Gophers, as xgo
has been released, this repository is considered End of Life.
As a redesign of go-mock
, xgo
provides seemingless integration with go, less build time and richer abilities.
Go to https://github.com/xhd2015/xgo to check for more details!
A compile-time mock framework or library, it can be used in place where mock is needed, just like you would otherwise use other monkey-patch or interface-mock libraries.
# add dependency
go get github.com/xhd2015/go-mock
# generate a initial mock
go run -mod=readonly github.com/xhd2015/go-mock build -o ./exec.bin -v ./path/to/your_main_package
...add some mocks...
# rebuild the binary with mock enabled,then run
go run -mod=readonly github.com/xhd2015/go-mock build -o ./exec.bin -v ./path/to/your_main_package
./exec.bin
# or just run
go run -mod=readonly github.com/xhd2015/go-mock run -v ./path/to/your_main_package
For a working example, check example/demo for more details.
- Source code function extraction;
- Function level trace;
- Dynamic skipping mock(use
mock.CallOld()
); - Nested mock;
- RPC mock;
- Nearly any function from any package mock;
- Type safe;
- build with go compiler, no dependency on any architecture nor os;
- Work on any platform: amd64, arm64...
- Work on any os: windows, linux, darwin...
For business development usage, we recommend putting all test data and code into the top level directory test
, to separate concern between product code and testing code.
You can make your own testing code layout by copying all contents under the archtype directory into your test
directory.
NOTE: it is important that archtype/vendorhelp/vendorhelp.go should be included in your code base. Since go-mock
is a main package, normally its code will not be included in the go's vendor
directory, making it inconvienent to run in offline enviornment like CI. To include the vendorhelp
but not really import it anywhere, the go-mock
can be built and run from source directly, without having to pre-build one.
Show verbose log.
If encountered with building problems, try to add -f
to refresh all cached files.
The https://go.dev/blog/cover provides a very good explanation on how coverage in go is implemented.
Take this simple hello.go
fo example:
package hello
import "fmt"
func Hello() {
if true {
fmt.Printf("hello world")
}
}
Running go tool cover -mode=count hello.go
would give us:
package hello
import "fmt"
func Hello() {GoCover.Count[0]++;
if true {GoCover.Count[1]++;
fmt.Printf("hello world")
}
}
var GoCover = struct {
Count [2]uint32
Pos [3 * 2]uint32
NumStmt [2]uint16
} {
Pos: [3 * 2]uint32{
5, 6, 0xa000e, // [0]
6, 8, 0x3000a, // [1]
},
NumStmt: [2]uint16{
1, // 0
1, // 1
},
}
You'll see that the code is rewritten by go in the way that:
- line layout does not change at all;
- extra statistics code is added to beginning of each block
NOTE: it is important that the line layout does not change at all, so that we can still debug the generated code as if it is written verbatim in the original file. So if panic,log and other line-based debugging info are reported, they will match the original file's lines.
With all these said, let's see how the go-mock library does all these:
go run github.com/xhd2015/go-mock print -print-rewrite=true -print-mock=false ./hello.go
Output:
package hello;import _mock "github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/mock"
import "fmt"
func Hello() {var _mockreq = struct{}{};var _mockresp struct{};_mock.TrapFunc(nil,&_mock.StubInfo{PkgName:"github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/tmp",Owner:"",OwnerPtr:false,Name:"Hello"}, nil, &_mockreq, &_mockresp,_mockHello,false,false,false);}; func _mockHello(){
if true {
fmt.Printf("hello world")
}
}
You can relate each line of the generated file to the original file, with 2 changes:
- after
package hello
, we import this mock library - in beginning of func
Hello
's body, a_mock.TrapFunc
is inserted so that whenHello
is called, its control flow is transferred to_mock.TrapFunc
inside which we add interceptor and other mock strategies.
After the original code rewritten, they are put into a temp directory, on Linux this is usually /tmp/go-rewrite
.
To map the generated files to original files, we add -trimpath=GEN_DIR=>ORIG_DIR
flag, as output by adding -v
we can verify that:
cd /tmp/go-rewrite/Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo
go build -o /Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo/exec.bin '-gcflags=all=-trimpath=/tmp/go-rewrite/Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo=>/Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo' ./
NOTE the -gcflags=all=-trimpath=/tmp/go-rewrite/Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo=>/Users/x/gopath/src/github.com/xhd2015/go-mock/example/demo
will map files under /tmp/go-rewrite/...
to their original directory.