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Pester is the ubiquitous test and mock framework for PowerShell.

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Pester

📦🔐 Pester is now signed. -SkipPublisherCheck should no longer be used to install from PowerShell Gallery on Windows 10.

👩👨 We are looking for contributors! All issues labeled help wanted are up for grabs. They further split up into good first issue aimed at issues I hope are easy to solve. Bad first issue where I expect the implementation to be problematic or needs to be proposed and discussed before. And the rest which is somewhere in the middle. If you decide to pick up an issue please comment in the issue thread so others don't waste their time working on the same issue as you.
There is also contributor's guide that will hopefully help you.

Pester is the ubiquitous test and mock framework for PowerShell.

# your function
function Get-Planet ([string]$Name='*')
{
  $planets = @(
    @{ Name = 'Mercury' }
    @{ Name = 'Venus'   }
    @{ Name = 'Earth'   }
    @{ Name = 'Mars'    }
    @{ Name = 'Jupiter' }
    @{ Name = 'Saturn'  }
    @{ Name = 'Uranus'  }
    @{ Name = 'Neptune' }
  ) | foreach { [PSCustomObject]$_ }

  $planets | where { $_.Name -like $Name }
}

# Pester tests
Describe 'Get-Planet' {
  It "Given no parameters, it lists all 8 planets" {
    $allPlanets = Get-Planet
    $allPlanets.Count | Should -Be 8
  }

  Context "Filtering by Name" {
    It "Given valid -Name '<Filter>', it returns '<Expected>'" -TestCases @(
      @{ Filter = 'Earth'; Expected = 'Earth' }
      @{ Filter = 'ne*'  ; Expected = 'Neptune' }
      @{ Filter = 'ur*'  ; Expected = 'Uranus' }
      @{ Filter = 'm*'   ; Expected = 'Mercury', 'Mars' }
    ) {
      param ($Filter, $Expected)

      $planets = Get-Planet -Name $Filter
      $planets.Name | Should -Be $Expected
    }

    It "Given invalid parameter -Name 'Alpha Centauri', it returns `$null" {
      $planets = Get-Planet -Name 'Alpha Centauri'
      $planets | Should -Be $null
    }
  }
}

This code example lies a tiny bit, find it annotated and production ready here.

Learn more about the usage and syntax on our wiki.

Installation

Pester is compatible with Windows PowerShell 2.x - 5.x on Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista and even 2003. Since version 4.0.9 Pester is compatible also with PowerShell Core 6.x on Windows, Linux, macOS but with some limitations.

Pester comes pre-installed with Windows 10, but we recommend updating, by running this PowerShell command as administrator:

Install-Module -Name Pester -Force

Not running Windows 10 or facing problems? See the full installation and update guide.

Features

Test runner

Pester runs your tests and prints a nicely formatted output to the screen.

test run output

Command line output is not the only output option, Pester also integrates with Visual Studio Code, Visual Studio, and any tool that can consume nUnit XML output.

Assertions

Pester comes with a suite of assertions that cover a lot of common use cases. Pester assertions range from very versatile, like Should -Be, to specialized like Should -Exists. Here is how you ensure that a file exists:

Describe 'Notepad' {
    It 'Exists in Windows folder' {
        'C:\Windows\notepad.exe' | Should -Exist
    }
}

Learn more about assertion on our wiki.

Mocking

Pester has mocking built-in. Using mocks you can easily replace functions with empty implementation to avoid changing the real environment.

function Remove-Cache {
    Remove-Item "$env:TEMP\cache.txt"
}

Describe 'Remove-Cache' {
    It 'Removes cached results from temp\cache.text' {
        Mock -CommandName Remove-Item -MockWith {}

        Remove-Cache

        Assert-MockCalled -CommandName Remove-Item -Times 1 -Exactly
    }
}

Learn more about Mocking here.

Code coverage

Pester can measure how much of your code is covered by tests and export it to JaCoCo format that is easily understood by build servers.

JaCoCo code coverage report

Learn more about code coverage here.

Build server integration

Pester integrates nicely with TFS, AppVeyor, TeamCity, Jenkins and other CI servers.

Testing your scripts, and all pull requests on AppVeyor is extremely simple. Just commit this appveyor.yml file to your repository, and select your repository on the AppVeyor website:

version: 1.0.{build}
image:
- Visual Studio 2017
- Ubuntu
install:
- ps: Install-Module Pester -Force -Scope CurrentUser
build: off
test_script:
- ps: Invoke-Pester -EnableExit

See it in action here! If you do not need to test your scripts against PowerShell Core, just simply remove the entire line mentioning Ubuntu.

Pester itself is build on the community build server and Travis CI, and distributed mainly via PowerShell gallery.

windows build linux/macos build latest version downloads

Further reading

Do you like what you see? Learn how to use Pester with our wiki guide, and continue with some of the other resources.

Got questions?

Got questions or you just want to get in touch? Use our issues page or one of these channels:

Pester Twitter Pester on StackOverflow Testing channel on Powershell Slack Pester Gitter Pester on PowerShell.org

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Pester is the ubiquitous test and mock framework for PowerShell.

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