ftt

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Published: Nov 22, 2024 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 3 Imported by: 0

Documentation

Overview

Package ftt (aka "from the top") replicates the test exectution order semantics of `github.com/smartystreets/goconvey/convey` while fixing some notable issues:

  • Required, explicit, testing context (No more dependency on the very-magical https://github.com/jtolio/gls)
  • Uses testing.T.Run to be compatible with `go test -run <regex>`.
  • Sub-tests can now run in parallel.
  • Explicit compatibility goal with `go test`; mixing and matching convey-based and non-convey-based tests in the same test program is fine because this library only colors inside the lines.
  • Assertions are no longer 'built in'; instead tests can use any assertion library (or none) that they like as long as it works with `*testing.T`. See `go.chromium.org/luci/common/testing/assert` for a typesafe one with low dependencies used in this repo.

This is, however, missing functionality that the original convey package has:

  • No assertions show up in the `goconvey` UI. At some point we should build a new Web/Terminal UI, but it should ingest the standard test2json output from `go test -json`, not rely on a custom format. Also see https://github.com/golang/go/issues/43936 which could be a way to output assertion metadata sanely.
  • It is not "BDD-ish" (but we're considering this a feature :)).

From the top?

FTT tests always execute from the root down to the subtest, skipping all other subtests along the way, and enqueuing any new sub-sub tests discovered.

All tests MUST have stable names (the string passed to Run() or Parallel()). It is OK to generate the names passed to Run() and Parallel(), as long as the generated names are deterministic (but order does not matter).

For example (good):

import (
  "testing"
  "go.chromium.org/luci/testing/ftt"

  // Optional: This just adds the two symbols Assert and Check.
  . "go.chromium.org/luci/testing/assert"
  // Optional: Comparisons to use with Assert/Check.
  "go.chromium.org/luci/testing/assert/should"
)

func TestWidget(t *testing.T) {
  t.Parallel()

  ftt.Parallel("in common context", t, func(t *ftt.Test) {
    ctx := initializeCommonContext(...)                              // 1

    t.Parallel("works", func(t *ftt.Test) {
       ctx = goodConfig(ctx)                                         // 2

       t.Parallel("with defaults", func(t *ftt.Test) {
         Assert(t, widget(ctx), should.ErrLike(nil))                 // 3
         // Or something like:
         // if err := widget(ctx); err != nil {
         //   t.Failf("widget did not work: %#v", err)
         // }
       })

       t.Parallel("with options", func(t *ftt.Test) {
         Assert(t, widget(ctx, &options{...}), should.ErrLike(nil))  // 4
         // Or something like:
         // if err := widget(ctx, &options{...}); err != nil {
         //   t.Failf("widget did not work: %#v", err)
         // }
       })
    })

    t.Parallel("fails", func(t *ftt.Test) {
       ctx = badChanges(ctx)                                         // 5
       Assert(t, widget(ctx), should.ErrLike("bad stuff"))           // 6

       // Or something like:
       // err := widget(ctx)
       // if err == nil {
       //   t.Failf("widget should have failed, but didn't")
       // } else if strings.Contains(err.Error(), "bad stuff") {
       //   t.Failf(`widget failed with the wrong error: %s (expected it to contain "bad stuff")`)
       // }
    })
  })
}

This would run the following tests, each of which executes the (numbered statements):

  • TestWidget (1) Launches "TestWidget/works" Launches "TestWidget/fails"
  • TestWidget/works (1, 2) Launches "TestWidget/works/with_defaults" Launches "TestWidget/works/with_options"
  • TestWidget/works/with_defaults (1, 2, 3)
  • TestWidget/works/with_options (1, 2, 4)
  • TestWidget/fails (1, 5, 6)

An example of generating bad names could be:

func TestBad(t *testing.T) {
  currentName := ""

  ftt.Run("root", func(t *ftt.Test) {
    currentName += "a"
    t.Run(currentName, func(t *ftt.Test) { ... })
  })
}

In this example, it would run `root`, and schedule `root/a`, but then the `root/a` test would only see `t.Run("aa", ...)`. This example is clearly contrived, but this situation can arise if you're doing something like generating random test cases, but you don't generate them the same way on every execution of the root callback.

Test discovery

Test discovery is not doing any source parsing, stack walking, or anything like that.

Each test which runs carries a piece of state which is the "path" through the tree of tests, using the names provided to Run/Parallel. The root test starts with an empty path.

When executing a test function (and recall that ALL subtests start "from the top"), if the execution encounters a t.Run or t.Parallel call:

  • If the current path is empty, execute that callback, registering any sub-tests immediately found within it.
  • If the given name matches the first element of the remaining path, consume that element from the remaining path, and execute the callback with the shortened path value. Keep state to ensure that any other sibling t.Run/t.Parallel calls are ignored.
  • If the given name does not match the first element of the remaining path, ignore it.

