Comprehensive guide to stretchr/testify for Golang testing. Covers assert, require, mock, and suite packages in depth. Use whenever writing tests with testify, creating mocks, setting up test suites, or choosing between assert and require. Essential for testify assertions, mock expectations, argument matchers, call verification, suite lifecycle, and advanced patterns like Eventually, JSONEq, and custom matchers. Trigger on any Go test file importing testify.
92
93%
Does it follow best practices?
Impact
90%
1.30xAverage score across 3 eval scenarios
Passed
No known issues
Persona: You are a Go engineer who treats tests as executable specifications. You write tests to constrain behavior and make failures self-explanatory — not to hit coverage targets.
Modes:
testify complements Go's testing package with readable assertions, mocks, and suites. It does not replace testing — always use *testing.T as the entry point.
This skill is not exhaustive. Please refer to library documentation and code examples for more information. Context7 can help as a discoverability platform.
Both offer identical assertions. The difference is failure behavior:
t.FailNow() — use for preconditions where continuing would panic or misleadUse assert.New(t) / require.New(t) for readability. Name them is and must:
func TestParseConfig(t *testing.T) {
is := assert.New(t)
must := require.New(t)
cfg, err := ParseConfig("testdata/valid.yaml")
must.NoError(err) // stop if parsing fails — cfg would be nil
must.NotNil(cfg)
is.Equal("production", cfg.Environment)
is.Equal(8080, cfg.Port)
is.True(cfg.TLS.Enabled)
}Rule: require for preconditions (setup, error checks), assert for verifications. Never mix randomly.
is := assert.New(t)
// Equality
is.Equal(expected, actual) // DeepEqual + exact type
is.NotEqual(unexpected, actual)
is.EqualValues(expected, actual) // converts to common type first
is.EqualExportedValues(expected, actual)
// Nil / Bool / Emptiness
is.Nil(obj) is.NotNil(obj)
is.True(cond) is.False(cond)
is.Empty(collection) is.NotEmpty(collection)
is.Len(collection, n)
// Contains (strings, slices, map keys)
is.Contains("hello world", "world")
is.Contains([]int{1, 2, 3}, 2)
is.Contains(map[string]int{"a": 1}, "a")
// Comparison
is.Greater(actual, threshold) is.Less(actual, ceiling)
is.Positive(val) is.Negative(val)
is.Zero(val)
// Errors
is.Error(err) is.NoError(err)
is.ErrorIs(err, ErrNotFound) // walks error chain
is.ErrorAs(err, &target)
is.ErrorContains(err, "not found")
// Type
is.IsType(&User{}, obj)
is.Implements((*io.Reader)(nil), obj)Argument order: always (expected, actual) — swapping produces confusing diff output.
is.ElementsMatch([]string{"b", "a", "c"}, result) // unordered comparison
is.InDelta(3.14, computedPi, 0.01) // float tolerance
is.JSONEq(`{"name":"alice"}`, `{"name": "alice"}`) // ignores whitespace/key order
is.WithinDuration(expected, actual, 5*time.Second)
is.Regexp(`^user-[a-f0-9]+$`, userID)
// Async polling
is.Eventually(func() bool {
status, _ := client.GetJobStatus(jobID)
return status == "completed"
}, 5*time.Second, 100*time.Millisecond)
// Async polling with rich assertions
is.EventuallyWithT(func(c *assert.CollectT) {
resp, err := client.GetOrder(orderID)
assert.NoError(c, err)
assert.Equal(c, "shipped", resp.Status)
}, 10*time.Second, 500*time.Millisecond)Mock interfaces to isolate the unit under test. Embed mock.Mock, implement methods with m.Called(), always verify with AssertExpectations(t).
Key matchers: mock.Anything, mock.AnythingOfType("T"), mock.MatchedBy(func). Call modifiers: .Once(), .Times(n), .Maybe(), .Run(func).
For defining mocks, argument matchers, call modifiers, return sequences, and verification, see Mock reference.
Suites group related tests with shared setup/teardown.
SetupSuite() → once before all tests
SetupTest() → before each test
TestXxx()
TearDownTest() → after each test
TearDownSuite() → once after all teststype TokenServiceSuite struct {
suite.Suite
store *MockTokenStore
service *TokenService
}
func (s *TokenServiceSuite) SetupTest() {
s.store = new(MockTokenStore)
s.service = NewTokenService(s.store)
}
func (s *TokenServiceSuite) TestGenerate_ReturnsValidToken() {
s.store.On("Save", mock.Anything, mock.Anything).Return(nil)
token, err := s.service.Generate("user-42")
s.NoError(err)
s.NotEmpty(token)
s.store.AssertExpectations(s.T())
}
// Required launcher
func TestTokenServiceSuite(t *testing.T) {
suite.Run(t, new(TokenServiceSuite))
}Suite methods like s.Equal() behave like assert. For require: s.Require().NotNil(obj).
AssertExpectations(t) — mock expectations silently pass without verificationis.Equal(ErrNotFound, err) — fails on wrapped errors. Use is.ErrorIs to walk the chain(expected, actual). Swapping produces backwards diffsassert for guards — test continues after failure and panics on nil dereference. Use requiresuite.Run() — without the launcher function, zero tests execute silentlyis.Equal(ptr1, ptr2) compares addresses. Dereference or use EqualExportedValuesUse testifylint to catch wrong argument order, assert/require misuse, and more. See samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-linter skill.
samber/cc-skills-golang@golang-testing skill for general test patterns, table-driven tests, and CIsamber/cc-skills-golang@golang-linter skill for testifylint configurationb88f91d
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