name: csharp-spector-coverage-gaps description: Discovers and implements gaps in Spector test coverage for the C# HTTP client emitter. Use when asked to find missing Spector scenarios, add Spector test coverage, or implement a specific Spector spec for the C# emitter.
Discovering and implementing Spector coverage gaps for http-client-csharp
Overview
This skill discovers which Spector scenarios the C# emitter (@typespec/http-client-csharp) does not yet cover, then implements the missing test(s). Spector scenarios are defined in @typespec/http-specs and @azure-tools/azure-http-specs. The coverage dashboard is at https://typespec.io/can-i-use/http/.
Note:
{PKG}refers to<repo-root>/packages/http-client-csharpthroughout this document.
Inputs
You may receive one of:
- "Find coverage gaps" — discover all missing scenarios and present them.
- Spector spec link — a link to a specific spec under
packages/http-specs/specs/...orpackages/azure-http-specs/specs/.... - Spec name — e.g.,
http/encode/duration,http/type/model/flatten,http/type/union/discriminated.
Output
- A report of coverage gaps (when discovering).
- New or updated C# NUnit test file(s) under
{PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector.Tests/Http/. - Updated
{PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector.Tests/TestProjects.Spector.Tests.csprojif a new project reference is needed. - Regenerated client code (via
Generate.ps1).
Workflow
- Ensure prerequisites are met (npm ci, npm run build)
- Discover coverage gaps or identify the target spec
- Verify the spec is not in the failing specs list
- Generate the C# client for the target spec (unstubbed with
-Stubbed $false, or use Test-Spector.ps1) - Read the generated client to understand the API surface
- Read the TypeSpec scenario file to understand expected behavior
- Find or create the test file
- Implement the test(s) following existing conventions
- Run the tests using
Test-Spector.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>" - Validate all tests pass
Prerequisites — Environment setup
Before starting, ensure the build environment is ready. These instructions supersede the repo-root pnpm instructions.
- Install dependencies (from
{PKG}):cd {PKG} npm ci - Build the package:
npm run build
⚠️ Do NOT run
pnpm installorpnpm buildat the repo root — only the http-client-csharp package build is needed.
Step 1 — Discover coverage gaps
How specs are filtered
The file {PKG}/eng/scripts/Spector-Helper.psm1 defines which specs are included/excluded:
Failing specs are defined in {PKG}/eng/scripts/Spector-Helper.psm1 in the $failingSpecs array. Always check that file for the current list — do not hardcode specs here.
Azure allow-list (only these Azure specs are tested):
http/client/structure/client-operation-grouphttp/client/structure/defaulthttp/client/structure/multi-clienthttp/client/structure/renamed-operationhttp/client/structure/two-operation-grouphttp/resiliency/srv-driven
All other specs from @typespec/http-specs are included by default.
