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testscript-rs
A Rust crate for testing command-line tools using filesystem-based script files.
testscript-rs provides a framework for writing integration tests for CLI applications using the .txtar format, where test scripts and file contents are combined in a single file.
This crate is inspired by and aims to be compatible with Go's github.com/rogpeppe/go-internal/testscript package.
Testscript is primarily useful for describing testing scenarios involving executing commands and dealing with files. This makes it a good choice for testing CLI applications in a succinct and human-readable way.
Quick Example
use testscript_rs::testscript;
#[test]
fn test_my_cli() {
testscript::run("testdata")
.setup(|env| {
// Compile your CLI tool
std::process::Command::new("cargo")
.args(["build", "--bin", "my-cli"])
.status()?;
// Copy binary to test environment
std::fs::copy("target/debug/my-cli", env.work_dir.join("my-cli"))?;
Ok(())
})
.execute()
.unwrap();
}
With a test script in testdata/basic.txt:
# Test basic functionality
exec ./my-cli --version
stdout "my-cli 1.0"
exec ./my-cli process input.txt
cmp output.txt expected.txt
-- input.txt --
test content
-- expected.txt --
processed: test content
Running the test will compile the CLI program, make it available to the testscript environment, run the specified commands, and check its output.
Installation
Add testscript-rs to your Cargo.toml:
[dev-dependencies]
testscript-rs = "<release>"
Requires Rust 1.70 or later.
Usage
Basic Usage
use testscript_rs::testscript;
#[test]
fn test_cli() {
testscript::run("testdata").execute().unwrap();
}
With Setup Hook
testscript::run("testdata")
.setup(|env| {
// Compile your binary before each test
std::process::Command::new("cargo")
.args(["build", "--bin", "my-tool"])
.status()?;
Ok(())
})
.execute()
.unwrap();
With Custom Commands
testscript::run("testdata")
.command("custom-cmd", |env, args| {
// Your custom command implementation
println!("Running custom command with args: {:?}", args);
Ok(())
})
.condition("feature-enabled", true)
.preserve_work_on_failure(true) // Debug failed tests
.execute()
.unwrap();
To call the custom command, in your testscript file:
custom-cmd arg1 arg2 arg3
Test Script Format
Test scripts use the txtar format. For complete format documentation, see the original Go testscript documentation.
Built-in Commands
- exec - Execute external commands
- cmp - Compare two files
- stdout/stderr - Check command output (supports regex)
- exists - Check file existence
- mkdir - Create directories
- cp - Copy files (supports stdout/stderr as source)
- mv - Move/rename files
- rm - Remove files/directories
- chmod - Change file permissions
- env - Set environment variables
- cmpenv - Compare files with environment variable substitution
- stdin - Set stdin for next command
- cd - Change working directory
- wait - Wait for background processes
- kill - Kill background processes
- skip - Skip test execution
- stop - Stop test early (pass)
- unquote - Remove leading
>from file lines - grep - Search files with regex
- symlink - Create symbolic links
Commands can be prefixed with conditions ([unix]) or negated (!).
Error Messages
testscript-rs provides detailed error messages with script context to make debugging easy:
Error in testdata/hello.txt at line 6:
3 | stdout "this works"
4 |
5 | # This command will fail
> 6 | exec nonexistent-command arg1 arg2
7 | stdout "should not get here"
8 |
Note: Some features of
testscriptin Go are not supported in this Rust port:
[gc]for whether Go was built with gc[gccgo]for whether Go was built with gccgo[go1.x]for whether the Go version is 1.x or later
Examples
See examples/sample-cli/ and its testdata directory for more examples.
There are also more tests in testdata that demonstrate and check this implementations behavior.
UpdateScripts (Test Maintenance)
UpdateScripts automatically updates test files with actual command output, making test maintenance easier:
// Enable via API
testscript::run("testdata")
.update_scripts(true)
.execute()
.unwrap();
Or via environment variable:
UPDATE_SCRIPTS=1 cargo test
When enabled, instead of failing on output mismatches, the test files will be updated with actual command output:
Before (failing test):
exec my-tool --version
stdout "my-tool 1.0"
After running with update mode:
exec my-tool --version
stdout "my-tool 2.1.0"
This feature only updates stdout and stderr expectations while preserving file structure and comments.