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Bash unit

bash unit testing enterprise edition framework for professionals

From bash-unit·Updated May 25, 2026·View on GitHub·

ifndef::backend-manpage[] image::img/bu_50.png[bash_unit] endif::[] The project is written primarily in Shell, distributed under the GNU General Public License v3.0 license, first published in 2011. Key topics include: assertions, bash, tdd, test-driven-development, test-framework.

Latest release: v2.3.3Minor fixes
August 28, 2025View Changelog →

ifdef::backend-manpage[]
= BASH_UNIT(1)

== NAME
endif::[]

ifndef::backend-manpage[]
image::img/bu_50.png[bash_unit]
endif::[]

bash_unit - bash unit testing enterprise edition framework for professionals!

== Synopsis

bash_unit [-f tap] [-p <pattern>] [-s <pattern>] [-r] [test_file]

== Description

bash_unit allows you to write unit tests (functions starting with test),
run them and, in case of failure, displays the stack trace
with source file and line number indications to locate the problem.

Need a quick start? The
https://github.com/bash-unit/getting_started/[getting started project]
will help you get on track in no time.

The following functions are available in your tests (see below for detailed documentation):

  • fail [message]
  • assert <assertion> [message]
  • assert_fail <assertion> [message]
  • assert_status_code <expected_status_code> <assertion> [message]
  • assert_equals <expected> <actual> [message]
  • assert_not_equals <unexpected> <actual> [message]
  • assert_matches <expected-regex> <actual> [message]
  • assert_not_matches <unexpected-regex> <actual> [message]
  • assert_within_delta <expected num> <actual num> <max delta> [message]
  • assert_no_diff <expected> <actual> [message]
  • skip_if <condition> <pattern>
  • fake <command> [replacement code]

ifndef::backend-manpage[]
image::img/demo.gif[demo]
endif::[]

(by the way, the documentation you are reading is itself tested with bash-unit)

bash_unit is free software you may contribute to. See link:CONTRIBUTING.md[CONTRIBUTING.md].

== Options

-p pattern::
filters tests to run based on the given pattern.
You can specify several patterns by repeating this option
for each pattern.

-s pattern::
skip tests which name matches the given pattern.
You can specify several patterns by repeating this option
for each pattern.
Tests will appear in bash_unit output as skipped.
(see also skip_if)

-r::
executes test cases in random order.
Only affects the order within a test file (files are always
executed in the order in which they are specified on the
command line).

-f output_format::
specify an alternative output format.
The only supported value is tap.

-q::
quiet mode.
Will only output the status of each test with no further
information even in case of failure.

ifndef::backend-manpage[]

== How to install bash_unit

=== installing on Archlinux

bash_unit package is available on Archlinux through AUR. In order to install, issue the following command :

yaourt -Sys bash_unit

=== installing via link:https://nixos.org/[Nix/NixOS]

bash_unit package has been added to link:https://github.com/nixos/nixpkgs[nixpkgs]. You can use it with the following command:

nix-shell -p bash_unit

=== installing via link:https://brew.sh[Homebrew]

bash_unit is available by invoking brew:

brew install bash_unit

=== other installation

This will install bash_unit in your current working directory:

curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bash-unit/bash_unit/master/install.sh | bash

You can also download it from the https://github.com/bash-unit/bash_unit/releases[release page].

endif::[]

=== GitHub Actions

Here is an example of how you could integrate bash_unit with https://docs.github.com/fr/actions[GitHub Actions]:

name: bash_unit tests
on:
  push:
    branches: [ main ]
  pull_request:
    branches: [ main ]

jobs:
  ubuntu:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
    - uses: actions/checkout@v4
    - name: Unit testing with bash_unit
      run: |
        curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bash-unit/bash_unit/master/install.sh | bash
        FORCE_COLOR=true ./bash_unit tests/test_*

See this bash_unit https://github.com/pgrange/bash_unit_getting_started[getting started github project] for a working example.

