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= Writing Tests =

Mercurial contains a simple regression test framework that allows both Python unit tests and shell-script driven regression tests.

See also: DebuggingTests
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Mercurial contains a simple regression test framework that allows both Python unit tests and shell-script driven regression tests.

See also: DebuggingTests
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== Making Tests Repeatable == == Making tests repeatable ==
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== A Naming Scheme For Test Elements == == A naming scheme for test elements ==
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CategoryContributing CategoryTesting CategoryHowTo CategoryTesting CategoryDeveloper

Writing Tests

Mercurial contains a simple regression test framework that allows both Python unit tests and shell-script driven regression tests.

See also: DebuggingTests

1. Running the test suite

To run the tests, do:

$ make tests
cd tests && ./run-tests.py
............................................
Ran 44 tests, 0 failed.

This finds all scripts in the tests/ directory named test-* and executes them. The scripts can be either shell scripts or Python. Each test is run in a temporary directory that is removed when the test is complete.

You can also run tests individually:

$ cd tests/
$ ./run-tests.py test-pull test-undo
..
Ran 2 tests, 0 failed.

A test-<x> succeeds if the script returns success and its output matches test-<x>.out. If the new output doesn't match, it is stored in test-<x>.err.

Also, run-tests.py has some useful options:

$ ./run-tests.py --help
usage: run-tests.py [options] [tests]

options:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -v, --verbose         output verbose messages
  -t TIMEOUT, --timeout=TIMEOUT
                        kill errant tests after TIMEOUT seconds
  -c, --cover           print a test coverage report
  -s, --cover_stdlib    print a test coverage report inc. standard libraries
  -C, --annotate        output files annotated with coverage
  -r, --retest          retest failed tests
  -f, --first           exit on the first test failure
  -R, --restart         restart at last error
  -i, --interactive     prompt to accept changed output

One option that comes in handy when running tests repeatedly is --local. By default, run-tests.py installs Mercurial into its temporary directory for each run of the test suite. You can save several seconds per run with --local, which tells run-tests.py simply to use the local hg script and library. The catch: if you edit the code during a long test suite run, different tests will run with different code. It's best to use --local when you are running the same test script many times, as often happens during development.

Running tests under Windows is a bit harder; see WindowsTestingPlan for details.

Note that tests won't run properly with an egg based install of Mercurial; the system install of Mercurial will be used instead of the checked out version. Use a Mercurial installed from source instead to avoid conflicts.

2. Writing a shell script test

Creating a regression test is easy. Simply create a *.t file which contains shell script commands prepended with '  $ '. Lines not starting with two spaces are comments.

Here's an example (test-x.t):

File replaced with directory:

  $ hg init a
  $ cd a
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg commit -Ama
  $ rm a
  $ mkdir a
  $ echo a > a/a

Should fail - would corrupt dirstate:

  $ hg add a/a

Then run this test for the first time

adi@kork-ubuntu1:~/hgrepos/hg-crew/tests$ python run-tests.py test-x.t -i

ERROR: /home/adi/hgrepos/hg-crew/tests/test-x.t output changed
--- /home/adi/hgrepos/hg-crew/tests/test-x.t 
+++ /home/adi/hgrepos/hg-crew/tests/test-x.t.err 
@@ -4,6 +4,7 @@
   $ cd a
   $ echo a > a
   $ hg commit -Ama
+  adding a
   $ rm a
   $ mkdir a
   $ echo a > a/a
@@ -11,4 +12,6 @@
 Should fail - would corrupt dirstate:
 
   $ hg add a/a
+  abort: file 'a' in dirstate clashes with 'a/a'
+  [255]
 
!Accept this change? [n] 

Check the output of the commands inserted into your test file and accept the modified test file with 'y'.

The test file includes now both command input interspersed with command output.

File replaced with directory:

  $ hg init a
  $ cd a
  $ echo a > a
  $ hg commit -Ama
  adding a
  $ rm a
  $ mkdir a
  $ echo a > a/a

Should fail - would corrupt dirstate:

  $ hg add a/a
  abort: file 'a' in dirstate clashes with 'a/a'
  [255]

Note how nonzero return values show up enclosed in squared brackets ("[255]" for "hg add a/a").

Running this test again will now pass

adi@kork-ubuntu1:~/hgrepos/hg-crew/tests$ python run-tests.py test-x.t -i
.
# Ran 1 tests, 0 skipped, 0 failed.

