Well you could extend Test::Unit::Assertions
to do what you like, i do not think there is a built-in way to do this. Perhaps something like this (quick & dirty):
require 'test/unit'
module Test::Unit::Assertions
def safe_assert(test, msg=nil)
passed = msg.nil? ? assert(test) : assert(test,msg)
ensure
puts 'take screenshot' unless passed
end
end
class MyTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
def setup
puts 'setup'
end
def teardown
puts 'teardown'
end
def test_something
safe_assert true
puts 'before failing assert'
safe_assert false, "message"
puts 'after failing assert'
end
end
output:
Loaded suite unittest
Started
setup
before failing assert
take screenshot
teardown
F
Finished in 0.001094 seconds.
1) Failure:
test_something(MyTest) [unittest.rb:5]:
message
1 tests, 2 assertions, 1 failures, 0 errors, 0 skips
Test run options: --seed 58428
EDIT: you could actually pass the args to assert
in a simpler way:
module Test::Unit::Assertions
def safe_assert(*args)
passed = assert(*args)
ensure
puts 'take screenshot' unless passed
end
end
also, you could wrap a standard assert
in a begin
-ensure
-end
block if you only need this functionality infrequently:
class MyTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
def test_something
safe_assert true
puts 'before failing assert'
begin
passed = assert false, "message"
ensure
puts 'take screenshot' unless passed
end
puts 'after failing assert'
end
end
or you build a method that ensures a screenshot like in the following example. This actually seems like the cleanest way to me:
def screenshot_on_fail
passed = yield
ensure
puts 'take screenshot' unless passed
end
class MyTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
def test_something_else
screenshot_on_fail do
assert true
end
screenshot_on_fail do
assert false, 'message'
end
end
end