I use Vader to test Vimscript.
Use your favorite plugin manager.
- vim-plug
- Add
Plug 'junegunn/vader.vim'
to .vimrc - Run
:PlugInstall
- Add
Vader [file glob ...]
Vader! [file glob ...]
- Exit Vim after running the tests with exit status of 0 or 1
vim '+Vader!*' && echo Success || echo Failure
- (You need to pass
--nofork
option when using GVim)
- (You need to pass
- If the description of
Do
orExecute
block includesFIXME
orTODO
, the block is recognized as a pending test case and does not affect the exit status. - If the environment variable
VADER_OUTPUT_FILE
is set, the test results will be written to it as well, otherwise they are written to stderr using different methods (depending on Neovim/Vim).
- Exit Vim after running the tests with exit status of 0 or 1
A Vader file is a flat sequence of blocks each of which starts with the block
label, such as Execute:
, followed by the content of the block indented by 2
spaces.
- Given
- Content to fill the execution buffer
- Do
- Normal-mode keystrokes that can span multiple lines
- Execute
- Vimscript to execute
- Then
- Vimscript to run after Do or Execute block. Used for assertions.
- Expect
- Expected result of the preceding Do/Execute block
- Before
- Vimscript to run before each test case
- After
- Vimscript to run after each test case
If you want to skip 2-space indention, end the block label with a semi-colon instead of a colon.
The content of a Given block is pasted into the "workbench buffer" for the
subsequent Do/Execute blocks. If filetype
parameter is given, &filetype
of
the buffer is set accordingly. It is also used to syntax-highlight the block in
.vader file.
Given [filetype] [(comment)]:
[input text]
The content of a Do block is a sequence of normal-mode keystrokes that can
freely span multiple lines. A special key can be written in its name surrounded
by angle brackets preceded by a backslash (e.g. \<Enter>
).
Do block can be followed by an optional Expect block.
Do [(comment)]:
[keystrokes]
The content of an Execute block is plain Vimscript to be executed.
Execute block can also be followed by an optional Expect block.
Execute [(comment)]:
[vimscript]
In Execute block, the following commands are provided.
- Assertions
Assert <boolean expr>[, message]
AssertEqual <expected>, <got>[, message]
AssertNotEqual <unexpected>, <got>[, message]
AssertThrows <command>
- This will set
g:vader_exception
(fromv:exception
) andg:vader_throwpoint
(fromv:throwpoint
).
- This will set
- Other commands
Log "Message"
Save <name>[, ...]
Restore [<name>, ...]
The following syntax helper functions are provided:
-
SyntaxAt
: return a string with the name of the syntax group at the following position:SyntaxAt()
: current cursor positionSyntaxAt(col)
: current cursor line, at given columnSyntaxAt(lnum, col)
: line and column
-
SyntaxOf(pattern[, nth=1])
: return a string with the name of the syntax group at the first character of the nth match of the given pattern. Return''
if there was no match.
The path of the current .vader
file can be accessed via g:vader_file
.
In addition to plain Vimscript, you can also test Ruby/Python/Perl/Lua interface with Execute block as follows:
Execute [lang] [(comment)]:
[<lang> code]
See Ruby and Python examples here.
A Then block containing Vimscript can follow a Do or an Execute block. Mostly used for assertions. Can be used in conjunction with an Expect block.
Then [(comment)]:
[vimscript]
If an Expect block follows an Execute block or a Do block, the result of the
preceding block is compared to the content of the Expect block. Comparison is
case-sensitive. filetype
parameter is used to syntax-highlight the block.
Expect [filetype] [(comment)]:
[expected output]
The content of a Before block is executed before every following Do/Execute block.
Before [(comment)]:
[vim script]
The content of an After block is executed after every following Do/Execute block.
After [(comment)]:
[vim script]
You can include other vader files using Include macro.
Include: setup.vader
# ...
Include: cleanup.vader
Any line that starts with #
, "
, =
, -
, ~
, ^
, or *
without
indentation is considered to be a comment and simply ignored.
