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nodejs/lib/assert.js
Ryan Dahl 4ccdc501d4 Include lib/ directory in node executable. Compile on demand.
Instead of installing the files in /usr/lib/node/libraries and loading them
from the file system, the files are built-in to the node executable.
However, they are only compiled on demand.

The reasoning is:
  1. Allow for more complex internal javascript. In particular,
  process.stdout and process.stdin can be js implemented streams.

  2. Ease system installs. Loading from disk each time is unnecessary
  overhead. Note that there is no "system" path for modules anymore. Only
  $HOME/.node_libraries.
2010-03-15 08:04:35 -07:00

287 lines
9.3 KiB
JavaScript

// http://wiki.commonjs.org/wiki/Unit_Testing/1.0
//
// THIS IS NOT TESTED NOR LIKELY TO WORK OUTSIDE V8!
//
// Originally from narwhal.js (http://narwhaljs.org)
// Copyright (c) 2009 Thomas Robinson <280north.com>
//
// Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
// of this software and associated documentation files (the 'Software'), to
// deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the
// rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
// sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
// furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
//
// The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
// all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
//
// THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
// IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
// FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
// AUTHORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN
// ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION
// WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
// UTILITY
var inherits = require('sys').inherits;
var pSlice = Array.prototype.slice;
// 1. The assert module provides functions that throw
// AssertionError's when particular conditions are not met. The
// assert module must conform to the following interface.
var assert = exports;
// 2. The AssertionError is defined in assert.
// new assert.AssertionError({message: message, actual: actual, expected: expected})
assert.AssertionError = function AssertionError (options) {
this.name = "AssertionError";
this.message = options.message;
this.actual = options.actual;
this.expected = options.expected;
this.operator = options.operator;
var stackStartFunction = options.stackStartFunction || fail;
if (Error.captureStackTrace) {
Error.captureStackTrace(this, stackStartFunction);
}
};
inherits(assert.AssertionError, Error);
assert.AssertionError.prototype.toString = function() {
if (this.message) {
return [this.name+":", this.message].join(' ');
} else {
return [ this.name+":"
, JSON.stringify(this.expected )
, this.operator
, JSON.stringify(this.actual)
].join(" ");
}
}
// assert.AssertionError instanceof Error
assert.AssertionError.__proto__ = Error.prototype;
// At present only the three keys mentioned above are used and
// understood by the spec. Implementations or sub modules can pass
// other keys to the AssertionError's constructor - they will be
// ignored.
// 3. All of the following functions must throw an AssertionError
// when a corresponding condition is not met, with a message that
// may be undefined if not provided. All assertion methods provide
// both the actual and expected values to the assertion error for
// display purposes.
function fail(actual, expected, message, operator, stackStartFunction) {
throw new assert.AssertionError({
message: message,
actual: actual,
expected: expected,
operator: operator,
stackStartFunction: stackStartFunction
});
}
// EXTENSION! allows for well behaved errors defined elsewhere.
assert.fail = fail;
// 4. Pure assertion tests whether a value is truthy, as determined
// by !!guard.
// assert.ok(guard, message_opt);
// This statement is equivalent to assert.equal(true, guard,
// message_opt);. To test strictly for the value true, use
// assert.strictEqual(true, guard, message_opt);.
assert.ok = function ok(value, message) {
if (!!!value) fail(value, true, message, "==", assert.ok);
};
// 5. The equality assertion tests shallow, coercive equality with
// ==.
// assert.equal(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.equal = function equal(actual, expected, message) {
if (actual != expected) fail(actual, expected, message, "==", assert.equal);
};
// 6. The non-equality assertion tests for whether two objects are not equal
// with != assert.notEqual(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.notEqual = function notEqual(actual, expected, message) {
if (actual == expected) {
fail(actual, expected, message, "!=", assert.notEqual);
}
};
// 7. The equivalence assertion tests a deep equality relation.
