Packages

package path

Type Members

  1. class FreeSpec extends FreeSpecLike

    A sister class to org.scalatest.FreeSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    A sister class to org.scalatest.FreeSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    Class path.FreeSpec behaves similarly to class org.scalatest.FreeSpec, except that tests are isolated based on their path. The purpose of path.FreeSpec is to facilitate writing specification-style tests for mutable objects in a clear, boilerpate-free way. To test mutable objects, you need to mutate them. Using a path class, you can make a statement in text, then implement that statement in code (including mutating state), and nest and combine these test/code pairs in any way you wish. Each test will only see the side effects of code that is in blocks that enclose the test. Here's an example:

    import org.scalatest.path
    import org.scalatest.matchers.Matchers
    import scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer
    
    class ExampleSpec extends path.FreeSpec with Matchers {
    
      "A ListBuffer" - {
    
        val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int] // This implements "A ListBuffer"
    
        "should be empty when created" in {
    
          // This test sees:
          //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
          // So buf is: ListBuffer()
    
          buf should be ('empty)
        }
    
        "when 1 is appended" - {
    
          buf += 1 // This implements "when 1 is appended", etc...
    
          "should contain 1" in {
    
            // This test sees:
            //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
            //   buf += 1
            // So buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    
            buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
            buf should be ('empty)
          }
    
          "when 2 is appended" - {
    
            buf += 2
    
            "should contain 1 and 2" in {
    
              // This test sees:
              //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
              //   buf += 1
              //   buf += 2
              // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2)
    
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            "when 2 is removed" - {
    
              buf -= 2
    
              "should contain only 1 again" in {
    
                // This test sees:
                //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
                //   buf += 1
                //   buf += 2
                //   buf -= 2
                // So buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
            }
    
            "when 3 is appended" - {
    
              buf += 3
    
              "should contain 1, 2, and 3" in {
    
                // This test sees:
                //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
                //   buf += 1
                //   buf += 2
                //   buf += 3
                // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2, 3)
    
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
            }
          }
    
          "when 88 is appended" - {
    
            buf += 88
    
            "should contain 1 and 88" in {
    
              // This test sees:
              //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
              //   buf += 1
              //   buf += 88
              // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 88)
    
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (88)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
          }
        }
    
        "should have size 0 when created" in {
    
          // This test sees:
          //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
          // So buf is: ListBuffer()
    
          buf should have size 0
        }
      }
    }
    

    Note that the above class is organized by writing a bit of specification text that opens a new block followed by, at the top of the new block, some code that "implements" or "performs" what is described in the text. This is repeated as the mutable object (here, a ListBuffer), is prepared for the enclosed tests. For example:

    "A ListBuffer" - {
      val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
    

    Or:

    "when 2 is appended" - {
      buf += 2
    

    Note also that although each test mutates the ListBuffer, none of the other tests observe those side effects:

    "should contain 1" in {
    
      buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
      // ...
    }
    
    "when 2 is appended" - {
    
      buf += 2
    
      "should contain 1 and 2" in {
    
        // This test does not see the buf.remove(0) from the previous test,
        // so the first element in the ListBuffer is again 1
        buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
    

    This kind of isolation of tests from each other is a consequence of running each test in its own instance of the test class, and can also be achieved by simply mixing OneInstancePerTest into a regular org.scalatest.FreeSpec. However, path.FreeSpec takes isolation one step further: a test in a path.FreeSpec does not observe side effects performed outside tests in earlier blocks that do not enclose it. Here's an example:

    "when 2 is removed" - {
    
      buf -= 2
    
      // ...
    }
    
    "when 3 is appended" - {
    
      buf += 3
    
      "should contain 1, 2, and 3" in {
    
        // This test does not see the buf -= 2 from the earlier "when 2 is removed" block,
        // because that block does not enclose this test, so the second element in the
        // ListBuffer is still 2
        buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
    

    Running the full ExampleSpec, shown above, in the Scala interpeter would give you:

    scala> import org.scalatest._
    import org.scalatest._
    
    scala> run(new ExampleSpec)
    ExampleSpec:
    A ListBuffer
    - should be empty when created
      when 1 is appended
      - should contain 1
        when 2 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 2
          when 2 is removed
          - should contain only 1 again
          when 3 is appended
          - should contain 1, 2, and 3
        when 88 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 88
    - should have size 0 when created
    

    Note: class path.FreeSpec's approach to isolation was inspired in part by the specsy framework, written by Esko Luontola.

