- NAME
- tcltest — Test harness support code and utilities
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- COMMANDS
- test
name description ?-option value ...?
- test
name description ?constraints? body
result
- loadTestedCommands
- makeFile contents name
?directory?
- removeFile name ?directory?
- makeDirectory name
?directory?
- removeDirectory name
?directory?
- viewFile file ?directory?
- cleanupTests
- runAllTests
- CONFIGURATION COMMANDS
- configure
- configure option
- configure option value ?-option value
...?
- customMatch mode script
- testConstraint constraint
?boolean?
- interpreter ?executableName?
- outputChannel ?channelID?
- errorChannel ?channelID?
- SHORTCUT
CONFIGURATION COMMANDS
- debug
?level?
- errorFile ?filename?
- limitConstraints ?boolean?
- loadFile ?filename?
- loadScript ?script?
- match
?patternList?
- matchDirectories ?patternList?
- matchFiles ?patternList?
- outputFile ?filename?
- preserveCore ?level?
- singleProcess ?boolean?
- skip
?patternList?
- skipDirectories ?patternList?
- skipFiles ?patternList?
- temporaryDirectory ?directory?
- testsDirectory ?directory?
- verbose ?level?
- OTHER
COMMANDS
- test
name description optionList
- workingDirectory ?directoryName?
- normalizeMsg msg
- normalizePath pathVar
- bytestring string
- TESTS
- -constraints
keywordList|expression
- -setup script
- -body
script
- -cleanup script
- -match mode
- -result expectedValue
- -output expectedValue
- -errorOutput expectedValue
- -returnCodes expectedCodeList
- -errorCode expectedErrorCode
- TEST
CONSTRAINTS
- singleTestInterp
- unix
- win
- nt
- mac
- unixOrWin
- macOrWin
- macOrUnix
- tempNotWin
- tempNotMac
- unixCrash
- winCrash
- macCrash
- emptyTest
- knownBug
- nonPortable
- userInteraction
- interactive
- nonBlockFiles
- asyncPipeClose
- unixExecs
- hasIsoLocale
- root
- notRoot
- eformat
- stdio
- RUNNING ALL
TESTS
- CONFIGURABLE
OPTIONS
- -singleproc boolean
- -debug level
- 0
- 1
- 2
- 3
- -verbose level
- body
(b)
- pass
(p)
- skip
(s)
- start
(t)
- error
(e)
- line
(l)
- msec
(m)
- usec
(u)
- -preservecore level
- 0
- 1
- 2
- -limitconstraints boolean
- -constraints list
- -tmpdir directory
- -testdir directory
- -file patternList
- -notfile patternList
- -relateddir patternList
- -asidefromdir patternList
- -match patternList
- -skip patternList
- -load script
- -loadfile filename
- -outfile filename
- -errfile filename
- CREATING
TEST SUITES WITH TCLTEST
- COMPATIBILITY
- KNOWN
ISSUES
- KEYWORDS
tcltest — Test harness support code and utilities
package require tcltest ?2.5?
tcltest::test name description ?-option value
...?
tcltest::test name description ?constraints?
body result
tcltest::loadTestedCommands
tcltest::makeDirectory name ?directory?
tcltest::removeDirectory name ?directory?
tcltest::makeFile contents name
?directory?
tcltest::removeFile name ?directory?
tcltest::viewFile name ?directory?
tcltest::cleanupTests ?runningMultipleTests?
tcltest::runAllTests
tcltest::configure
tcltest::configure -option
tcltest::configure -option value ?-option value
...?
tcltest::customMatch mode command
tcltest::testConstraint constraint ?value?
tcltest::outputChannel ?channelID?
tcltest::errorChannel ?channelID?
tcltest::interpreter ?interp?
tcltest::debug ?level?
tcltest::errorFile ?filename?
tcltest::limitConstraints ?boolean?
tcltest::loadFile ?filename?
tcltest::loadScript ?script?
tcltest::match ?patternList?
tcltest::matchDirectories ?patternList?
tcltest::matchFiles ?patternList?
tcltest::outputFile ?filename?
tcltest::preserveCore ?level?
tcltest::singleProcess ?boolean?
tcltest::skip ?patternList?
tcltest::skipDirectories ?patternList?
tcltest::skipFiles ?patternList?
tcltest::temporaryDirectory ?directory?
tcltest::testsDirectory ?directory?
tcltest::verbose ?level?
tcltest::test name description optionList
tcltest::bytestring string
tcltest::normalizeMsg msg
tcltest::normalizePath pathVar
tcltest::workingDirectory ?dir?