This kind of test is also known as "unified test" (because it unifies input and output into the same file).

2.1. Filtering output

Such tests must be repeatable, that is, output generated by commands must not contain strings that change for each invocation (like the path of a temporary file).

To cope with this kind of variation, unified tests support filtering using (glob) or (re).

To enable glob filtering for an output line, append " (glob)" to the respective line like in the following example:

   $ hg version -q
   Mercurial Distributed SCM (version *) (glob)

(glob) filtering supports * for matching a string and ? for matching a single character. Example:

  $ hg diff
  diff -r ???????????? orphanchild (glob)
  --- /dev/null
  +++ b/orphanchild
  @@ -0,0 +1,1 @@
  +orphan

Literal * or ? on (glob) lines must be escaped with \ (backslash).

To use regular expression filtering on a line, append " (re)" to the output line:

   $ hg version -q
   Mercurial Distributed SCM \(version .*\) (re)

The format in a nutshell (adapted from http://pypi.python.org/pypi/cram):

  • Unified tests use the .t file extension.
  • Lines beginning with two spaces, a dollar sign, and a space are run in the shell.
  • Lines beginning with two spaces, a greater than sign, and a space allow multi-line commands. All other lines beginning with two spaces are considered command output.
  • Output lines ending with a space and the keyword (re) are matched as Perl-compatible regular expressions.

  • Lines ending with a space and the keyword (glob) are matched with a glob-like syntax. The only special characters supported are "*" and "?". Both characters can be escaped using "\", and the backslash can be escaped itself.
  • Output lines ending with either of the above keywords are always first matched literally with actual command output.

Anything else is a comment.

3. Writing a Python unit test

A unit test operates much like a regression test, but is written in Python. Here's an example:

   1 #!/usr/bin/env python
   2 
   3 import sys
   4 from mercurial import bdiff, mpatch
   5 
   6 def test1(a, b):
   7     d = bdiff.bdiff(a, b)
   8     c = a
   9     if d:
  10         c = mpatch.patches(a, [d])
  11     if c != b:
  12         print "***", `a`, `b`
  13         print "bad:"
  14         print `c`[:200]
  15         print `d`
  16 
  17 def test(a, b):
  18     print "***", `a`, `b`
  19     test1(a, b)
  20     test1(b, a)
  21 
  22 test("a\nc\n\n\n\n", "a\nb\n\n\n")
  23 test("a\nb\nc\n", "a\nc\n")
  24 test("", "")
  25 test("a\nb\nc", "a\nb\nc")
  26 test("a\nb\nc\nd\n", "a\nd\n")
  27 test("a\nb\nc\nd\n", "a\nc\ne\n")
  28 test("a\nb\nc\n", "a\nc\n")
  29 test("a\n", "c\na\nb\n")
  30 test("a\n", "")
  31 test("a\n", "b\nc\n")
  32 test("a\n", "c\na\n")
  33 test("", "adjfkjdjksdhfksj")
  34 test("", "ab")
  35 test("", "abc")
  36 test("a", "a")
  37 test("ab", "ab")
  38 test("abc", "abc")
  39 test("a\n", "a\n")
  40 test("a\nb", "a\nb")
  41 
  42 print "done"

4. Writing Windows-only tests

Sometimes, it is necessary to write tests which will only run on Windows (for example, testing case sensitivity issues, or cases where os.sep is not '/'). The simplest way of doing this is to write the test as a .bat file. As usual, the output will be compared with the expected output, stored in a file with the .out extension.

Here is a simple example:

@echo off
call hg init
echo hello >a
call hg add a
call hg status

Some things to note:

  • Use @echo off at the start of the file to stop commands being echoed. (Although command echo could be useful to see what commands produce what output - just be careful to add the command echo into the expected output!)

  • You have to use call hg to run Mercurial. If you don't, the test will terminate after the first hg call!. This is because in the test environment, the hg command is implemented as a .bat file, and Windows won't allow one batch file to call another without an explicit call command. Without the call, control is transferred to the hg.bat file, and does not return.

  • Windows has a much more limited set of utilities available by default - so don't assume that things like sed exist. (If you're following WindowsTestingPlan, you will have many of the normal Unix tools, so in practice you can get away with this without too much bother).