    Shared fixtures

    A test fixture is objects or other artifacts (such as files, sockets, database connections, etc.) used by tests to do their work. If a fixture is used by only one test, then the definitions of the fixture objects can be local to the method. If multiple tests need to share an immutable fixture, you can simply assign them to instance variables. If multiple tests need to share mutable fixture objects or vars, there's one and only one way to do it in a path.FreeSpec: place the mutable objects lexically before the test. Any mutations needed by the test must be placed lexically before and/or after the test. As used here, "Lexically before" means that the code needs to be executed during construction of that test's instance of the test class to reach the test (or put another way, the code is along the "path to the test.") "Lexically after" means that the code needs to be executed to exit the constructor after the test has been executed.

    The reason lexical placement is the one and only one way to share fixtures in a path.FreeSpec is because all of its lifecycle methods are overridden and declared final. Thus you can't mix in BeforeAndAfter or BeforeAndAfterEach, because both override runTest, which is final in a path.FreeSpec. You also can't override withFixture, because path.FreeSpec extends Suite not TestSuite, where withFixture is defined. In short:

    In a path.FreeSpec, if you need some code to execute before a test, place that code lexically before the test. If you need some code to execute after a test, place that code lexically after the test.

    The reason the life cycle methods are final, by the way, is to prevent users from attempting to combine a path.FreeSpec's approach to isolation with other ways ScalaTest provides to share fixtures or execute tests, because doing so could make the resulting test code hard to reason about. A path.FreeSpec's execution model is a bit magical, but because it executes in one and only one way, users should be able to reason about the code. To help you visualize how a path.FreeSpec is executed, consider the following variant of ExampleSpec that includes print statements:

    import org.scalatest.path
    import org.scalatest.matchers.Matchers
    import scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer
    
    class ExampleSpec extends path.FreeSpec with Matchers {
    
      println("Start of: ExampleSpec")
      "A ListBuffer" - {
    
        println("Start of: A ListBuffer")
        val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
    
        "should be empty when created" in {
    
          println("In test: should be empty when created; buf is: " + buf)
          buf should be ('empty)
        }
    
        "when 1 is appended" - {
    
          println("Start of: when 1 is appended")
          buf += 1
    
          "should contain 1" in {
    
            println("In test: should contain 1; buf is: " + buf)
            buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
            buf should be ('empty)
          }
    
          "when 2 is appended" - {
    
            println("Start of: when 2 is appended")
            buf += 2
    
            "should contain 1 and 2" in {
    
              println("In test: should contain 1 and 2; buf is: " + buf)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            "when 2 is removed" - {
    
              println("Start of: when 2 is removed")
              buf -= 2
    
              "should contain only 1 again" in {
    
                println("In test: should contain only 1 again; buf is: " + buf)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
    
              println("End of: when 2 is removed")
            }
    
            "when 3 is appended" - {
    
              println("Start of: when 3 is appended")
              buf += 3
    
              "should contain 1, 2, and 3" in {
    
                println("In test: should contain 1, 2, and 3; buf is: " + buf)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
              println("End of: when 3 is appended")
            }
    
            println("End of: when 2 is appended")
          }
    
          "when 88 is appended" - {
    
            println("Start of: when 88 is appended")
            buf += 88
    
            "should contain 1 and 88" in {
    
              println("In test: should contain 1 and 88; buf is: " + buf)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (88)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            println("End of: when 88 is appended")
          }
    
          println("End of: when 1 is appended")
        }
    
        "should have size 0 when created" in {
    
          println("In test: should have size 0 when created; buf is: " + buf)
          buf should have size 0
        }
    
        println("End of: A ListBuffer")
      }
      println("End of: ExampleSpec")
      println()
    }
    

