Complements the standard unittest module in Nim to allow testing of asynchronous code.
Use the Nimble package manager to add asynctest to an existing project. Add the following to its .nimble file:
requires "asynctest >= 0.5.2 & < 0.6.0"
Replace import unittest
with one of the following imports, and you can await
asynchronous calls in tests, setup and teardown.
When you use Nim's standard library only (asyncdispatch and unittest):
import asynctest/asyncdispatch/unittest
When you use chronos or unittest2, pick the import that matches your choices:
import asynctest/asyncdispatch/unittest2 # standard async and unittest2
import asynctest/chronos/unittest # chronos and standard unittest
import asynctest/chronos/unittest2 # chronos and unittest2
import asynctest/asyncdispatch/unittest
proc someAsyncProc {.async.} =
# perform some async operations using await
suite "test async proc":
setup:
# invoke await in each test setup:
await someAsyncProc()
teardown:
# invoke await in each test teardown:
await someAsyncProc()
test "async test":
# invoke await in tests:
await someAsyncProc()
When you find yourself adding calls to sleepAsync
to your tests, you might
want to consider using check eventually
instead. It will repeatedly check
an expression until it becomes true. It has a built-in timeout of 5 seconds that
you can override.
var x: int
proc slowProcedure {.async.} =
# perform a slow operation
x = 42
let future = slowProcedure()
check eventually x == 42
await future
The setup
and teardown
code runs before and after every test, just like the
standard unittest module. In addition we provide setupAll
and
teardownAll
. The setupAll
code runs once before all tests in the suite, and
the teardownAll
runs once after all tests in the suite. Use these only as a
last resort when setting up the test environment is very costly. Be careful that
the tests do not modify the environment that you set up, lest you introduce
dependencies between tests.