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https://github.com/ceph/ceph-csi.git
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007988d1cb
Bumps [github.com/onsi/gomega](https://github.com/onsi/gomega) from 1.27.8 to 1.27.10. - [Release notes](https://github.com/onsi/gomega/releases) - [Changelog](https://github.com/onsi/gomega/blob/master/CHANGELOG.md) - [Commits](https://github.com/onsi/gomega/compare/v1.27.8...v1.27.10) --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: github.com/onsi/gomega dependency-type: direct:production update-type: version-update:semver-patch ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com>
659 lines
26 KiB
Go
659 lines
26 KiB
Go
package gomega
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import (
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"time"
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"github.com/google/go-cmp/cmp"
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"github.com/onsi/gomega/matchers"
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"github.com/onsi/gomega/types"
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)
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// Equal uses reflect.DeepEqual to compare actual with expected. Equal is strict about
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// types when performing comparisons.
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// It is an error for both actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
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func Equal(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.EqualMatcher{
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Expected: expected,
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}
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}
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// BeEquivalentTo is more lax than Equal, allowing equality between different types.
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// This is done by converting actual to have the type of expected before
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// attempting equality with reflect.DeepEqual.
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// It is an error for actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
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func BeEquivalentTo(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeEquivalentToMatcher{
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Expected: expected,
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}
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}
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// BeComparableTo uses gocmp.Equal from github.com/google/go-cmp (instead of reflect.DeepEqual) to perform a deep comparison.
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// You can pass cmp.Option as options.
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// It is an error for actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
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func BeComparableTo(expected interface{}, opts ...cmp.Option) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeComparableToMatcher{
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Expected: expected,
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Options: opts,
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}
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}
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// BeIdenticalTo uses the == operator to compare actual with expected.
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// BeIdenticalTo is strict about types when performing comparisons.
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// It is an error for both actual and expected to be nil. Use BeNil() instead.
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func BeIdenticalTo(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeIdenticalToMatcher{
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Expected: expected,
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}
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}
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// BeNil succeeds if actual is nil
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func BeNil() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeNilMatcher{}
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}
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// BeTrue succeeds if actual is true
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func BeTrue() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeTrueMatcher{}
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}
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// BeFalse succeeds if actual is false
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func BeFalse() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeFalseMatcher{}
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}
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// HaveOccurred succeeds if actual is a non-nil error
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// The typical Go error checking pattern looks like:
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//
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// err := SomethingThatMightFail()
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// Expect(err).ShouldNot(HaveOccurred())
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func HaveOccurred() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveOccurredMatcher{}
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}
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// Succeed passes if actual is a nil error
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// Succeed is intended to be used with functions that return a single error value. Instead of
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//
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// err := SomethingThatMightFail()
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// Expect(err).ShouldNot(HaveOccurred())
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//
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// You can write:
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//
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// Expect(SomethingThatMightFail()).Should(Succeed())
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//
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// It is a mistake to use Succeed with a function that has multiple return values. Gomega's Ω and Expect
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// functions automatically trigger failure if any return values after the first return value are non-zero/non-nil.
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// This means that Ω(MultiReturnFunc()).ShouldNot(Succeed()) can never pass.
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func Succeed() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.SucceedMatcher{}
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}
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// MatchError succeeds if actual is a non-nil error that matches the passed in
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// string, error, or matcher.
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//
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// These are valid use-cases:
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//
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// Expect(err).Should(MatchError("an error")) //asserts that err.Error() == "an error"
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// Expect(err).Should(MatchError(SomeError)) //asserts that err == SomeError (via reflect.DeepEqual)
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// Expect(err).Should(MatchError(ContainSubstring("sprocket not found"))) // asserts that edrr.Error() contains substring "sprocket not found"
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//
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// It is an error for err to be nil or an object that does not implement the
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// Error interface
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func MatchError(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.MatchErrorMatcher{
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Expected: expected,
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}
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}
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// BeClosed succeeds if actual is a closed channel.
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// It is an error to pass a non-channel to BeClosed, it is also an error to pass nil
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//
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// In order to check whether or not the channel is closed, Gomega must try to read from the channel
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// (even in the `ShouldNot(BeClosed())` case). You should keep this in mind if you wish to make subsequent assertions about
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// values coming down the channel.
