Hooks

Pre-run and post-run hooks allow you to take any initialization steps or verify the results of the run.

Hook scripts can be set through the editor, through a command line option or in the .gutconfig.json file.

All Hook scripts must inherit from GutHookScript. If the pre-run or post-run scripts specified do not exist or do not extend GutHookScript then the run will be aborted before any tests are run.

All Hook scripts have access to the GUT instance that is running the tests via the gut property defined in hook_script.gd. This is set after initializing the script.

GUT executes the run() method in each of the Hook scripts. Place your custom code in there.

Note: All Hook scripts are instantiated at the start of the run and later run() is called on each instance at the appropriate time. The _init() method of your Hook Script will not have access to the GUT instance since it is set later.

Setup

Create scripts that inherit from GutHookScript, implement the run() method, and set their paths either through the editor, command line or .gutconfig.json.

Editor

The GUT node has pre_run_script and post_run_script properties to set the path to your Hook scripts.

Command Line

The command line -gpre_run_script and -gpost_run_script options. You can also specify pre_run_script and post_run_script in the .gutconfig.json file.

Features

The following features are available to scripts that inherit from GutHookScript. Not all features are usable by all hooks. Details below.

  • gut - the GUT instance running tests.

  • abort() - abort the test run.

  • set_exit_code(code) - Set the code to be returned when the command line finishes.

  • The JunitXmlExport class can be used to create an export object to export results. See Export-Test-Results

Access GUT instance

Each Hook script can access the GUT instance via the gut variable. Useful for getting to summary info or manipulating the GUT instance for reasons I can’t think of (which is probably a bad idea but who am I to judge).

Abort (pre-run only)

The built in abort() method will cause the run to end immediately after the run() method of the pre-run script finishes. The post-run script will NOT be executed. Calling this in the post-run script will have no effect.

Exit Code (post-run only)

The set_exit_code(code) method will set an exit code that will be used when running from the command line. The default behavior is to return 0 when all tests pass and 1 if any tests fail (pending tests do not affect the exit code). If you call set_exit_code then the value passed will be used.

Note Any call directly to OS.exit_code will be overwritten by gut_cmdln.

Note Calling set_exit_code in the pre-run script will not affect the actual exit code. You could use gut.get_pre_run_script_instance().get_exit_code() in your post-run script to get you any value you’ve set via set_exit_code in your pre-run script.

Pre-Run Hook

The pre-run hook is run just before any tests are executed. This can be useful in setting global variables or performing any setup required for all your tests.

The post-run hook can access the pre-run hook instance via gut.get_pre_run_script_instance().

Things to do in your pre-run script:

  • mute all sounds AudioServer.set_bus_volume_db(0, -INF)

  • set flags you’ve implemented to prevent actions from occurring during tests

    • flags to prevent files from being saved like user stats (my personal catalyst for all these features)

    • logging levels for your application

  • other things I haven’t thought of.

Post-Run Hook

The post-run hook is run after all tests are run and all output has been generated. The post-run hook can access the pre-run script instance (if one was specified) via gut.get_pre_run_script_instance().

The post-run hook could be useful in writing files used by CICD pipelines to verify the status fo the run.

Summary Info

GUT tracks the results of all the scripts and tests that are run. There is a Summary object that you can access via the gut variable. Using this information you can take actions in the post-run hook.

Reading the documentation/code in summary.gd will get you the full details, but here are a few examples of how to get the summary data.

Full Summary

# Returns GUT's summary.gd instance holding all the data about the run.
gut.get_summary()

Counts

# This will return a dictionary containing the following counts:
#   passing = 0,
#   pending = 0,
#   failing = 0,
#   tests = 0,
#   scripts = 0
gut.get_summary().get_totals()

All Scripts

# Returns and array of Summary.gd.TestScript objects that have detailed information
# about each script/inner class that was ran.  See summary.gd for more details.
gut.get_summary().get_scripts()