Introduction to Testing in Cadence
Testing is an essential part of smart contract development to ensure the correctness and reliability of your code. In Cadence, the testing framework provides a convenient way to write tests for Cadence programs, allowing you to verify the functionality of your smart contracts.
Install Flow CLI
The Flow CLI is the primary tool for developing, testing, and deploying smart contracts written in Cadence to the Flow network. You can install the Flow CLI by following the installation instructions provided by the Flow documentation.
Create a new project
In your preferred code editor, create a new directory for your project and navigate to it in the terminal. Then
initialize a new Flow project by running the command flow init
. This will create a flow.json
file that contains the project configuration.
_10mkdir test-cadence_10cd test-cadence_10flow init
Write a simple smart contract
In your code editor, create a new file called calculator.cdc
and add the following code:
Add the smart contract to the config
Run flow config add contract
and add the created calculator.cdc
contract to the config with the name as Calculator
:
_10Enter name: Calculate_10Enter contract file location: ./calculator.cdc
Write test cases
In the same directory, create a new file called calculator_test.cdc
and add the following code:
This code
- imports the
Calculator
contract from thecalculator.cdc
file (according toflow.json
); - creates an
calculator
instance of the smart-contract; - defines two test functions:
testAdd()
andtestSubtract()
; - calls
add()
andsubtract()
methods with different input values respectively.
Running the test cases
To run the test cases, use the following command in the terminal:
_10flow test ./calculator_test.cdc
This command uses the Flow CLI to run the test cases and display the output. You should see the following output:
_10Test results: "./calculator_test.cdc"_10- PASS: testAdd_10- PASS: testSubtract
This output indicates that both test cases ran successfully, and the smart contract is functioning as expected.
Advanced Testing Techniques
The Cadence testing framework provides various features and techniques for writing comprehensive test cases. Some of these include:
- Code Coverage: You can use the
-cover
flag with theflow test
command to view code coverage results when running your tests. This allows you to identify areas of your code that are not adequately covered by your test inputs; - Test Fixtures: Test fixtures are reusable components that help you set up the initial state for your test cases. You can create test fixtures in Cadence by defining resource types and using them in your test functions;
- Assertions: The testing framework provides built-in assertion functions, such as
assertEqual
,assertTrue
, andassertFalse
, to help you verify the expected behavior of your smart contracts; - Test Suites: You can organize your test cases into test suites to improve the readability and maintainability of your test code. Test suites allow you to group related test cases and set up common test fixtures for all the tests in the suite.
By leveraging these advanced testing techniques, you can write more robust and reliable smart contracts in Cadence.In this example, we set up a basic testing environment, wrote a simple smart contract in Cadence, and created a test case to verify its functionality. We then used the Flow CLI to run the test case and confirm that the smart contract is working correctly. This is a basic example, and there are many more advanced features and techniques you can explore when working with the Cadence testing framework. For more in-depth tutorials and documentation, refer to the official Flow Developer Portal and the Flow CLI documentation.