The tcltest package provides several utility commands useful
in the construction of test suites for code instrumented to be run
by evaluation of Tcl commands. Notably the built-in commands of the
Tcl library itself are tested by a test suite using the tcltest
package.
All the commands provided by the tcltest package are
defined in and exported from the ::tcltest namespace, as
indicated in the SYNOPSIS above. In the
following sections, all commands will be described by their simple
names, in the interest of brevity.
The central command of tcltest is test that
defines and runs a test. Testing with test involves
evaluation of a Tcl script and comparing the result to an expected
result, as configured and controlled by a number of options.
Several other commands provided by tcltest govern the
configuration of test and the collection of many test
commands into test suites.
See CREATING TEST SUITES WITH TCLTEST
below for an extended example of how to use the commands of
tcltest to produce test suites for your Tcl-enabled
code.
- test name description
?-option value ...?
- Defines and possibly runs a test with the name name and
description description. The name and description of a test
are used in messages reported by test during the test, as
configured by the options of tcltest. The remaining
option value arguments to test define the test,
including the scripts to run, the conditions under which to run
them, the expected result, and the means by which the expected and
actual results should be compared. See TESTS below for a complete description of the valid
options and how they define a test. The test command returns
an empty string.
- test name description
?constraints? body result
- This form of test is provided to support test suites
written for version 1 of the tcltest package, and also a
simpler interface for a common usage. It is the same as
“test name description -constraints
constraints -body body -result
result”. All other options to test take their default
values. When constraints is omitted, this form of
test can be distinguished from the first because all
options begin with “-”.
- loadTestedCommands
- Evaluates in the caller's context the script specified by
configure -load or configure -loadfile. Returns the
result of that script evaluation, including any error raised by the
script. Use this command and the related configuration options to
provide the commands to be tested to the interpreter running the
test suite.
- makeFile contents name
?directory?
- Creates a file named name relative to directory
directory and write contents to that file using the
encoding encoding
system. If contents does not end with a newline, a
newline will be appended so that the file named name does
end with a newline. Because the system encoding is used, this
command is only suitable for making text files. The file will be
removed by the next evaluation of cleanupTests, unless it is
removed by removeFile first. The default value of
directory is the directory configure -tmpdir. Returns
the full path of the file created. Use this command to create any
text file required by a test with contents as needed.
- removeFile name
?directory?
- Forces the file referenced by name to be removed. This
file name should be relative to directory. The default value
of directory is the directory configure -tmpdir.
Returns an empty string. Use this command to delete files created
by makeFile.
- makeDirectory name
?directory?
- Creates a directory named name relative to directory
directory. The directory will be removed by the next
evaluation of cleanupTests, unless it is removed by
removeDirectory first. The default value of directory
is the directory configure -tmpdir. Returns the full path of
the directory created. Use this command to create any directories
that are required to exist by a test.
- removeDirectory name
?directory?
- Forces the directory referenced by name to be removed.
This directory should be relative to directory. The default
value of directory is the directory configure
-tmpdir. Returns an empty string. Use this command to delete
any directories created by makeDirectory.
- viewFile file
?directory?
- Returns the contents of file, except for any final
newline, just as read -nonewline would return. This file
name should be relative to directory. The default value of
directory is the directory configure -tmpdir. Use
this command as a convenient way to turn the contents of a file
generated by a test into the result of that test for matching
against an expected result. The contents of the file are read using
the system encoding, so its usefulness is limited to text
files.
- cleanupTests
- Intended to clean up and summarize after several tests have
been run. Typically called once per test file, at the end of the
file after all tests have been completed. For best effectiveness,
be sure that the cleanupTests is evaluated even if an error
occurs earlier in the test file evaluation.
Prints statistics about the tests run and removes files that
were created by makeDirectory and makeFile since the
last cleanupTests. Names of files and directories in the
directory configure -tmpdir created since the last
cleanupTests, but not created by makeFile or
makeDirectory are printed to outputChannel. This
command also restores the original shell environment, as described
by the global env
array. Returns an empty string.
- runAllTests
- This is a main command meant to run an entire suite of tests,
spanning multiple files and/or directories, as governed by the
configurable options of tcltest. See RUNNING ALL TESTS below for a complete description
of the many variations possible with runAllTests.
- configure
- Returns the list of configurable options supported by
tcltest. See CONFIGURABLE OPTIONS
below for the full list of options, their valid values, and their
effect on tcltest operations.
