package testo-lwt
Install
dune-project
Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=50c4ad248a3234274c84f80b56d2c4007238c65cfd1e0a66b1952deaf04a4765
sha512=522c856350ea1cc3ca17cde59cbd50440ff36681952f672cfa0ba4451db41343a6de3ca0101f7d4465d30de3f337f226df289bbc21780f8a18a6d9a622e3fb55
Description
Use this if the tests return Lwt promises and you can't make them synchronous because 'Lwt_main.run' is not supported by your platform e.g. JavaScript.
Published: 18 Jan 2026
README
Testo 
Documentation: testocaml.net
Features
Testo is a test framework for OCaml that takes inspiration from its predecessor Alcotest and from pytest. Features include:
- support for explicit XFAIL tests i.e. tests that are expected to fail, indicating that they should be fixed eventually;
- support for test snapshots i.e. persistent storage of captured stdout, stderr, or output files;
- reviewing and approving tests without re-running them;
- nested test suites;
- various ways to select tests;
- parallel execution (using multiprocessing);
- supports OCaml >= 4.08.
A test executable is generated from a list of tests written in OCaml. The function to interpret the command line and run things is Testo.interpret_argv. The core subcommands supported by a test executable are:
run: run testsstatus: check the status of the tests without re-running themapprove: approve test output and make it the new reference
A test is fundamentally a name and test function of type unit -> unit. A test is considered successful if the test function returns normally and is considered failed if it raises an exception. A test is created with Testo.create which takes a variety of options in addition to the name and the test function.
For example, checking that some test result res equals an expected value of 42 is written as:
Testo.(check int) 42 res;This raises an exception that is turned into a nice error message.