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author | Thomas Guyot-Sionnest <dermoth@aei.ca> | 2008-11-28 05:01:53 -0500 |
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committer | Thomas Guyot-Sionnest <dermoth@aei.ca> | 2008-11-29 04:38:54 -0500 |
commit | 2bbf2e6967daa0a9f86874aac409fde245a3bc85 (patch) | |
tree | 7fc7a9e96f3bc0e1b6749cbd999c93a292e0d12b /tap/tap.3 | |
parent | 538b97cea63d68efbd9c9c67d9c41278cfd1ebad (diff) | |
download | monitoring-plugins-2bbf2e6967daa0a9f86874aac409fde245a3bc85.tar.gz |
Add Libtap as a bundled library (does not change any behaviour without --enable-libtap)
Detects system library as pre-1.4.13 and does not install the built-in library anymore
Tested on:
- Linux x86_64, with and without local libtap (System libtap installed)
- Linux x86, with and without local libtap (System libtap NOT installed)
- Solaris SPARC, with and without local libtap, with and without system libtap installed
Diffstat (limited to 'tap/tap.3')
-rw-r--r-- | tap/tap.3 | 368 |
1 files changed, 368 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tap/tap.3 b/tap/tap.3 new file mode 100644 index 00000000..4b23c24a --- /dev/null +++ b/tap/tap.3 @@ -0,0 +1,368 @@ +.Dd December 20, 2004 +.Os +.Dt TAP 3 +.Sh NAME +.Nm tap +.Nd write tests that implement the Test Anything Protocol +.Sh SYNOPSIS +.In tap.h +.Sh DESCRIPTION +The +.Nm +library provides functions for writing test scripts that produce output +consistent with the Test Anything Protocol. A test harness that parses +this protocol can run these tests and produce useful reports indicating +their success or failure. +.Ss PRINTF STRINGS +In the descriptions that follow, for any function that takes as the +last two parameters +.Dq Fa char * , Fa ... +it can be assumed that the +.Fa char * +is a +.Fn printf +-like format string, and the optional arguments are values to be placed +in that string. +.Ss TEST PLANS +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Ft int +.Fn plan_tests "unsigned int" +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft int +.Fn plan_no_plan "void" +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft int +.Fn plan_skip_all "char *" "..." +.Xc +.El +.Pp +You must first specify a test plan. This indicates how many tests you +intend to run, and allows the test harness to notice if any tests were +missed, or if the test program exited prematurely. +.Pp +To do this, use +.Fn plan_tests , +which always returns 0. The function will cause your program to exit +prematurely if you specify 0 tests. +.Pp +In some situations you may not know how many tests you will be running, or +you are developing your test program, and do not want to update the +.Fn plan_tests +parameter every time you make a change. For those situations use +.Fn plan_no_plan . +It returns 0, and indicates to the test harness that an indeterminate number +of tests will be run. +.Pp +Both +.Fn plan_tests +and +.Fn plan_no_plan +will cause your test program to exit prematurely with a diagnostic +message if they are called more than once. +.Pp +If your test program detects at run time that some required functionality +is missing (for example, it relies on a database connection which is not +present, or a particular configuration option that has not been included +in the running kernel) use +.Fn plan_skip_all , +passing as parameters a string to display indicating the reason for skipping +the tests. +.Ss SIMPLE TESTS +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Ft unsigned int +.Fn ok "expression" "char *" "..." +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft unsigned int +.Fn ok1 "expression" +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft unsigned int +.Fn pass "char *" "..." +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft unsigned int +.Fn fail "char *" "..." +.Xc +.El +.Pp +Tests are implemented as expressions checked by calls to the +.Fn ok +and +.Fn ok1 +macros. In both cases +.Fa expression +should evaluate to true if the test succeeded. +.Pp +.Fn ok +allows you to specify a name, or comment, describing the test which will +be included in the output. +.Fn ok1 +is for those times when the expression to be tested is self +explanatory and does not need an associated comment. In those cases +the test expression becomes the comment. +.Pp +These four calls are equivalent: +.Bd -literal -offset indent +int i = 5; + +ok(i == 5, "i equals 5"); /* Overly verbose */ +ok(i == 5, "i equals %d", i); /* Just to demonstrate printf-like + behaviour of the test name */ +ok(i == 5, "i == 5"); /* Needless repetition */ +ok1(i == 5); /* Just right */ +.Ed +.Pp +It is good practice to ensure that the test name describes the meaning +behind the test rather than what you are testing. Viz +.Bd -literal -offset indent +ok(db != NULL, "db is not NULL"); /* Not bad, but */ +ok(db != NULL, "Database conn. succeeded"); /* this is better */ +.Ed +.Pp +.Fn ok +and +.Fn ok1 +return 1 if the expression evaluated to true, and 0 if it evaluated to +false. This lets you chain calls from +.Fn ok +to +.Fn diag +to only produce diagnostic output if the test failed. For example, this +code will include diagnostic information about why the database connection +failed, but only if the test failed. +.Bd -literal -offset indent +ok(db != NULL, "Database conn. succeeded") || + diag("Database error code: %d", dberrno); +.Ed +.Pp +You also have +.Fn pass +and +.Fn fail . +From the Test::More documentation: +.Bd -literal -offset indent +Sometimes you just want to say that the tests have passed. +Usually the case is you've got some complicated condition +that is difficult to wedge into an ok(). In this case, +you can simply use pass() (to declare the test ok) or fail +(for not ok). + +Use these very, very, very sparingly. +.Ed +.Pp +These are