Tests a command line program by executing it in a temporary sandbox directory and inspecting its result.
Project description
Tests a command line program by executing it in a temporary sandbox directory and inspecting its result.
Or tests properties of existing files, directories etc.
Assertions are expressed in a declarative style, using a specialized type system.
Syntax is inspired by shell script, but thoroughly specialized.
A test may have setup and cleanup actions.
Supports individual test cases and test suites.
Supports easy referencing of predefined files and files created in the temporary sandbox.
Supports execution of arbitrary programs, as well as checking their result.
Exactly has a built in help system, which can, among other things, generate this Reference Manual.
TEST CASES
A test case is written as a plain text file.
Testing stdin, stdout, stderr, exit code
The following checks that your new my-contacts-program reads a contact list from stdin, and is able to find the email of a person:
[setup] stdin = -contents-of some-test-contacts.txt [act] my-contacts-program get-email --name 'Pablo Gauss' [assert] exit-code == 0 stdout equals <<EOF pablo@gauss.org EOF stderr is-empty
If the file ‘contacts.case’ contains this test case, then Exactly can execute it:
> exactly contacts.case PASS
“PASS” means that all assertions were satisfied.
This test assumes that
the system under test - my-contacts-program - is is found in the same directory as the test case file
the file “some-test-contacts.txt” (that is referenced from the test case) is found in the same directory as the test case file
If the actual email address of “Pablo Gauss” is not the expected one, then Exactly will report failure. For example:
> exactly contacts.case FAIL In [assert] contacts.case, line 13 stdout equals <<EOF pablo@gauss.org EOF Unexpected contents of stdout from the "action to check" @[EXACTLY_RESULT]@/stdout (F) equals Expected STRING 'pablo@gauss.org\n' Diff --- Expected +++ Actual @@ -1 +1 @@ -pablo@gauss.org +pablo.gauss@masters.org
Testing side effects on files and directories
When the execution of a test case starts, the current directory is set to a temporary directory. This gives the test case a sandbox where it can create and manipulate files.
The sandbox - and all files within it - are removed when the execution ends.
The following tests a program that classifies files as either good or bad, by moving them to the appropriate directory:
[setup] file input/a.txt = 'GOOD contents' file input/b.txt = 'bad contents' file input/sub/c.txt = 'more bad contents' dir output/good dir output/bad [act] classify-files-by-moving-to-appropriate-dir GOOD input/ output/ [assert] dir-contents input : is-empty dir-contents output/good : matches -full { a.txt : type file } dir-contents output/bad : matches -full { b.txt : type file sub : type dir && dir-contents matches -full { c.txt : type file } }
file and dir makes files in the current directory (by default).
Testing and transforming the contents of files
Use contents to test the contents of a file, or a transformed version of it, by applying a “text transformer”.
Such a “text transformer” may be given a name using the def instruction to make the test easier to read.
The following case tests that “timing lines” are output as part of a log file “log.txt”.
The challenge is that the (fictive) log file contains non-timing lines that the test is not interested in, and that timing lines contains a time stamp of the form “NN:NN”, who’s exact value also is not interesting.
A “text transformer” is used to extract all timing lines and to replace “NN:NN” time stamps with the constant string TIMESTAMP:
[setup] def line-matcher IS_TIMING_LINE = contents matches ^timing def text-transformer REPLACE_TIMESTAMPS = replace [0-9]{2}:[0-9]{2} TIMESTAMP def text-transformer GET_TIMING_LINES = filter IS_TIMING_LINE | REPLACE_TIMESTAMPS [act] program-that-writes-log-file [assert] contents log.txt : -transformed-by GET_TIMING_LINES equals <<EOF timing TIMESTAMP begin timing TIMESTAMP preprocessing timing TIMESTAMP validation timing TIMESTAMP execution timing TIMESTAMP end EOF
The -transformed-by option does not modify the tested file, it just applies the assertion to a transformed version of it.
Using external programs
External programs can help with setup, assertions etc.
Exactly can run executable files, shell commands and programs in the OS PATH, using run, $, %.
