PlayNicely.Projects 1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702

This is a prerelease version of PlayNicely.Projects.
There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package PlayNicely.Projects --version 1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702
NuGet\Install-Package PlayNicely.Projects -Version 1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="PlayNicely.Projects" Version="1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702" />
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add PlayNicely.Projects --version 1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702
#r "nuget: PlayNicely.Projects, 1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702"
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install PlayNicely.Projects as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=PlayNicely.Projects&version=1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702&prerelease

// Install PlayNicely.Projects as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=PlayNicely.Projects&version=1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-095702&prerelease

Play Nicely Projects

The Play Nicely Projects supports the definition and packaging (for reading or writing) of MSBuild Projects. These projects can be used to release test NuGet tool projects that you may be developing. This package provides foundation artefacts for tool project testing, however, the actual test execution code and supporting BDD extensions are developed separately.

In use in these tools packages:

Getting Started

This base package supports the definition of a TestCaseProject via a generic FileSystem interface. This interface allows for the definition of directories and files, and also the contents of those files.

The other artefacts support reading or writing of a TestCaseProject to media. At this time, the project supports reading from .NET assembly resources and writing to the physical file system. Implement concrete versions of IProjectPackageReader and IProjectPackageWriter if you have a specific media that you wish to support.

Defining Projects

The TestCaseProject class represents a virtual project, you can define a FileSystem by adding directories and files using it's fluent interface. You can also specify the ProjectFile from the same file system. Once defined the TestCaseProject doesn't do much on its own, but when combined with PlayNicely.Executor, or other dependent packages, it can have commands executed against it and any output collected for assertions.

var testCaseProject = new TestCaseProject("my-project");
var projectFile = testCaseProject.AddDirectory("project1")
                                 .AddFile("proj.csproj");

testCaseProject.ProjectFile = projectFile;

using(var writer = new StreamWriter(projectFile.OpenWriteStream()))
{
    writer.WriteLine("<Project Sdk=\"Microsoft.NET.Sdk\">");
    writer.WriteLine("  <PropertyGroup>");
    writer.WriteLine("    <TargetFramework>netstandard2.0</TargetFramework>");
    writer.WriteLine("  </PropertyGroup>");
    writer.WriteLine("</Project>");
}

Using Resource (resx) files

Building test case projects in code is fine, but there is already a tool to easily define and edit MSBuild projects, the IDE. To support this, Projects provides a IProjectPackageReader implementation for .NET resources. The basic idea is to add files to the resx with names equivalent to the project file structure. The ResourceSetPackageReader can then be used to read a package into a test case project, including the file contents.

Example

If you want a TestCaseProject with the following structure...

solution-dir
|-- Project1
|   |-- Project1.csproj
|   |-- Program.cs
|-- Project2
|   |-- Project2.csproj
|   |-- Program.cs
|   |-- Consts.cs
|-- my-solution.sln

The .resx file should have the following resources defined (note the item keys).

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
  
  <data name="ProjectFile" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>my-solution.sln</value>
  </data>
  <data name="my-solution.sln" xml:space="preserve">
    <value></value>
  </data>

  <data name="Project1/Project1.csproj" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>
&lt;Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk"&gt;
  &lt;PropertyGroup&gt;
    &lt;TargetFramework&gt;net6.0&lt;/TargetFramework&gt;
  &lt;/PropertyGroup&gt;
&lt;/Project&gt;
    </value>
  </data>
  <data name="Project1/Program.cs" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>
using System;

namespace Project1
{
    public static class Program
    {
        public static int Main(params string[] args)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Project1");

            return 0;
        }
    }
}
    </value>
  </data>

  <data name="Project2/Project2.csproj" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>
&lt;Project Sdk="Microsoft.NET.Sdk"&gt;
  &lt;PropertyGroup&gt;
    &lt;TargetFramework&gt;net6.0&lt;/TargetFramework&gt;
  &lt;/PropertyGroup&gt;
&lt;/Project&gt;
    </value>
  </data>
  <data name="Project2/Program.cs" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>
using System;

namespace Project1
{
    public static class Program
    {
        public static int Main(params string[] args)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Project2: {0}", Consts.Version);

            return 0;
        }
    }
}
    </value>
  </data>
  <data name="Project2/Consts.cs" xml:space="preserve">
    <value>
using System;

namespace Project1
{
    public static class Consts
    {
        public const string Version = "1.2.3";
    }
}
    </value>
  </data>
</root>

Note the special key ProjectFile which defines the TestCaseProject.ProjectFile path.

