
pester-migration
✓ Official★ 36,202by github · part of github/awesome-copilot
Experimental (preview) Pester migration skill for upgrading PowerShell Pester test suites across major versions — v3→v4, v4→v5, and v5→v6. The v5→v6 path tracks Pester 6, which is still a release candidate, so that guidance may change. Covers the Discovery/Run two-phase model, moving setup into BeforeAll, $PSScriptRoot vs $MyInvocation, mock changes (Assert-MockCalled → Should -Invoke, removed fall-through), Invoke-Pester parameters → PesterConfiguration, data-driven -ForEach/-TestCases, and the
This is the playbook your agent receives when the skill activates — you don't need to read it to use the skill, but it's here to audit before installing.
Pester Migration
Experimental / preview. The v5→v6 guidance tracks Pester 6 while it is a release candidate and may change; verify against the current release notes. v3→v4 and v4→v5 cover stable releases.
Pester is the test framework for PowerShell. Test files end in *.Tests.ps1 and use
Describe / Context / It blocks with Should assertions. This skill upgrades an existing
suite from one major Pester version to the next and gets it green again.
Mental model: each major jump has a different character. v3→v4 is mostly a syntax rename. v4→v5 is a fundamental runtime change (the Discovery/Run split) and is the hard one. v5→v6 is largely backwards-compatible — a handful of previously-deprecated things now throw. Migrate one major at a time; never skip a version.
Detailed, symptom-driven guides live in references/ — load the one(s) for the jump you are doing.
References
| Reference | When to load |
|---|---|
| v3-to-v4.md | Should Be → Should -Be, Contain → FileContentMatch, Assert-VerifiableMocks → Assert-VerifiableMock, array-assertion edge cases. |
| v4-to-v5.md | The big one. Discovery/Run phases, BeforeAll setup, $PSScriptRoot, BeforeDiscovery, -ForEach, mock scoping, Should -Throw wildcards, Invoke-Pester → New-PesterConfiguration. |
| v5-to-v6.md | PowerShell 5.1/7.4+ only, per-file discovery+run, empty -ForEach throws, duplicate setup blocks throw, name <...> templates evaluate, Assert-MockCalled removed, mocks no longer fall through, code-coverage tracer, legacy Invoke-Pester params removed. |
Canonical source: the official migration guides at https://pester.dev/docs/migrations/ — this skill mirrors them. When in doubt, prefer the website.
Step 0 — Detect where you are and where you're going
Find the installed version(s) and the version the tests were written for. These can differ.
# Installed Pester version(s) on this machine
Get-Module Pester -ListAvailable | Select-Object Name, Version, Path
# Version currently imported in the session
(Get-Module Pester).VersionTell the source version from the test code with these heuristics:
You see in *.Tests.ps1 / build scripts | Suite was written for |
|---|---|
Should Be / Should Contain (no dash) | v3 or earlier → start at v3-to-v4 |
$MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path + dot-source at the top of the file; arbitrary code directly under Describe | v4 → v4-to-v5 |
Assert-MockCalled, Assert-VerifiableMock, Set-ItResult -Pending | v4 / early-v5 (these are removed in v6) |
Invoke-Pester -Script … -OutputFile … -CodeCoverage … (legacy params) | v4 invocation → map to config |
BeforeAll { . $PSScriptRoot/… }, New-PesterConfiguration, Should -Invoke | already v5-style → v5-to-v6 |
Install the target version when ready:
# Latest stable v5 — pin the major so this keeps installing v5 even after v6 goes GA
Install-Module Pester -MaximumVersion 5.99.99 -Force
# Pester 6 (currently a release candidate — needs -AllowPrerelease)
Install-Module Pester -AllowPrerelease -ForceOn Windows PowerShell 5.1 the OS ships a Microsoft-signed built-in Pester 3 that PowerShellGet won't overwrite with the differently-signed newer Pester — add
-SkipPublisherCheckthere to install side-by-side. Not needed on PowerShell 7+. See https://pester.dev/docs/introduction/installation.
Migration workflow
Run this loop for each major jump. Do not jump two majors at once — go v4→v5, then v5→v6.
- Baseline. Run the suite on the current version first and record pass/fail. You need a
known-good (or known) starting point so you can tell migration regressions apart from
pre-existing failures.
