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Should v3

Jeff Crosby edited this page Jun 29, 2019 · 4 revisions

⚠️ All information on this page is relevant to Pester v. 3.x. A syntax for Pester v. 4.0 you can find - here.

Should is a command that provides assertion convenience methods for comparing objects and throwing test failures when test expectations fail. Should is used inside It blocks of a Pester test script.

Negative Assertions

When reviewing the operators listed below, keep in mind that all of them can be negated by putting the word "Not" between "Should" and the operator. For example:

$true | Should Be $true
$true | Should Not Be $false

Should Operators

Be

Compares one object with another for equality and throws if the two objects are not the same. This comparison is not case sensitive.

$actual="Actual value"
$actual | Should Be "actual value" # Test will pass
$actual | Should Be "not actual value"  # Test will fail

BeExactly

Compares one object with another for equality and throws if the two objects are not the same. This comparison is case sensitive.

$actual="Actual value"
$actual | Should BeExactly "Actual value" # Test will pass
$actual | Should BeExactly "actual value" # Test will fail

BeGreaterThan

Asserts that a number is greater than an expected value. Uses PowerShell's -gt operator to compare the two values.

$Error.Count | Should BeGreaterThan 0

BeLessThan

Asserts that a number is less than an expected value. Uses PowerShell's -lt operator to compare the two values.

$Error.Count | Should BeLessThan 1

BeLike

Asserts that the actual value matches a wildcard pattern using PowerShell's -like operator. This comparison is not case-sensitive.

$actual="Actual value"
$actual | Should BeLike "actual *" # Test will pass
$actual | Should BeLike "not actual *" # Test will fail

BeLikeExactly

Asserts that the actual value matches a wildcard pattern using PowerShell's -like operator. This comparison is case-sensitive.

$actual="Actual value"
$actual | Should BeLikeExactly "Actual *" # Test will pass
$actual | Should BeLikeExactly "actual *" # Test will fail

BeOfType

Asserts that the actual value should be an object of a specified type (or a subclass of the specified type) using PowerShell's -is operator:

$actual = Get-Item $env:SystemRoot
$actual | Should BeOfType System.IO.DirectoryInfo   # Test will pass; object is a DirectoryInfo
$actual | Should BeOfType System.IO.FileSystemInfo  # Test will pass; DirectoryInfo base class is FileSystemInfo

$actual | Should BeOfType System.IO.FileInfo        # Test will fail; FileInfo is not a base class of DirectoryInfo

Exist

Does not perform any comparison but checks if the object calling Exist is present in a PS Provider. The object must have valid path syntax. It essentially must pass a Test-Path call.

$actual=(Dir . )[0].FullName
Remove-Item $actual
$actual | Should Exist # Test will fail

To test path containing [ ] wildcards, escape each bracket with two back-ticks as such "TestDrive:\``[test``].txt" or use Test-Path -LiteralPath $something | Should Be $true.

Contain

Checks to see if a file contains the specified text. This search is not case sensitive and uses regular expressions.

Set-Content -Path TestDrive:\file.txt -Value 'I am a file'
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should Contain 'I Am' # Test will pass
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should Contain '^I.*file$' # Test will pass

'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should Contain 'I Am Not' # Test will fail

Tip: Use [regex]::Escape("pattern") to match the exact text.

Set-Content -Path TestDrive:\file.txt -Value 'I am a file.'
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should Contain 'I.am.a.file' # Test will pass
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should Contain ([regex]::Escape('I.am.a.file')) # Test will fail

Warning: Make sure the input is either a quoted string or and Item object. Otherwise PowerShell will try to invoke the path, likely throwing an error Cannot run a document in the middle of a pipeline.

c:\file.txt |  Should Contain something # Will throw an error
'c:\file.txt' |  Should Contain something # Will evaluate correctly

ContainExactly

Checks to see if a file contains the specified text. This search is case sensitive and uses regular expressions to match the text.

Set-Content -Path TestDrive:\file.txt -Value 'I am a file.'
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should ContainExactly 'I am' # Test will pass
'TestDrive:\file.txt' | Should ContainExactly 'I Am' # Test will fail

Match

Uses a regular expression to compare two objects. This comparison is not case sensitive.

"I am a value" | Should Match "I Am" # Test will pass
"I am a value" | Should Match "I am a bad person" # Test will fail

Tip: Use [regex]::Escape("pattern") to match the exact text.

"Greg" | Should Match ".reg" # Test will pass
"Greg" | Should Match ([regex]::Escape(".reg")) # Test will fail

MatchExactly

Uses a regular expression to compare two objects. This comparison is case sensitive.

"I am a value" | Should MatchExactly "I am" # Test will pass
"I am a value" | Should MatchExactly "I Am" # Test will fail

Throw

Checks if an exception was thrown in the input ScriptBlock. Takes an optional argument to indicate the expected exception message.

{ foo } | Should Throw # Test will pass
{ $foo = 1 } | Should Throw # Test will fail
{ foo } | Should Not Throw # Test will fail
{ $foo = 1 } | Should Not Throw # Test will pass
{ throw "This is a test" } | Should Throw "This is a test" # Test will pass
{ throw "bar" } | Should Throw "This is a test" # Test will fail

Note: The exception message match is a substring match, so the following assertion will pass:

{throw "foo bar baz"} | Should Throw "bar" # Test will pass

Warning: The input object must be a ScriptBlock, otherwise it is processed outside of the assertion.

Get-Process -Name "process" -ErrorAction Stop  | Should Throw # Should pass but fails the test

BeNullOrEmpty

Checks values for null or empty (strings). The static [String]::IsNullOrEmpty() method is used to do the comparison.

$null | Should BeNullOrEmpty # Test will pass
$null | Should Not BeNullOrEmpty # Test will fail
@()   | Should BeNullOrEmpty # Test will pass
""    | Should BeNullOrEmpty # Test will pass

Using Should in a Test

function Add-Numbers($a, $b) {
    return $a + $b
}

Describe "Add-Numbers" {

    It "adds positive numbers" {
        $sum = Add-Numbers 2 3
        $sum | should be 3
    }

    It "ensures that 2 + 2 does not equal 5" {
        $sum = Add-Numbers 2 2
        $sum | should not be 5
    }
}

This test will fail since 3 will not be equal to the sum of 2 and 3.

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