| .. _testing: |
| |
| Test Framework |
| ############### |
| |
| The Zephyr Test Framework (Ztest) provides a simple testing framework intended |
| to be used during development. It provides basic assertion macros and a generic |
| test structure. |
| |
| The framework can be used in two ways, either as a generic framework for |
| integration testing, or for unit testing specific modules. |
| |
| Quick start - Integration testing |
| ********************************* |
| |
| A simple working base is located at :file:`samples/testing/integration`. Just |
| copy the files to ``tests/`` and edit them for your needs. The test will then |
| be automatically built and run by the sanitycheck script. If you are testing |
| the **bar** component of **foo**, you should copy the sample folder to |
| ``tests/foo/bar``. It can then be tested with:: |
| |
| ./scripts/sanitycheck -s tests/foo/bar/test-identifier |
| |
| |
| In the example above ``tests/foo/bar`` signifies the path to the test and the |
| ``test-identifier`` references a test defined in the file::`testcase.yaml` file. |
| |
| To run all tests defined in a test project, run:: |
| |
| ./scripts/sanitycheck -T tests/foo/bar/ |
| |
| The sample contains the following files: |
| |
| CMakeLists.txt |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: ../../../samples/testing/integration/CMakeLists.txt |
| :language: CMake |
| :linenos: |
| |
| testcase.yaml |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: ../../../samples/testing/integration/testcase.yaml |
| :language: yaml |
| :linenos: |
| |
| prj.conf |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: ../../../samples/testing/integration/prj.conf |
| :language: text |
| :linenos: |
| |
| src/main.c (see :ref:`best practices <main_c_bp>`) |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: ../../../samples/testing/integration/src/main.c |
| :language: c |
| :linenos: |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| :depth: 1 |
| :local: |
| :backlinks: top |
| |
| |
| |
| A test case project may consist of multiple sub-tests or smaller tests that |
| either can be testing functionality or APIs. Functions implementing a test |
| should follow the guidelines below: |
| |
| * Test cases function names should be prefix with **test_** |
| * Test cases should be documented using doxygen |
| * Test function names should be unique within the section or component being |
| tested |
| |
| |
| An example can be seen below:: |
| |
| /** |
| * @brief Test Asserts |
| * |
| * This test verifies the zassert_true macro. |
| */ |
| static void test_assert(void) |
| { |
| zassert_true(1, "1 was false"); |
| } |
| |
| |
| The above test is then enabled as part of the testsuite using:: |
| |
| ztest_unit_test(test_assert) |
| |
| |
| Listing Tests |
| ============= |
| |
| Tests (test projects) in the Zephyr tree consist of many testcases that run as |
| part of a project and test similar functionality, for example an API or a |
| feature. The ``sanitycheck`` script can parse the testcases in all |
| test projects or a subset of them, and can generate reports on a granular |
| level, i.e. if cases have passed or failed or if they were blocked or skipped. |
| |
| Sanitycheck parses the source files looking for test case names, so you |
| can list all kernel test cases, for example, by entering:: |
| |
| sanitycheck --list-tests -T tests/kernel |
| |
| Skipping Tests |
| ============== |
| |
| Special- or architecture-specific tests cannot run on all |
| platforms and architectures, however we still want to count those and |
| report them as being skipped. Because the test inventory and |
| the list of tests is extracted from the code, adding |
| conditionals inside the test suite is sub-optimal. Tests that need |
| to be skipped for a certain platform or feature need to explicitly |
| report a skip using :c:func:`ztest_test_skip()`. If the test runs, |
| it needs to report either a pass or fail. For example:: |
| |
| #ifdef CONFIG_TEST1 |
| void test_test1(void) |
| { |
| zassert_true(1, "true"); |
| } |
| #else |
| void test_test1(void) |
| { |
| ztest_test_skip(); |
| } |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| void test_main(void) |
| { |
| ztest_test_suite(common, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_test1), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_test2) |
| ); |
| ztest_run_test_suite(common); |
| } |
| |
| Quick start - Unit testing |
| ************************** |
| |
| Ztest can be used for unit testing. This means that rather than including the |
| entire Zephyr OS for testing a single function, you can focus the testing |
| efforts into the specific module in question. This will speed up testing since |
| only the module will have to be compiled in, and the tested functions will be |
| called directly. |
| |
| Since you won't be including basic kernel data structures that most code |
| depends on, you have to provide function stubs in the test. Ztest provides |
| some helpers for mocking functions, as demonstrated below. |
| |
| In a unit test, mock objects can simulate the behavior of complex real objects |
| and are used to decide whether a test failed or passed by verifying whether an |
| interaction with an object occurred, and if required, to assert the order of |
| that interaction. |
| |
| .. _main_c_bp: |
| |
| Best practices for declaring the test suite |
| =========================================== |
| |
| *sanitycheck* and other validation tools need to obtain the list of |
| subcases that a Zephyr *ztest* test image will expose. |
| |
| .. admonition:: Rationale |
| |
