When writing tests in Go, there are two options as per how you choose to name your package’s tests; package foo or package foo_test . While both are perfectly valid and idiomatic, it leaves the question of which do we use ?.

With package foo_test , what you are essentially getting is a black box system. You only run your tests against the public API of your code like a user. but with package foo , you get access to the entire system (plus sub-system), unexported data/functions can be called in the testsuites.

I never gave this a thought until last week when I had to switch to a PHP project and a (little) problem I ran into which I would detail shortly.

I have always made use of the first version, package foo - and a lot of packages i have seen. So far so good, my tests run good and fail when they are supposed to :) . But I am getting a change of heart and switching to the second version, package foo_test .

In PHP, you can also test private method but it means reflection.

WHY ?

It all boils down to the answer to a question ; Should you test private methods ?

Private methods in Go would be unexported functions and the likes

The answer for me has always been NO and that has reflected in my testsuites for other languages I write. But in Go, I was doing the exact opposite. I thought it was one of the ways in which Go differs from other languages but I was wrong.

One of the way I get accustomed to a new codebase is by reading through it’s test suite. I tried applying that method to a certain Go codebase but it ended in futility. A key part of achieving the above trick is a black box codebase - caring only about what is exported and not what exists in the entire system. Having all those tests for unexportedFunc just makes the entire testsuite derail the reader (me) from the details I should care about not mentioning the fact that the tests become convoluted . You would eventually go through the unexportedFunc s but with learning tests, the main goal is the public API.

I would give an example of a certain problem I ran into the past week with being able to access private data in a testsuite.

So in onecache, one of the cache stores happens to be an in memory store. That meant storing data in a map. Last week, I decided to check the library for data race issues, turns out there was one.

I triaged the codebase but couldn’t find any reason as to why that occurred. The map was well protected by a mutex and i had to fight that fruitlessly for 2 days before i decided to look in the tests. C’mon, that is the wrong place to look ? Nah, wrong. Turns out that was where the problem was. I was manually accessing the length of the (unexported) map to make sure it equaled zero (because I could) after a Flush operation on the store. If i had made use of package foo_test , the test wouldn’t even compile since the map would be inaccessible.

While the above is a mistake from my end, it’s more like If there is a probability of exploiting something, it would be exploited someday in the future and in bad ways.

I agree there are valid usecases for making use of package foo but going forward, I am sticking with package foo_test . And you should too.

But after all is said and done, it leaves me with thoughts of designing my code better. What should be exported and what shouldn’t be ? Anyways, your tests would fail if that unexportedFunc doesn’t work as expected [0].

[0] Unexported stuffs are usually helper/utility pieces.

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