PowerShell/test/powershell
Steve Lee b69ff717ab Remove unncessary check for Paths.count > 0 as there is code later to use the current (#5596)
Remove unnecessary check for Paths.count > 0 as there is code later to use the current working directory since -Path is not a mandatory parameter.
Updated ShouldProcess to output the internal action on adding paths rather than the user action (which is the cmdlet name).

Updated tests to not specify -Path

Fix #5594
2017-12-01 10:57:00 -08:00
..
engine Skip null-element check for collections with a value-type element type (#5432) 2017-11-30 14:46:09 -08:00
Host Updated csproj to use the latest help package (#5454) 2017-11-15 16:29:04 -08:00
Installer output url so when test fails you can more easily troubleshoot 2017-11-29 13:00:36 -08:00
Language Change $OutputEncoding to be utf8 without BOM rather than ASCII (#5369) 2017-11-07 14:49:14 -08:00
Modules Remove unncessary check for Paths.count > 0 as there is code later to use the current (#5596) 2017-12-01 10:57:00 -08:00
Provider Rename powershell.exe to pwsh.exe (#5101) 2017-10-17 17:25:11 -07:00
SDK Rename powershell.exe to pwsh.exe (#5101) 2017-10-17 17:25:11 -07:00
README.md Rename powershell.exe to pwsh.exe (#5101) 2017-10-17 17:25:11 -07:00

Pester Testing Test Guide

Also see the Writing Pester Tests document.

Running Pester Tests

Go to the top level of the PowerShell repository and run: Start-PSPester inside a self-hosted copy of PowerShell.

You can use Start-PSPester -Tests SomeTestSuite* to limit the tests run.

Testing new powershell processes

Any launch of a new powershell process must include -noprofile so that modified user and system profiles do not causes tests to fail. You also must take care to call the development copy of PowerShell, which is not the first one on the path.

Example:

    $powershell = Join-Path -Path $PsHome -ChildPath "pwsh"
    & $powershell -noprofile -command "ExampleCommand" | Should Be "ExampleOutput"

Portability

Some tests simply must be tied to certain platforms. Use Pester's -Skip directive on an It statement to do this. For instance to run the test only on Windows:

It "Should do something on Windows" -Skip:($IsLinux -Or $IsMacOS) { ... }

Or only on Linux and OS X:

It "Should do something on Linux" -Skip:$IsWindows { ... }

Pending

When writing a test that should pass, but does not, please do not skip or delete the test, but use It "Should Pass" -Pending to mark the test as pending, and file an issue on GitHub.