View Source Credo.Test.Case (Credo v1.7.8)

Conveniences for testing Credo custom checks and plugins.

This module can be used in your test cases, like this:

use Credo.Test.Case

Using this module will:

  • import all the functions from this module
  • make the test case :async by default (use use Credo.Test.Case, async: false to opt out)

Testing custom checks

Suppose we have a custom check in our project that checks whether or not the "FooBar rules" are applied (one of those very project-specific things).

defmodule MyProject.MyCustomChecks.FooBar do
  use Credo.Check, category: :warning, base_priority: :high

  def run(%SourceFile{} = source_file, params) do
    # ... implement all the "FooBar rules" ...
  end
end

When we want to test this check, we can use Credo.Test.Case for convenience:

defmodule MyProject.MyCustomChecks.FooBarTest do
  use Credo.Test.Case

  alias MyProject.MyCustomChecks.FooBar

  test "it should NOT report expected code" do
    """
    defmodule CredoSampleModule do
      # ... some good Elixir code ...
    end
    """
    |> to_source_file()
    |> run_check(FooBar)
    |> refute_issues()
  end

  test "it should report code that violates the FooBar rule" do
    """
    defmodule CredoSampleModule do
      # ... some Elixir code that violates the FooBar rule ...
    end
    """
    |> to_source_file()
    |> run_check(FooBar)
    |> assert_issues()
  end
end

This is as simple and mundane as it looks (which is a good thing): We have two tests: one for the good case, one for the bad case. In each, we create a source file representation from a heredoc, run our custom check and assert/refute the issues we expect.

Asserting found issues

Once we get to know domain a little better, we can add more tests, typically testing for other bad cases in which our check should produce issues.

Note that there are two assertion functions for this: assert_issue/2 and assert_issues/2, where the first one ensures that there is a single issue and the second asserts that there are at least two issues.

Both functions take an optional callback as their second parameter, which is called with the issue or the list of issues found, which makes it convenient to check for the issues properties ...

"""
# ... any Elixir code ...
"""
|> to_source_file()
|> run_check(FooBar)
|> assert_issue(fn issue -> assert issue.trigger == "foo" end)

... or properties of the list of issues:

"""
# ... any Elixir code ...
"""
|> to_source_file()
|> run_check(FooBar)
|> assert_issue(fn issues -> assert Enum.count(issues) == 3 end)

Testing checks that analyse multiple source files

For checks that analyse multiple source files, like Credo's consistency checks, we can use to_source_files/1 to create

[
  """
  # source file 1
  """,
  """
  # source file 2
  """
]
|> to_source_files()
|> run_check(FooBar)
|> refute_issues()

If our check needs named source files, we can always use to_source_file/2 to create individually named source files and combine them into a list:

source_file1 =
  """
  # source file 1
  """
  |> to_source_file("foo.ex")

source_file2 =
  """
  # source file 2
  """
  |> to_source_file("bar.ex")

[source_file1, source_file2]
|> run_check(FooBar)
|> assert_issue(fn issue -> assert issue.filename == "foo.ex" end)

Summary

Functions

Asserts the presence of a single issue.

Asserts the presence of more than one issue.

Refutes the presence of any issues.

Runs the given check on the given source_file using the given params.

Converts the given source string to a %SourceFile{}.

Converts the given source string to a %SourceFile{} with the given filename.

Converts the given list of source code strings to a list of %SourceFile{} structs.

Functions

Link to this function

assert_issue(issues, callback \\ nil)

View Source

Asserts the presence of a single issue.

Link to this function

assert_issues(issues, callback \\ nil)

View Source

Asserts the presence of more than one issue.

Refutes the presence of any issues.

Link to this function

run_check(source_files, check, params \\ [])

View Source

Runs the given check on the given source_file using the given params.

"x = 5"
|> to_source_file()
|> run_check(MyProject.MyCheck, foo_parameter: "bar")

Converts the given source string to a %SourceFile{}.

"x = 5"
|> to_source_file()
Link to this function

to_source_file(source, filename)

View Source

Converts the given source string to a %SourceFile{} with the given filename.

"x = 5"
|> to_source_file("simple.ex")

Converts the given list of source code strings to a list of %SourceFile{} structs.

["x = 5", "y = 6"]
|> to_source_files()