- configure option
- Returns the current value of the supported configurable option
option. Raises an error if option is not a supported
configurable option.
- configure option value
?-option value ...?
- Sets the value of each configurable option option to the
corresponding value value, in order. Raises an error if an
option is not a supported configurable option, or if
value is not a valid value for the corresponding
option, or if a value is not provided. When an error
is raised, the operation of configure is halted, and
subsequent option value arguments are not processed.
If the environment variable ::env(TCLTEST_OPTIONS) exists
when the tcltest package is loaded (by package require tcltest)
then its value is taken as a list of arguments to pass to
configure. This
allows the default values of the configuration options to be set by
the environment.
- customMatch mode
script
- Registers mode as a new legal value of the -match
option to test. When the -match mode option is
passed to test, the script script will be evaluated
to compare the actual result of evaluating the body of the test to
the expected result. To perform the match, the script is
completed with two additional words, the expected result, and the
actual result, and the completed script is evaluated in the global
namespace. The completed script is expected to return a boolean
value indicating whether or not the results match. The built-in
matching modes of test are exact, glob, and regexp.
- testConstraint constraint
?boolean?
- Sets or returns the boolean value associated with the named
constraint. See TEST CONSTRAINTS
below for more information.
- interpreter
?executableName?
- Sets or returns the name of the executable to be execed by runAllTests to run
each test file when configure -singleproc is false. The
default value for interpreter is the name of the currently
running program as returned by info nameofexecutable.
- outputChannel
?channelID?
- Sets or returns the output channel ID. This defaults to
stdout. Any test
that prints test related output should send that output to
outputChannel rather than letting that output default to
stdout.
- errorChannel
?channelID?
- Sets or returns the error channel ID. This defaults to
stderr. Any test
that prints error messages should send that output to
errorChannel rather than printing directly to stderr.
- debug ?level?
- Same as “configure -debug ?level?”.
- errorFile
?filename?
- Same as “configure -errfile ?filename?”.
- limitConstraints
?boolean?
- Same as “configure -limitconstraints
?boolean?”.
- loadFile
?filename?
- Same as “configure -loadfile ?filename?”.
- loadScript
?script?
- Same as “configure -load ?script?”.
- match
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -match ?patternList?”.
- matchDirectories
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -relateddir
?patternList?”.
- matchFiles
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -file ?patternList?”.
- outputFile
?filename?
- Same as “configure -outfile ?filename?”.
- preserveCore
?level?
- Same as “configure -preservecore ?level?”.
- singleProcess
?boolean?
- Same as “configure -singleproc ?boolean?”.
- skip
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -skip ?patternList?”.
- skipDirectories
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -asidefromdir
?patternList?”.
- skipFiles
?patternList?
- Same as “configure -notfile ?patternList?”.
- temporaryDirectory
?directory?
- Same as “configure -tmpdir ?directory?”.
- testsDirectory
?directory?
- Same as “configure -testdir ?directory?”.
- verbose ?level?
- Same as “configure -verbose ?level?”.
The remaining commands provided by tcltest have better
alternatives provided by tcltest or Tcl itself. They are retained to
support existing test suites, but should be avoided in new code.
- test name description
optionList
- This form of test was provided to enable passing many
options spanning several lines to test as a single argument
quoted by braces, rather than needing to backslash quote the
newlines between arguments to test. The optionList
argument is expected to be a list with an even number of elements
representing option and value arguments to pass to
test. However, these values are not passed directly, as in
the alternate forms of switch. Instead, this form makes an
unfortunate attempt to overthrow Tcl's substitution rules by
performing substitutions on some of the list elements as an attempt
to implement a “do what I mean” interpretation of a brace-enclosed
“block”. The result is nearly impossible to document clearly, and
for that reason this form is not recommended. See the examples in
CREATING TEST SUITES WITH TCLTEST below
to see that this form is really not necessary to avoid
backslash-quoted newlines. If you insist on using this form,
examine the source code of tcltest if you want to know the
substitution details, or just enclose the third through last
argument to test in braces and hope for the best.
- workingDirectory
?directoryName?
- Sets or returns the current working directory when the test
suite is running. The default value for workingDirectory is the
directory in which the test suite was launched. The Tcl commands
cd and pwd are sufficient replacements.
- normalizeMsg msg
- Returns the result of removing the “extra” newlines from
msg, where “extra” is rather imprecise. Tcl offers plenty of
string processing commands to modify strings as you wish, and
customMatch allows flexible matching of actual and expected
results.
