// Copyright 2010 Google Inc. // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the License at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. // Package gomock is a mock framework for Go. // // Standard usage: // (1) Define an interface that you wish to mock. // type MyInterface interface { // SomeMethod(x int64, y string) // } // (2) Use mockgen to generate a mock from the interface. // (3) Use the mock in a test: // func TestMyThing(t *testing.T) { // mockCtrl := gomock.NewController(t) // defer mockCtrl.Finish() // // mockObj := something.NewMockMyInterface(mockCtrl) // mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(4, "blah") // // pass mockObj to a real object and play with it. // } // // By default, expected calls are not enforced to run in any particular order. // Call order dependency can be enforced by use of InOrder and/or Call.After. // Call.After can create more varied call order dependencies, but InOrder is // often more convenient. // // The following examples create equivalent call order dependencies. // // Example of using Call.After to chain expected call order: // // firstCall := mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(1, "first") // secondCall := mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(2, "second").After(firstCall) // mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(3, "third").After(secondCall) // // Example of using InOrder to declare expected call order: // // gomock.InOrder( // mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(1, "first"), // mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(2, "second"), // mockObj.EXPECT().SomeMethod(3, "third"), // ) package gomock import ( "context" "fmt" "reflect" "runtime" "sync" ) // A TestReporter is something that can be used to report test failures. It // is satisfied by the standard library's *testing.T. type TestReporter interface { Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) } // TestHelper is a TestReporter that has the Helper method. It is satisfied // by the standard library's *testing.T. type TestHelper interface { TestReporter Helper() } // cleanuper is used to check if TestHelper also has the `Cleanup` method. A // common pattern is to pass in a `*testing.T` to // `NewController(t TestReporter)`. In Go 1.14+, `*testing.T` has a cleanup // method. This can be utilized to call `Finish()` so the caller of this library // does not have to. type cleanuper interface { Cleanup(func()) } // A Controller represents the top-level control of a mock ecosystem. It // defines the scope and lifetime of mock objects, as well as their // expectations. It is safe to call Controller's methods from multiple // goroutines. Each test should create a new Controller and invoke Finish via // defer. // // func TestFoo(t *testing.T) { // ctrl := gomock.NewController(t) // defer ctrl.Finish() // // .. // } // // func TestBar(t *testing.T) { // t.Run("Sub-Test-1", st) { // ctrl := gomock.NewController(st) // defer ctrl.Finish() // // .. // }) // t.Run("Sub-Test-2", st) { // ctrl := gomock.NewController(st) // defer ctrl.Finish() // // .. // }) // }) type Controller struct { // T should only be called within a generated mock. It is not intended to // be used in user code and may be changed in future versions. T is the // TestReporter passed in when creating the Controller via NewController. // If the TestReporter does not implement a TestHelper it will be wrapped // with a nopTestHelper. T TestHelper mu sync.Mutex expectedCalls *callSet finished bool } // NewController returns a new Controller. It is the preferred way to create a // Controller. // // New in go1.14+, if you are passing a *testing.T into this function you no // longer need to call ctrl.Finish() in your test methods. func NewController(t TestReporter) *Controller { h, ok := t.(TestHelper) if !ok { h = &nopTestHelper{t} } ctrl := &Controller{ T: h, expectedCalls: newCallSet(), } if c, ok := isCleanuper(ctrl.T); ok { c.Cleanup(func() { ctrl.T.Helper() ctrl.finish(true, nil) }) } return ctrl } type cancelReporter struct { t TestHelper cancel func() } func (r *cancelReporter) Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) { r.t.Errorf(format, args...) } func (r *cancelReporter) Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) { defer r.cancel() r.t.Fatalf(format, args...) } func (r *cancelReporter) Helper() { r.t.Helper() } // WithContext returns a new Controller and a Context, which is cancelled on any // fatal failure. func WithContext(ctx context.Context, t TestReporter) (*Controller, context.Context) { h, ok := t.