Skip to content

JamesDawson/Pester

 
 

Repository files navigation

Pester

Pester provides a framework for running Unit Tests to execute and validate PowerShell commands inside of PowerShell. Pester follows a file naming convention for naming tests to be discovered by pester at test time and a simple set of functions that expose a Testing DSL for isolating, running, evaluating and reporting the results of Powershell commands.

Pester tests can execute any command or script that is accesible to a pester test file. This can include functions, Cmdlets, Modules and scripts. Pester can be run in ad hoc style in a console or it can be integrated into the Build scripts of a Continuous Integration system.

Pester also contains a powerful set of Mocking Functions that allow tests to mimic and mock the functionality of any command inside of a piece of powershell code being tested.

A Pester Test

BuildChanges.ps1

function BuildIfChanged {
  $thisVersion=Get-Version
  $nextVersion=Get-NextVersion
  if($thisVersion -ne $nextVersion) {Build $nextVersion}
  return $nextVersion
}

BuildChanges.Tests.ps1

$here = Split-Path -Parent $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path
$sut = (Split-Path -Leaf $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path).Replace(".Tests.", ".")
. "$here\$sut"

Describe "BuildIfChanged" {
  Context "When there are Changes" {
    Mock Get-Version {return 1.1}
    Mock Get-NextVersion {return 1.2}
    Mock Build {} -Verifiable -ParameterFilter {$version -eq 1.2}

    $result = BuildIfChanged

      It "Builds the next version" {
          Assert-VerifiableMocks
      }
      It "returns the next version number" {
          $result.Should.Be(1.2)
      }
    }
  Context "When there are no Changes" {
    Mock Get-Version -MockWith {return 1.1}
    Mock Get-NextVersion -MockWith {return 1.1}
    Mock Build {}

    $result = BuildIfChanged

      It "Should not build the next version" {
          Assert-MockCalled Build -Times 0 -ParameterFilter{$version -eq 1.1}
      }
    }
}

Running Tests

C:\PS>./bin/pester.bat

This will run all tests inside of files containing .Tests. recursively from the current directory downwards and print a report of all failing and passing tests to the console.

Continuous Integration with Pester

Pester integrates well with almost any build automation solution. You could create a MSBuild target that calls Pester's convenience Batch file:

<Target Name="Tests">
<Exec Command="cmd /c $(baseDir)pester\bin\pester.bat" />
</Target>

This will start a powershell session, import the Pester Module and call invoke pester within the current directory. If any test fails, it will return an exit code equal to the number of failed tests and all test results will be saved to Test.xml using NUnit's Schema allowing you to plug these results nicely into most Build systems like CruiseControl, TeamCity, TFS or Jenkins.

Some further reading and resources:

About

Powershell BDD style testing framework

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published