    Running the above version of ExampleSpec in the Scala interpreter will give you output similar to:

    scala> import org.scalatest._
    import org.scalatest._
    
    scala> run(new ExampleSpec)
    ExampleSpec:
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    In test: should be empty when created; buf is: ListBuffer()
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    In test: should contain 1; buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    ExampleSpec:
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    In test: should contain 1 and 2; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2)
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is removed
    In test: should contain only 1 again; buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    End of: when 2 is removed
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    Start of: when 3 is appended
    In test: should contain 1, 2, and 3; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2, 3)
    End of: when 3 is appended
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 88 is appended
    In test: should contain 1 and 88; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 88)
    End of: when 88 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    In test: should have size 0 when created; buf is: ListBuffer()
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    A ListBuffer
    - should be empty when created
      when 1 is appended
      - should contain 1
        when 2 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 2
          when 2 is removed
          - should contain only 1 again
          when 3 is appended
          - should contain 1, 2, and 3
        when 88 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 88
    - should have size 0 when created
    

    Note that each test is executed in order of appearance in the path.FreeSpec, and that only those println statements residing in blocks that enclose the test being run are executed. Any println statements in blocks that do not form the "path" to a test are not executed in the instance of the class that executes that test.

    How it executes

    To provide its special brand of test isolation, path.FreeSpec executes quite differently from its sister class in org.scalatest. An org.scalatest.FreeSpec registers tests during construction and executes them when run is invoked. An org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec, by contrast, runs each test in its own instance while that instance is being constructed. During construction, it registers not the tests to run, but the results of running those tests. When run is invoked on a path.FreeSpec, it reports the registered results and does not run the tests again. If run is invoked a second or third time, in fact, a path.FreeSpec will each time report the same results registered during construction. If you want to run the tests of a path.FreeSpec anew, you'll need to create a new instance and invoke run on that.

    A path.FreeSpec will create one instance for each "leaf" node it contains. The main kind of leaf node is a test, such as:

    // One instance will be created for each test
    "should be empty when created" in {
      buf should be ('empty)
    }
    

    However, an empty scope (a scope that contains no tests or nested scopes) is also a leaf node:

    // One instance will be created for each empty scope
    "when 99 is added" - {
      // A scope is "empty" and therefore a leaf node if it has no
      // tests or nested scopes, though it may have other code (which
      // will be executed in the instance created for that leaf node)
      buf += 99
    }
    

    The tests will be executed sequentially, in the order of appearance. The first test (or empty scope, if that is first) will be executed when a class that mixes in path.FreeSpec is instantiated. Only the first test will be executed during this initial instance, and of course, only the path to that test. Then, the first time the client uses the initial instance (by invoking one of run, expectedTestsCount, tags, or testNames on the instance), the initial instance will, before doing anything else, ensure that any remaining tests are executed, each in its own instance.

    To ensure that the correct path is taken in each instance, and to register its test results, the initial path.FreeSpec instance must communicate with the other instances it creates for running any subsequent leaf nodes. It does so by setting a thread-local variable prior to creating each instance (a technique suggested by Esko Luontola). Each instance of path.FreeSpec checks the thread-local variable. If the thread-local is not set, it knows it is an initial instance and therefore executes every block it encounters until it discovers, and executes the first test (or empty scope, if that's the first leaf node). It then discovers, but does not execute the next leaf node, or discovers there are no other leaf nodes remaining to execute. It communicates the path to the next leaf node, if any, and the result of running the test it did execute, if any, back to the initial instance. The initial instance repeats this process until all leaf nodes have been executed and all test results registered.

    Ignored tests

    You mark a test as ignored in an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. Please see the Ignored tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that a separate instance will be created for an ignored test, and the path to the ignored test will be executed in that instance, but the test function itself will not be executed. Instead, a TestIgnored event will be fired.

    Informers

    You output information using Informers in an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. Please see the Informers section in its documentation for more information.