# Bare Invoke-Pester works on every major; exact parameters differ # (v3/v4: -Script/-OutputFile; v5+/v6: -Path/-Output). Invoke-Pester - Read the reference for this jump (table above) so you know the full scope before editing.
- Edit file by file. Apply the mechanical changes (see per-jump cheat sheets below and in the reference). Keep changes small and reviewable — one file or one concern at a time.
- Switch versions with
Install-Module(Step 0), then re-import:Remove-Module Pester; Import-Module Pester(or start a fresh session). - Run and fix. Re-run with
-Output Detailed; use-Output Diagnostic(v4→v5) or read the explicit v6 error messages to locate problems. Match each failure to the symptom → fix tables in the reference. - Green, diff, commit. Re-run until the result matches the baseline (or better). Review the diff, then commit. Migrating in small commits makes regressions trivial to bisect.
What actually changes (scope per jump)
| Jump | Difficulty | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| v3 → v4 | Low | Assertion-syntax rename (Should -Be). Largely script-automatable. |
| v4 → v5 | High | New two-phase runtime. Test structure changes: setup must move into BeforeAll, discovery-time code into BeforeDiscovery, file location via $PSScriptRoot. Not a pure find-replace. |
| v5 → v6 | Low–Medium | Backwards-compatible runtime; deprecated features now throw. Mostly small, targeted fixes. Your Should -Be assertions keep working unchanged. |
Quick cheat sheets
v4 → v5 (most common fixes)
# 1. Move file import into BeforeAll, use $PSScriptRoot (NOT $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path)
# BEFORE
$here = Split-Path -Parent $MyInvocation.MyCommand.Path
. "$here\Get-Thing.ps1"
# AFTER
BeforeAll { . $PSScriptRoot/Get-Thing.ps1 }
# 2. Any code that DISCOVERS/generates tests must be in BeforeDiscovery
BeforeDiscovery { $cases = Get-Content $PSScriptRoot/cases.json | ConvertFrom-Json }
# 3. Should -Throw matches with -like wildcards, not .Contains
{ throw 'a long message' } | Should -Throw '*long*'
# 4. Invoke-Pester legacy params → New-PesterConfiguration (see reference for full map)Full details, scoping rules, and the parameter→config table: references/v4-to-v5.md.
v5 → v6 (most common fixes)
# 1. Mock assertions: removed verbs — rename (old -> new):
# Assert-MockCalled -> Should -Invoke
# Assert-VerifiableMock -> Should -InvokeVerifiable
Should -Invoke Get-Thing -Times 1 -Exactly
Should -InvokeVerifiable
# 2. Add a default mock — unmatched calls no longer run the real command
Mock Get-Thing { 'default' }
Mock Get-Thing -ParameterFilter { $Name -eq 'a' } -MockWith { 'a' }
# 3. Empty/$null -ForEach now throws; allow it only where empty is expected
Describe 'Optional' -ForEach $cases -AllowNullOrEmptyForEach { }
# 4. Combine duplicate BeforeAll/BeforeEach/AfterAll/AfterEach in the same block into oneFull breaking-change list with symptoms and fixes: references/v5-to-v6.md.
Safety rules
- Tests are the spec. Migration must not change what a test asserts — only how the suite is structured and invoked. If a test starts passing/failing differently for any reason other than a documented breaking change, investigate before accepting it.
- Automated migration scripts produce false positives. The community scripts (linked in the
references) help with
Shouldsyntax and dot-sourcing, but always review the diff and re-run the suite afterward. Never bulk-edit and commit unchecked. - Mind file encoding when scripting replacements over
*.Tests.ps1— preserve the original encoding (UTF-8 vs ASCII) so you don't mangle non-ASCII test names. - Work on a branch, commit per file/concern. Small commits keep
git bisectuseful if a migrated test goes red later.
npx skills add https://github.com/github/awesome-copilot --skill pester-migrationRun this in your project — your agent picks the skill up automatically.
No common issues documented yet. If you hit a problem, the repository's GitHub Issues page is the best place to look.
Licensed under MIT— you can use, modify, and redistribute it under that license's terms.
View the full license file on GitHub →