Jump to the docs to learn more. To start rolling your Ginkgo tests now keep reading!
If you have a question, comment, bug report, feature request, etc. please open a GitHub issue.
Feature List
- 
Ginkgo uses Go's testingpackage and can live alongside your existingtestingtests. It's easy to bootstrap and start writing your first tests
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Structure your BDD-style tests expressively: - Nestable Describe,ContextandWhencontainer blocks
- BeforeEachand- AfterEachblocks for setup and teardown
- Itand- Specifyblocks that hold your assertions
- JustBeforeEachblocks that separate creation from configuration (also known as the subject action pattern).
- BeforeSuiteand- AfterSuiteblocks to prep for and cleanup after a suite.
 
- Nestable 
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A comprehensive test runner that lets you: - Mark specs as pending
- Focus individual specs, and groups of specs, either programmatically or on the command line
- Run your tests in random order, and then reuse random seeds to replicate the same order.
- Break up your test suite into parallel processes for straightforward test parallelization
 
- 
ginkgo: a command line interface with plenty of handy command line arguments for running your tests and generating test files. Here are a few choice examples:- ginkgo -nodes=Nruns your tests in- Nparallel processes and print out coherent output in realtime
- ginkgo -coverruns your tests using Go's code coverage tool
- ginkgo convertconverts an XUnit-style- testingpackage to a Ginkgo-style package
- ginkgo -focus="REGEXP"and- ginkgo -skip="REGEXP"allow you to specify a subset of tests to run via regular expression
- ginkgo -rruns all tests suites under the current directory
- ginkgo -vprints out identifying information for each tests just before it runs
 And much more: run ginkgo helpfor details!The ginkgoCLI is convenient, but purely optional -- Ginkgo works just fine withgo test
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ginkgo watchwatches packages and their dependencies for changes, then reruns tests. Run tests immediately as you develop!
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Built-in support for testing asynchronicity 
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Built-in support for benchmarking your code. Control the number of benchmark samples as you gather runtimes and other, arbitrary, bits of numerical information about your code. 
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Completions for Sublime Text: just use Package Control to install Ginkgo Completions.
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Completions for VSCode: just use VSCode's extension installer to install vscode-ginkgo.
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Straightforward support for third-party testing libraries such as Gomock and Testify. Check out the docs for details. 
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A modular architecture that lets you easily: - Write custom reporters (for example, Ginkgo comes with a JUnit XML reporter and a TeamCity reporter).
- Adapt an existing matcher library (or write your own!) to work with Ginkgo
 
Gomega: Ginkgo's Preferred Matcher Library
Ginkgo is best paired with Gomega. Learn more about Gomega here
Agouti: A Go Acceptance Testing Framework
Agouti allows you run WebDriver integration tests. Learn more about Agouti here
Set Me Up!
You'll need the Go command-line tools. Ginkgo is tested with Go 1.6+, but preferably you should get the latest. Follow the installation instructions if you don't have it installed.
go get -u github.com/onsi/ginkgo/ginkgo  # installs the ginkgo CLI
go get -u github.com/onsi/gomega/...     # fetches the matcher library
cd path/to/package/you/want/to/test
ginkgo bootstrap # set up a new ginkgo suite
ginkgo generate  # will create a sample test file.  edit this file and add your tests then...
go test # to run your tests
ginkgo  # also runs your tests
I'm new to Go: What are my testing options?
Of course, I heartily recommend Ginkgo and Gomega. Both packages are seeing heavy, daily, production use on a number of projects and boast a mature and comprehensive feature-set.
With that said, it's great to know what your options are :)
What Go gives you out of the box
Testing is a first class citizen in Go, however Go's built-in testing primitives are somewhat limited: The testing package provides basic XUnit style tests and no assertion library.
Matcher libraries for Go's XUnit style tests
A number of matcher libraries have been written to augment Go's built-in XUnit style tests. Here are two that have gained traction:
You can also use Ginkgo's matcher library Gomega in XUnit style tests
BDD style testing frameworks
There are a handful of BDD-style testing frameworks written for Go. Here are a few:
Finally, @shageman has put together a comprehensive comparison of Go testing libraries.
Go explore!
License
Ginkgo is MIT-Licensed
Contributing
See CONTRIBUTING.md