    Pending tests

    You mark a test as pending in an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. Please see the Pending tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that a separate instance will be created for a pending test, and the path to the ignored test will be executed in that instance, as well as the test function (up until it completes abruptly with a TestPendingException).

    Tagging tests

    You can place tests into groups by tagging them in an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. Please see the Tagging tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that one difference between this class and its sister class org.scalatest.FreeSpec is that because tests are executed at construction time, rather than each time run is invoked, an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec will always execute all non-ignored tests. When run is invoked on a path.FreeSpec, if some tests are excluded based on tags, the registered results of running those tests will not be reported. (But those tests will have already run and the results registered.) By contrast, because an org.scalatest.FreeSpec only executes tests after run has been called, and at that time the tags to include and exclude are known, only tests selected by the tags will be executed.

    In short, in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec, tests not selected by the tags to include and exclude specified for the run (via the Filter passed to run) will not be executed. In an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec, by contrast, all non-ignored tests will be executed, each during the construction of its own instance, and tests not selected by the tags to include and exclude specified for a run will not be reported. (One upshot of this is that if you have tests that you want to tag as being slow so you can sometimes exclude them during a run, you probably don't want to put them in a path.FreeSpec. Because in a path.Freespec the slow tests will be run regardless, with only their registered results not being reported if you exclude slow tests during a run.)

    Shared tests

    You can factor out shared tests in an org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. Please see the Shared tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Nested suites

    Nested suites are not allowed in a path.FreeSpec. Because a path.FreeSpec executes tests eagerly at construction time, registering the results of those test runs and reporting them later when run is invoked, the order of nested suites versus test runs would be different in a org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec than in an org.scalatest.FreeSpec. In org.scalatest.FreeSpec's implementation of run, nested suites are executed then tests are executed. A org.scalatest.path.FreeSpec with nested suites would execute these in the opposite order: first tests then nested suites. To help make path.FreeSpec code easier to reason about by giving readers of one less difference to think about, nested suites are not allowed. If you want to add nested suites to a path.FreeSpec, you can instead wrap them all in a Suites object. They will be executed in the order of appearance (unless a Distributor is passed, in which case they will execute in parallel).

    Durations

    Many ScalaTest events include a duration that indicates how long the event being reported took to execute. For example, a TestSucceeded event provides a duration indicating how long it took for that test to execute. A SuiteCompleted event provides a duration indicating how long it took for that entire suite of tests to execute.

    In the test completion events fired by a path.FreeSpec (TestSucceeded, TestFailed, or TestPending), the durations reported refer to the time it took for the tests to run. This time is registered with the test results and reported along with the test results each time run is invoked. By contrast, the suite completion events fired for a path.FreeSpec represent the amount of time it took to report the registered results. (These events are not fired by path.FreeSpec, but instead by the entity that invokes run on the path.FreeSpec.) As a result, the total time for running the tests of a path.FreeSpec, calculated by summing the durations of all the individual test completion events, may be greater than the duration reported for executing the entire suite.

  2. trait FreeSpecLike extends Suite with OneInstancePerTest with Informing with Notifying with Alerting with Documenting

    Implementation trait for class path.FreeSpec, which is a sister class to org.scalatest.FreeSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    Implementation trait for class path.FreeSpec, which is a sister class to org.scalatest.FreeSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    path.FreeSpec is a class, not a trait, to minimize compile time given there is a slight compiler overhead to mixing in traits compared to extending classes. If you need to mix the behavior of path.FreeSpec into some other class, you can use this trait instead, because class path.FreeSpec does nothing more than extend this trait and add a nice toString implementation.

    See the documentation of the class for a detailed overview of path.FreeSpec.

