The Docker image to automatically run tests on Bash solutions submitted to Exercism.
To run the tests of an arbitrary exercise, do the following:
- Open a terminal in the project's root
- Run
./bin/run.sh <exercise-slug> <solution-dir> <output-dir>
Once the test runner has finished, its results will be written to <output-dir>/results.json
.
This script is provided for testing purposes, as it mimics how test runners run in Exercism's production environment.
To run the tests of an arbitrary exercise using the Docker image, do the following:
- Open a terminal in the project's root
- Run
./bin/run-in-docker.sh <exercise-slug> <solution-dir> <output-dir>
Once the test runner has finished, its results will be written to <output-dir>/results.json
.
To run the tests to verify the behavior of the test runner, do the following:
- Open a terminal in the project's root
- Run
./bin/run-tests.sh
These are golden tests that compare the results.json
generated by running the current state of the code against the "known good" tests/<test-name>/results.json
. All files created during the test run itself are discarded.
When you've made modifications to the code that will result in a new "golden" state, you'll need to generate and commit a new tests/<test-name>/results.json
file.
This script is provided for testing purposes, as it mimics how test runners run in Exercism's production environment.
To run the tests to verify the behavior of the test runner using the Docker image, do the following:
- Open a terminal in the project's root
- Run
./bin/run-tests-in-docker.sh
These are golden tests that compare the results.json
generated by running the current state of the code against the "known good" tests/<test-name>/results.json
. All files created during the test run itself are discarded.
When you've made modifications to the code that will result in a new "golden" state, you'll need to generate and commit a new tests/<test-name>/results.json
file.