- normalizePath
pathVar
- Resolves symlinks in a path, thus creating a path without
internal redirection. It is assumed that pathVar is
absolute. pathVar is modified in place. The Tcl command
file normalize is a
sufficient replacement.
- bytestring string
- Construct a string that consists of the requested sequence of
bytes, as opposed to a string of properly formed UTF-8 characters
using the value supplied in string. This allows the tester
to create denormalized or improperly formed strings to pass to C
procedures that are supposed to accept strings with embedded NULL
types and confirm that a string result has a certain pattern of
bytes. This is exactly equivalent to the Tcl command encoding convertfrom
identity.
The test command is the heart of the tcltest package.
Its essential function is to evaluate a Tcl script and compare the
result with an expected result. The options of test define
the test script, the environment in which to evaluate it, the
expected result, and how the compare the actual result to the
expected result. Some configuration options of tcltest also
influence how test operates.
The valid options for test are summarized:
test name description
?-constraints keywordList|expression?
?-setup setupScript?
?-body testScript?
?-cleanup cleanupScript?
?-result expectedAnswer?
?-output expectedOutput?
?-errorOutput expectedError?
?-returnCodes codeList?
?-errorCode expectedErrorCode?
?-match mode?
The name may be any string. It is conventional to choose
a name according to the pattern:
target-majorNum.minorNum
For white-box (regression) tests, the target should be the name
of the C function or Tcl procedure being tested. For black-box
tests, the target should be the name of the feature being tested.
Some conventions call for the names of black-box tests to have the
suffix _bb. Related tests should share a major number. As a
test suite evolves, it is best to have the same test name continue
to correspond to the same test, so that it remains meaningful to
say things like “Test foo-1.3 passed in all releases up to 3.4, but
began failing in release 3.5.”
During evaluation of test, the name will be
compared to the lists of string matching patterns returned by
configure -match, and configure -skip. The test will
be run only if name matches any of the patterns from
configure -match and matches none of the patterns from
configure -skip.
The description should be a short textual description of
the test. The description is included in output produced by
the test, typically test failure messages. Good description
values should briefly explain the purpose of the test to users of a
test suite. The name of a Tcl or C function being tested should be
included in the description for regression tests. If the test case
exists to reproduce a bug, include the bug ID in the
description.
Valid attributes and associated values are:
- -constraints
keywordList|expression
- The optional -constraints attribute can be list of one
or more keywords or an expression. If the -constraints value
is a list of keywords, each of these keywords should be the name of
a constraint defined by a call to testConstraint. If any of
the listed constraints is false or does not exist, the test is
skipped. If the -constraints value is an expression, that
expression is evaluated. If the expression evaluates to true, then
the test is run.
Note that the expression form of -constraints may
interfere with the operation of configure -constraints and
configure -limitconstraints, and is not recommended.
Appropriate constraints should be added to any tests that should
not always be run. That is, conditional evaluation of a test should
be accomplished by the -constraints option, not by
conditional evaluation of test. In that way, the same number
of tests are always reported by the test suite, though the number
skipped may change based on the testing environment. The default
value is an empty list. See TEST
CONSTRAINTS below for a list of built-in constraints and
information on how to add your own constraints.
- -setup script
- The optional -setup attribute indicates a script
that will be run before the script indicated by the -body
attribute. If evaluation of script raises an error, the test
will fail. The default value is an empty script.
- -body script
- The -body attribute indicates the script to run
to carry out the test, which must return a result that can be
checked for correctness. If evaluation of script raises an
error, the test will fail (unless the -returnCodes option is
used to state that an error is expected). The default value is an
empty script.
- -cleanup script
- The optional -cleanup attribute indicates a
script that will be run after the script indicated by the
-body attribute. If evaluation of script raises an
error, the test will fail. The default value is an empty
script.
- -match mode
- The -match attribute determines how expected answers
supplied by -result, -output, and -errorOutput
are compared. Valid values for mode are regexp, glob, exact, and any value
registered by a prior call to customMatch. The default value
is exact.
- -result
expectedValue
- The -result attribute supplies the expectedValue
against which the return value from script will be compared. The
default value is an empty string.
- -output
expectedValue
- The -output attribute supplies the expectedValue
against which any output sent to stdout or outputChannel
during evaluation of the script(s) will be compared. Note that only
output printed using the global puts command is used for comparison.
If -output is not specified, output sent to stdout and outputChannel
is not processed for comparison.
