This crate provides a simple language testing framework designed to help when
you are testing things like compilers and virtual machines. It allows users to
express simple tests for process success/failure and for stderr/stdout, including
embedding those tests directlly in the source file. It is loosely based on the
compiletest_rs
crate, but is much
simpler (and hence sometimes less powerful), and designed to be used for
testing non-Rust languages too.
For example, a Rust language tester, loosely in the spirit of
compiletest_rs
, looks as follows:
use std::{fs::read_to_string, path::PathBuf, process::Command};
use lang_tester::LangTester;
use tempfile::TempDir;
static COMMENT_PREFIX: &str = "//";
fn main() {
// We use rustc to compile files into a binary: we store those binary files
// into `tempdir`. This may not be necessary for other languages.
let tempdir = TempDir::new().unwrap();
LangTester::new()
.test_dir("examples/rust_lang_tester/lang_tests")
// Only use files named `*.rs` as test files.
.test_file_filter(|p| p.extension().unwrap().to_str().unwrap() == "rs")
// Extract the first sequence of commented line(s) as the tests.
.test_extract(|p| {
read_to_string(p)
.unwrap()
.lines()
// Skip non-commented lines at the start of the file.
.skip_while(|l| !l.starts_with(COMMENT_PREFIX))
// Extract consecutive commented lines.
.take_while(|l| l.starts_with(COMMENT_PREFIX))
.map(|l| &l[COMMENT_PREFIX.len()..])
.collect::<Vec<_>>()
.join("\n")
})
// We have two test commands:
// * `Compiler`: runs rustc.
// * `Run-time`: if rustc does not error, and the `Compiler` tests
// succeed, then the output binary is run.
.test_cmds(move |p| {
// Test command 1: Compile `x.rs` into `tempdir/x`.
let mut exe = PathBuf::new();
exe.push(&tempdir);
exe.push(p.file_stem().unwrap());
let mut compiler = Command::new("rustc");
compiler.args(&["-o", exe.to_str().unwrap(), p.to_str().unwrap()]);
// Test command 2: run `tempdir/x`.
let runtime = Command::new(exe);
vec![("Compiler", compiler), ("Run-time", runtime)]
})
.run();
}
This defines a lang tester that uses all *.rs
files in a given directory as
test files, running two test commands against them: Compiler
(i.e. rustc
);
and Run-time
(the compiled binary).
Users can then write test files such as the following:
// Compiler:
// stderr:
// warning: unused variable: `x`
// ...unused_var.rs:12:9
// ...
//
// Run-time:
// stdout: Hello world
fn main() {
let x = 0;
println!("Hello world");
}
lang_tester
is entirely ignorant of the language being tested, leaving it
entirely to the user to determine what the test data in/for a file is. In this
case, since we are embedding the test data as a Rust comment at the start of
the file, the test_extract
function we specified returns the following
string:
Compiler:
stderr:
warning: unused variable: `x`
...unused_var.rs:12:9
...
Run-time:
stdout: Hello world
Test data is specified with a two-level indentation syntax: the outer most level of indentation defines a test command (multiple command names can be specified, as in the above); the inner most level of indentation defines alterations to the general command or sub-tests. Multi-line values are stripped of their common indentation, such that:
x:
a
b
c
defines a test command x
with a value a\n b\nc
. Trailing whitespace
is preserved.
String matching is performed by the fm crate,
which provides support for ...
operators and so on. Unless lang_tester
is
explicitly instructed otherwise, it uses fm
's defaults. In particular, even
though lang_tester
preserves (some) leading and (all) trailing whitespace,
fm
ignores leading and trailing whitespace by default (though this can be
changed).
Each test command must define at least one sub-test:
status: <success|error|signal|<int>>
, wheresuccess
anderror
map to platform specific notions of a command completing successfully or unsuccessfully respectively.signal
checks for termination due to a signal on Unix platforms; on non-Unix platforms, the test will be ignored.<int>
is a signed integer checking for a specific exit code on platforms that support it. If not specified, defaults tosuccess
.stderr: [<string>]
,stdout: [<string>]
match<string>
against a command'sstderr
orstdout
. The special string...
can be used as a simple wildcard: if a line consists solely of...
, it means "match zero or more lines"; if a line begins with...
, it means "match the remainder of the line only"; if a line ends with...
, it means "match the start of the line only". A line may start and end with...
. Note thatstderr
/stdout
matches ignore leading/trailing whitespace and newlines, but are case sensitive. If not specified, defaults to...
(i.e. match anything). Note that the empty string matches only the empty string so e.g.stderr:
on its own means that a command'sstderr
muct not contain any output.
Test commands can alter the general command by specifying zero or more of the following:
env-var: <key>=<string>
will set (or override if it is already present) the environment variable<key>
to the value<string>
.env-var
can be specified multiple times, each setting an additional (or overriding an existing) environment variable.exec-arg: <string>
specifies a string which will be passed as an additional command-line argument to the command (in addition to those specified by thetest_cmds
function). Multipleexec-arg
s can be specified, each adding an additional command-line argument.stdin: <string>
, text to be passed to the command'sstdin
. If the command exits without having consumed all of<string>
, an error will be raised. Note, though, that operating system file buffers can mean that the command appears to have consumed all of<string>
without it actually having done so.
The above file thus contains 4 meaningful tests, two specified by the user and
two implied by defaults: the Compiler
should succeed (e.g. return a 0
exit
code when run on Unix), and its stderr
output should warn about an unused
variable on line 12; and the resulting binary should succeed produce Hello world
on stdout
.
A file's tests can be ignored entirely if a test command ignore
is defined:
ignore: [<string>]
, specifies that this file should be ignored for the reason set out in<string>
(if any). Note that<string>
is purely for user information and has no effect on the running of tests.
lang_tester
's output is deliberately similar to Rust's normal testing output.
Running the example rust_lang_tester
in this crate produces the following
output:
$ cargo run --example=rust_lang_tester
Compiling lang_tester v0.1.0 (/home/ltratt/scratch/softdev/lang_tester)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.49s
Running `target/debug/examples/rust_lang_tester`
running 4 tests
test lang_tests::no_main ... ok
test lang_tests::unknown_var ... ok
test lang_tests::unused_var ... ok
test lang_tests::exit_code ... ok
test result: ok. 4 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out
If you want to run a subset of tests, you can specify simple filters which use substring match to run a subset of tests:
$ cargo run --example=rust_lang_tester var
Compiling lang_tester v0.1.0 (/home/ltratt/scratch/softdev/lang_tester)
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 3.37s
Running `target/debug/examples/rust_lang_tester var`
running 2 tests
test lang_tests::unknown_var ... ok
test lang_tests::unused_var ... ok
test result: ok. 2 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 2 filtered out
Tests created with lang_tester can be used as part of an existing test suite and
can be run with the cargo test
command. For example, if the Rust source file
that runs your lang tests is lang_tests/run.rs
then add the following to your
Cargo.toml:
[[test]]
name = "lang_tests"
path = "lang_tests/run.rs"
harness = false