Use MSTest for BDD.
Use local functions to structure tests with patterns like:
Arrange
/Act
/Assert
Given
/When
/Then
Context
/Specification
LoFuUnit.MSTest and related packages makes it convenient for developers to write tests with collaboration & communication in mind.
An example of a test with LoFuUnit.MSTest
and FluentAssertions:
using FluentAssertions;
using LoFuUnit.MSTest;
using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting;
namespace LoFuUnitDocs
{
[TestClass]
public class AuthenticationTests : LoFuTest
{
SecurityService Subject;
UserToken Token;
[TestMethod]
public void Authenticate_admin_users()
{
Subject = new SecurityService();
void when_authenticating_an_admin_user() =>
Token = Subject.Authenticate("username", "password");
void should_indicate_the_user_s_role() =>
Token.Role.Should().Be(Roles.Admin);
void should_have_a_unique_session_id() =>
Token.SessionId.Should().NotBeNull();
}
}
}
Output:
Authenticate admin users
when authenticating an admin user
should indicate the user's role
should have a unique session id
Test methods can contain local functions that are invoked implicitly. These test functions can perform the arrange, act or assert steps of the test.
The LoFuUnit.MSTest
package contains the LoFuTest
base class for test fixtures to inherit from.
This class defines a method marked with the [TestCleanup]
attribute, and it is called after running each test in the test fixture.
The TestCleanup
method invokes the test functions in the containing test method that was just executed.
The invocations will occur in the order that the test functions are declared.
If a test function fails, the test method fails directly.
Any subsequent test functions in the test method will not be invoked.
More documentation is available at https://github.com/hlaueriksson/LoFuUnit