- -errorOutput
expectedValue
- The -errorOutput attribute supplies the
expectedValue against which any output sent to stderr or errorChannel
during evaluation of the script(s) will be compared. Note that only
output printed using the global puts command is used for comparison.
If -errorOutput is not specified, output sent to stderr and errorChannel
is not processed for comparison.
- -returnCodes
expectedCodeList
- The optional -returnCodes attribute supplies
expectedCodeList, a list of return codes that may be
accepted from evaluation of the -body script. If evaluation
of the -body script returns a code not in the
expectedCodeList, the test fails. All return codes known to
return, in both numeric
and symbolic form, including extended return codes, are acceptable
elements in the expectedCodeList. Default value is “ok
return”.
- -errorCode
expectedErrorCode
- The optional -errorCode attribute supplies
expectedErrorCode, a glob pattern that should match the
error code reported from evaluation of the -body script. If
evaluation of the -body script returns a code not matching
expectedErrorCode, the test fails. Default value is
“*”. If -returnCodes does not include error it
is set to error.
To pass, a test must successfully evaluate its -setup,
-body, and -cleanup scripts. The return code of the
-body script and its result must match expected values, and
if specified, output and error data from the test must match
expected -output and -errorOutput values. If any of
these conditions are not met, then the test fails. Note that all
scripts are evaluated in the context of the caller of
test.
As long as test is called with valid syntax and legal
values for all attributes, it will not raise an error. Test
failures are instead reported as output written to
outputChannel. In default operation, a successful test
produces no output. The output messages produced by test are
controlled by the configure -verbose option as described in
CONFIGURABLE OPTIONS below. Any output
produced by the test scripts themselves should be produced using
puts to
outputChannel or errorChannel, so that users of the
test suite may easily capture output with the configure
-outfile and configure -errfile options, and so that the
-output and -errorOutput attributes work
properly.
Constraints are used to determine whether or not a test should be
skipped. Each constraint has a name, which may be any string, and a
boolean value. Each test has a -constraints value
which is a list of constraint names. There are two modes of
constraint control. Most frequently, the default mode is used,
indicated by a setting of configure -limitconstraints to
false. The test will run only if all constraints in the list are
true-valued. Thus, the -constraints option of test is
a convenient, symbolic way to define any conditions required for
the test to be possible or meaningful. For example, a test
with -constraints unix will only be run if the constraint
unix is true, which indicates the test suite is being run on
a Unix platform.
Each test should include whatever -constraints are
required to constrain it to run only where appropriate. Several
constraints are predefined in the tcltest package, listed
below. The registration of user-defined constraints is performed by
the testConstraint command. User-defined constraints may
appear within a test file, or within the script specified by the
configure -load or configure -loadfile options.
The following is a list of constraints predefined by the
tcltest package itself:
- singleTestInterp
- This test can only be run if all test files are sourced into a
single interpreter.
- unix
- This test can only be run on any Unix platform.
- win
- This test can only be run on any Windows platform.
- nt
- This test can only be run on any Windows NT platform.
- mac
- This test can only be run on any Mac platform.
- unixOrWin
- This test can only be run on a Unix or Windows platform.
- macOrWin
- This test can only be run on a Mac or Windows platform.
- macOrUnix
- This test can only be run on a Mac or Unix platform.
- tempNotWin
- This test can not be run on Windows. This flag is used to
temporarily disable a test.
- tempNotMac
- This test can not be run on a Mac. This flag is used to
temporarily disable a test.
- unixCrash
- This test crashes if it is run on Unix. This flag is used to
temporarily disable a test.
- winCrash
- This test crashes if it is run on Windows. This flag is used to
temporarily disable a test.
- macCrash
- This test crashes if it is run on a Mac. This flag is used to
temporarily disable a test.
- emptyTest
- This test is empty, and so not worth running, but it remains as
a place-holder for a test to be written in the future. This
constraint has value false to cause tests to be skipped unless the
user specifies otherwise.
- knownBug
- This test is known to fail and the bug is not yet fixed. This
constraint has value false to cause tests to be skipped unless the
user specifies otherwise.
- nonPortable
- This test can only be run in some known development
environment. Some tests are inherently non-portable because they
depend on things like word length, file system configuration,
window manager, etc. This constraint has value false to cause tests
to be skipped unless the user specifies otherwise.
- userInteraction
- This test requires interaction from the user. This constraint
has value false to causes tests to be skipped unless the user
specifies otherwise.
