper);
}
struct Wrapper(usize);
impl Deref for Wrapper {
type Target = usize;
fn deref(&self) -> &Self::Target {
&self.0
}
}
mock! {
#[derive(Default)]
pub struct MyStruct;
impl MyTrait for MyStruct {
fn exec(&self, a: Wrapper);
}
}
fn main() {
let mock = MyStruct::mock();
// Using `eq` directly would cause an error.
// expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(eq(1)));
expect_method_call!(mock as MyTrait, exec(deref(eq(1))));
mock.exec(Wrapper(1));
}
Comparison to other crates
murf
is not the only mocking and unit test framework out there, but murf is the only one that combines the best features of all other crates.
v
fully supported-
partially supportedx
not supported?
unknown
Feature | murf |
mockall |
mockers |
mock_derive |
galvanic_mock |
pseudo |
faux |
unimock |
mry |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
maintained | v | v | - | x | x | x | - | v | - |
documentation | v | v | v | - | - | - | v | v | - |
proc macro | v | v | v | v | v | x | v | v | v |
dev-dependency only | v | v | - | - | - | v | - | - | - |
matcher / action interface | v | v | x | x | - | - | v | v | - |
split into handle and mock object | v | x | v | x | x | x | x | x | x |
support for local references | v | v | x | ? | ? | x | - | x | ? |
support for Self type |
v | v | v | ? | ? | v | ? | v | ? |
support for generic traits | v | v | v | v | v | - | x | - | - |
support for associated types | v | v | - | ? | - | - | x | - | - |
support for associated functions | v | v | x | ? | x | - | x | x | v |
support for default actions | v | x | x | v | x | - | x | x | v |
define expectations in a sequence | v | v | v | ? | x | x | x | - | x |
support for checkpoints | v | v | v | ? | x | - | x | x | x |
define call count for expectations | v | v | v | x | v | - | v | v | v |
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license.
Dependencies
~5–11MB
~131K SLoC