Example

If you have the following project structure...

solution-dir
|-- my-project.Specs           # BDD Specifications for your project
|   |-- TestCases.Projects     # Define your test case 'packages' in resx files
|       |-- Project1.resx
|-- TestCase.Projects          # Define your test case projects in here using familiar tools.
|   |-- Project1
|       |-- Project1.csproj
|       |-- Program.cs
|-- my-solution.sln

The .resx file should have the following resources defined (note the item keys).

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<root>
  <data name="Project1/Project1.csproj" type="System.Resources.ResXFileRef, System.Windows.Forms">
    <value>Project1/Project1.csproj;System.String, mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089;utf-8</value>
  </data>
  <data name="Project1/Program.cs" type="System.Resources.ResXFileRef, System.Windows.Forms">
    <value>Project1/Program.cs;System.String, mscorlib, Version=4.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=b77a5c561934e089;utf-8</value>
  </data>
</root>

And then to load these resources into a TestCaseProject you can...

internal static class TestCases
{
    // Where projectName is the same as the resx file name without the extension
    public static async Task<TestCaseProject> LoadAsync(string projectName, CancellationToken cancel)
    {
        ArgumentException.ThrowIfNullOrEmpty(projectName);
        cancel.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();

        var resourceManager = new ResourceManager($"{ResourceNamespace}.{projectName}", ResourceAssembly);

        using var resourceSet = resourceManager.GetResourceSet(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, true, true)
            ?? throw new TestCaseException(string.Format(ContentRes.Error_ProjectNameDoesNotExist, projectName));
        using var reader = new ResourceSetBlobReader(resourceSet);

        var result = new TestCaseProject(projectName);

        await result.LoadFromAsync(reader, cancel);
        cancel.ThrowIfCancellationRequested();

        return result;
    }

    public static Assembly ResourceAssembly => _resourceAssembly.Value;
    public static string ResourceNamespace => _resourceNamespace.Value;

    private static readonly Lazy<Assembly> _resourceAssembly = new(() => typeof(TestCases).Assembly);
    private static readonly Lazy<string> _resourceNamespace = new(() => typeof(TestCases).Namespace ?? string.Empty);
}
Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
  • net8.0

    • No dependencies.

NuGet packages (1)

Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on PlayNicely.Projects:

Package Downloads
PlayNicely.Executor

A framework that facilitates testing of Play Nicely functionality. Provides capability to execute programs, in a controlled environment, against test case projects.

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.1.1 4 6/1/2024
1.1.1-beta-418 11 6/1/2024
1.1.1-beta-398 27 6/1/2024
1.1.0 92 5/6/2024
1.1.0-beta-393 37 5/31/2024
1.1.0-beta-382 83 5/21/2024
1.1.0-beta-370 88 5/8/2024
1.1.0-beta-355 90 5/7/2024
1.1.0-beta-349 89 5/7/2024
1.1.0-beta-346 90 5/7/2024
1.1.0-beta-340 91 5/7/2024
1.1.0-beta-323 90 5/6/2024
1.0.7 257 4/11/2024
1.0.7-beta-312 95 4/26/2024
1.0.7-beta-299 86 4/14/2024
1.0.7-beta-296 86 4/14/2024
1.0.7-beta-287 82 4/11/2024
1.0.7-beta-282 82 4/11/2024
1.0.7-beta-280 76 4/10/2024
1.0.7-beta-278 80 4/10/2024
1.0.7-beta-276 78 4/10/2024
1.0.7-beta-274 81 4/9/2024
1.0.7-beta-272 72 4/9/2024
1.0.6 123 3/21/2024
1.0.6-beta-266 89 3/21/2024
1.0.6-beta-260 89 3/21/2024
1.0.5 151 3/10/2024
1.0.5-prerelease-20240301-0... 71 3/1/2024
1.0.5-beta-227 97 3/10/2024
1.0.5-beta-221 95 3/9/2024
1.0.5-beta-214 89 3/9/2024
1.0.5-beta-208 95 3/1/2024
1.0.5-beta-206 86 3/1/2024
1.0.4 98 2/29/2024
1.0.4-prerelease-20240229-1... 64 2/29/2024
1.0.4-prerelease-20240228-0... 62 2/28/2024
1.0.4-prerelease-20240226-1... 69 2/26/2024