  3. class FunSpec extends FunSpecLike

    A sister class to org.scalatest.FunSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    A sister class to org.scalatest.FunSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    Class path.FunSpec behaves similarly to class org.scalatest.FunSpec, except that tests are isolated based on their path. The purpose of path.FunSpec is to facilitate writing specification-style tests for mutable objects in a clear, boilerpate-free way. To test mutable objects, you need to mutate them. Using a path class, you can make a statement in text, then implement that statement in code (including mutating state), and nest and combine these test/code pairs in any way you wish. Each test will only see the side effects of code that is in blocks that enclose the test. Here's an example:

    import org.scalatest.path
    import org.scalatest.matchers.Matchers
    import scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer
    
    class ExampleSpec extends path.FunSpec with Matchers {
    
      describe("A ListBuffer") {
    
        val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int] // This implements "A ListBuffer"
    
        it("should be empty when created") {
    
          // This test sees:
          //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
          // So buf is: ListBuffer()
    
          buf should be ('empty)
        }
    
        describe("when 1 is appended") {
    
          buf += 1 // This implements "when 1 is appended", etc...
    
          it("should contain 1") {
    
            // This test sees:
            //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
            //   buf += 1
            // So buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    
            buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
            buf should be ('empty)
          }
    
          describe("when 2 is appended") {
    
            buf += 2
    
            it("should contain 1 and 2") {
    
              // This test sees:
              //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
              //   buf += 1
              //   buf += 2
              // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2)
    
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            describe("when 2 is removed") {
    
              buf -= 2
    
              it("should contain only 1 again") {
    
                // This test sees:
                //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
                //   buf += 1
                //   buf += 2
                //   buf -= 2
                // So buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
            }
    
            describe("when 3 is appended") {
    
              buf += 3
    
              it("should contain 1, 2, and 3") {
    
                // This test sees:
                //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
                //   buf += 1
                //   buf += 2
                //   buf += 3
                // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2, 3)
    
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
            }
          }
    
          describe("when 88 is appended") {
    
            buf += 88
    
            it("should contain 1 and 88") {
    
              // This test sees:
              //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
              //   buf += 1
              //   buf += 88
              // So buf is: ListBuffer(1, 88)
    
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (88)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
          }
        }
    
        it("should have size 0 when created") {
    
          // This test sees:
          //   val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
          // So buf is: ListBuffer()
    
          buf should have size 0
        }
      }
    }
    

    Note that the above class is organized by writing a bit of specification text that opens a new block followed by, at the top of the new block, some code that "implements" or "performs" what is described in the text. This is repeated as the mutable object (here, a ListBuffer), is prepared for the enclosed tests. For example:

    describe("A ListBuffer") {
      val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
    

    Or:

    describe("when 2 is appended") {
      buf += 2
    

    Note also that although each test mutates the ListBuffer, none of the other tests observe those side effects:

    it("should contain 1") {
    
      buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
      // ...
    }
    
    describe("when 2 is appended") {
    
      buf += 2
    
      it("should contain 1 and 2") {
    
        // This test does not see the buf.remove(0) from the previous test,
        // so the first element in the ListBuffer is again 1
        buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
    

    This kind of isolation of tests from each other is a consequence of running each test in its own instance of the test class, and can also be achieved by simply mixing OneInstancePerTest into a regular org.scalatest.FunSpec. However, path.FunSpec takes isolation one step further: a test in a path.FunSpec does not observe side effects performed outside tests in earlier blocks that do not enclose it. Here's an example:

    describe("when 2 is removed") {
    
      buf -= 2
    
      // ...
    }
    
    describe("when 3 is appended") {
    
      buf += 3
    
      it("should contain 1, 2, and 3") {
    
        // This test does not see the buf -= 2 from the earlier "when 2 is removed" block,
        // because that block does not enclose this test, so the second element in the
        // ListBuffer is still 2
        buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
        buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
    

    Running the full ExampleSpec, shown above, in the Scala interpeter would give you:

    scala> import org.scalatest._
    import org.scalatest._
    
    scala> run(new ExampleSpec)
    ExampleSpec:
    A ListBuffer
    - should be empty when created
      when 1 is appended
      - should contain 1
        when 2 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 2
          when 2 is removed
          - should contain only 1 again
          when 3 is appended
          - should contain 1, 2, and 3
        when 88 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 88
    - should have size 0 when created
    

    Note: class path.FunSpec's approach to isolation was inspired in part by the specsy framework, written by Esko Luontola.