=== GitLab CI

Here is an example of how you could integrate bash_unit with https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/ci/[GitLab CI]:

test:
  image: debian
  script:
    - apt-get update
    - apt-get install --no-install-recommends -y curl ca-certificates
    - curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/bash-unit/bash_unit/master/install.sh | bash
    - FORCE_COLOR=true ./bash_unit tests/test_*

See this bash_unit https://gitlab.com/pgrange/bash_unit_getting_started[getting started gitlab project] for a working example.

=== pre-commit hook

You can run +bash_unit+ as a https://pre-commit.com[pre-commit] hook.

Add the following to your pre-commit configuration. By default it will run scripts that are identified as shell scripts that match the path +^tests/(.*/)?test_.*\.sh$+.

[.pre-commit-config,yaml]

repos:
  - repo: https://github.com/bash-unit/bash_unit
    rev: v2.2.0
    hooks:
      - id: bash-unit
        always-run: true

== How to run tests

To run tests, simply call bash_unit with all your tests files as parameter. For instance to run some bash_unit tests, from bash_unit directory:

test
./bash_unit tests/test_core.sh
output
Running tests in tests/test_core.sh Running test_assert_equals_fails_when_not_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_equals_succeed_when_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_matches_fails_when_not_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_matches_succeed_when_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_no_diff_fails_when_diff ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_no_diff_succeeds_when_no_diff ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_equals_fails_when_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_equals_succeeds_when_not_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_matches_fails_when_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_matches_succeed_when_not_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stderr_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stdout_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_status_code_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_status_code_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_fail_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_fail_prints_failure_message ... SUCCESS Running test_fail_prints_where_is_error ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_actually_fakes_the_command ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_can_fake_inline ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_echo_stdin_when_no_params ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_exports_faked_in_subshells ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_transmits_params_to_fake_code ... SUCCESS Running test_fake_transmits_params_to_fake_code_as_array ... SUCCESS Running test_should_pretty_format_even_when_LANG_is_unset ... SUCCESS Running test_should_pretty_format_even_with_pipefail_set ... SUCCESS Overall result: SUCCESS

You might also want to run only specific tests, you may do so with the
-p option. This option accepts a pattern as parameter and filters test
functions against this pattern.

test
./bash_unit -p fail_fails -p assert tests/test_core.sh
output
Running tests in tests/test_core.sh Running test_assert_equals_fails_when_not_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_equals_succeed_when_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_matches_fails_when_not_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_matches_succeed_when_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_no_diff_fails_when_diff ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_no_diff_succeeds_when_no_diff ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_equals_fails_when_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_equals_succeeds_when_not_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_matches_fails_when_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_not_matches_succeed_when_not_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stderr_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stdout_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_status_code_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_status_code_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_fail_fails ... SUCCESS Overall result: SUCCESS

You can combine the -p option with -s to skip some of the tests. This option accepts a pattern
as parameter and mark as skipped any test function which matches this pattern.

test
./bash_unit -p fail_fails -p assert -s no -s status tests/test_core.sh
output
Running tests in tests/test_core.sh Running test_assert_equals_fails_when_not_equal ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_matches_fails_when_not_matching ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_no_diff_fails_when_diff ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_no_diff_succeeds_when_no_diff ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_not_equals_fails_when_equal ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_not_equals_succeeds_when_not_equal ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_not_matches_fails_when_matching ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_not_matches_succeed_when_not_matching ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_status_code_fails ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_status_code_succeeds ... SKIPPED Running test_assert_equals_succeed_when_equal ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_fails_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_matches_succeed_when_matching ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stderr_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_shows_stdout_on_failure ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_fails ... SUCCESS Running test_assert_within_delta_succeeds ... SUCCESS Running test_fail_fails ... SUCCESS Overall result: SUCCESS

bash_unit supports the http://testanything.org/[Test Anything Protocol] so you can ask for a tap formatted
output with the -f option.

