Ptest: Difference between revisions
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The test can be anything, from a simple shell script running a binary and checking its output to an elaborate system of test binaries and data files. | The test can be anything, from a simple shell script running a binary and checking its output to an elaborate system of test binaries and data files. | ||
One major point of ptest is to | One major point of ptest is to consolidate the output format of all tests into a single common format. The format selected is the automake "simple test" format: | ||
result: testname | result: testname | ||
Where "result" one of PASS, FAIL or SKIP and "testname" can be any identifying string. | Where "result" is one of PASS, FAIL or SKIP and "testname" can be any identifying string. (The the same format used by Automake: http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/automake.html#Simple-Tests) | ||
==General recipe preparations== | ==General recipe preparations== | ||
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First, add "ptest" to the "inherit" line in the package recipe. | First, add "ptest" to the "inherit" line in the package recipe. | ||
If a test adds build-time or run-time dependencies to the package which are not there normally (such as requiring "make" to run the test suite), add those with a -ptest | If a test adds build-time or run-time dependencies to the package which are not there normally (such as requiring "make" to run the test suite), add those with a -ptest suffix, like this: | ||
RDEPENDS_${PN}-ptest += "make" | RDEPENDS_${PN}-ptest += "make" |
Revision as of 08:30, 16 January 2013
Introduction
Ptest (package test) is a concept for building, installing and running the test suites that are included in many packages, and producing a consistent output format.
Adding ptest to your build
Ptest is enabled in your build by adding "ptest" to the DISTRO_FEATURES variable. This will cause ptest-enabled packages to build and install the test suite in /usr/lib/<package>/ptest.
Running ptest
The "ptest-runner" package installs a "ptest-runner" shell script which loops through all installed ptest test suites and runs them in sequence.
Adding ptest support to a package
What constitutes a ptest?
A ptest must at minimum contain two things: run-ptest and the actual test.
run-ptest is a minimal shell script that starts the test suite. Note: It must not contain the test suite, only start it!
The test can be anything, from a simple shell script running a binary and checking its output to an elaborate system of test binaries and data files.
One major point of ptest is to consolidate the output format of all tests into a single common format. The format selected is the automake "simple test" format:
result: testname
Where "result" is one of PASS, FAIL or SKIP and "testname" can be any identifying string. (The the same format used by Automake: http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/manual/automake.html#Simple-Tests)
General recipe preparations
First, add "ptest" to the "inherit" line in the package recipe.
If a test adds build-time or run-time dependencies to the package which are not there normally (such as requiring "make" to run the test suite), add those with a -ptest suffix, like this:
RDEPENDS_${PN}-ptest += "make"
Building the test suite
Few packages support cross-compiling their test suites, so this is something we typically have to add.
Many automake-based packages compile and run the test suite in a single command: "make check". This doesn't work when cross-compiling (since we need to build on host and run on target), so we need to split that into two targets: One for building the test and one for running it. Our build of automake comes with a patch which does this, so packages using the plain "make check" arrangement from automake get this automatically.
Now add a do_compile_append function to build the test suite:
do_compile_append() { if [ "${PN}" = "${BPN}" -a ${PTEST_ENABLED} = "1" ]; then oe_runmake buildtest-TESTS fi }
Installing the test suite
The ptest.bbclass contains a ptest_do_install function which copies the required "run-ptest" file and runs "make install-ptest" if there is such a target in the top-level Makefile. This provides a standardized install method to use in the package do_install_append function:
do_compile_append() { ptest_do_install }