The following case shows some examples, but doesn’t make sense as a realistic test case, tough:
[setup] run my-setup-helper-program first "second arg" run my-setup-helper-program arg -stdin 'the stdin of the program' run -ignore-exit-code my-setup-helper-program def list DB_ARGS = -uu -pp -hlocalhost -Dd run % mysql @[DB_ARGS]@ --batch --execute "create table my_table(id int)" run % mysql @[DB_ARGS]@ --batch --execute :> create table my_table(id int) def list MYSQL_BATCH = @[DB_ARGS]@ --batch --execute file interesting-records.txt = -stdout-from % mysql @[MYSQL_BATCH]@ :> select * from a_table where name = "interesting" % touch file $ ls *.txt file root-files.txt = -stdout-from % ls / -transformed-by run my-text-transformer-program file interesting-pgm-output.txt = -stdout-from -python @[EXACTLY_HOME]@/my-text-generating-program.py -transformed-by strip -trailing-new-lines [act] $ echo ${PATH} > output.txt [assert] run my-assert-helper-program % stat root-files.txt $ test -f root-files.txt stdout -from $ echo 'Interesting output' equals "Interesting output@[NEW_LINE]@" exit-code -from my-assert-helper-program == 0 exists output.txt : ( type file && run -python @[EXACTLY_HOME]@/my-file-matcher.py arg1 && contents run -python @[EXACTLY_HOME]@/my-text-matcher.py arg1 "arg 2" ) [cleanup] % mysql @[MYSQL_BATCH]@ :> drop table my_table
A program executed in [assert] becomes an assertion that depends on the exit code.
Program values can be defined for reuse using def, and referenced using @:
[setup] def program RUN_MYSQL = % mysql -uu -pp -hlocalhost -Dd def program EXECUTE_SQL = @ RUN_MYSQL --skip-column-names --batch --execute run @ EXECUTE_SQL "create table my_table(id int)" [act] @ EXECUTE_SQL :> CALL MyStoredProcedure() [assert] stdout -from @ EXECUTE_SQL "select * from my_table" ! is-empty [cleanup] run @ EXECUTE_SQL :> drop table my_table
:> treats the rest of the line as a single string.
Thus :> a b c becomes the string a b c.
Testing existing OS environment - tests without [act]
A test case does not need to have an [act] phase. This way, Exactly can be used to check existing files and directories, for example.
The following case checks your hierarchy of software projects.
The projects are rooted at the directory ‘my-projects’. Each ‘project’ sub directory contains a project, and must contain a ‘Makefile’ with a target ‘all’:
[assert] exists @[MY_PROJECTS_ROOT_DIR]@ : type dir && @[ALL_PROJECT_DIRS_ARE_VALID]@ [setup] def path MY_PROJECTS_ROOT_DIR = -rel-act-home my-projects def string MY_PROJECT_DIR_NAME = project def file-matcher IS_VALID_MAKEFILE = type file && contents -transformed-by filter contents matches '^all:' num-lines == 1 def file-matcher IS_VALID_PROJECT_DIR = type dir && dir-contents matches { Makefile : @[IS_VALID_MAKEFILE]@ } def file-matcher ALL_PROJECT_DIRS_ARE_VALID = dir-contents -recursive -selection name @[MY_PROJECT_DIR_NAME]@ every file : @[IS_VALID_PROJECT_DIR]@
The @[SYMBOL_NAME]@ syntax is a reference to the “symbol” “SYMBOL_NAME”. This syntax can always be used.
In some contexts, just SYMBOL_NAME will also do.
Testing a git commit hook
The following tests a git commit hook (prepare-commit-msg).
The hook should add the issue id in the branch name, to commit messages:
[setup] def string ISSUE_ID = ABC-123 def string MESSAGE_WO_ISSUE_ID = "commit message without issue id" def program GET_LOG_MESSAGE_OF_LAST_COMMIT = % git log -1 --format=%s #### Setup a git repo with the commit hook to test % git init copy prepare-commit-msg .git/hooks #### Setup a branch, with issue number in its name, # and a file to commit % git checkout -b @[ISSUE_ID]@-branch-with-issue-id file file-on-branch.txt % git add file-on-branch.txt [act] % git commit -m @[MESSAGE_WO_ISSUE_ID]@ [assert] exit-code == 0 stdout -from @ GET_LOG_MESSAGE_OF_LAST_COMMIT equals <<- @[ISSUE_ID]@ : @[MESSAGE_WO_ISSUE_ID]@ -
% ... runs a program in the OS PATH.