Discovering gaps programmatically
Compare available specs against existing tests. Run this from {PKG}:
Import-Module "{PKG}/eng/scripts/Spector-Helper.psm1" -DisableNameChecking -Force
# Get all valid specs
$specs = Get-Sorted-Specs | ForEach-Object { Get-SubPath $_ }
# Get all test files
$testFiles = Get-ChildItem -Path "{PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector.Tests/Http" -Recurse -Filter "*Tests.cs" |
ForEach-Object { $_.FullName }
# For each spec, check if a corresponding test directory/file exists
foreach ($spec in $specs) {
$specParts = $spec -replace '/', '\' -split '\\'
# Convert to expected test path segments
$testPath = "{PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector.Tests/Http"
# ... check if test exists
}
Alternatively, manually compare the list of specs against existing test files:
Existing test coverage (test directories under Spector.Tests/Http/):
Authentication/ApiKey, Authentication/Http/Custom, Authentication/OAuth2, Authentication/Union
Client/Naming, Client/Structure/{ClientOperationGroup,Default,MultiClient,RenamedOperation,TwoOperationGroup}
Documentation
Encode/{Array,Bytes,DateTime,Numeric}
Parameters/{Basic,BodyOptionality,CollectionFormat,Path,Query,Spread}
Payload/{ContentNegotiation,JsonMergePatch,MediaType,Multipart,Pageable,Xml}
Resiliency/SrvDriven/{V1,V2}
Response/StatusCodeRange
Routes
Serialization/EncodedName/Json
Server/{Endpoint/NotDefined,Path/Multiple,Path/Single,Versions/NotVersioned,Versions/Versioned}
SpecialHeaders/{ConditionalRequest,Repeatability}
Versioning/{Added,MadeOptional,Removed,RenamedFrom,ReturnTypeChangedFrom,TypeChangedFrom}
_Type/{Dictionary,Model/Empty,Model/Inheritance/*,Model/Usage,Model/Visibility,Property/*,Scalar,Union,_Array,_Enum/*}
Accurate gap detection
The naive approach of matching spec paths to test directory names can produce false positives because:
- C# reserved words get underscore-prefixed in test dirs (e.g.,
type/→_Type/,array→_Array,enum→_Enum) - kebab-case gets converted to PascalCase (e.g.,
content-negotiation→ContentNegotiation) - Some test files cover a parent spec but not sub-specs (e.g.,
UnionTests.cscoverstype/unionbut NOTtype/union/discriminated)
To find real gaps, verify each candidate by checking whether a test directory exists for the spec's exact path, including sub-paths. A test file at a parent level does NOT cover child specs.
Known failing specs are tracked in $failingSpecs in {PKG}/eng/scripts/Spector-Helper.psm1. Always read that file for the current list.
Important: The gap list evolves over time. Always re-run the comparison to get current gaps. All committed Spector libraries are stubbed —
[SpectorTest]will auto-skip tests unless you regenerate with-Stubbed $falseor useTest-Spector.ps1.
Understanding stubbed vs unstubbed generation
All Spector libraries committed to the repository are stubbed. Generate.ps1 defaults to $Stubbed = $true, which passes --option @typespec/http-client-csharp.generator-name=StubLibraryGenerator to the emitter. Stubbed clients use expression-bodied constructors (=>) instead of block bodies ({ }), and the [SpectorTest] attribute automatically skips tests for stubbed clients.
To generate unstubbed code (for local testing), pass -Stubbed $false:
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>" -Stubbed $false
However, the recommended way to test is via Test-Spector.ps1 (see Step 7), which handles the unstubbed regeneration, test execution, and directory restoration automatically.
Step 2 — Read the spec to understand expected behavior
Spec files live in {PKG}/node_modules/@typespec/http-specs/specs/ (or @azure-tools/azure-http-specs/specs/ for Azure specs).
If node_modules is not installed, read from the source at <repo-root>/packages/http-specs/specs/.
Each spec contains:
main.tsp— the TypeSpec definition with@scenarioand@scenarioDocdecoratorsclient.tsp(optional) — client-level customizations; takes priority overmain.tspduring generationtspconfig.yaml(optional in the Spector test project) — C#-specific generation options
Read the @scenarioDoc decorators to understand:
- The HTTP method, path, and expected parameters
- The expected request body shape
- The expected response status code and body
- Any special behavior (e.g., "should return 204", "should send header X")
Step 3 — Generate the C# client for the target spec
Use Generate.ps1 with a filter to generate only the specific spec. By default, Generate.ps1 generates stubbed code (same as what is committed to the repo). To generate unstubbed code for local testing, pass -Stubbed $false:
cd {PKG}
# Generate unstubbed (for local testing/development)
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>" -Stubbed $false
# Generate stubbed (default, matches what is committed to repo)
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>"
Examples:
# Single spec (unstubbed for testing)
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "http/encode/duration" -Stubbed $false
# Versioning spec (generates v1 + v2 automatically)
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "http/versioning/added" -Stubbed $false
The generated code lands in {PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector/<spec-path>/src/Generated/.
