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Version: 5.7

Lifecycle hooks

It is extremely common in tests to want to perform some action before and after a test, or before and after all tests in the same file. It is in these lifecycle hooks that you would perform any setup/teardown logic required for a test.

Kotest provides a rich assortment of hooks that can be defined directly inside a spec. For more advanced cases, such as writing distributable plugins or re-usable hooks, one can use extensions.

At the end of this section is a list of the available hooks and when they are executed.

There are several ways to use hooks in Kotest:

DSL Methods​

The first and simplest, is to use the DSL methods available inside a Spec which create and register a TestListener for you. For example, we can invoke beforeTest or afterTest (and others) directly alongside our tests.

class TestSpec : WordSpec({
beforeTest {
println("Starting a test $it")
}
afterTest { (test, result) ->
println("Finished spec with result $result")
}
"this test" should {
"be alive" {
println("Johnny5 is alive!")
}
}
})

Behind the scenes, these DSL methods will create an instance of TestListener, overriding the appropriate functions, and ensuring that this test listener is registered to run.

You can use afterProject as a DSL method which will create an instance of ProjectListener, but there is no beforeProject because by the time the framework is at this stage of detecting a spec, the project has already started!

DSL methods with functions​

Since these DSL methods accept functions, we can pull out logic to a function and re-use it in several places. The BeforeTest type used on the function definition is an alias to suspend (TestCase) -> Unit to keep things simple. There are aliases for the types of each of the callbacks.

val startTest: BeforeTest = {
println("Starting a test $it")
}

class TestSpec : WordSpec({

// used once
beforeTest(startTest)

"this test" should {
"be alive" {
println("Johnny5 is alive!")
}
}
})

class OtherSpec : WordSpec({

// used twice
beforeTest(startTest)

"this test" should {
"fail" {
fail("boom")
}
}
})

Overriding callback functions in a Spec​

The second, related, method is to override the callback functions in the Spec. This is essentially just a variation on the first method.

class TestSpec : WordSpec() {
override fun beforeTest(testCase: TestCase) {
println("Starting a test $testCase")
}

init {
"this test" should {
"be alive" {
println("Johnny5 is alive!")
}
}
}
}
CallbackDescription
beforeContainerInvoked directly before each test with type TestType.Container is executed, with the TestCase instance as a parameter. If the test is marked as ignored / disabled / inactive, then this callback won't be invoked.
afterContainerInvoked immediately after a TestCase with type TestType.Container has finished, with the TestResult of that test. If a test case was skipped (ignored / disabled / inactive) then this callback will not be invoked for that particular test case.

The callback will execute even if the test fails.
beforeEachInvoked directly before each test with type TestType.Test is executed, with the TestCase instance as a parameter. If the test is marked as ignored / disabled / inactive, then this callback won't be invoked.
afterEachInvoked immediately after a TestCase with type TestType.Test has finished, with the TestResult of that test. If a test case was skipped (ignored / disabled / inactive) then this callback will not be invoked for that particular test case.

The callback will execute even if the test fails.
beforeAnyInvoked directly before each test with any TestType is executed, with the TestCase instance as a parameter. If the test is marked as ignored / disabled / inactive, then this callback won't be invoked.
afterAnyInvoked immediately after a TestCase with any TestType has finished, with the TestResult of that test. If a test case was skipped (ignored / disabled / inactive) then this callback will not be invoked for that particular test case.

The callback will execute even if the test fails.
beforeTestInvoked directly before each test is executed with the TestCase instance as a parameter. If the test is marked as ignored / disabled / inactive, then this callback won't be invoked.

This callback has the same behavior as beforeAny.
afterTestInvoked immediately after a TestCase has finished with the TestResult of that test. If a test case was skipped (ignored / disabled / inactive) then this callback will not be invoked for that particular test case.

The callback will execute even if the test fails.

This callback has the same behavior as afterAny.
beforeSpecInvoked after the Engine instantiates a spec to be used as part of a test execution.

The callback is provided with the Spec instance that the test will be executed under.

If a spec is instantiated multiple times - for example, if InstancePerTest or InstancePerLeaf isolation modes are used, then this callback will be invoked for each instance created, just before the first test (or only test) is executed for that spec.

This callback should be used if you need to perform setup each time a new spec instance is created.

If you simply need to perform setup once per class file, then use prepareSpec. This callback runs before any beforeTest functions are invoked.

When running in the default SingleInstance isolation mode, then this callback and prepareSpec are functionally the same since all tests will run in the same spec instance.
afterSpecIs invoked after the TestCases that are part of a particular spec instance have completed.

If a spec is instantiated multiple times - for example, if InstancePerTest or InstancePerLeaf isolation modes are used, then this callback will be invoked for each instantiated spec, after the tests that are applicable to that spec instance have returned.

This callback should be used if you need to perform cleanup after each individual spec instance. If you need to perform cleanup once per class file, then use finalizeSpec.

This callback runs after any afterTest callbacks have been invoked.

When running in the default SingleInstance isolation mode, then this callback and finalizeSpec are functionally the same since all tests will run in the same spec instance.
In case there is any exception in beforeSpec, afterSpec will be skipped
prepareSpecCalled once per spec, when the engine is preparing to execute the tests for that spec. The KClass instance of the spec is provided as a parameter.

Regardless of how many times the spec is instantiated, for example, if InstancePerTest or InstancePerLeaf isolation modes are used, this callback will only be invoked once. If there are no active tests in a spec, then this callback will still be invoked.

When running in the default SingleInstance isolation mode, then this callback and beforeSpec are functionally the same since all tests will run in the same spec instance.
finalizeSpecCalled once per Spec, after all tests have completed for that spec.

Regardless of how many times the spec is instantiated, for example, if InstancePerTest or InstancePerLeaf isolation modes are used, this callback will only be invoked once.

The results parameter contains every TestCase, along with the result of that test, including tests that were ignored (which will have a TestResult that has TestStatus.Ignored).

When running in the default SingleInstance isolation mode, then this callback and afterSpec are functionally the same since all tests will run in the same spec instance.
beforeInvocationInvoked before each 'run' of a test, with a flag indicating the iteration number. This callback is useful if you have set a test to have multiple invocations via config and want to do some setup / teardown between runs.

If you are running a test with the default single invocation then this callback is effectively the same as beforeTest.

Note: If you have set multiple invocations _and multiple threads, then these callbacks will be invoked concurrently._
afterInvocationInvoked after each 'run' of a test, with a flag indicating the iteration number. This callback is useful if you have set a test to have multiple invocations via config and want to do some setup / teardown between runs.

If you are running a test with the default single invocation then this callback is effectively the same as afterTest.

Note: If you have set multiple invocations _and multiple threads, then these callbacks will be invoked concurrently._