Testing source code files
The actor instruction can specify an interpreter to test a source code file:
[conf] actor = file % python [act] my-python-program.py 'an argument' second third [assert] stdout equals <<EOF Argument: an argument Argument: second Argument: third EOF
Testing source code
The actor instruction can specify an interpreter to test source code in [act]:
[conf] actor = source % python [act] import sys sys.stdout.write('Hello\n') sys.stdout.write('world!\n') [assert] stdout equals <<- Hello world! -
Print output from the tested program
If --act is used, the output of the “act” phase (the “action to check”) will become the output of exactly - stdout, stderr and exit code:
[setup] dir a-dir file a-file [act] $ ls [assert] stdout num-lines == 314
> exactly --act my-test.case a-dir a-file
The test case is executed in a temporary sandbox, as usual, but assertions are ignored.
Referencing files
The home directory structure is directories containing predefined files involved in a test case:
- act-home
Location of the program file being tested
- home
Location of arbitrary test resources
Both of them defaults to the directory that contains the test case file, but can be changed via [conf].
Exactly does it’s best to prevent files in these directories from being modified.
The sandbox directory structure is temporary directories for files involved in a single execution of a test case:
- act
The current directory, when execution begins
- result
Stores the output from the tested program
- tmp
A directory for arbitrary temporary files
There are options for making paths relative to all of these.
-rel-home refers to the home directory, and -rel-act to the act directory, for example:
[conf] act-home = ../bin/ home = data/ [setup] copy -rel-home input.txt -rel-act actual.txt [act] my-grep-tool "text to find" actual.txt [assert] contents -rel-act actual.txt : equals -contents-of -rel-home expected.txt
-rel-home input.txt becomes a single path argument.
These “relativity” options have defaults designed to minimize the need for them. The following case does the same thing as the one above:
[conf] act-home = ../bin/ home = data/ [setup] copy input.txt actual.txt [act] my-grep-tool "text to find" actual.txt [assert] contents actual.txt : equals -contents-of expected.txt
ORGANIZING TESTS
File inclusion
Test case contents can be included from external files:
[setup] including my-dir-symbols.def including my-common-setup-and-cleanup.xly
Test suites
Tests can be grouped in suites:
first.case second.case
or:
[cases] helloworld.case *.case **/*.case [suites] sub-suite.suite *.suite pkg/suite.suite **/*.suite
If the file my-suite.suite contains this text, then Exactly can run it:
> exactly suite my-suite.suite ... OK
The result of a suite can be reported as simple progress information, or JUnit XML.
Suites can contain test case functionality that is common to all cases in the suite. For example:
[cases] *.case [conf] act-home = ../bin/ [setup] def string CONF_FILE = my.conf file @[CONF_FILE]@ = <<EOF common = configuration EOF
The common functionality is included in each test case.
MORE EXAMPLES
The examples/ directory of the source distribution contains more examples.
INSTALLING
Exactly is written in Python and does not require any external libraries.
Exactly requires Python >= 3.6.
Use pip or pip3 to install:
> pip3 install exactly
The program can also be run from a source distribution:
> python3 src/default-main-program-runner.py
DEVELOPMENT STATUS
Current version is fully functional, but some syntax and semantics is inconsistent:
Some instructions allow arguments to span multiple lines, some do not.
Support for escapes characters in strings is missing.
Incompatible changes to syntax and semantics may occur in every 0.x release.
Comments are welcome!
Future development
More functionality is needed, smaller and larger. Including (but by no means limited to):
Improved string character escaping
Improved syntax using parentheses
Concurrent execution of processes
Support for non-terminating processes
Windows port (most features work, but have not been thoroughly tested)
Symbol substitution in files
More matchers, text transformers, etc
Long term goals
Dynamic symbol values (contents of dir, current date, e.g.)
Macros and functions
Embedding of Python code in test cases
Python library for running cases and suites from within Python as a DSEL
THANKS
The Python IDE PyCharm from JetBrains has greatly helped the development of this software.
Thanks for the great
Python language
GNU/Linux
GNU Emacs
git
Docker
Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn’s “De Staalmeesters”
DEDICATION
Aron Karlén
Tommy Karlsson
Götabergsgatan 10, lägenhet 4
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