Verify generation succeeded
# Check that client code was generated
Get-ChildItem "{PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector/<spec-path>/src/Generated/" -Filter "*Client.cs"
Note: All committed Spector libraries are stubbed. The
[SpectorTest]attribute automatically skips tests for stubbed clients. UseTest-Spector.ps1(Step 7) to regenerate unstubbed, run tests, and restore automatically.
Step 4 — Read the generated client API surface
Browse the generated code to understand:
- Client class(es):
*Client.cs— the entry point(s) - Sub-clients: accessed via
Get*Client()methods - Operations: async methods like
GetAsync(),PutAsync(body),SendAsync() - Models: under
Models/— request/response shapes - Constructor signature:
new XClient(Uri endpoint, XClientOptions options)ornew XClient(Uri endpoint, KeyCredential credential, XClientOptions options)
Pay attention to:
- Method names (they map to TypeSpec operation names)
- Parameter types (models, primitives, BinaryData)
- Return types (
ClientResult,ClientResult<T>,AsyncPageable<T>)
Step 5 — Create or extend the test file
Directory and namespace conventions
The test directory structure mirrors the spec path with these transformations:
http/→Http/- kebab-case → PascalCase (e.g.,
content-negotiation→ContentNegotiation) type/→_Type/(leading underscore becauseTypeis a C# keyword)array→_Array(same reason)enum→_Enum(same reason)
Namespace pattern: TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http.<PascalCasePath>
Example mappings:
| Spec path | Test directory | Namespace |
|---|---|---|
http/encode/duration | Http/Encode/Duration/ | TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http.Encode.Duration |
http/type/union/discriminated | Http/_Type/Union/Discriminated/ | TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http._Type.Union.Discriminated |
http/special-words | Http/SpecialWords/ | TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http.SpecialWords |
Test file template
// Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
// Licensed under the MIT License.
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using <GeneratedNamespace>;
using NUnit.Framework;
namespace TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http.<Category>.<SubCategory>
{
public class <Name>Tests : SpectorTestBase
{
[SpectorTest]
public Task <ScenarioName>() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var response = await new <Client>(host, null).<Method>Async(<args>);
Assert.AreEqual(<expectedStatusCode>, response.GetRawResponse().Status);
});
}
}
Common test patterns
Simple void operation (204 response):
[SpectorTest]
public Task SimpleOp() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var response = await new MyClient(host, null).DoThingAsync();
Assert.AreEqual(204, response.GetRawResponse().Status);
});
GET with typed response:
[SpectorTest]
public Task GetValue() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var response = await new MyClient(host, null).GetValueAsync();
Assert.AreEqual("expected", response.Value);
});
GET with model response:
[SpectorTest]
public Task GetModel() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var response = await new MyClient(host, null).GetModelAsync();
Assert.AreEqual("name", response.Value.Name);
Assert.AreEqual(42, response.Value.Age);
});
PUT/POST with body:
[SpectorTest]
public Task SendModel() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var body = new MyModel("name", 42);
var response = await new MyClient(host, null).SendAsync(body);
Assert.AreEqual(204, response.GetRawResponse().Status);
});
Round-trip (GET then PUT):
[SpectorTest]
public Task RoundTrip() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var client = new MyClient(host, null);
var getResult = await client.GetAsync();
var response = await client.PutAsync(getResult.Value);
Assert.AreEqual(204, response.GetRawResponse().Status);
});
Error assertion:
[SpectorTest]
public Task InvalidKey() => Test((host) =>
{
var exception = Assert.ThrowsAsync<ClientResultException>(
() => new MyClient(host, new ApiKeyCredential("invalid"), null).CallAsync());
Assert.AreEqual(403, exception!.Status);
return Task.CompletedTask;
});
Sub-client access:
[SpectorTest]
public Task SubClientOp() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var response = await new MyClient(host, null)
.GetSubClient()
.DoThingAsync();
Assert.AreEqual(204, response.GetRawResponse().Status);
});
Pagination:
[SpectorTest]
public Task ListItems() => Test(async (host) =>
{
var items = new MyClient(host, null).GetItemsAsync();
int count = 0;
await foreach (var item in items)
{
count++;
}
Assert.Greater(count, 0);
});
Additional imports commonly needed
using System;
using System.ClientModel; // ClientResult, ClientResultException, ApiKeyCredential
using System.IO; // For file/stream scenarios
using NUnit.Framework; // Test framework
Step 6 — Update the .csproj if needed
If a new Spector test project directory was created (new spec), a project reference may be needed in TestProjects.Spector.Tests.csproj:
<ProjectReference Include="..\Spector\http\<spec-path>\src\<ProjectName>.csproj" />
Check existing references to match the pattern. The project name typically matches the package-name from tspconfig.yaml or is derived from the namespace.