// assert.deepEqual(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.deepEqual = function deepEqual(actual, expected, message) {
if (!_deepEqual(actual, expected)) {
fail(actual, expected, message, "deepEqual", assert.deepEqual);
}
};
function _deepEqual(actual, expected) {
// 7.1. All identical values are equivalent, as determined by ===.
if (actual === expected) {
return true;
// 7.2. If the expected value is a Date object, the actual value is
// equivalent if it is also a Date object that refers to the same time.
} else if (actual instanceof Date && expected instanceof Date) {
return actual.getTime() === expected.getTime();
// 7.3. Other pairs that do not both pass typeof value == "object",
// equivalence is determined by ==.
} else if (typeof actual != 'object' && typeof expected != 'object') {
return actual == expected;
// 7.4. For all other Object pairs, including Array objects, equivalence is
// determined by having the same number of owned properties (as verified
// with Object.prototype.hasOwnProperty.call), the same set of keys
// (although not necessarily the same order), equivalent values for every
// corresponding key, and an identical "prototype" property. Note: this
// accounts for both named and indexed properties on Arrays.
} else {
return objEquiv(actual, expected);
}
}
function isUndefinedOrNull (value) {
return value === null || value === undefined;
}
function isArguments (object) {
return Object.prototype.toString.call(object) == '[object Arguments]';
}
function objEquiv (a, b) {
if (isUndefinedOrNull(a) || isUndefinedOrNull(b))
return false;
// an identical "prototype" property.
if (a.prototype !== b.prototype) return false;
//~~~I've managed to break Object.keys through screwy arguments passing.
// Converting to array solves the problem.
if (isArguments(a)) {
if (!isArguments(b)) {
return false;
}
a = pSlice.call(a);
b = pSlice.call(b);
return _deepEqual(a, b);
}
try{
var ka = Object.keys(a),
kb = Object.keys(b),
key, i;
} catch (e) {//happens when one is a string literal and the other isn't
return false;
}
// having the same number of owned properties (keys incorporates hasOwnProperty)
if (ka.length != kb.length)
return false;
//the same set of keys (although not necessarily the same order),
ka.sort();
kb.sort();
//~~~cheap key test
for (i = ka.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
if (ka[i] != kb[i])
return false;
}
//equivalent values for every corresponding key, and
//~~~possibly expensive deep test
for (i = ka.length - 1; i >= 0; i--) {
key = ka[i];
if (!_deepEqual(a[key], b[key] ))
return false;
}
return true;
}
// 8. The non-equivalence assertion tests for any deep inequality.
// assert.notDeepEqual(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.notDeepEqual = function notDeepEqual(actual, expected, message) {
if (_deepEqual(actual, expected)) {
fail(actual, expected, message, "notDeepEqual", assert.notDeepEqual);
}
};
// 9. The strict equality assertion tests strict equality, as determined by ===.
// assert.strictEqual(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.strictEqual = function strictEqual(actual, expected, message) {
if (actual !== expected) {
fail(actual, expected, message, "===", assert.strictEqual);
}
};
// 10. The strict non-equality assertion tests for strict inequality, as determined by !==.
// assert.notStrictEqual(actual, expected, message_opt);
assert.notStrictEqual = function notStrictEqual(actual, expected, message) {
if (actual === expected) {
fail(actual, expected, message, "!==", assert.notStrictEqual);
}
};
function _throws (shouldThrow, block, err, message) {
var exception = null,
threw = false,
typematters = true;
message = message || "";
//handle optional arguments
if (arguments.length == 3) {
if (typeof(err) == "string") {
message = err;
typematters = false;
}
} else if (arguments.length == 2) {
typematters = false;
}
try {
block();
} catch (e) {
threw = true;
exception = e;
}
if (shouldThrow && !threw) {
fail( "Missing expected exception"
+ (err && err.name ? " ("+err.name+")." : '.')
+ (message ? " " + message : "")
);
}
if (!shouldThrow && threw && typematters && exception instanceof err) {
fail( "Got unwanted exception"
+ (err && err.name ? " ("+err.name+")." : '.')
+ (message ? " " + message : "")
);
}
if ((shouldThrow && threw && typematters && !(exception instanceof err)) ||
(!shouldThrow && threw)) {
throw exception;
}
}
// 11. Expected to throw an error:
// assert.throws(block, Error_opt, message_opt);
assert.throws = function(block, /*optional*/error, /*optional*/message) {
_throws.apply(this, [true].concat(pSlice.call(arguments)));
};
// EXTENSION! This is annoying to write outside this module.
assert.doesNotThrow = function(block, /*optional*/error, /*optional*/message) {
_throws.apply(this, [false].concat(pSlice.call(arguments)));
};