Agent Skills: Go Testing

Use when writing, reviewing, or improving Go test code — including table-driven tests, subtests, parallel tests, test helpers, test doubles, and assertions with cmp.Diff. Also use when a user asks to write a test for a Go function, even if they don't mention specific patterns like table-driven tests or subtests. Does not cover benchmark performance testing (see go-performance).

UncategorizedID: cxuu/golang-skills/go-testing

Repository

cxuuLicense: Apache-2.0
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pnpm dlx add-skill https://github.com/cxuu/golang-skills/tree/HEAD/skills/go-testing

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skills/go-testing/SKILL.md

Skill Metadata

Name
go-testing
Description
Use when writing, reviewing, or improving Go test code — including table-driven tests, subtests, parallel tests, test helpers, test doubles, and assertions with cmp.Diff. Also use when a user asks to write a test for a Go function, even if they don't mention specific patterns like table-driven tests or subtests. Does not cover benchmark performance testing (see go-performance).

Go Testing

Compatibility: Diff examples may use github.com/google/go-cmp.

Resource Routing

  • scripts/gen-table-test.sh - Run when generating a table-driven test scaffold.
  • assets/table-test-template.go - Use as a copyable table-test starting point.
  • references/TABLE-DRIVEN-TESTS.md - Read when choosing table tests, subtests, or parallel test patterns.
  • references/TEST-HELPERS.md - Read when writing helpers, fixtures, cleanup, or test doubles.
  • references/TEST-ORGANIZATION.md - Read when structuring packages, black-box tests, or larger test suites.
  • references/VALIDATION-APIS.md - Read when choosing t.Error, t.Fatal, cmp.Diff, or assertion style.
  • references/INTEGRATION.md - Read when testing external services, HTTP handlers, databases, or long-running setup.

Quick Reference

| Pattern | Use When | |---------|----------| | t.Error | Default — report failure, keep running | | t.Fatal | Setup failed or continuing is meaningless | | cmp.Diff | Comparing structs, slices, maps, protos | | Table-driven | Many cases share identical logic | | Subtests | Need filtering, parallel execution, or naming | | t.Helper() | Any test helper function (call as first statement) | | t.Cleanup() | Teardown in helpers instead of defer |


Useful Test Failures

Normative: Test failures must be diagnosable without reading the test source.

Every failure message must include: function name, inputs, actual (got), and expected (want). Use the format YourFunc(%v) = %v, want %v.

// Good:
t.Errorf("Add(2, 3) = %d, want %d", got, 5)

// Bad: Missing function name and inputs
t.Errorf("got %d, want %d", got, 5)

Always print got before want: got %v, want %v — never reversed.


No Assertion Libraries

Normative: Do not use assertion libraries. Use cmp.Diff for complex comparisons.

if diff := cmp.Diff(want, got); diff != "" {
    t.Errorf("GetPost() mismatch (-want +got):\n%s", diff)
}

For protocol buffers, add protocmp.Transform() as a cmp option. Always include the direction key (-want +got) in diff messages. Avoid comparing JSON/serialized output — compare semantically instead.


t.Error vs t.Fatal

Normative: Use t.Error by default to report all failures in one run. Use t.Fatal only when continuing is impossible.

Choose t.Fatal when:

  • Setup fails (DB connection, file load)
  • The next assertion depends on the previous one succeeding (e.g., decode after encode)

Never call t.Fatal/t.FailNow from a goroutine other than the test goroutine — use t.Error instead.


Table-Driven Tests

See assets/table-test-template.go when scaffolding a new table-driven test and need the canonical struct, loop, and subtest layout.

Advisory: Use table-driven tests when many cases share identical logic.

Use table tests when: all cases run the same code path with no conditional setup, mocking, or assertions. A single shouldErr bool is acceptable.

Don't use table tests when: cases need complex setup, conditional mocking, or multiple branches — write separate test functions instead.

Key rules:

  • Use field names when cases span many lines or have same-type adjacent fields
  • Include inputs in failure messages — never identify rows by index

Validation: After generating or modifying tests, run go test -run TestXxx -v to verify the tests compile and pass. Fix any compilation errors before proceeding.


Test Helpers

Normative: Test helpers must call t.Helper() first and use t.Cleanup() for teardown.

func setupTestDB(t *testing.T) *sql.DB {
    t.Helper()
    db, err := sql.Open("sqlite3", ":memory:")
    if err != nil {
        t.Fatalf("Could not open database: %v", err)
    }
    t.Cleanup(func() { db.Close() })
    return db
}

Test Error Semantics

Advisory: Test error semantics, not error message strings.

// Bad: Brittle string comparison
if err.Error() != "invalid input" { ... }

// Good: Semantic check
if !errors.Is(err, ErrInvalidInput) { ... }

For simple presence checks when specific semantics don't matter:

if gotErr := err != nil; gotErr != tt.wantErr {
    t.Errorf("f(%v) error = %v, want error presence = %t", tt.input, err, tt.wantErr)
}

Related Skills

  • Error testing: See go-error-handling when testing error semantics with errors.Is/errors.As or sentinel errors
  • Interface mocking: See go-interfaces when creating test doubles by implementing interfaces at the consumer side
  • Naming test functions: See go-naming when naming test functions, subtests, or test helper utilities
  • Linter integration: See go-linting when running linters alongside tests in CI or pre-commit hooks