| This all is for the purpose of traceability. It's not enough to |
| have only a semaphore test project. We also need to show that we |
| have testpoints for all APIs and functionality, and we trace back |
| to documentation of the API, and functional requirements. |
| |
| The idea is that test reports show results for every sub-testcase |
| as passed, failed, blocked, or skipped. Reporting on only the |
| high-level test project level, particularly when tests do too |
| many things, is too vague. |
| |
| Here is a generic template for a test showing the expected use of |
| :func:`ztest_test_suite`: |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| #include <ztest.h> |
| |
| extern void test_sometest1(void); |
| extern void test_sometest2(void); |
| #ifndef CONFIG_WHATEVER /* Conditionally skip test_sometest3 */ |
| void test_sometest3(void) |
| { |
| ztest_test_skip(); |
| } |
| #else |
| extern void test_sometest3(void); |
| #endif |
| extern void test_sometest4(void); |
| ... |
| |
| void test_main(void) |
| { |
| ztest_test_suite(common, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest1), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest2), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest3), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest4), |
| ); |
| ztest_run_test_suite(common); |
| } |
| |
| For *sanitycheck* to parse source files and create a list of subcases, |
| the declarations of :func:`ztest_test_suite` must follow a few rules: |
| |
| - one declaration per line |
| |
| - conditional execution by using :func:`ztest_test_skip` |
| |
| What to avoid: |
| |
| - packing multiple testcases in one source file |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| void test_main(void) |
| { |
| #ifdef TEST_feature1 |
| ztest_test_suite(feature1, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_1a), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_1b), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_1c), |
| ztest_run_test_suite(feature1); |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef TEST_feature2 |
| ztest_test_suite(feature2, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_2a), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_2b), |
| ztest_run_test_suite(feature2); |
| #endif |
| } |
| |
| |
| - Do not use ``#if`` |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| ztest_test_suite(common, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest1), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest2), |
| #ifdef CONFIG_WHATEVER |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest3), |
| #endif |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest4), |
| ... |
| |
| - Do not add comments on lines with a call to :func:`ztest_unit_test`: |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| ztest_test_suite(common, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest1), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest2) /* will fail */, |
| /* will fail! */ ztest_unit_test(test_sometest3), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest4), |
| ... |
| |
| - Do not define multiple definitions of unit / user unit test case per |
| line |
| |
| |
| .. code-block:: C |
| |
| ztest_test_suite(common, |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest1), ztest_unit_test(test_sometest2), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest3), |
| ztest_unit_test(test_sometest4), |
| ... |
| |
| |
| Other questions: |
| |
| - Why not pre-scan with CPP and then parse? or post scan the ELF file? |
| |
| If C pre-processing or building fails because of any issue, then we |
| won't be able to tell the subcases. |
| |
| - Why not declare them in the YAML testcase description? |
| |
| A separate testcase description file would be harder to maintain |
| than just keeping the information in the test source files |
| themselves -- only one file to update when changes are made |
| eliminates duplication. |
| |
| |
| API reference |
| ************* |
| |
| Running tests |
| ============= |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: ztest_test |
| :project: Zephyr |
| |
| Assertions |
| ========== |
| |
| These macros will instantly fail the test if the related assertion fails. |
| When an assertion fails, it will print the current file, line and function, |
| alongside a reason for the failure and an optional message. If the config |
| option:`CONFIG_ZTEST_ASSERT_VERBOSE` is 0, the assertions will only print the |
| file and line numbers, reducing the binary size of the test. |
| |
| Example output for a failed macro from |
| ``zassert_equal(buf->ref, 2, "Invalid refcount")``: |
| |
| .. code-block:: none |
| |
| Assertion failed at main.c:62: test_get_single_buffer: Invalid refcount (buf->ref not equal to 2) |
| Aborted at unit test function |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: ztest_assert |
| :project: Zephyr |
| |
| Mocking |
| ======= |
| |
| These functions allow abstracting callbacks and related functions and |
| controlling them from specific tests. You can enable the mocking framework by |
| setting :option:`CONFIG_ZTEST_MOCKING` to "y" in the configuration file of the |
| test. The amount of concurrent return values and expected parameters is |
| limited by :option:`CONFIG_ZTEST_PARAMETER_COUNT`. |
| |
| Here is an example for configuring the function ``expect_two_parameters`` to |
| expect the values ``a=2`` and ``b=3``, and telling ``returns_int`` to return |
| ``5``: |
| |
| .. literalinclude:: mocking.c |
| :language: c |
| :linenos: |
| |
| .. doxygengroup:: ztest_mock |
| :project: Zephyr |