    Shared fixtures

    A test fixture is objects or other artifacts (such as files, sockets, database connections, etc.) used by tests to do their work. If a fixture is used by only one test, then the definitions of the fixture objects can be local to the method. If multiple tests need to share an immutable fixture, you can simply assign them to instance variables. If multiple tests need to share mutable fixture objects or vars, there's one and only one way to do it in a path.FunSpec: place the mutable objects lexically before the test. Any mutations needed by the test must be placed lexically before and/or after the test. As used here, "Lexically before" means that the code needs to be executed during construction of that test's instance of the test class to reach the test (or put another way, the code is along the "path to the test.") "Lexically after" means that the code needs to be executed to exit the constructor after the test has been executed.

    The reason lexical placement is the one and only one way to share fixtures in a path.FunSpec is because all of its lifecycle methods are overridden and declared final. Thus you can't mix in BeforeAndAfter or BeforeAndAfterEach, because both override runTest, which is final in a path.FunSpec. You also can't override withFixture, because path.FreeSpec extends Suite not TestSuite, where withFixture is defined. In short:

    In a path.FunSpec, if you need some code to execute before a test, place that code lexically before the test. If you need some code to execute after a test, place that code lexically after the test.

    The reason the life cycle methods are final, by the way, is to prevent users from attempting to combine a path.FunSpec's approach to isolation with other ways ScalaTest provides to share fixtures or execute tests, because doing so could make the resulting test code hard to reason about. A path.FunSpec's execution model is a bit magical, but because it executes in one and only one way, users should be able to reason about the code. To help you visualize how a path.FunSpec is executed, consider the following variant of ExampleSpec that includes print statements:

    import org.scalatest.path
    import org.scalatest.matchers.Matchers
    import scala.collection.mutable.ListBuffer
    
    class ExampleSpec extends path.FunSpec with Matchers {
    
      println("Start of: ExampleSpec")
      describe("A ListBuffer") {
    
        println("Start of: A ListBuffer")
        val buf = ListBuffer.empty[Int]
    
        it("should be empty when created") {
    
          println("In test: should be empty when created; buf is: " + buf)
          buf should be ('empty)
        }
    
        describe("when 1 is appended") {
    
          println("Start of: when 1 is appended")
          buf += 1
    
          it("should contain 1") {
    
            println("In test: should contain 1; buf is: " + buf)
            buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
            buf should be ('empty)
          }
    
          describe("when 2 is appended") {
    
            println("Start of: when 2 is appended")
            buf += 2
    
            it("should contain 1 and 2") {
    
              println("In test: should contain 1 and 2; buf is: " + buf)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            describe("when 2 is removed") {
    
              println("Start of: when 2 is removed")
              buf -= 2
    
              it("should contain only 1 again") {
    
                println("In test: should contain only 1 again; buf is: " + buf)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
    
              println("End of: when 2 is removed")
            }
    
            describe("when 3 is appended") {
    
              println("Start of: when 3 is appended")
              buf += 3
    
              it("should contain 1, 2, and 3") {
    
                println("In test: should contain 1, 2, and 3; buf is: " + buf)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (2)
                buf.remove(0) should equal (3)
                buf should be ('empty)
              }
              println("End of: when 3 is appended")
            }
    
            println("End of: when 2 is appended")
          }
    
          describe("when 88 is appended") {
    
            println("Start of: when 88 is appended")
            buf += 88
    
            it("should contain 1 and 88") {
    
              println("In test: should contain 1 and 88; buf is: " + buf)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (1)
              buf.remove(0) should equal (88)
              buf should be ('empty)
            }
    
            println("End of: when 88 is appended")
          }
    
          println("End of: when 1 is appended")
        }
    
        it("should have size 0 when created") {
    
          println("In test: should have size 0 when created; buf is: " + buf)
          buf should have size 0
        }
    
        println("End of: A ListBuffer")
      }
      println("End of: ExampleSpec")
      println()
    }
    

