enso/test/Meta_Test_Suite_Tests
GregoryTravis d9bc5246ba
Remove old (Java) Regex library and replace with new (Truffle) library. (#6195)
Remove old (Java) Regex library and replace with new (Truffle) library.
2023-04-04 19:58:26 +00:00
..
data Detect conflicts between exported types and FQNs (#5986) 2023-03-21 21:09:41 +00:00
src Remove old (Java) Regex library and replace with new (Truffle) library. (#6195) 2023-04-04 19:58:26 +00:00
package.yaml Add with_clue support to test framework (#3786) 2022-12-13 13:46:50 +01:00
README.md Add with_clue support to test framework (#3786) 2022-12-13 13:46:50 +01:00

Running the meta-tests

The test suite runs Enso forks to test the Test library using the Test library. By default, it relies on the enso launcher being available on the system path and will use the enso default version to run the tests.

If you do not want to use the launcher or want to use a different version you can use the environment variables ENSO_META_TEST_COMMAND and ENSO_META_TEST_ARGS to provide a path to an alternative runner command and its arguments. The ENSO_META_TEST_ARGS override will only apply if also ENSO_META_TEST_COMMAND is set.

For example, if you want to use just the engine runner directly to run the tests, bypassing the launcher, you can run the following series of commands:

export ENSO_META_TEST_COMMAND=<path to the engine runner executable>
export ENSO_META_TEST_ARGS=--run
$ENSO_META_TEST_COMMAND --run test/Meta_Test_Suite_Tests

Creating the tests

The test runner browses the data directory for subdirectories. Each subdirectory is treated as a separate test. Each subdirectory is expected to contain the following files:

  • Main.enso - the entry point of the test that will be executed, it must contain a main method so that it can be run as a standalone script.
  • test_description.txt - a plain text file containing a comment that will explain what the test does - it will be passed to the Test.specify invocation, displaying this comment in the test summary.
  • stdout.txt - a plain text file describing the expected output of the test on the standard output stream.

Since parts of the test output will contain variable data - like test timing or absolute file paths which depend on the system, any instance of three consecutive question marks (???) will match any string. This can be used to encode such varying parts of the test. The ??? will match any sequence of characters, including newlines. All other characters in the file are matched literally.

This is mostly a prototype / proof-of-concept, so currently, we are only checking the standard output stream of the test. In the future we can easily extend to also check standard error stream and exit code.