commit | 3c6375b89aa1078406761d879ae7170e10140da1 | [log] [tgz] |
---|---|---|
author | Android Build Coastguard Worker <[email protected]> | Thu May 23 23:15:07 2024 +0000 |
committer | Android Build Coastguard Worker <[email protected]> | Thu May 23 23:15:07 2024 +0000 |
tree | 14b382e40033abb0437ddc432233761e8dbf2567 | |
parent | ff33d27189229d1b8895505b1d0d6ebdf0836f70 [diff] | |
parent | 8de54872804f68b7043516685a1f0ae67cd3fea1 [diff] |
Snap for 11881322 from 8de54872804f68b7043516685a1f0ae67cd3fea1 to 24Q3-release Change-Id: Id9d5efaebe6ca2f9eed23a7f129fa71290f9d8ee
This crate provides a convenient concise way to write unit tests for implementations of Serialize
and Deserialize
.
The Serialize
impl for a value can be characterized by the sequence of Serializer
calls that are made in the course of serializing the value, so serde_test
provides a [Token
] abstraction which corresponds roughly to Serializer
method calls. There is an [assert_ser_tokens
] function to test that a value serializes to a particular sequence of method calls, an [assert_de_tokens
] function to test that a value can be deserialized from a particular sequence of method calls, and an [assert_tokens
] function to test both directions. There are also functions to test expected failure conditions.
Here is an example from the linked-hash-map
crate.
use linked_hash_map::LinkedHashMap; use serde_test::{assert_tokens, Token}; #[test] fn test_ser_de_empty() { let map = LinkedHashMap::<char, u32>::new(); assert_tokens( &map, &[ Token::Map { len: Some(0) }, Token::MapEnd, ], ); } #[test] fn test_ser_de() { let mut map = LinkedHashMap::new(); map.insert('b', 20); map.insert('a', 10); map.insert('c', 30); assert_tokens( &map, &[ Token::Map { len: Some(3) }, Token::Char('b'), Token::I32(20), Token::Char('a'), Token::I32(10), Token::Char('c'), Token::I32(30), Token::MapEnd, ], ); }