    Running the above version of ExampleSpec in the Scala interpreter will give you output similar to:

    scala> import org.scalatest._
    import org.scalatest._
    
    scala> run(new ExampleSpec)
    ExampleSpec:
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    In test: should be empty when created; buf is: ListBuffer()
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    In test: should contain 1; buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    ExampleSpec:
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    In test: should contain 1 and 2; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2)
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is removed
    In test: should contain only 1 again; buf is: ListBuffer(1)
    End of: when 2 is removed
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 2 is appended
    Start of: when 3 is appended
    In test: should contain 1, 2, and 3; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 2, 3)
    End of: when 3 is appended
    End of: when 2 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    Start of: when 1 is appended
    Start of: when 88 is appended
    In test: should contain 1 and 88; buf is: ListBuffer(1, 88)
    End of: when 88 is appended
    End of: when 1 is appended
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    Start of: ExampleSpec
    Start of: A ListBuffer
    In test: should have size 0 when created; buf is: ListBuffer()
    End of: A ListBuffer
    End of: ExampleSpec
    
    A ListBuffer
    - should be empty when created
      when 1 is appended
      - should contain 1
        when 2 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 2
          when 2 is removed
          - should contain only 1 again
          when 3 is appended
          - should contain 1, 2, and 3
        when 88 is appended
        - should contain 1 and 88
    - should have size 0 when created
    

    Note that each test is executed in order of appearance in the path.FunSpec, and that only those println statements residing in blocks that enclose the test being run are executed. Any println statements in blocks that do not form the "path" to a test are not executed in the instance of the class that executes that test.

    How it executes

    To provide its special brand of test isolation, path.FunSpec executes quite differently from its sister class in org.scalatest. An org.scalatest.FunSpec registers tests during construction and executes them when run is invoked. An org.scalatest.path.FunSpec, by contrast, runs each test in its own instance while that instance is being constructed. During construction, it registers not the tests to run, but the results of running those tests. When run is invoked on a path.FunSpec, it reports the registered results and does not run the tests again. If run is invoked a second or third time, in fact, a path.FunSpec will each time report the same results registered during construction. If you want to run the tests of a path.FunSpec anew, you'll need to create a new instance and invoke run on that.

    A path.FunSpec will create one instance for each "leaf" node it contains. The main kind of leaf node is a test, such as:

    // One instance will be created for each test
    it("should be empty when created") {
      buf should be ('empty)
    }
    

    However, an empty scope (a scope that contains no tests or nested scopes) is also a leaf node:

    // One instance will be created for each empty scope
    describe("when 99 is added") {
      // A scope is "empty" and therefore a leaf node if it has no
      // tests or nested scopes, though it may have other code (which
      // will be executed in the instance created for that leaf node)
      buf += 99
    }
    

    The tests will be executed sequentially, in the order of appearance. The first test (or empty scope, if that is first) will be executed when a class that mixes in path.FunSpec is instantiated. Only the first test will be executed during this initial instance, and of course, only the path to that test. Then, the first time the client uses the initial instance (by invoking one of run, expectedTestsCount, tags, or testNames on the instance), the initial instance will, before doing anything else, ensure that any remaining tests are executed, each in its own instance.

    To ensure that the correct path is taken in each instance, and to register its test results, the initial path.FunSpec instance must communicate with the other instances it creates for running any subsequent leaf nodes. It does so by setting a thread-local variable prior to creating each instance (a technique suggested by Esko Luontola). Each instance of path.FunSpec checks the thread-local variable. If the thread-local is not set, it knows it is an initial instance and therefore executes every block it encounters until it discovers, and executes the first test (or empty scope, if that's the first leaf node). It then discovers, but does not execute the next leaf node, or discovers there are no other leaf nodes remaining to execute. It communicates the path to the next leaf node, if any, and the result of running the test it did execute, if any, back to the initial instance. The initial instance repeats this process until all leaf nodes have been executed and all test results registered.

    Ignored tests

    You mark a test as ignored in an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. Please see the Ignored tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that a separate instance will be created for an ignored test, and the path to the ignored test will be executed in that instance, but the test function itself will not be executed. Instead, a TestIgnored event will be fired.