test
./bash_unit -f tap tests/test_core.sh
output
# Running tests in tests/test_core.sh ok - test_assert_equals_fails_when_not_equal ok - test_assert_equals_succeed_when_equal ok - test_assert_fails ok - test_assert_fails_fails ok - test_assert_fails_succeeds ok - test_assert_matches_fails_when_not_matching ok - test_assert_matches_succeed_when_matching ok - test_assert_no_diff_fails_when_diff ok - test_assert_no_diff_succeeds_when_no_diff ok - test_assert_not_equals_fails_when_equal ok - test_assert_not_equals_succeeds_when_not_equal ok - test_assert_not_matches_fails_when_matching ok - test_assert_not_matches_succeed_when_not_matching ok - test_assert_shows_stderr_on_failure ok - test_assert_shows_stdout_on_failure ok - test_assert_status_code_fails ok - test_assert_status_code_succeeds ok - test_assert_succeeds ok - test_assert_within_delta_fails ok - test_assert_within_delta_succeeds ok - test_fail_fails ok - test_fail_prints_failure_message ok - test_fail_prints_where_is_error ok - test_fake_actually_fakes_the_command ok - test_fake_can_fake_inline ok - test_fake_echo_stdin_when_no_params ok - test_fake_exports_faked_in_subshells ok - test_fake_transmits_params_to_fake_code ok - test_fake_transmits_params_to_fake_code_as_array ok - test_should_pretty_format_even_when_LANG_is_unset ok - test_should_pretty_format_even_with_pipefail_set 1..31

== How to write tests

Write your test functions in a file. The name of a test function has to start with test. Only functions starting with test will be tested.

Use the bash_unit assertion functions in your test functions, see below.

You may write a setup function that will be executed before each test is run.

You may write a teardown function that will be executed after each test is run.

You may write a setup_suite function that will be executed only once before all the tests of your test file.

You may write a teardown_suite function that will be executed only once after all the tests of your test file.

If you write code outside of any bash function, this code will be executed once at test file loading time since
your file is a bash script and bash_unit sources it before running your tests. It is suggested to write a
setup_suite function and avoid any code outside a bash function. you must not use any bash_unit assertion
in setup_suite or use exit in setup_suite for teardown_suite to be run.
See https://github.com/bash-unit/bash_unit/issues/43[issue 43] for more details.

If you want to keep an eye on a test not yet implemented, prefix the name of the function by todo instead of test.
Test to do are not executed and do not impact the global status of your test suite but are displayed in bash_unit output.

bash_unit changes the current working directory to the one of the running test file. If you need to access files from your test code, for instance the script under test, use path relative to the test file.

You may need to change the behavior of some commands to create conditions for your code under test to behave as expected. The fake function may help you to do that, see below.

== Test functions

bash_unit supports several shell oriented assertion functions.

=== fail

fail [message]

Fails the test and displays an optional message.

test
test_can_fail() { fail "this test failed on purpose" }
output
Running test_can_fail ... FAILURE this test failed on purpose doc:2:test_can_fail()

=== assert

assert <assertion> [message]

Evaluates assertion and fails if assertion fails.

assertion fails if its evaluation returns a status code different from 0.

In case of failure, the standard output and error of the evaluated assertion is displayed. The optional message is also displayed.

test
test_assert_fails() { assert false "this test failed, obviously" } test_assert_succeed() { assert true }
output
Running test_assert_fails ... FAILURE this test failed, obviously doc:2:test_assert_fails() Running test_assert_succeed ... SUCCESS

But you probably want to assert less obvious facts.

test
code() { touch /tmp/the_file } test_code_creates_the_file() { code assert "test -e /tmp/the_file" } test_code_makes_the_file_executable() { code assert "test -x /tmp/the_file" "/tmp/the_file should be executable" }
output
Running test_code_creates_the_file ... SUCCESS Running test_code_makes_the_file_executable ... FAILURE /tmp/the_file should be executable doc:14:test_code_makes_the_file_executable()

It may also be fun to use assert to check for the expected content of a file.

test
code() { echo 'not so cool' > /tmp/the_file } test_code_write_appropriate_content_in_the_file() { code assert "diff <(echo 'this is cool') /tmp/the_file" }
output
Running test_code_write_appropriate_content_in_the_file ... FAILURE out> 1c1 out> < this is cool out> --- out> > not so cool doc:8:test_code_write_appropriate_content_in_the_file()

=== assert_fail

assert_fail <assertion> [message]

Asserts that assertion fails. This is the opposite of assert.

assertion fails if its evaluation returns a status code different from 0.