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//
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// Also, if you are testing that a *buffered* channel is closed you must first read all values out of the channel before
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// asserting that it is closed (it is not possible to detect that a buffered-channel has been closed until all its buffered values are read).
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//
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// Finally, as a corollary: it is an error to check whether or not a send-only channel is closed.
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func BeClosed() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeClosedMatcher{}
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}
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// Receive succeeds if there is a value to be received on actual.
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// Actual must be a channel (and cannot be a send-only channel) -- anything else is an error.
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//
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// Receive returns immediately and never blocks:
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//
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// - If there is nothing on the channel `c` then Expect(c).Should(Receive()) will fail and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will pass.
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//
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// - If the channel `c` is closed then Expect(c).Should(Receive()) will fail and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will pass.
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//
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// - If there is something on the channel `c` ready to be read, then Expect(c).Should(Receive()) will pass and Ω(c).ShouldNot(Receive()) will fail.
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//
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// If you have a go-routine running in the background that will write to channel `c` you can:
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//
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// Eventually(c).Should(Receive())
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//
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// This will timeout if nothing gets sent to `c` (you can modify the timeout interval as you normally do with `Eventually`)
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//
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// A similar use-case is to assert that no go-routine writes to a channel (for a period of time). You can do this with `Consistently`:
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//
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// Consistently(c).ShouldNot(Receive())
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//
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// You can pass `Receive` a matcher. If you do so, it will match the received object against the matcher. For example:
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//
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// Expect(c).Should(Receive(Equal("foo")))
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//
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// When given a matcher, `Receive` will always fail if there is nothing to be received on the channel.
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//
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// Passing Receive a matcher is especially useful when paired with Eventually:
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//
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// Eventually(c).Should(Receive(ContainSubstring("bar")))
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//
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// will repeatedly attempt to pull values out of `c` until a value matching "bar" is received.
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//
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// Finally, if you want to have a reference to the value *sent* to the channel you can pass the `Receive` matcher a pointer to a variable of the appropriate type:
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//
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// var myThing thing
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// Eventually(thingChan).Should(Receive(&myThing))
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// Expect(myThing.Sprocket).Should(Equal("foo"))
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// Expect(myThing.IsValid()).Should(BeTrue())
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func Receive(args ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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var arg interface{}
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if len(args) > 0 {
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arg = args[0]
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}
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return &matchers.ReceiveMatcher{
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Arg: arg,
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}
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}
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// BeSent succeeds if a value can be sent to actual.
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// Actual must be a channel (and cannot be a receive-only channel) that can sent the type of the value passed into BeSent -- anything else is an error.
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// In addition, actual must not be closed.
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//
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// BeSent never blocks:
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//
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// - If the channel `c` is not ready to receive then Expect(c).Should(BeSent("foo")) will fail immediately
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// - If the channel `c` is eventually ready to receive then Eventually(c).Should(BeSent("foo")) will succeed.. presuming the channel becomes ready to receive before Eventually's timeout
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// - If the channel `c` is closed then Expect(c).Should(BeSent("foo")) and Ω(c).ShouldNot(BeSent("foo")) will both fail immediately
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//
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// Of course, the value is actually sent to the channel. The point of `BeSent` is less to make an assertion about the availability of the channel (which is typically an implementation detail that your test should not be concerned with).
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// Rather, the point of `BeSent` is to make it possible to easily and expressively write tests that can timeout on blocked channel sends.
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func BeSent(arg interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeSentMatcher{
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Arg: arg,
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}
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}
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// MatchRegexp succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that matches the
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// passed-in regexp. Optional arguments can be provided to construct a regexp
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// via fmt.Sprintf().
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func MatchRegexp(regexp string, args ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.MatchRegexpMatcher{
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Regexp: regexp,
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Args: args,
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}
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}
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// ContainSubstring succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that contains the
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// passed-in substring. Optional arguments can be provided to construct the substring
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// via fmt.Sprintf().
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func ContainSubstring(substr string, args ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.ContainSubstringMatcher{
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Substr: substr,
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Args: args,
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}
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}
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// HavePrefix succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that contains the
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// passed-in string as a prefix. Optional arguments can be provided to construct
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// via fmt.Sprintf().
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func HavePrefix(prefix string, args ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HavePrefixMatcher{
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Prefix: prefix,
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Args: args,
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}
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}
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// HaveSuffix succeeds if actual is a string or stringer that contains the
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// passed-in string as a suffix. Optional arguments can be provided to construct
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// via fmt.Sprintf().