Only add a project reference if one doesn't already exist for the spec.
Step 7 — Build and run the tests
Recommended: Use Test-Spector.ps1
The Test-Spector.ps1 script is the recommended way to test Spector specs. It automatically:
- Regenerates the spec as unstubbed (so tests are not auto-skipped)
- Runs the tests for that spec
- Restores the directory to its original stubbed state
cd {PKG}
# Test a specific spec
pwsh eng/scripts/Test-Spector.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>"
Example:
pwsh eng/scripts/Test-Spector.ps1 -filter "http/encode/duration"
Run full Spector test suite
pwsh eng/scripts/Get-Spector-Coverage.ps1
Manual approach (if needed)
If you need more control, you can manually generate unstubbed, build, and run tests:
cd {PKG}
# Generate unstubbed
pwsh eng/scripts/Generate.ps1 -filter "<spec-path>" -Stubbed $false
# Build
dotnet build generator
# Run only your new tests
dotnet test generator/TestProjects/Spector.Tests/TestProjects.Spector.Tests.csproj `
--filter "FullyQualifiedName~TestProjects.Spector.Tests.Http.<YourNamespace>"
# Restore the directory to stubbed state when done
git clean -xfd generator/TestProjects/Spector/<spec-path>
git restore generator/TestProjects/Spector/<spec-path>
Step 8 — Handle special cases
Versioning specs
Versioning specs generate two clients (v1 and v2). Tests go in separate subdirectories:
Http/Versioning/<Name>/V1/<Name>V1Tests.cs
Http/Versioning/<Name>/V2/<Name>V2Tests.cs
Generation is handled automatically by Generate.ps1 when the path contains versioning.
Srv-driven (resiliency) specs
Similar to versioning — generates v1 and v2 clients from old.tsp and main.tsp.
Specs with tspconfig.yaml
Some specs have a tspconfig.yaml in the Spector test project that overrides the package-name. Check {PKG}/generator/TestProjects/Spector/<spec-path>/tspconfig.yaml before importing the generated namespace.
Notes
- Do not modify
Spector-Helper.psm1to remove items from the failing list unless you're sure the generator now supports them. - All committed Spector libraries are stubbed —
Generate.ps1defaults to$Stubbed = $true. UseTest-Spector.ps1to temporarily regenerate unstubbed and run tests. - Tests auto-skip when the generated client is stubbed — it's safe to write tests for stubbed specs. They'll activate when
Test-Spector.ps1regenerates them unstubbed. - Only commit: test files (
.cs),.csprojchanges, andtspconfig.yamlif needed. - Follow existing test naming conventions:
<Feature>Tests.csin the matching directory. - Use
[SpectorTest]attribute (not[Test]) for all Spector tests — it enables auto-skip for stubbed implementations. - All test classes must inherit from
SpectorTestBase. - Do not add change logs — the http-client-csharp instructions say they are not needed.
- Do not comment out or delete existing tests.