5. Making tests repeatable

There are some tricky points here that you should be aware of when writing tests:

  • hg commit wants user interaction - use -m "text"
  • hg up -m wants user interaction, set HGMERGE to something noninteractive:

#!/bin/sh
cat <<EOF > merge
echo merging for `basename $1`
EOF
chmod +x merge

env HGMERGE=./merge hg update -m 1
  • changeset hashes will change based on user and date which make
    • things like hg history output change - use -d:

hg commit -m "test" -u test -d "0 0"
  • diff will show the current time - strip with sed:

hg diff | sed "s/\(\(---\|+++\) [a-zA-Z0-9_/.-]*\).*/\1/"

6. Making tests portable

You also need to be careful that the tests are portable from one platform to another. You're probably working on Linux, where the GNU toolchain has more (or different) functionality than on MacOS, *BSD, Solaris, AIX, etc. While testing on all platforms is the only sure-fire way to make sure that you've written portable code, here's a list of problems that have been found and fixed in the tests. Another, more comprehensive list may be found in the GNU Autoconf manual, online here:

6.1. sh

The Bourne shell is a very basic shell. On Linux, /bin/sh is typically bash, which even in Bourne-shell mode has many features that Bourne shells on other Unix systems don't have. (Note however that on Linux /bin/sh isn't guaranteed to be bash; in particular, on Ubuntu, /bin/sh is dash, a small Posix-compliant shell that lacks many bash features). You'll need to be careful about constructs that seem ubiquitous, but are actually not available in the least common denominator. While using another shell (ksh, bash explicitly, posix shell, etc.) explicitly may seem like another option, these may not exist in a portable location, and so are generally probably not a good idea. You may find that rewriting the test in python will be easier.

  • don't use pushd/popd; save the output of "pwd" and use "cd" in place of the pushd, and cd back to the saved pwd instead of popd.
  • don't use math expressions like let, (( ... )), or $(( ... )); use "expr" instead.
  • don't use $(...) command substitution; use `...` instead.

  • don't use $PWD; use `pwd` instead.

  • don't use the "function" keyword to define functions; use the old-style form instead:
    • # DON'T USE THIS
      function foo {
         ...
      }
      
      # USE THIS INSTEAD
      foo () {
         ...
      }
  • don't use "source" to load another script; use "." instead.

6.2. grep

  • don't use the -q option; redirect stdout to /dev/null instead.
  • don't use extended regular expressions with grep; use egrep instead, and don't escape any regex operators.

6.3. sed

  • make sure that the beginning-of-line matcher ("^") is at the very beginning of the expression -- it may not be supported inside parens.
  • don't use the -i option; instead, redirect to a file:

sed -e 's/foo/bar/' a > a.new
mv a.new a

6.4. echo

  • echo may interpret "\n" and print a newline; use printf instead if you want a literal "\n" (backslash + n).

6.5. false

  • false is guaranteed only to return a non-zero value; you cannot depend on it being 1. On Solaris in particular, /bin/false returns 255. Rewrite your test to not depend on a particular return value, or create a temporary "false" executable, and call that instead.

6.6. diff

  • don't use the -N option. There's no particularly good workaround short of writing a reasonably complicated replacement script, but substituting gdiff for diff if you can't rewrite the test not to need -N will probably do.

6.7. wc

  • don't use it, or else eliminate leading whitespace from the output:

wc -l | sed -e 's/^ *//'

or use python:

python -c "print len(open('foo').readlines())"

  • don't use the -c option (not part of SUSv3, not supported on OpenBSD). Instead, use dd. the following are equivalent; the latter is preferred:

head -c 20 foo > bar

dd if=foo of=bar bs=1 count=20 2>/dev/null

6.9. ls

  • don't use the -R option. Instead, use find(1).

6.10. tr

  • don't use ranges like tr a-z A-Z . Classes like tr [:lower:] [:upper:] can be used instead.

7. A naming scheme for test elements

Rather than use an ad-hoc mix of names like foo, bar, baz for generic names in tests, consider the following scheme when writing new test cases:

  • 0, 1, 2, 3... for commit messages (each commit message matches its expected revision)
  • f1, f2, f3... for generic filenames
  • c1, c2, c3... for generic file contents (easily identifiable in the output)
  • d1, d2, d3... for generic directory names
  • r for repos, t for tags, b for branches, u for users, and so on

If you've only got one directory, one file, etc. in your test, you can drop the '1'.


CategoryTesting CategoryDeveloper

WritingTests (last edited 2018-04-18 16:35:50 by GregorySzorc)