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func HaveSuffix(suffix string, args ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveSuffixMatcher{
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Suffix: suffix,
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Args: args,
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}
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}
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// MatchJSON succeeds if actual is a string or stringer of JSON that matches
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// the expected JSON. The JSONs are decoded and the resulting objects are compared via
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// reflect.DeepEqual so things like key-ordering and whitespace shouldn't matter.
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func MatchJSON(json interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.MatchJSONMatcher{
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JSONToMatch: json,
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}
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}
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// MatchXML succeeds if actual is a string or stringer of XML that matches
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// the expected XML. The XMLs are decoded and the resulting objects are compared via
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// reflect.DeepEqual so things like whitespaces shouldn't matter.
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func MatchXML(xml interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.MatchXMLMatcher{
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XMLToMatch: xml,
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}
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}
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// MatchYAML succeeds if actual is a string or stringer of YAML that matches
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// the expected YAML. The YAML's are decoded and the resulting objects are compared via
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// reflect.DeepEqual so things like key-ordering and whitespace shouldn't matter.
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func MatchYAML(yaml interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.MatchYAMLMatcher{
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YAMLToMatch: yaml,
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}
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}
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// BeEmpty succeeds if actual is empty. Actual must be of type string, array, map, chan, or slice.
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func BeEmpty() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeEmptyMatcher{}
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}
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// HaveLen succeeds if actual has the passed-in length. Actual must be of type string, array, map, chan, or slice.
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func HaveLen(count int) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveLenMatcher{
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Count: count,
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}
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}
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// HaveCap succeeds if actual has the passed-in capacity. Actual must be of type array, chan, or slice.
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func HaveCap(count int) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveCapMatcher{
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Count: count,
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}
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}
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// BeZero succeeds if actual is the zero value for its type or if actual is nil.
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func BeZero() types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeZeroMatcher{}
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}
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// ContainElement succeeds if actual contains the passed in element. By default
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// ContainElement() uses Equal() to perform the match, however a matcher can be
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// passed in instead:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ContainElement(ContainSubstring("Bar")))
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//
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// Actual must be an array, slice or map. For maps, ContainElement searches
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// through the map's values.
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//
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// If you want to have a copy of the matching element(s) found you can pass a
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// pointer to a variable of the appropriate type. If the variable isn't a slice
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// or map, then exactly one match will be expected and returned. If the variable
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// is a slice or map, then at least one match is expected and all matches will be
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// stored in the variable.
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//
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// var findings []string
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ContainElement(ContainSubString("Bar", &findings)))
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func ContainElement(element interface{}, result ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.ContainElementMatcher{
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Element: element,
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Result: result,
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}
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}
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// BeElementOf succeeds if actual is contained in the passed in elements.
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// BeElementOf() always uses Equal() to perform the match.
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// When the passed in elements are comprised of a single element that is either an Array or Slice, BeElementOf() behaves
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// as the reverse of ContainElement() that operates with Equal() to perform the match.
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//
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// Expect(2).Should(BeElementOf([]int{1, 2}))
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// Expect(2).Should(BeElementOf([2]int{1, 2}))
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//
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// Otherwise, BeElementOf() provides a syntactic sugar for Or(Equal(_), Equal(_), ...):
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//
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// Expect(2).Should(BeElementOf(1, 2))
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//
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// Actual must be typed.
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func BeElementOf(elements ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeElementOfMatcher{
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Elements: elements,
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}
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}
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// BeKeyOf succeeds if actual is contained in the keys of the passed in map.
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// BeKeyOf() always uses Equal() to perform the match between actual and the map keys.
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//
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// Expect("foo").Should(BeKeyOf(map[string]bool{"foo": true, "bar": false}))
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func BeKeyOf(element interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.BeKeyOfMatcher{
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Map: element,
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}
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}
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// ConsistOf succeeds if actual contains precisely the elements passed into the matcher. The ordering of the elements does not matter.
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// By default ConsistOf() uses Equal() to match the elements, however custom matchers can be passed in instead. Here are some examples:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ConsistOf("FooBar", "Foo"))
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ConsistOf(ContainSubstring("Bar"), "Foo"))
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ConsistOf(ContainSubstring("Foo"), ContainSubstring("Foo")))
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//
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// Actual must be an array, slice or map. For maps, ConsistOf matches against the map's values.
