View Source ExUnit.CaptureIO (ExUnit v1.12.3)

Functionality to capture IO for testing.

Examples

defmodule AssertionTest do
  use ExUnit.Case

  import ExUnit.CaptureIO

  test "example" do
    assert capture_io(fn -> IO.puts("a") end) == "a\n"
  end
end

Link to this section Summary

Link to this section Functions

@spec capture_io((() -> any())) :: String.t()

Captures IO generated when evaluating fun.

Returns the binary which is the captured output.

By default, capture_io replaces the group_leader (:stdio) for the current process. Capturing the group leader is done per process and therefore can be done concurrently.

However, the capturing of any other named device, such as :stderr, happens globally and persists until the function has ended. While this means it is safe to run your tests with async: true in many cases, captured output may include output from a different test and care must be taken when using capture_io with a named process asynchronously.

A developer can set a string as an input. The default input is an empty string. If capturing a named device asynchronously, an input can only be given to the first capture. Any further capture that is given to a capture on that device will raise an exception and would indicate that the test should be run synchronously.

Similarly, once a capture on a named device has begun, the encoding on that device cannot be changed in a subsequent concurrent capture. An error will be raised in this case.

IO devices

You may capture the IO from any registered IO device. The device name given must be an atom representing the name of a registered process. In addition, Elixir provides two shortcuts:

  • :stdio - a shortcut for :standard_io, which maps to the current Process.group_leader/0 in Erlang

  • :stderr - a shortcut for the named process :standard_error provided in Erlang

Options

  • :capture_prompt - Define if prompts (specified as arguments to IO.get* functions) should be captured. Defaults to true. For IO devices other than :stdio, the option is ignored.

  • :encoding (since v1.10.0) - encoding of the IO device. Allowed values are :unicode (default) and :latin1.

Examples

iex> capture_io(fn -> IO.write("john") end) == "john"
true

iex> capture_io(:stderr, fn -> IO.write(:stderr, "john") end) == "john"
true

iex> capture_io(:standard_error, fn -> IO.write(:stderr, "john") end) == "john"
true

iex> capture_io("this is input", fn ->
...>   input = IO.gets("> ")
...>   IO.write(input)
...> end) == "> this is input"
true

iex> capture_io([input: "this is input", capture_prompt: false], fn ->
...>   input = IO.gets("> ")
...>   IO.write(input)
...> end) == "this is input"
true

Returning values

As seen in the examples above, capture_io returns the captured output. If you want to also capture the result of the function executed inside the capture_io, you can use Kernel.send/2 to send yourself a message and use ExUnit.Assertions.assert_received/2 to match on the results:

capture_io([input: "this is input", capture_prompt: false], fn ->
  send(self(), {:block_result, 42})
  # ...
end)

assert_received {:block_result, 42}
@spec capture_io(atom(), (() -> any())) :: String.t()
@spec capture_io(String.t(), (() -> any())) :: String.t()
@spec capture_io(keyword(), (() -> any())) :: String.t()
Link to this function

capture_io(device, input, fun)

View Source
@spec capture_io(atom(), String.t(), (() -> any())) :: String.t()
@spec capture_io(atom(), keyword(), (() -> any())) :: String.t()