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Running tests

To run all tests, you may run make check under test/ (alternative targets: make pytest, make sh).

For more control, you may use the prove or pytest command, which receives a directory or a list of files to run, and produces a report.

Each test script is standalone, so you may run them individually. Some tests may receive command-line options to help debugging. See for example sharness's documentation for shell test scripts: https://github.com/chriscool/sharness/blob/master/README.git

Dependencies

For all the test to run, the following Arch packages should be installed:

  • pyalpm
  • python-alembic
  • python-bleach
  • python-markdown
  • python-pygit2
  • python-sqlalchemy
  • python-srcinfo
  • python-coverage
  • python-pytest
  • python-pytest-cov
  • python-pytest-asyncio

Running tests

Recommended method of running tests: make check.

First, setup the test configuration:

$ sed -r 's;YOUR_AUR_ROOT;$(pwd);g' conf/config.dev > conf/config

With those installed, one can run Python tests manually with any AUR config specified by AUR_CONFIG:

$ AUR_CONFIG=conf/config coverage run --append /usr/bin/pytest test/

After tests are run (particularly, with coverage run included), one can produce coverage reports.

# Print out a CLI coverage report.
$ coverage report
# Produce an HTML-based coverage report.
$ coverage html

When running make -C test, all tests ran will produce coverage data via coverage run --append. After running make -C test, one can continue with coverage reporting steps above. Running tests through make will test and cover code ran by both aurweb scripts and our pytest collection.

Writing tests

Shell test scripts must follow the Test Anything Protocol specification: http://testanything.org/tap-specification.html

Python tests must be compatible with pytest and included in pytest test/ execution after setting up a configuration.

Tests must support being run from any directory. They may use $0 to determine their location. Python scripts should expect aurweb to be installed and importable without toying with os.path or PYTHONPATH.

Tests written in shell should use sharness. In general, new tests should be consistent with existing tests unless they have a good reason not to.

Debugging tests

By default, make -C test is quiet and does not print out verbose information about tests being run. If a test is failing, one can look into verbose details of sharness tests by executing them with the --verbose flag. Example: ./t1100_git_auth.t --verbose. This is particularly useful when tests happen to fail in a remote continuous integration environment, where the reader does not have complete access to the runner.