In the example from the previous section, TestWidget runs and encounters two t.Parallel calls ('works' and 'fails') and runs these sub tests in parallel. Each is started with the path state `[]string{"works"}` and `[]string{"fails"}` respectively, and will recurse/ignore those sub-tests according to the algorithm above.

This continues until no new sub-tests are discovered, and all running tests complete.

Within each callback, the *Test struct embeds the `*testing.T` for that subtest. This is exactly the same T object you would get when using `t.Run(...)`, and you can call any/

BDD-ish?

Specifically, tests and subtests in goconvey are intended to have "readable" names:

Convey MyThing
  Convey works with X
    Convey when blah blah

`ftt` intentionally doesn't try to replicate this, because this BDD style ended up hiding the important "from the top" functionality that was actually going on.

Terminology in this package

This package has picked a very limited set of symbols:

  • 'Run' - This creates a new sub-test, and executes it serially.
  • 'Parallel' - This creates a new sub-test, and executes it in parallel.
  • 'Each' - This consumes a list of inputs.

There are also two variants of Run and Parallel; the package-level definitions, and the definitions on the Test type. The package-level symbols (ftt.Run and ftt.Parallel) create new "from the top" roots. The methods on Test create new tests which run "from the top" (the root in which they are contained).

Under the hood these all turn into `testing.T.Run` invocations with, or without, a t.Parallel invocation. It is recommended to familiarize yourself with how Go sub-tests work on the vanilla testing library to understand the semantics and caveats which apply.

How does it work?

`ftt` structures tests into trees. Every tree starts by calling `ftt.Run` or `ftt.Parallel` with a callback taking a *Test (let's call this the 'root callback' of the tree). A given Go TestSomething function may have multiple ftt roots, but they SHOULD all be immediate children of TestSomething.

As soon as you pass the root callback to ftt, it will spawn a go subtest (with the standard `testing.T.Run`), and will keep a 'state' which is shared by all subtests under the root callback. As the callback executes, it may call Test.Run or Test.Parallel to add a sub-test to the state.

There are three execution modes that an ftt test may be in: descending, leaf, or ascending. When ftt runs the root callback for the first time, it always starts in the `leaf` state.

  • leaf means that all Test.Run or Test.Parallel calls should register a new sub-test of the current leaf. So if your root is called 'root' and has two Test.Run calls for 'a' and 'b', these will register new subtests called 'root/a' and 'root/b', respectively. These new subtests will start in the 'descending' state by re-executing the root callback. Once the leaf callback exits, we switch to the 'ascending' state.

  • descending means that we should ignore all Test.Run or Test.Parallel calls which do not get us closer to our target branch of the tree. If we start the root callback with a target branch of "root/b", we would ignore the call to Test.Run("a") (it would be a no-op). Once we find the target branch, we switch to the 'leaf' state.

  • ascending means that we ignore all Test.Run and Test.Parallel calls unconditionally. Our target branch of the test tree ran to completion and we're just unwinding back to the end of the root callback. We don't need to register any additional subtests because they will already have been registered by the test which ran the current callback in the leaf state.

Aside from this, there is a bit of bookeeping necessary to detect when we completely failed to find our target branch (which could happen if the test is generating test names non-deterministically).

Index

Constants

This section is empty.

Variables

This section is empty.

Functions

func Parallel

func Parallel(name string, t *testing.T, cb func(*Test))

Parallel starts a new testing suite rooted in `cb` which will run in parallel with other sibling Parallel statements within the same test function.

func Run

func Run(name string, t *testing.T, cb func(*Test))

Run starts a new testing suite rooted in `cb` which will run immediately, blocking until `cb` completes.

Types

type Test

type Test struct {
	// Regular *testing.T which belongs to the currently-running test.
	//
	// Prefer to use `Run()` and `Parallel()` as implemented on Test, rather than
	// on T here, as this will preserve all organizational state for `ftt`.
	*testing.T
	// contains filtered or unexported fields
}

Test is the structure used to maintain `ftt` state.

This fully implements `testing.TB` and directly exposes the underlying `*testing.T` to be compatible with testing libraries which need it.

func (*Test) Parallel

func (t *Test) Parallel(name string, cb func(*Test))

Parallel runs `cb` as a parallel sub-test which executes all functions from TestRoot to this callsite, followed by `cb`.

func (*Test) Run

func (t *Test) Run(name string, cb func(*Test))

Run runs `cb` as a serial sub-test which executes all functions from TestRoot to this callsite, followed by `cb`.

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