Yamatanooroti
Yamatanooroti is a multi-platform real(?) terminal testing framework.
Supporting envronments:
- vterm gem
- Windows command prompt
Usage
You can test the executed result and its rendering on the automatically detected environment that you have at the time, by code below:
require 'yamatanooroti'
class MyTest < Yamatanooroti::TestCase
def setup
start_terminal(5, 30, ['irb', '-f', '--multiline'])
end
def test_example
write(":a\n")
close
assert_screen(['irb(main):001:0> :a', '=> :a', 'irb(main):002:0>', '', ''])
end
end
This code detects some real(?) terminal environments:
- vterm gem (you should install beforehand)
- Windows (you should run on command prompt)
If any real(?) terminal environments not found, it will fail with a message:
$ rake
Traceback (most recent call last):
(snip traceback)
/path/to/yamatanooroti/lib/yamatanooroti.rb:71:in `inherited': Any real(?) terminal environments not found. (LoadError)
Supporting real(?) terminals:
- vterm gem
- Windows
rake aborted!
Command failed with status (1)
Tasks: TOP => default => test
(See full trace by running task with --trace)
Advanced Usage
If you want to specify vterm environment that needs vterm gem, you can use Yamatanooroti::VTermTestCase
:
require 'yamatanooroti'
class MyTest < Yamatanooroti::VTermTestCase
def setup
start_terminal(5, 30, ['irb', '-f', '--multiline'])
end
def test_example
write(":a\n")
close
assert_screen(['irb(main):001:0> :a', '=> :a', 'irb(main):002:0>', '', ''])
end
end
If you haven't installed vterm gem, this code will fail with a message You need vterm gem for Yamatanooroti::VTermTestCase (LoadError)
.
Likewise, you can specify Windows command prompt test by Yamatanooroti::WindowsTestCase
.
Method Reference
start_terminal(height, width, command, startup_message: nil)
Starts terminal internally that is sized height
and width
with command
to test the result. The command
should be an array of strings with a path of command and zero or more options. This should be called in setup
method.
If startup_message
is given, start_terminal
waits for the string to be printed and then returns.
code = 'sleep 1; puts "aaa"; sleep 10; puts "bbb"'
start_terminal(5, 30, ['ruby', '-e', code], startup_message: 'aaa')
close
assert_screen(<<~EOC)
aaa
EOC
# The start_terminal method waits for the output of the "aaa" as specified by
# the startup_message option, the "bbb" after 10 seconds won't come because
# the I/O is closed immediately after it.
write(str)
Writes str
like inputting by a keyboard to the started terminal.
close
Closes the terminal to take the internal rendering result. You must call it before call assertions.
assert_screen(expected_lines)
Asserts the rendering result of the terminal with expected_lines
that should be an Array
or a String
of lines. The Array
contains blank lines and doesn't contain newline characters, and the String
contains newline characters at end of each line and doesn't contain continuous last blank lines.
License
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.