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//
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// You typically pass variadic arguments to ConsistOf (as in the examples above). However, if you need to pass in a slice you can provided that it
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// is the only element passed in to ConsistOf:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ConsistOf([]string{"FooBar", "Foo"}))
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//
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// Note that Go's type system does not allow you to write this as ConsistOf([]string{"FooBar", "Foo"}...) as []string and []interface{} are different types - hence the need for this special rule.
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func ConsistOf(elements ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.ConsistOfMatcher{
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Elements: elements,
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}
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}
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// HaveExactElemets succeeds if actual contains elements that precisely match the elemets passed into the matcher. The ordering of the elements does matter.
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// By default HaveExactElements() uses Equal() to match the elements, however custom matchers can be passed in instead. Here are some examples:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(HaveExactElements("Foo", "FooBar"))
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(HaveExactElements("Foo", ContainSubstring("Bar")))
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(HaveExactElements(ContainSubstring("Foo"), ContainSubstring("Foo")))
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//
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// Actual must be an array or slice.
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func HaveExactElements(elements ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveExactElementsMatcher{
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Elements: elements,
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}
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}
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// ContainElements succeeds if actual contains the passed in elements. The ordering of the elements does not matter.
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// By default ContainElements() uses Equal() to match the elements, however custom matchers can be passed in instead. Here are some examples:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ContainElements("FooBar"))
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(ContainElements(ContainSubstring("Bar"), "Foo"))
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//
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// Actual must be an array, slice or map.
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// For maps, ContainElements searches through the map's values.
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func ContainElements(elements ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.ContainElementsMatcher{
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Elements: elements,
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}
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}
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// HaveEach succeeds if actual solely contains elements that match the passed in element.
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// Please note that if actual is empty, HaveEach always will succeed.
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// By default HaveEach() uses Equal() to perform the match, however a
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// matcher can be passed in instead:
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//
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// Expect([]string{"Foo", "FooBar"}).Should(HaveEach(ContainSubstring("Foo")))
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//
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// Actual must be an array, slice or map.
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// For maps, HaveEach searches through the map's values.
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func HaveEach(element interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveEachMatcher{
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Element: element,
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}
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}
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// HaveKey succeeds if actual is a map with the passed in key.
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// By default HaveKey uses Equal() to perform the match, however a
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// matcher can be passed in instead:
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//
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// Expect(map[string]string{"Foo": "Bar", "BazFoo": "Duck"}).Should(HaveKey(MatchRegexp(`.+Foo$`)))
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func HaveKey(key interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveKeyMatcher{
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Key: key,
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}
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}
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// HaveKeyWithValue succeeds if actual is a map with the passed in key and value.
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// By default HaveKeyWithValue uses Equal() to perform the match, however a
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// matcher can be passed in instead:
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//
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// Expect(map[string]string{"Foo": "Bar", "BazFoo": "Duck"}).Should(HaveKeyWithValue("Foo", "Bar"))
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// Expect(map[string]string{"Foo": "Bar", "BazFoo": "Duck"}).Should(HaveKeyWithValue(MatchRegexp(`.+Foo$`), "Bar"))
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func HaveKeyWithValue(key interface{}, value interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
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return &matchers.HaveKeyWithValueMatcher{
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Key: key,
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Value: value,
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}
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}
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// HaveField succeeds if actual is a struct and the value at the passed in field
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// matches the passed in matcher. By default HaveField used Equal() to perform the match,
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// however a matcher can be passed in in stead.
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//
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// The field must be a string that resolves to the name of a field in the struct. Structs can be traversed
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// using the '.' delimiter. If the field ends with '()' a method named field is assumed to exist on the struct and is invoked.
