Justin M. Keyes d8ccee30b0 fix(jobwait): always drain process event queues #15970 | 3 éve | |
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.. | ||
benchmark | 7 éve | |
busted | 4 éve | |
config | 7 éve | |
functional | 3 éve | |
includes | 5 éve | |
symbolic | 3 éve | |
unit | 3 éve | |
README.md | 3 éve | |
helpers.lua | 3 éve |
Tests are broadly divided into unit tests (test/unit), functional tests (test/functional), and old tests (src/nvim/testdir/).
You can learn the key concepts of Lua in 15 minutes. Use any existing test as a template to start writing new tests.
Tests are run by /cmake/RunTests.cmake
file, using busted
(a Lua test-runner).
For some failures, .nvimlog
(or $NVIM_LOG_FILE
) may provide insight.
Depending on the presence of binaries (e.g., xclip
) some tests will be
ignored. You must compile with libintl to prevent E319: The command is not
available in this version
errors.
/test/benchmark
: benchmarks/test/functional
: functional tests/test/unit
: unit tests/test/config
: contains *.in
files which are transformed into *.lua
files using configure_file
CMake command: this is for acessing CMake
variables in lua tests./test/includes
: include-files for use by luajit ffi.cdef
C definitions
parser: normally used to make macros not accessible via this mechanism
accessible the other way./test/*/preload.lua
: modules preloaded by busted --helper
option/test/**/helpers.lua
: common utility functions for test code/test/*/**/*_spec.lua
: actual tests. Files that do not end with
_spec.lua
are libraries like /test/**/helpers.lua
, except that they have
some common topic./src/nvim/testdir
: old tests (from Vim)To run all tests (except "old" tests):
make test
To run only unit tests:
make unittest
To run only functional tests:
make functionaltest
To run all legacy Vim tests:
make oldtest
To run a single legacy test file you can use either:
make oldtest TEST_FILE=test_syntax.vim
or:
make src/nvim/testdir/test_syntax.vim
$GDB
to run tests under gdbserver.
And if $VALGRIND
is set it will pass --vgdb=yes
to valgrind instead of
starting gdbserver directly.:h press-enter
prompts. The
default screen width is 50 columns. Commands that try to print lines longer
than 50 columns in the command-line, e.g. :edit very...long...path
, will
trigger the prompt. In this case, a shorter path or :silent edit
should be
used.If you can't figure out what is going on, try to visualize the screen. Put this at the beginning of your test:
local Screen = require('test.functional.ui.screen')
local screen = Screen.new()
screen:attach()
Afterwards, put screen:snapshot_util()
at any position in your test. See the
comment at the top of test/functional/ui/screen.lua
for more.
Another filter method is by setting a pattern of test name to TEST_FILTER
.
it('foo api',function()
...
end)
it('bar api',function()
...
end)
To run only test with filter name:
TEST_FILTER='foo.*api' make functionaltest
To run a specific unit test:
TEST_FILE=test/unit/foo.lua make unittest
To run a specific functional test:
TEST_FILE=test/functional/foo.lua make functionaltest
To repeat a test:
BUSTED_ARGS="--repeat=100 --no-keep-going" TEST_FILE=test/functional/foo_spec.lua make functionaltest
Tests can be "tagged" by adding #
before a token in the test description.
it('#foo bar baz', function()
...
end)
it('#foo another test', function()
...
end)
To run only the tagged tests:
TEST_TAG=foo make functionaltest
NOTE:
TEST_FILE
is not a pattern string like TEST_TAG
or TEST_FILTER
. The
given value to TEST_FILE
must be a path to an existing file.TEST_TAG
and TEST_FILTER
filter tests by the string descriptions
found in it()
and describe()
.types.h
, so types used in the tested functions
could be moved to it to avoid having to rewrite the declarations in the test
files.
#define
constants must be rewritten const
or enum
so they can be
"visible" to the tests.if-else
. If a functional test depends on
some external factor (e.g. the existence of md5sum
on $PATH
), and you
can't mock or fake the dependency, then skip the test via pending()
if the
external factor is missing. This ensures that the total test-count
(success + fail + error + pending) is the same in all environments.
pending()
is ignored if it is missing an argument, unless it is
contained in an it()
block.
Provide empty function argument if the pending()
call is outside of it()
(example).source([=[...]=])
blocks may break Vim's Lua syntax
highlighting. Try :syntax sync fromstart
to fix it.Tests in /test/unit
and /test/functional
are divided into groups
by the semantic component they are testing.
src/nvim/
, because they are testing
functions directly. E.g. unit-tests for src/nvim/undo.c
should live in
test/unit/undo_spec.lua
.test/functional/*/*_spec.lua
group that makes
sense, before creating a new one.make lint
(and make lualint
) runs luacheck
on the test code.