If the evaluated expression does not fail, then assert_fail will fail and display the standard output and error of the evaluated assertion. The optional message is also displayed.

test
code() { echo 'not so cool' > /tmp/the_file } test_code_does_not_write_cool_in_the_file() { code assert_fails "grep cool /tmp/the_file" "should not write 'cool' in /tmp/the_file" } test_code_does_not_write_this_in_the_file() { code assert_fails "grep this /tmp/the_file" "should not write 'this' in /tmp/the_file" }
output
Running test_code_does_not_write_cool_in_the_file ... FAILURE should not write 'cool' in /tmp/the_file out> not so cool doc:8:test_code_does_not_write_cool_in_the_file() Running test_code_does_not_write_this_in_the_file ... SUCCESS

=== assert_status_code

assert_status_code <expected_status_code> <assertion> [message]

Checks for a precise status code of the evaluation of assertion.

It may be useful if you want to distinguish between several error conditions in your code.

In case of failure, the standard output and error of the evaluated assertion is displayed. The optional message is also displayed.

test
code() { exit 23 } test_code_should_fail_with_code_25() { assert_status_code 25 code }
output
Running test_code_should_fail_with_code_25 ... FAILURE expected status code 25 but was 23 doc:6:test_code_should_fail_with_code_25()

=== assert_equals

assert_equals <expected> <actual> [message]

Asserts for equality of the two strings expected and actual.

test
test_obvious_inequality_with_assert_equals(){ assert_equals "a string" "another string" "a string should be another string" } test_obvious_equality_with_assert_equals(){ assert_equals a a }
output
Running test_obvious_equality_with_assert_equals ... SUCCESS Running test_obvious_inequality_with_assert_equals ... FAILURE a string should be another string expected [a string] but was [another string] doc:2:test_obvious_inequality_with_assert_equals()

=== assert_not_equals

assert_not_equals <unexpected> <actual> [message]

Asserts for inequality of the two strings unexpected and actual.

test
test_obvious_equality_with_assert_not_equals(){ assert_not_equals "a string" "a string" "a string should be different from another string" } test_obvious_inequality_with_assert_not_equals(){ assert_not_equals a b }
output
Running test_obvious_equality_with_assert_not_equals ... FAILURE a string should be different from another string expected different value than [a string] but was the same doc:2:test_obvious_equality_with_assert_not_equals() Running test_obvious_inequality_with_assert_not_equals ... SUCCESS

=== assert_matches

assert_matches <expected-regex> <actual> [message]

Asserts that the string actual matches the regex pattern expected-regex.

test
test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_matches(){ assert_matches "a str.*" "another string" "'another string' should not match 'a str.*'" } test_obvious_matching_with_assert_matches(){ assert_matches "a[nN].t{0,1}.*r str.*" "another string" }
output
Running test_obvious_matching_with_assert_matches ... SUCCESS Running test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_matches ... FAILURE 'another string' should not match 'a str.*' expected regex [a str.*] to match [another string] doc:2:test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_matches()

=== assert_not_matches

assert_not_matches <unexpected-regex> <actual> [message]

Asserts that the string actual does not match the regex pattern unexpected-regex.

test
test_obvious_matching_with_assert_not_matches(){ assert_not_matches "a str.*" "a string" "'a string' should not match 'a str.*'" } test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_not_matches(){ assert_not_matches "a str.*" "another string" }
output
Running test_obvious_matching_with_assert_not_matches ... FAILURE 'a string' should not match 'a str.*' expected regex [a str.*] should not match but matched [a string] doc:2:test_obvious_matching_with_assert_not_matches() Running test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_not_matches ... SUCCESS

=== assert_within_delta

assert_within_delta <expected num> <actual num> <max delta> [message]

