How to install go-testing
npx skills add https://github.com/cxuu/golang-skills --skill go-testingFull instructions (SKILL.md)
Source of truth, from cxuu/golang-skills.
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). allowed-tools: Bash(bash:*)
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 choosingt.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.Difffor 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.Errorby default to report all failures in one run. Uset.Fatalonly 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.gowhen 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 -vto verify the tests compile and pass. Fix any compilation errors before proceeding.
Test Helpers
Normative: Test helpers must call
t.Helper()first and uset.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.Asor 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
Related skills
More from cxuu/golang-skills and the wider catalog.
go-code-review
Use when reviewing Go code or checking code against community style standards. Also use proactively before submitting a Go PR or when reviewing any Go code changes, even if the user doesn't explicitly request a style review. Does not cover language-specific syntax — delegates to specialized skills.
go-linting
Use when setting up linting for a Go project, configuring golangci-lint, or adding Go checks to a CI/CD pipeline. Also use when starting a new Go project and deciding which linters to enable, even if the user only asks about "code quality" or "static analysis" without mentioning specific linter names. Does not cover code review process (see go-code-review).
go-documentation
Use when writing or reviewing documentation for Go packages, types, functions, or methods. Also use proactively when creating new exported types, functions, or packages, even if the user doesn't explicitly ask about documentation. Does not cover code comments for non-exported symbols (see go-style-core).
go-performance
Use when optimizing Go code, investigating slow performance, or writing performance-critical sections. Also use when a user mentions slow Go code, string concatenation in loops, or asks about benchmarking, even if the user doesn't explicitly mention performance patterns. Does not cover concurrent performance patterns (see go-concurrency).
go-error-handling
Use when writing Go code that returns, wraps, or handles errors — choosing between sentinel errors, custom types, and fmt.Errorf (%w vs %v), structuring error flow, or deciding whether to log or return. Also use when propagating errors across package boundaries or using errors.Is/As, even if the user doesn't ask about error strategy. Does not cover panic/recover patterns (see go-defensive).
go-naming
Use when naming any Go identifier — packages, types, functions, methods, variables, constants, or receivers — to ensure idiomatic, clear names. Also use when a user is creating new types, packages, or exported APIs, even if they don't explicitly ask about naming conventions. Does not cover package organization (see go-packages).