dejafu/doc/refinement_testing.rst

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Refinement Testing
==================
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Déjà Fu also supports a form of property-testing where you can check
things about the side-effects of stateful operations. For example, we
can assert that ``readMVar`` is equivalent to sequencing ``takeMVar``
and ``putMVar`` like so:
.. code-block:: haskell
prop_mvar_read_take_put =
sig readMVar `equivalentTo` sig (\v -> takeMVar v >>= putMVar v)
Given the signature function, ``sig``, defined in the next section.
If we check this, our property fails!
.. code-block:: none
> check prop_mvar_read_take_put
*** Failure: (seed Just 0)
left: [(Nothing,Just 0)]
right: [(Nothing,Just 0),(Just Deadlock,Just 0)]
False
This is because ``readMVar`` is atomic, whereas sequencing
``takeMVar`` with ``putMVar`` is not, and so another thread can
interfere with the ``MVar`` in the middle. The ``check`` and
``equivalentTo`` functions come from ``Test.DejaFu.Refinement`` (also
re-exported from ``Test.DejaFu``).
Signatures
----------
A signature tells the property-tester something about the state your
operation acts upon, it has a few components:
.. code-block:: haskell
data Sig s o x = Sig
{ initialise :: x -> ConcIO s
, observe :: s -> x -> ConcIO o
, interfere :: s -> x -> ConcIO ()
, expression :: s -> ConcIO ()
}
* ``s`` is the **state type**, it's the thing which your operations
mutate. For ``readMVar``, the state is some ``MVar a``.
* ``o`` is the **observation type**, it's some pure (and comparable)
proxy for a snapshot of your mutable state. For ``MVar a``, the
observation is probably a ``Maybe a``.
* ``x`` is the **seed type**, it's some pure value used to construct
the initial mutable state. For ``MVar a``, the seed is probably a
``Maybe a``.
* ``ConcIO`` is just one of the instances of ``MonadConc`` that Déjà
Fu defines for testing purposes. Just write code polymorphic in the
monad as usual, and all will work.
The ``initialise``, ``observe``, and ``expression`` functions should
be self-explanatory, but the ``interfere`` one may not be. It's the
job of the ``interfere`` function to change the state in some way;
it's run concurrently with the expression, to simulate the
nondeterministic action of other threads.
Here's a concrete example for our ``MVar`` example:
.. code-block:: haskell
sig :: (MVar ConcIO Int -> ConcIO a) -> Sig (MVar ConcIO Int) (Maybe Int) (Maybe Int)
sig e = Sig
{ initialise = maybe newEmptyMVar newMVar
, observe = \v _ -> tryTakeMVar v
, interfere = \v s -> tryTakeMVar v >> maybe (pure ()) (\x -> void $ tryPutMVar v (x * 1000)) s
, expression = void . e
}
The ``observe`` function should be deterministic, but as it is run
after the normal execution ends, it may have side-effects on the
state. The ``interfere`` function can do just about anything [#]_,
but a poor one may result in the property-checker being unable to
distinguish between atomic and nonatomic expressions.
.. [#] There are probably some concrete rules for a good function, but
I haven't figured them out yet.
Properties
----------
A property is a pair of signatures linked by one of three provided
functions. These functions are:
.. csv-table::
:header: "Function", "Operator", "Checks that..."
"``equivalentTo``", "``===``", "... the left and right have exactly the same behaviours"
"``refines``", "``=>=``", "... every behaviour of the left is also a behaviour of the right"
"``strictlyRefines``", "``->-``", "... ``left =>= right`` holds but ``left === right`` does not"
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The signatures can have different state types, as long as the seed and
observation types are the same. This lets you compare different
implementations of the same idea: for example, comparing a concurrent
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stack implemented using ``MVar`` with one implemented using ``IORef``.
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Properties can have parameters, given in the obvious way:
.. code-block:: haskell
check $ \a b c -> sig1 ... `op` sig2 ...
Under the hood, seed and parameter values are generated using the
:hackage:`leancheck` package, an enumerative property-based testing
library. This means that any types you use will need to have a
``Listable`` instance.
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You can also think about the three functions in terms of sets of
results, where a result is a ``(Maybe Failure, o)`` value. A
``Failure`` is something like deadlocking, or being killed by an
exception; ``o`` is the observation type. An observation is always
made, even if execution of the expression fails.
.. csv-table::
:header: "Function", "Result-set operation"
"``refines``", "For all seed and parameter assignments, subset-or-equal"
"``strictlyRefines``", "For at least one seed and parameter assignment, proper subset; for all others, subset-or-equal"
"``equivalentTo``", "For all seed and parameter assignments, equality"
Finally, there is an ``expectFailure`` function, which inverts the
expected result of a property.
The Déjà Fu testsuite has :github:`a collection of refinement
properties
<blob/2a15549d97c2fa12f5e8b92ab918fdb34da78281/dejafu-tests/Cases/Refinement.hs>`,
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which may help you get a feel for this sort of testing.
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Using HUnit and Tasty
---------------------
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As for unit testing, :hackage:`HUnit` and :hackage:`tasty` integration
is provided for refinement testing in the :hackage:`hunit-dejafu` and
:hackage:`tasty-dejafu` packages.
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The ``testProperty`` function is used to check properties. Our example from the start becomes:
.. code-block:: haskell
testProperty "Read is equivalent to Take then Put" prop_mvar_read_take_put