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// Such methods must take no arguments and return a single value:
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//
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// type Book struct {
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// Title string
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// Author Person
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// }
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// type Person struct {
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// FirstName string
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// LastName string
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// DOB time.Time
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// }
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// Expect(book).To(HaveField("Title", "Les Miserables"))
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// Expect(book).To(HaveField("Title", ContainSubstring("Les"))
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// Expect(book).To(HaveField("Author.FirstName", Equal("Victor"))
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|
// Expect(book).To(HaveField("Author.DOB.Year()", BeNumerically("<", 1900))
|
|
func HaveField(field string, expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveFieldMatcher{
|
|
Field: field,
|
|
Expected: expected,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// HaveExistingField succeeds if actual is a struct and the specified field
|
|
// exists.
|
|
//
|
|
// HaveExistingField can be combined with HaveField in order to cover use cases
|
|
// with optional fields. HaveField alone would trigger an error in such situations.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(MrHarmless).NotTo(And(HaveExistingField("Title"), HaveField("Title", "Supervillain")))
|
|
func HaveExistingField(field string) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveExistingFieldMatcher{
|
|
Field: field,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// HaveValue applies the given matcher to the value of actual, optionally and
|
|
// repeatedly dereferencing pointers or taking the concrete value of interfaces.
|
|
// Thus, the matcher will always be applied to non-pointer and non-interface
|
|
// values only. HaveValue will fail with an error if a pointer or interface is
|
|
// nil. It will also fail for more than 31 pointer or interface dereferences to
|
|
// guard against mistakenly applying it to arbitrarily deep linked pointers.
|
|
//
|
|
// HaveValue differs from gstruct.PointTo in that it does not expect actual to
|
|
// be a pointer (as gstruct.PointTo does) but instead also accepts non-pointer
|
|
// and even interface values.
|
|
//
|
|
// actual := 42
|
|
// Expect(actual).To(HaveValue(42))
|
|
// Expect(&actual).To(HaveValue(42))
|
|
func HaveValue(matcher types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveValueMatcher{
|
|
Matcher: matcher,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeNumerically performs numerical assertions in a type-agnostic way.
|
|
// Actual and expected should be numbers, though the specific type of
|
|
// number is irrelevant (float32, float64, uint8, etc...).
|
|
//
|
|
// There are six, self-explanatory, supported comparators:
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("==", 1))
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("~", 0.999, 0.01))
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically(">", 0.9))
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically(">=", 1.0))
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("<", 3))
|
|
// Expect(1.0).Should(BeNumerically("<=", 1.0))
|
|
func BeNumerically(comparator string, compareTo ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.BeNumericallyMatcher{
|
|
Comparator: comparator,
|
|
CompareTo: compareTo,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeTemporally compares time.Time's like BeNumerically
|
|
// Actual and expected must be time.Time. The comparators are the same as for BeNumerically
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(time.Now()).Should(BeTemporally(">", time.Time{}))
|
|
// Expect(time.Now()).Should(BeTemporally("~", time.Now(), time.Second))
|
|
func BeTemporally(comparator string, compareTo time.Time, threshold ...time.Duration) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.BeTemporallyMatcher{
|
|
Comparator: comparator,
|
|
CompareTo: compareTo,
|
|
Threshold: threshold,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeAssignableToTypeOf succeeds if actual is assignable to the type of expected.
|
|
// It will return an error when one of the values is nil.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(0).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(0)) // Same values
|
|
// Expect(5).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(-1)) // different values same type
|
|
// Expect("foo").Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf("bar")) // different values same type
|
|
// Expect(struct{ Foo string }{}).Should(BeAssignableToTypeOf(struct{ Foo string }{}))
|
|
func BeAssignableToTypeOf(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.AssignableToTypeOfMatcher{
|
|
Expected: expected,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Panic succeeds if actual is a function that, when invoked, panics.
|
|
// Actual must be a function that takes no arguments and returns no results.
|
|
func Panic() types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.PanicMatcher{}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// PanicWith succeeds if actual is a function that, when invoked, panics with a specific value.
|
|
// Actual must be a function that takes no arguments and returns no results.
|
|
//
|
|
// By default PanicWith uses Equal() to perform the match, however a
|
|
// matcher can be passed in instead:
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(fn).Should(PanicWith(MatchRegexp(`.+Foo$`)))
|
|
func PanicWith(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.PanicMatcher{Expected: expected}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeAnExistingFile succeeds if a file exists.
|
|
// Actual must be a string representing the abs path to the file being checked.
|
|
func BeAnExistingFile() types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.BeAnExistingFileMatcher{}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeARegularFile succeeds if a file exists and is a regular file.
|
|
// Actual must be a string representing the abs path to the file being checked.
|
|
func BeARegularFile() types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.BeARegularFileMatcher{}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// BeADirectory succeeds if a file exists and is a directory.
|
|
// Actual must be a string representing the abs path to the file being checked.