If a luacheck warning must be ignored, specify the warning code. Example:
-- luacheck: ignore 621
http://luacheck.readthedocs.io/en/stable/warnings.html
Ignore the smallest applicable scope (e.g. inside a function, not at the top of the file).
Test behaviour is affected by environment variables. Currently supported (Functional, Unit, Benchmarks) (when Defined; when set to 1; when defined, treated as Integer; when defined, treated as String; when defined, treated as Number; !must be defined to function properly):
BUSTED_ARGS
(F) (U): arguments forwarded to busted
.
GDB
(F) (D): makes nvim instances to be run under gdbserver
. It will be
accessible on localhost:7777
: use gdb build/bin/nvim
, type target remote
:7777
inside.
GDBSERVER_PORT
(F) (I): overrides port used for GDB
.
VALGRIND
(F) (D): makes nvim instances to be run under valgrind
. Log
files are named valgrind-%p.log
in this case. Note that non-empty valgrind
log may fail tests. Valgrind arguments may be seen in
/test/functional/helpers.lua
. May be used in conjunction with GDB
.
VALGRIND_LOG
(F) (S): overrides valgrind log file name used for VALGRIND
.
TEST_SKIP_FRAGILE
(F) (D): makes test suite skip some fragile tests.
TEST_TIMEOUT
(FU) (I): specifies maximum time, in seconds, before the test
suite run is killed
NVIM_PROG
, NVIM_PRG
(F) (S): override path to Neovim executable (default
to build/bin/nvim
).
CC
(U) (S): specifies which C compiler to use to preprocess files.
Currently only compilers with gcc-compatible arguments are supported.
NVIM_TEST_MAIN_CDEFS
(U) (1): makes ffi.cdef
run in main process. This
raises a possibility of bugs due to conflicts in header definitions, despite
the counters, but greatly speeds up unit tests by not requiring ffi.cdef
to
do parsing of big strings with C definitions.
NVIM_TEST_PRINT_I
(U) (1): makes cimport
print preprocessed, but not yet
filtered through formatc
headers. Used to debug formatc
. Printing is done
with the line numbers.
NVIM_TEST_PRINT_CDEF
(U) (1): makes cimport
print final lines which will
be then passed to ffi.cdef
. Used to debug errors ffi.cdef
happens to
throw sometimes.
NVIM_TEST_PRINT_SYSCALLS
(U) (1): makes it print to stderr when syscall
wrappers are called and what they returned. Used to debug code which makes
unit tests be executed in separate processes.
NVIM_TEST_RUN_FAILING_TESTS
(U) (1): makes itp
run tests which are known
to fail (marked by setting third argument to true
).
LOG_DIR
(FU) (S!): specifies where to seek for valgrind and ASAN log files.
NVIM_TEST_CORE_*
(FU) (S): a set of environment variables which specify
where to search for core files. Are supposed to be defined all at once.
NVIM_TEST_CORE_GLOB_DIRECTORY
(FU) (S): directory where core files are
located. May be .
. This directory is then recursively searched for core
files. Note: this variable must be defined for any of the following to have
any effect.
NVIM_TEST_CORE_GLOB_RE
(FU) (S): regular expression which must be matched
by core files. E.g. /core[^/]*$
. May be absent, in which case any file is
considered to be matched.
NVIM_TEST_CORE_EXC_RE
(FU) (S): regular expression which excludes certain
directories from searching for core files inside. E.g. use ^/%.deps$
to not
search inside /.deps
. If absent, nothing is excluded.
NVIM_TEST_CORE_DB_CMD
(FU) (S): command to get backtrace out of the
debugger. E.g. gdb -n -batch -ex "thread apply all bt full"
"$_NVIM_TEST_APP" -c "$_NVIM_TEST_CORE"
. Defaults to the example command.
This debug command may use environment variables _NVIM_TEST_APP
(path to
application which is being debugged: normally either nvim or luajit) and
_NVIM_TEST_CORE
(core file to get backtrace from).
NVIM_TEST_CORE_RANDOM_SKIP
(FU) (D): makes check_cores
not check cores
after approximately 90% of the tests. Should be used when finding cores is
too hard for some reason. Normally (on OS X or when
NVIM_TEST_CORE_GLOB_DIRECTORY
is defined and this variable is not) cores
are checked for after each test.
NVIM_TEST_RUN_TESTTEST
(U) (1): allows running
test/unit/testtest_spec.lua
used to check how testing infrastructure works.
NVIM_TEST_TRACE_LEVEL
(U) (N): specifies unit tests tracing level:
0
disables tracing (the fastest, but you get no data if tests crash and
there no core dump was generated),1
leaves only C function calls and returns in the trace (faster than
recording everything),2
records all function calls, returns and executed Lua source lines.NVIM_TEST_TRACE_ON_ERROR
(U) (1): makes unit tests yield trace on error in
addition to regular error message.
NVIM_TEST_MAXTRACE
(U) (N): specifies maximum number of trace lines to
keep. Default is 1024.