Hel is the norse goddess that rules over Helheim, where the souls of those who did not die in battle go.
This little tool is similar; it generates (hopefully simple) mocks of Go interface types and stores them in helheim_test.go (by default).
There are plenty of mock generators out there, but:
- I felt like messing more with Go's
ast
package. - The mock generators that I know about seem to generate complicated mocks, and often generate their mocks as exported types in a separate package.
- A side note on exported mocks: Exporting mocks seems to, on some projects, encourage the idea that an interface defines everything that a type is capable of. In Go, I find that to be a bad practice; local interfaces should be defined as functionality that the local logic needs, and concrete types implementing said functionality should be passed in. This keeps interfaces very small, which keeps mocks (mostly) simple.
Hel shells out to goimports
to set up its import
clause(s), so you'll need that installed somewhere
in your PATH
.
Hel is go-gettable: go get github.com/nelsam/hel
In the near future, I'll set up a CI system which uploads binaries to github releases, as well.
At its simplest, you can just run hel
without any options in the
directory you want to generate mocks for. Mocks will be saved in a
file called helheim_test.go
by default.
See hel -h
or hel --help
for command line options. Most flags
allow multiple calls (e.g. -t ".*Foo" -t ".*Bar"
).
Adding comments for go generate
to use Hel is relatively flexible.
Some examples:
//go:generate hel --package ./...
The above command would find all exported interface types in the
project and generate mocks in helheim_test.go
in each of the
packages it finds interfaces to mock.
//go:generate hel
The above command would generate mocks for all exported types in
the current package in helheim_test.go
//go:generate hel --type Foo --output mock_foo_test.go
type Foo interface {
Foo() string
}
The above command would generate a mock for the Foo type in
mock_foo_test.go