    Informers

    You output information using Informers in an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. Please see the Informers section in its documentation for more information.

    Pending tests

    You mark a test as pending in an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. Please see the Pending tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that a separate instance will be created for a pending test, and the path to the ignored test will be executed in that instance, as well as the test function (up until it completes abruptly with a TestPendingException).

    Tagging tests

    You can place tests into groups by tagging them in an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. Please see the Tagging tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Note that one difference between this class and its sister class org.scalatest.FunSpec is that because tests are executed at construction time, rather than each time run is invoked, an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec will always execute all non-ignored tests. When run is invoked on a path.FunSpec, if some tests are excluded based on tags, the registered results of running those tests will not be reported. (But those tests will have already run and the results registered.) By contrast, because an org.scalatest.FunSpec only executes tests after run has been called, and at that time the tags to include and exclude are known, only tests selected by the tags will be executed.

    In short, in an org.scalatest.FunSpec, tests not selected by the tags to include and exclude specified for the run (via the Filter passed to run) will not be executed. In an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec, by contrast, all non-ignored tests will be executed, each during the construction of its own instance, and tests not selected by the tags to include and exclude specified for a run will not be reported. (One upshot of this is that if you have tests that you want to tag as being slow so you can sometimes exclude them during a run, you probably don't want to put them in a path.FunSpec. Because in a path.Freespec the slow tests will be run regardless, with only their registered results not being reported if you exclude slow tests during a run.)

    Shared tests

    You can factor out shared tests in an org.scalatest.path.FunSpec in the same manner as in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. Please see the Shared tests section in its documentation for more information.

    Nested suites

    Nested suites are not allowed in a path.FunSpec. Because a path.FunSpec executes tests eagerly at construction time, registering the results of those test runs and reporting them later when run is invoked, the order of nested suites versus test runs would be different in a org.scalatest.path.FunSpec than in an org.scalatest.FunSpec. In org.scalatest.FunSpec's implementation of run, nested suites are executed then tests are executed. A org.scalatest.path.FunSpec with nested suites would execute these in the opposite order: first tests then nested suites. To help make path.FunSpec code easier to reason about by giving readers of one less difference to think about, nested suites are not allowed. If you want to add nested suites to a path.FunSpec, you can instead wrap them all in a Suites object. They will be executed in the order of appearance (unless a Distributor is passed, in which case they will execute in parallel).

    Durations

    Many ScalaTest events include a duration that indicates how long the event being reported took to execute. For example, a TestSucceeded event provides a duration indicating how long it took for that test to execute. A SuiteCompleted event provides a duration indicating how long it took for that entire suite of tests to execute.

    In the test completion events fired by a path.FunSpec (TestSucceeded, TestFailed, or TestPending), the durations reported refer to the time it took for the tests to run. This time is registered with the test results and reported along with the test results each time run is invoked. By contrast, the suite completion events fired for a path.FunSpec represent the amount of time it took to report the registered results. (These events are not fired by path.FunSpec, but instead by the entity that invokes run on the path.FunSpec.) As a result, the total time for running the tests of a path.FunSpec, calculated by summing the durations of all the individual test completion events, may be greater than the duration reported for executing the entire suite.

  4. trait FunSpecLike extends Suite with OneInstancePerTest with Informing with Notifying with Alerting with Documenting

    Implementation trait for class path.FunSpec, which is a sister class to org.scalatest.FunSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    Implementation trait for class path.FunSpec, which is a sister class to org.scalatest.FunSpec that isolates tests by running each test in its own instance of the test class, and for each test, only executing the path leading to that test.

    path.FunSpec is a class, not a trait, to minimize compile time given there is a slight compiler overhead to mixing in traits compared to extending classes. If you need to mix the behavior of path.FunSpec into some other class, you can use this trait instead, because class path.FunSpec does nothing more than extend this trait and add a nice toString implementation.

    See the documentation of the class for a detailed overview of path.FunSpec.

Ungrouped