(TestHelper) if !ok { h = &nopTestHelper{t: t} } ctx, cancel := context.WithCancel(ctx) return NewController(&cancelReporter{t: h, cancel: cancel}), ctx } type nopTestHelper struct { t TestReporter } func (h *nopTestHelper) Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) { h.t.Errorf(format, args...) } func (h *nopTestHelper) Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) { h.t.Fatalf(format, args...) } func (h nopTestHelper) Helper() {} // RecordCall is called by a mock. It should not be called by user code. func (ctrl *Controller) RecordCall(receiver interface{}, method string, args ...interface{}) *Call { ctrl.T.Helper() recv := reflect.ValueOf(receiver) for i := 0; i < recv.Type().NumMethod(); i++ { if recv.Type().Method(i).Name == method { return ctrl.RecordCallWithMethodType(receiver, method, recv.Method(i).Type(), args...) } } ctrl.T.Fatalf("gomock: failed finding method %s on %T", method, receiver) panic("unreachable") } // RecordCallWithMethodType is called by a mock. It should not be called by user code. func (ctrl *Controller) RecordCallWithMethodType(receiver interface{}, method string, methodType reflect.Type, args ...interface{}) *Call { ctrl.T.Helper() call := newCall(ctrl.T, receiver, method, methodType, args...) ctrl.mu.Lock() defer ctrl.mu.Unlock() ctrl.expectedCalls.Add(call) return call } // Call is called by a mock. It should not be called by user code. func (ctrl *Controller) Call(receiver interface{}, method string, args ...interface{}) []interface{} { ctrl.T.Helper() // Nest this code so we can use defer to make sure the lock is released. actions := func() []func([]interface{}) []interface{} { ctrl.T.Helper() ctrl.mu.Lock() defer ctrl.mu.Unlock() expected, err := ctrl.expectedCalls.FindMatch(receiver, method, args) if err != nil { // callerInfo's skip should be updated if the number of calls between the user's test // and this line changes, i.e. this code is wrapped in another anonymous function. // 0 is us, 1 is controller.Call(), 2 is the generated mock, and 3 is the user's test. origin := callerInfo(3) ctrl.T.Fatalf("Unexpected call to %T.%v(%v) at %s because: %s", receiver, method, args, origin, err) } // Two things happen here: // * the matching call no longer needs to check prerequite calls, // * and the prerequite calls are no longer expected, so remove them. preReqCalls := expected.dropPrereqs() for _, preReqCall := range preReqCalls { ctrl.expectedCalls.Remove(preReqCall) } actions := expected.call() if expected.exhausted() { ctrl.expectedCalls.Remove(expected) } return actions }() var rets []interface{} for _, action := range actions { if r := action(args); r != nil { rets = r } } return rets } // Finish checks to see if all the methods that were expected to be called // were called. It should be invoked for each Controller. It is not idempotent // and therefore can only be invoked once. // // New in go1.14+, if you are passing a *testing.T into NewController function you no // longer need to call ctrl.Finish() in your test methods. func (ctrl *Controller) Finish() { // If we're currently panicking, probably because this is a deferred call. // This must be recovered in the deferred function. err := recover() ctrl.finish(false, err) } func (ctrl *Controller) finish(cleanup bool, panicErr interface{}) { ctrl.T.Helper() ctrl.mu.Lock() defer ctrl.mu.Unlock() if ctrl.finished { if _, ok := isCleanuper(ctrl.T); !ok { ctrl.T.Fatalf("Controller.Finish was called more than once. It has to be called exactly once.") } return } ctrl.finished = true // Short-circuit, pass through the panic. if panicErr != nil { panic(panicErr) } // Check that all remaining expected calls are satisfied. failures := ctrl.expectedCalls.Failures() for _, call := range failures { ctrl.T.Errorf("missing call(s) to %v", call) } if len(failures) != 0 { if !cleanup { ctrl.T.Fatalf("aborting test due to missing call(s)") return } ctrl.T.Errorf("aborting test due to missing call(s)") } } // callerInfo returns the file:line of the call site. skip is the number // of stack frames to skip when reporting. 0 is callerInfo's call site. func callerInfo(skip int) string { if _, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(skip + 1); ok { return fmt.Sprintf("%s:%d", file, line) } return "unknown file" } // isCleanuper checks it if t's base TestReporter has a Cleanup method. func isCleanuper(t TestReporter) (cleanuper, bool) { tr := unwrapTestReporter(t) c, ok := tr.(cleanuper) return c, ok } // unwrapTestReporter unwraps TestReporter to the base implementation. func unwrapTestReporter(t TestReporter) TestReporter { tr := t switch nt := t.(type) { case *cancelReporter: tr = nt.t if h, check := tr.(*nopTestHelper); check { tr = h.t } case *nopTestHelper: tr = nt.t default: // not wrapped } return tr }