###################
# Typical comment #
###################
Given (fixture):
================
Hello
Do (modification):
------------------
* change inner word
ciw
* to
World
Expect (result):
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
World
# Test case
Execute (test assertion):
%d
Assert 1 == line('$')
setf python
AssertEqual 'python', &filetype
Given ruby (some ruby code):
def a
a = 1
end
Do (indent the block):
vip=
Expect ruby (indented block):
def a
a = 1
end
Do (indent and shift):
vip=
gv>
Expect ruby (indented and shifted):
def a
a = 1
end
Given c (C file):
int i = 0;
Execute (syntax is good):
AssertEqual SyntaxAt(2), 'cType'
AssertEqual SyntaxOf('0'), 'cNumber'
When you test a plugin, it's generally a good idea to setup a testing environment that is isolated from the other plugins and settings irrelevant to the test. The simplest way to achieve this is to start Vim with a mini .vimrc as follows:
vim -Nu <(cat << EOF
filetype off
set rtp+=~/.vim/bundle/vader.vim
set rtp+=~/.vim/bundle/vim-markdown
set rtp+=~/.vim/bundle/vim-markdown/after
filetype plugin indent on
syntax enable
EOF) +Vader*
To make your project tested on Travis CI, you need to
add .travis.yml
to your project root. For most plugins the following example
should suffice.
language: vim
before_script: |
git clone https://github.com/junegunn/vader.vim.git
script: |
vim -Nu <(cat << VIMRC
filetype off
set rtp+=vader.vim
set rtp+=.
set rtp+=after
filetype plugin indent on
syntax enable
VIMRC) -c 'Vader! test/*' > /dev/null
(Note that vim
is not a valid language for Travis CI. It just sets up Ruby
execution environment instead as the default.)
- Simple .travis.yml
- Advanced .travis.yml
- Multiple dependencies
- Builds Vim from source
- Build result
See the wiki page.
The keystrokes given to the feedkeys() function are consumed only after Vader finishes executing the content of the Do/Execute block. Take the following case as an example:
Do (Test feedkeys() function):
i123
\<C-O>:call feedkeys('456')\<CR>
789
Expect (Wrong!):
123456789
You may have expected 123456789
, but the result is 123789456
. Unfortunately
I have yet to find a workaround for this problem. Please let me know if you find
one.
It is reported that
CursorMoved event is not triggered inside a Do block. If you need to test a
feature that involves autocommands on CursorMoved event, you have to manually
invoke it in the middle of the block using :doautocmd
.
Do (Using doautocmd):
jjj
:doautocmd CursorMoved\<CR>
This is likely a bug of Vim itself. For some reason, search history is not correctly updated when searches are performed inside a Do block. The following test scenario fails due to this problem.
Execute (Clear search history):
for _ in range(&history)
call histdel('/', -1)
endfor
Given (Search and destroy):
I'm a street walking cheetah with a heart full of napalm
I'm a runaway son of the nuclear A-bomb
I'm a world's forgotten boy
The one who searches and destroys
Do (Searches):
/street\<CR>
/walking\<CR>
/cheetah\<CR>
/runaway\<CR>
/search\<CR>
Execute (Assertions):
Log string(map(range(1, &history), 'histget("/", - v:val)'))
AssertEqual 'runaway', histget('/', -2)
AssertEqual 'search', histget('/', -1)
The result is given as follows:
Starting Vader: 1 suite(s), 3 case(s)
Starting Vader: /Users/jg/.vim/plugged/vader.vim/search-and-destroy.vader
(1/3) [EXECUTE] Clear search history
(2/3) [ GIVEN] Search and destroy
(2/3) [ DO] Searches
(3/3) [ GIVEN] Search and destroy
(3/3) [EXECUTE] Assertions
> ['search', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '', '']
(3/3) [EXECUTE] (X) Assertion failure: 'runaway' != ''
Success/Total: 2/3
Success/Total: 2/3 (assertions: 0/1)
Elapsed time: 0.366118 sec.
MIT