// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // Package regtest provides a framework for writing gopls regression tests. // // User reported regressions are often expressed in terms of editor // interactions. For example: "When I open my editor in this directory, // navigate to this file, and change this line, I get a diagnostic that doesn't // make sense". In these cases reproducing, diagnosing, and writing a test to // protect against this regression can be difficult. // // The regtest package provides an API for developers to express these types of // user interactions in ordinary Go tests, validate them, and run them in a // variety of execution modes (see gopls/doc/daemon.md for more information on // execution modes). This is achieved roughly as follows: // + the Runner type starts and connects to a gopls instance for each // configured execution mode. // + the Env type provides a collection of resources to use in writing tests // (for example a temporary working directory and fake text editor) // + user interactions with these resources are scripted using test wrappers // around the API provided by the golang.org/x/tools/internal/lsp/fake // package. // // Regressions are expressed in terms of Expectations, which at a high level // are conditions that we expect to be met (or not to be met) at some point // after performing the interactions in the test. This is necessary because the // LSP is by construction asynchronous: both client and server can send // eachother notifications without formal acknowledgement that they have been // fully processed. // // Simple Expectations may be combined to match specific conditions reported by // the user. In the example above, a regtest validating that the user-reported // bug had been fixed would "expect" that the editor never displays the // confusing diagnostic. package regtest