Asserts that the expected num matches the actual num up to a given max delta.
This function only support integers.
Given an expectation of 5 and a delta of 2 this would match 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7:

test
test_matches_within_delta(){ assert_within_delta 5 3 2 assert_within_delta 5 4 2 assert_within_delta 5 5 2 assert_within_delta 5 6 2 assert_within_delta 5 7 2 } test_does_not_match_within_delta(){ assert_within_delta 5 2 2 }
output
Running test_does_not_match_within_delta ... FAILURE expected value [5] to match [2] with a maximum delta of [2] doc:9:test_does_not_match_within_delta() Running test_matches_within_delta ... SUCCESS

=== assert_no_diff

assert_no_diff <expected> <actual> [message]

Asserts that the content of the file actual does not have any differences to the one expected.

test
test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_no_diff(){ assert_no_diff <(echo foo) <(echo bar) } test_obvious_matching_with_assert_assert_no_diff(){ assert_no_diff bash_unit bash_unit }
output
Running test_obvious_matching_with_assert_assert_no_diff ... SUCCESS Running test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_no_diff ... FAILURE expected 'doc' to be identical to 'doc' but was different out> 1c1 out> < foo out> --- out> > bar doc:2:test_obvious_notmatching_with_assert_no_diff()

== skip_if function

skip_if <condition> <pattern>

If condition is true, will skip all the tests in the current file which match the given pattern.

This can be useful when one has tests that are dependent on system environment, for instance:

skip_if "uname | grep Darwin" linux
skip_if "uname | grep Linux" darwin

test_linux_proc_exists() {
  assert "ls /proc/" "there should exist /proc on Linux"
}
test_darwin_proc_does_not_exist() {
  assert_fail "ls /proc/" "there should not exist /proc on Darwin"
}

will output, on a Linux system:

	Running test_darwin_proc_does_not_exist ... SKIPPED
	Running test_linux_proc_exists ... SUCCESS

== fake function

fake <command> [replacement code]

Fakes command and replaces it with replacement code (if code is specified) for the rest of the execution of your test. If no replacement code is specified, then it replaces command by one that echoes stdin of fake. This may be useful if you need to simulate an environment for you code under test.

For instance:

test
fake ps echo hello world ps

will output:

output
hello world

We can do the same using stdin of fake:

test
fake ps << EOF hello world EOF ps
output
hello world

ifndef::backend-manpage[]
It has been asked whether using fake results in creating actual fakes or stubs or mocks? or may be spies? or may be they are dummies?
The first answer to this question is: it depends. The second is: read this
https://www.google.fr/search?tbm=isch&q=fake%20mock%20stub[great and detailed literature] on this subject.
endif::[]

=== Using stdin

Here is an example, parameterizing fake with its stdin to test that code fails when some process does not run and succeeds otherwise:

test
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_code_succeeds_if_apache_runs() { fake ps <<EOF PID TTY TIME CMD 13525 pts/7 00:00:01 bash 24162 pts/7 00:00:00 ps 8387 ? 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start EOF assert code "code should succeed when apache is running" } test_code_fails_if_apache_does_not_run() { fake ps <<EOF PID TTY TIME CMD 13525 pts/7 00:00:01 bash 24162 pts/7 00:00:00 ps EOF assert_fails code "code should fail when apache is not running" }
output
Running test_code_fails_if_apache_does_not_run ... SUCCESS Running test_code_succeeds_if_apache_runs ... SUCCESS

=== Using a function

In a previous example, we faked ps by specifying code inline:

test
fake ps echo hello world ps
output
hello world

If you need to write more complex code to fake your command, you may abstract this code in a function:

test
_ps() { echo hello world } fake ps _ps ps
output
hello world

Be careful however that your _ps function is not exported to sub-processes. It means that, depending on how your code under test works, _ps may not be defined in the context where ps will be called. For instance:

test
_ps() { echo hello world } fake ps _ps bash -c ps
output
environment: line 1: _ps: command not found

It depends on your code under test but it is safer to just export functions needed by your fake so that they are available in sub-processes:

test
_ps() { echo hello world } export -f _ps fake ps _ps bash -c ps
output
hello world

fake is also limited by the fact that it defines a bash function to
override the actual command. In some context the command can not be
overridden by a function. For instance if your code under test relies on exec to launch ps, fake will have no effect.

fake may also imply strange behaviors from bash_unit when you try to
fake really basic stuff. bash_unit tries to be as much immune to this as
possible but there are some limits. Especially and as surprising as it
might seem, bash allows creating functions named after builtin commands
and bash_unit won't resist that kind of situation. So, for instance, do
not try to fake: exit; local; trap; eval; export; if; then; else; fi; while; do; done; $; echo; [ (I know, this is not a builtin but don't).