- interactive
- This test can only be run in if the interpreter is in
interactive mode (when the global ::tcl_interactive variable
is set to 1).
- nonBlockFiles
- This test can only be run if platform supports setting files
into nonblocking mode.
- asyncPipeClose
- This test can only be run if platform supports async flush and
async close on a pipe.
- unixExecs
- This test can only be run if this machine has Unix-style
commands cat, echo, sh, wc, rm,
sleep, fgrep, ps, chmod, and
mkdir available.
- hasIsoLocale
- This test can only be run if can switch to an ISO locale.
- root
- This test can only run if Unix user is root.
- notRoot
- This test can only run if Unix user is not root.
- eformat
- This test can only run if app has a working version of sprintf
with respect to the “e” format of floating-point numbers.
- stdio
- This test can only be run if interpreter can be
opened as a pipe.
The alternative mode of constraint control is enabled by setting
configure -limitconstraints to true. With that configuration
setting, all existing constraints other than those in the
constraint list returned by configure -constraints are set
to false. When the value of configure -constraints is set,
all those constraints are set to true. The effect is that when both
options configure -constraints and configure
-limitconstraints are in use, only those tests including only
constraints from the configure -constraints list are run;
all others are skipped. For example, one might set up a
configuration with
configure -constraints knownBug \
-limitconstraints true \
-verbose pass
to run exactly those tests that exercise known bugs, and
discover whether any of them pass, indicating the bug had been
fixed.
The single command runAllTests is evaluated to run an entire
test suite, spanning many files and directories. The configuration
options of tcltest control the precise operations. The
runAllTests command begins by printing a summary of its
configuration to outputChannel.
Test files to be evaluated are sought in the directory
configure -testdir. The list of files in that directory that
match any of the patterns in configure -file and match none
of the patterns in configure -notfile is generated and
sorted. Then each file will be evaluated in turn. If configure
-singleproc is true, then each file will be sourced in the caller's context. If
it is false, then a copy of interpreter will be exec'd to evaluate each file. The
multi-process operation is useful when testing can cause errors so
severe that a process terminates. Although such an error may
terminate a child process evaluating one file, the main process can
continue with the rest of the test suite. In multi-process
operation, the configuration of tcltest in the main process
is passed to the child processes as command line arguments, with
the exception of configure -outfile. The runAllTests
command in the main process collects all output from the child
processes and collates their results into one main report. Any
reports of individual test failures, or messages requested by a
configure -verbose setting are passed directly on to
outputChannel by the main process.
After evaluating all selected test files, a summary of the
results is printed to outputChannel. The summary includes
the total number of tests evaluated, broken down into those
skipped, those passed, and those failed. The summary also notes the
number of files evaluated, and the names of any files with failing
tests or errors. A list of the constraints that caused tests to be
skipped, and the number of tests skipped for each is also printed.
Also, messages are printed if it appears that evaluation of a test
file has caused any temporary files to be left behind in
configure -tmpdir.
Having completed and summarized all selected test files,
runAllTests then recursively acts on subdirectories of
configure -testdir. All subdirectories that match any of the
patterns in configure -relateddir and do not match any of
the patterns in configure -asidefromdir are examined. If a
file named all.tcl is found in such a directory, it will be
sourced in the caller's
context. Whether or not an examined directory contains an
all.tcl file, its subdirectories are also scanned against
the configure -relateddir and configure -asidefromdir
patterns. In this way, many directories in a directory tree can
have all their test files evaluated by a single runAllTests
command.
The configure
command is used to set and query the configurable options of
tcltest. The valid options are:
- -singleproc
boolean
- Controls whether or not runAllTests spawns a child
process for each test file. No spawning when boolean is
true. Default value is false.
- -debug level
- Sets the debug level to level, an integer value
indicating how much debugging information should be printed to
stdout. Note that
debug messages always go to stdout, independent of the
value of configure -outfile. Default value is 0. Levels are
defined as:
- 0
- Do not display any debug information.
- 1
- Display information regarding whether a test is skipped because
it does not match any of the tests that were specified using by
configure -match (userSpecifiedNonMatch) or matches any of
the tests specified by configure -skip (userSpecifiedSkip).
Also print warnings about possible lack of cleanup or balance in
test files. Also print warnings about any re-use of test
names.
- 2
- Display the flag array parsed by the command line processor,
the contents of the global env array, and all user-defined
variables that exist in the current namespace as they are
used.
- 3
- Display information regarding what individual procs in the test
harness are doing.
