Ptest
Introduction
Ptest (package test) is a concept for building, installing and running the test suites that are included in many packages.
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
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 prefix, like this:
RDEPENDS_${PN}-ptest += "make"
Building the test suite
Very few packages support cross-compiling their test suites, so this is something we typically need to add.
Many automake-based packages compile and run the test suite in a single command: make check. This doesn't work when cross-compiling, so we need to split that into two targets: One for building the test and one for running it. We include a patch in our build of automake which does this, so packages using the plain "make check" arrangement from automake get this automatically.
Now add a do_compile_append function to build the test suite:
do_compile_append() { if [ "${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 or do_install_append.