synonyms for ok(1, ...) and ok(0, ...). +.Ss SKIPPING TESTS +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Ft int +.Fn skip "unsigned int" "char *" "..." +.Xc +.It Xo +.Fn skip_start "expression" "unsigned int" "char *" "..." +.Xc +.It Xo +.Sy skip_end +.Xc +.El +.Pp +Sets of tests can be skipped. Ordinarily you would do this because +the test can't be run in this particular testing environment. +.Pp +For example, suppose some tests should be run as root. If the test is +not being run as root then the tests should be skipped. In this +implementation, skipped tests are flagged as being ok, with a special +message indicating that they were skipped. It is your responsibility +to ensure that the number of tests skipped (the first parameter to +.Fn skip ) +is correct for the number of tests to skip. +.Pp +One way of implementing this is with a +.Dq do { } while(0); +loop, or an +.Dq if( ) { } else { } +construct, to ensure that there are no additional side effects from the +skipped tests. +.Bd -literal -offset indent +if(getuid() != 0) { + skip(1, "because test only works as root"); +} else { + ok(do_something_as_root() == 0, "Did something as root"); +} +.Ed +.Pp +Two macros are provided to assist with this. The previous example could +be re-written as follows. +.Bd -literal -offset indent +skip_start(getuid() != 0, 1, "because test only works as root"); + +ok(do_something_as_root() == 0, "Did something as root"); + +skip_end; /* It's a macro, no parentheses */ +.Ed +.Ss MARKING TESTS AS Dq TODO +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Ft void +.Fn todo_start "char *" "..." +.Xc +.It Xo +.Ft void +.Fn todo_end "void" +.Xc +.El +.Pp +Sets of tests can be flagged as being +.Dq TODO . +These are tests that you expect to fail, probably because you haven't +fixed a bug, or finished a new feature yet. These tests will still be +run, but with additional output that indicates that they are expected +to fail. Should a test start to succeed unexpectedly, tools like +.Xr prove 1 +will indicate this, and you can move the test out of the todo +block. This is much more useful than simply commenting out (or +.Dq #ifdef 0 ... #endif ) +the tests. +.Bd -literal -offset indent +todo_start("dwim() not returning true yet"); + +ok(dwim(), "Did what the user wanted"); + +todo_end(); +.Ed +.Pp +Should +.Fn dwim +ever start succeeding you will know about it as soon as you run the +tests. Note that +.Em unlike +the +.Fn skip_* +family, additional code between +.Fn todo_start +and +.Fn todo_end +.Em is +executed. +.Ss SKIP vs. TODO +From the Test::More documentation; +.Bd -literal -offset indent +If it's something the user might not be able to do, use SKIP. +This includes optional modules that aren't installed, running +under an OS that doesn't have some feature (like fork() or +symlinks), or maybe you need an Internet connection and one +isn't available. + +If it's something the programmer hasn't done yet, use TODO. +This is for any code you haven't written yet, or bugs you have +yet to fix, but want to put tests in your testing script +(always a good idea). +.Ed +.Ss DIAGNOSTIC OUTPUT +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Fr unsigned int +.Fn diag "char *" "..." +.Xc +.El +.Pp +If your tests need to produce diagnostic output, use +.Fn diag . +It ensures that the output will not be considered by the TAP test harness. +.Fn diag +adds the necessary trailing +.Dq \en +for you. +.Bd -literal -offset indent +diag("Expected return code 0, got return code %d", rcode); +.Ed +.Pp +.Fn diag +always returns 0. +.Ss EXIT STATUS +.Bl -tag -width indent +.It Xo +.Fr int +.Fn exit_status void +.Xc +.El +.Pp +For maximum compatability your test program should return a particular +exit code. This is calculated by +.Fn exit_status +so it is sufficient to always return from +.Fn main +with either +.Dq return exit_status(); +or +.Dq exit(exit_status()); +as appropriate. +.Sh EXAMPLES +The +.Pa tests +directory in the source distribution contains numerous tests of +.Nm +functionality, written using +.Nm . +Examine them for examples of how to construct test suites. +.Sh COMPATABILITY +.Nm +strives to be compatible with the Perl Test::More and Test::Harness +modules. The test suite verifies that +.Nm +is bug-for-bug compatible with their behaviour. This is why some +functions which would more naturally return nothing return constant +values. +.Pp +If the +.Lb libpthread +is found at compile time, +.Nm +.Em should +be thread safe. Indications to the contrary (and test cases that expose +incorrect behaviour) are very welcome. +.Sh SEE ALSO +.Xr Test::More 1 , +.Xr Test::Harness 1 , +.Xr prove 1 +.Sh STANDARDS +.Nm +requires a +.St -isoC-99 +compiler. Some of the +.Nm +functionality is implemented as variadic macros, and that functionality +was not formally codified until C99. Patches to use +.Nm +with earlier compilers that have their own implementation of variadic +macros will be gratefully received. +.Sh HISTORY +.Nm +was written to help improve the quality and coverage of the FreeBSD +regression test suite, and released in the hope that others find it +a useful tool to help improve the quality of their code. +.Sh AUTHORS +.An "Nik Clayton" Aq nik@ngo.org.uk , +.Aq nik@FreeBSD.org +.Pp +.Nm +would not exist without the efforts of +.An "Michael G Schwern" Aq schqern@pobox.com , +.An "Andy Lester" Aq andy@petdance.com , +and the countless others who have worked on the Perl QA programme. +.Sh BUGS +Ideally, running the tests would have no side effects on the behaviour +of the application you are testing. However, it is not always possible +to avoid them. The following side effects of using +.Nm +are known. +.Bl -bullet -offset indent +.It +stdout is set to unbuffered mode after calling any of the +.Fn plan_* +functions. +.El |