- -verbose level
- Sets the type of output verbosity desired to level, a
list of zero or more of the elements body, pass,
skip, start, error, line, msec
and usec. Default value is “body error”. Levels are
defined as:
- body (b)
- Display the body of failed tests
- pass (p)
- Print output when a test passes
- skip (s)
- Print output when a test is skipped
- start (t)
- Print output whenever a test starts
- error (e)
- Print errorInfo and errorCode, if they exist, when a test
return code does not match its expected return code
- line (l)
- Print source file line information of failed tests
- msec (m)
- Print each test's execution time in milliseconds
- usec (u)
- Print each test's execution time in microseconds
-
Note that the msec and usec verbosity levels are
provided as indicative measures only. They do not tackle the
problem of repeatability which should be considered in performance
tests or benchmarks. To use these verbosity levels to thoroughly
track performance degradations, consider wrapping your test bodies
with time commands.
The single letter abbreviations noted above are also recognized
so that “configure -verbose pt” is the same as “configure
-verbose {pass start}”.
- -preservecore
level
- Sets the core preservation level to level. This level
determines how stringent checks for core files are. Default value
is 0. Levels are defined as:
- 0
- No checking — do not check for core files at the end of each
test command, but do check for them in runAllTests after all
test files have been evaluated.
- 1
- Also check for core files at the end of each test
command.
- 2
- Check for core files at all times described above, and save a
copy of each core file produced in configure -tmpdir.
- -limitconstraints
boolean
- Sets the mode by which test honors constraints as
described in TESTS above. Default value
is false.
- -constraints
list
- Sets all the constraints in list to true. Also used in
combination with configure -limitconstraints true to control
an alternative constraint mode as described in TESTS above. Default value is an empty list.
- -tmpdir
directory
- Sets the temporary directory to be used by makeFile,
makeDirectory, viewFile, removeFile, and
removeDirectory as the default directory where temporary
files and directories created by test files should be created.
Default value is workingDirectory.
- -testdir
directory
- Sets the directory searched by runAllTests for test
files and subdirectories. Default value is
workingDirectory.
- -file
patternList
- Sets the list of patterns used by runAllTests to
determine what test files to evaluate. Default value is
“*.test”.
- -notfile
patternList
- Sets the list of patterns used by runAllTests to
determine what test files to skip. Default value is
“l.*.test”, so that any SCCS lock files are skipped.
- -relateddir
patternList
- Sets the list of patterns used by runAllTests to
determine what subdirectories to search for an all.tcl file.
Default value is “*”.
- -asidefromdir
patternList
- Sets the list of patterns used by runAllTests to
determine what subdirectories to skip when searching for an
all.tcl file. Default value is an empty list.
- -match
patternList
- Set the list of patterns used by test to determine
whether a test should be run. Default value is “*”.
- -skip
patternList
- Set the list of patterns used by test to determine
whether a test should be skipped. Default value is an empty
list.
- -load script
- Sets a script to be evaluated by loadTestedCommands.
Default value is an empty script.
- -loadfile
filename
- Sets the filename from which to read a script to be evaluated
by loadTestedCommands. This is an alternative to
-load. They cannot be used together.
- -outfile
filename
- Sets the file to which all output produced by tcltest should be
written. A file named filename will be opened for writing, and the resulting
channel will be set as the value of outputChannel.
- -errfile
filename
- Sets the file to which all error output produced by tcltest
should be written. A file named filename will be opened for writing, and the resulting
channel will be set as the value of errorChannel.
The fundamental element of a test suite is the individual
test command. We begin with several examples.
- Test of a script that returns normally.
test example-1.0 {normal return} {
format %s value
} value
- Test of a script that requires context setup and
cleanup. Note the bracing and indenting style that avoids any need
for line continuation.
test example-1.1 {test file existence} -setup {
set file [makeFile {} test]
} -body {
file exists $file
} -cleanup {
removeFile test
} -result 1
- Test of a script that raises an error.
test example-1.2 {error return} -body {
error message
} -returnCodes error -result message
- Test with a constraint.
test example-1.3 {user owns created files} -constraints {
unix
} -setup {
set file [makeFile {} test]
} -body {
file attributes $file -owner
} -cleanup {
removeFile test
} -result $::tcl_platform(user)
At the next higher layer of organization, several test
commands are gathered together into a single test file. Test files
should have names with the “.test” extension, because that
is the default pattern used by runAllTests to find test
files. It is a good rule of thumb to have one test file for each
source code file of your project. It is good practice to edit the
test file and the source code file together, keeping tests
synchronized with code changes.