=== fake parameters

fake stores parameters given to the fake in the global variable FAKE_PARAMS so that you can use them inside your fake.

It may be useful if you need to adapt the behavior on the given parameters.

It can also help in asserting the values of these parameters ... but this may be quite tricky.

For instance, in our previous code that checks apache is running, we have an issue since our code does not use ps with the appropriate parameters. So we will try to check that parameters given to ps are ax.

To do that, the first naive approach would be:

test
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters() { _ps() { cat <<EOF PID TTY TIME CMD 13525 pts/7 00:00:01 bash 24162 pts/7 00:00:00 ps 8387 ? 0:00 /usr/sbin/apache2 -k start EOF assert_equals ax "${FAKE_PARAMS[@]}" } export -f _ps fake ps _ps code >/dev/null }

This test calls code, which calls ps, which is actually implemented by _ps. Since code does not use ax but only a as parameters, this test should fail. But ...

output
Running test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters ... SUCCESS

The problem here is that ps fail (because of the failed assert_equals assertion). But ps is piped with grep:

shell
code() { ps a | grep apache }

With bash, the result code of a pipeline equals the result code of the last command of the pipeline. The last command is grep and since grep succeeds, the failure of _ps is lost and our test succeeds. We have only succeeded in messing with the test output, nothing more.

An alternative may be to activate bash pipefail option but this may introduce unwanted side effects. We can also simply not output anything in _ps so that grep fails:

shell
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters() { _ps() { assert_equals ax "${FAKE_PARAMS[@]}" } export -f _ps fake ps _ps code >/dev/null }

The problem here is that we use a trick to make the code under test fail but the
failure has nothing to do with the actual assert_equals failure. This is really
bad, don't do that.

Moreover, assert_equals output is captured by ps and this just messes with the display of our test results:

shell
Running test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters ...

The only correct alternative is for the fake ps to write FAKE_PARAMS in a file descriptor
so that your test can grab them after code execution and assert their value. For instance
by writing to a file:

test
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters() { _ps() { echo ${FAKE_PARAMS[@]} > /tmp/fake_params } export -f _ps fake ps _ps code || true assert_equals ax "$(head -n1 /tmp/fake_params)" } setup() { rm -f /tmp/fake_params }

Here our fake writes to /tmp/fake. We delete this file in setup to be
sure that we do not get inappropriate data from a previous test. We assert
that the first line of /tmp/fake equals ax. Also, note that we know
that code will fail and write this to ignore the error: code || true.

output
Running test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters ... FAILURE expected [ax] but was [a] doc:14:test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters()

We can also compact the fake definition:

test
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters() { fake ps 'echo ${FAKE_PARAMS[@]} >/tmp/fake_params' code || true assert_equals ax "$(head -n1 /tmp/fake_params)" } setup() { rm -f /tmp/fake_params }
output
Running test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters ... FAILURE expected [ax] but was [a] doc:10:test_code_gives_ps_appropriate_parameters()

Finally, we can avoid the /tmp/fake_params temporary file by using coproc:

test
code() { ps a | grep apache } test_get_data_from_fake() { #Fasten you seat belt ... coproc cat exec {test_channel}>&${COPROC[1]} fake ps 'echo ${FAKE_PARAMS[@]} >&$test_channel' code || true assert_equals ax "$(head -n1 <&${COPROC[0]})" }
output
Running test_get_data_from_fake ... FAILURE expected [ax] but was [a] doc:13:test_get_data_from_fake()

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This article is auto-generated from bash-unit/bash_unit via the GitHub API.Last fetched: 6/19/2026