|
|
func BeADirectory() types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.BeADirectoryMatcher{}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// HaveHTTPStatus succeeds if the Status or StatusCode field of an HTTP response matches.
|
|
// Actual must be either a *http.Response or *httptest.ResponseRecorder.
|
|
// Expected must be either an int or a string.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(resp).Should(HaveHTTPStatus(http.StatusOK)) // asserts that resp.StatusCode == 200
|
|
// Expect(resp).Should(HaveHTTPStatus("404 Not Found")) // asserts that resp.Status == "404 Not Found"
|
|
// Expect(resp).Should(HaveHTTPStatus(http.StatusOK, http.StatusNoContent)) // asserts that resp.StatusCode == 200 || resp.StatusCode == 204
|
|
func HaveHTTPStatus(expected ...interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveHTTPStatusMatcher{Expected: expected}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// HaveHTTPHeaderWithValue succeeds if the header is found and the value matches.
|
|
// Actual must be either a *http.Response or *httptest.ResponseRecorder.
|
|
// Expected must be a string header name, followed by a header value which
|
|
// can be a string, or another matcher.
|
|
func HaveHTTPHeaderWithValue(header string, value interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveHTTPHeaderWithValueMatcher{
|
|
Header: header,
|
|
Value: value,
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// HaveHTTPBody matches if the body matches.
|
|
// Actual must be either a *http.Response or *httptest.ResponseRecorder.
|
|
// Expected must be either a string, []byte, or other matcher
|
|
func HaveHTTPBody(expected interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.HaveHTTPBodyMatcher{Expected: expected}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// And succeeds only if all of the given matchers succeed.
|
|
// The matchers are tried in order, and will fail-fast if one doesn't succeed.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect("hi").To(And(HaveLen(2), Equal("hi"))
|
|
//
|
|
// And(), Or(), Not() and WithTransform() allow matchers to be composed into complex expressions.
|
|
func And(ms ...types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.AndMatcher{Matchers: ms}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// SatisfyAll is an alias for And().
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect("hi").Should(SatisfyAll(HaveLen(2), Equal("hi")))
|
|
func SatisfyAll(matchers ...types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return And(matchers...)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Or succeeds if any of the given matchers succeed.
|
|
// The matchers are tried in order and will return immediately upon the first successful match.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect("hi").To(Or(HaveLen(3), HaveLen(2))
|
|
//
|
|
// And(), Or(), Not() and WithTransform() allow matchers to be composed into complex expressions.
|
|
func Or(ms ...types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.OrMatcher{Matchers: ms}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// SatisfyAny is an alias for Or().
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect("hi").SatisfyAny(Or(HaveLen(3), HaveLen(2))
|
|
func SatisfyAny(matchers ...types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return Or(matchers...)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Not negates the given matcher; it succeeds if the given matcher fails.
|
|
//
|
|
// Expect(1).To(Not(Equal(2))
|
|
//
|
|
// And(), Or(), Not() and WithTransform() allow matchers to be composed into complex expressions.
|
|
func Not(matcher types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return &matchers.NotMatcher{Matcher: matcher}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// WithTransform applies the `transform` to the actual value and matches it against `matcher`.
|
|
// The given transform must be either a function of one parameter that returns one value or a
|
|
// function of one parameter that returns two values, where the second value must be of the
|
|
// error type.
|
|
//
|
|
// var plus1 = func(i int) int { return i + 1 }
|
|
// Expect(1).To(WithTransform(plus1, Equal(2))
|
|
//
|
|
// var failingplus1 = func(i int) (int, error) { return 42, "this does not compute" }
|
|
// Expect(1).To(WithTransform(failingplus1, Equal(2)))
|
|
//
|
|
// And(), Or(), Not() and WithTransform() allow matchers to be composed into complex expressions.
|
|
func WithTransform(transform interface{}, matcher types.GomegaMatcher) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return matchers.NewWithTransformMatcher(transform, matcher)
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Satisfy matches the actual value against the `predicate` function.
|
|
// The given predicate must be a function of one paramter that returns bool.
|
|
//
|
|
// var isEven = func(i int) bool { return i%2 == 0 }
|
|
// Expect(2).To(Satisfy(isEven))
|
|
func Satisfy(predicate interface{}) types.GomegaMatcher {
|
|
return matchers.NewSatisfyMatcher(predicate)
|
|
}
|