Most of the code in the test file should be the test
commands. Use constraints to skip tests, rather than conditional
evaluation of test.
- Recommended system for writing conditional tests,
using constraints to guard:
testConstraint X [expr $myRequirement]
test goodConditionalTest {} X {
# body
} result
- Discouraged system for writing conditional tests,
using if to guard:
if $myRequirement {
test badConditionalTest {} {
#body
} result
}
Use the -setup and -cleanup options to establish
and release all context requirements of the test body. Do not make
tests depend on prior tests in the file. Those prior tests might be
skipped. If several consecutive tests require the same context, the
appropriate setup and cleanup scripts may be stored in variable for
passing to each tests -setup and -cleanup options.
This is a better solution than performing setup outside of
test commands, because the setup will only be done if
necessary, and any errors during setup will be reported, and not
cause the test file to abort.
A test file should be able to be combined with other test files
and not interfere with them, even when configure -singleproc
1 causes all files to be evaluated in a common interpreter. A
simple way to achieve this is to have your tests define all their
commands and variables in a namespace that is deleted when the test
file evaluation is complete. A good namespace to use is a child
namespace test of the namespace of the module you are
testing.
A test file should also be able to be evaluated directly as a
script, not depending on being called by a main runAllTests.
This means that each test file should process command line
arguments to give the tester all the configuration control that
tcltest provides.
After all tests in a test file, the command
cleanupTests should be called.
- Here is a sketch of a sample test file illustrating
those points:
package require tcltest 2.5
eval ::tcltest::configure $argv
package require example
namespace eval ::example::test {
namespace import ::tcltest::*
testConstraint X [expr {...}]
variable SETUP {#common setup code}
variable CLEANUP {#common cleanup code}
test example-1 {} -setup $SETUP -body {
# First test
} -cleanup $CLEANUP -result {...}
test example-2 {} -constraints X -setup $SETUP -body {
# Second test; constrained
} -cleanup $CLEANUP -result {...}
test example-3 {} {
# Third test; no context required
} {...}
cleanupTests
}
namespace delete ::example::test
The next level of organization is a full test suite, made up of
several test files. One script is used to control the entire suite.
The basic function of this script is to call runAllTests
after doing any necessary setup. This script is usually named
all.tcl because that is the default name used by
runAllTests when combining multiple test suites into one
testing run.
- Here is a sketch of a sample test suite main script:
package require tcltest 2.5
package require example
::tcltest::configure -testdir \
[file dirname [file normalize [info script]]]
eval ::tcltest::configure $argv
::tcltest::runAllTests
A number of commands and variables in the ::tcltest
namespace provided by earlier releases of tcltest have not
been documented here. They are no longer part of the supported
public interface of tcltest and should not be used in new
test suites. However, to continue to support existing test suites
written to the older interface specifications, many of those
deprecated commands and variables still work as before. For
example, in many circumstances, configure will be
automatically called shortly after package require tcltest 2.1
succeeds with arguments from the variable ::argv. This is to
support test suites that depend on the old behavior that
tcltest was automatically configured from command line
arguments. New test files should not depend on this, but should
explicitly include
eval ::tcltest::configure $::argv
or
::tcltest::configure {*}$::argv
to establish a configuration from command line arguments.
There are two known issues related to nested evaluations of
test. The first issue relates to the stack level in which
test scripts are executed. Tests nested within other tests may be
executed at the same stack level as the outermost test. For
example, in the following code:
test level-1.1 {level 1} {
-body {
test level-2.1 {level 2} {
}
}
}
any script executed in level-2.1 may be executed at the same
stack level as the script defined for level-1.1.
In addition, while two tests have been run, results will
only be reported by cleanupTests for tests at the same level
as test level-1.1. However, test results for all tests run prior to
level-1.1 will be available when test level-2.1 runs. What this
means is that if you try to access the test results for test
level-2.1, it will may say that “m” tests have run, “n” tests have
been skipped, “o” tests have passed and “p” tests have failed,
where “m”, “n”, “o”, and “p” refer to tests that were run at the
same test level as test level-1.1.
Implementation of output and error comparison in the test
command depends on usage of puts in your application code. Output
is intercepted by redefining the global puts command while the defined test
script is being run. Errors thrown by C procedures or printed
directly from C applications will not be caught by the test
command. Therefore, usage of the -output and
-errorOutput options to test is useful only for pure
Tcl applications that use puts to produce output.
test, test harness, test suite
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