package craml
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=efe73af16e95683bf38f33b6d011bb9b5ec0c9c2c658820577662408a01fd0ef
md5=328d4d6bb137054894b215b3e10d95ca
README.md.html
craml: A CRAM-testing framework for testing shell scripts
CRAM is a is functional testing framework for command line applications. craml
is freely inspired by the Python tool, which was itself based on Mercurial's unified test format.
craml
is released as a single binary (called craml
) and supports the following syntax:
Lines beginning with two spaces, a dollar sign, and a space are commands and will be run in the shell.
Multi-lines commands end by
\
and continue with two spaces and a>
sign on the next line:$ <line1> \ > <line2> \ > <line3>
Lines beginning with two spaces are considered command output.
Command outputs can contains ellipsis:
...
. These will match any possible outputs (on zero, one or multiple lines).Lines starting by
<--
are command pre-conditions; they will determine the conditions where the command is run. Currently, only non-deterministic modes are supported as pre-conditions (see below).Lines starting by
-->
are command post-conditions. Currently, only exit codes are supported as post-conditions (see below).Anything else is a comment. It is not possible to put comments in the middle of an output as it is not clear what should be done to them when the output changes.
To run the tests described in a <file>
, use craml <file>
. This will run all the commands in sequence and will generated <file>.corrected
if one of the output do not match the expected command outputs.
Non-deterministic Outputs
craml
supports non-deterministic outputs:
<-- non-deterministic
$ <command>
<output>
In that case, craml <file>
will run the command but will not generate <file>.corrected
if the new output differs from the one described in the file. Use craml --non-deterministic <file>
to come back to the default behaviour.
Non-deterministic Commands
craml
supports non-deterministic outputs:
<-- non-deterministic [skip]
$ <command>
<output>
In that case, craml <file>
will not run the command. Use craml --non-deterministic <file>
to come back to the default behaviour.
Exit Codes
craml
tests exit codes:
$ <command>
<output>
--> exit 10
If <command>
does not exit with code 10, then craml <file>
will generate <file>.corrected
with the right exit code. Note that @@ exit 0
will not be displayed.