58 lines
2.2 KiB
Plaintext
58 lines
2.2 KiB
Plaintext
-*- outline -*-
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This directory holds the M4sugar, M4sh and Autoconf test suites.
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Here are a few rules on how to write tests.
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* Order of the tests
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It is extremely important to pay attention to the order of the tests.
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There are basically two philosophies: (i) test earlier the most
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critical features (hence hurried users will at least check those), or
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(ii) test earlier the primitives.
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For having tried both, I definitely recommend (ii). In practice users
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will run the whole test suite even if it's long. And if they don't,
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there will be enough other users who will do the job.
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But also in practice some problems in the core of project can be
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responsible for an incredible number of failures. Then the problems
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at the origin will be hidden by the consequences. If dependencies are
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properly ordered in the test suite (test features which depend upon
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other features *after* having checked the latter), basically you'll
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just have to pay attention to the first failures. BTW, it also makes
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`./testsuite -e' much more useful.
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* Write tests!
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Don't let you be bitten three times by the same dog! When you spent a
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significant amount of time tracking the failure of feature in some
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more primitive problem, immediately write a test for the latter.
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If you track down several bugs down to the same origin, write a test
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especially for it.
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Of course in both cases, more primitive tests will be run beforehand.
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Write your test and have it failed before your fixing, and succeeding
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after. This usually means having at hand two copies of the source
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tree, one running the test suite to have it fail, and the other to
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have the same testsuite succeed.
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* Autoconf
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** Use of `exit'
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Don't directly `exit 1' or `exit 77', rather use `AC_MSG_ERROR'.
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First of all because when we have to read the test suite logs we are
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happy to know why `configure' exited thanks to the error
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message. Secondly, because `configure' traps the `exit' and pretty
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many shells fail to set $? to 77 when trapping `exit 77'. This
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results in the test suite not being able to check the exit status.
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** AC_MSG_ERROR
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Of course, since macro names are forbidden in `configure', if you
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really want to mention the macro name, you'll have to do without
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including `A?_' in the output.
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