=================== Docutils_ Testing =================== :Authors: Lea Wiemann ; David Goodger :Revision: $Revision: 7463 $ :Date: $Date: 2012-06-22 21:49:51 +0200 (Fre, 22. Jun 2012) $ :Copyright: This document has been placed in the public domain. .. _Docutils: http://docutils.sourceforge.net/ .. contents:: When adding new functionality (or fixing bugs), be sure to add test cases to the test suite. Practise test-first programming; it's fun, it's addictive, and it works! This document describes how to run the Docutils test suite, how the tests are organized and how to add new tests or modify existing tests. Running the Test Suite ====================== Before checking in any changes, run the entire Docutils test suite to be sure that you haven't broken anything. From a shell:: cd docutils/test ./alltests.py Python Versions =============== The Docutils 0.10 release supports Python 2.4 or later. Therefore, you should actually have Pythons 2.4, as well as the latest Python (3.2 at the time of this writing) installed and always run the tests on all of them. (A good way to do that is to always run the test suite through a short script that runs ``alltests.py`` under each version of Python.) If you can't afford installing 3 or more Python versions, the edge cases (2.4, and 3.2) should cover most of it. Good resources covering the differences between Python versions: * `What's New in Python 2.4`__ * `What's New in Python 2.5`__ * `What's New in Python 2.6`__ * `PEP 290 - Code Migration and Modernization`__ __ http://www.python.org/doc/2.4.4/whatsnew/whatsnew24.html __ http://www.python.org/doc/2.5.2/whatsnew/whatsnew25.html __ http://docs.python.org/whatsnew/2.6.html __ http://www.python.org/peps/pep-0290.html .. _Python Check-in Policies: http://www.python.org/dev/tools.html .. _sandbox directory: http://docutils.svn.sourceforge.net/svnroot/docutils/trunk/sandbox/ .. _nightly repository tarball: http://svn.berlios.de/svndumps/docutils-repos.gz Unit Tests ========== Unit tests test single functions or modules (i.e. whitebox testing). If you are implementing a new feature, be sure to write a test case covering its functionality. It happens very frequently that your implementation (or even only a part of it) doesn't work with an older (or even newer) Python version, and the only reliable way to detect those cases is using tests. Often, it's easier to write the test first and then implement the functionality required to make the test pass. Writing New Tests ----------------- When writing new tests, it very often helps to see how a similar test is implemented. For example, the files in the ``test_parsers/test_rst/`` directory all look very similar. So when adding a test, you don't have to reinvent the wheel. If there is no similar test, you can write a new test from scratch using Python's ``unittest`` module. For an example, please have a look at the following imaginary ``test_square.py``:: #! /usr/bin/env python # $Id: testing.txt 7463 2012-06-22 19:49:51Z milde $ # Author: Your Name # Copyright: This module has been placed in the public domain. """ Test module for docutils.square. """ import unittest import docutils.square class SquareTest(unittest.TestCase): def test_square(self): self.assertEqual(docutils.square.square(0), 0) self.assertEqual(docutils.square.square(5), 25) self.assertEqual(docutils.square.square(7), 49) def test_square_root(self): self.assertEqual(docutils.square.sqrt(49), 7) self.assertEqual(docutils.square.sqrt(0), 0) self.assertRaises(docutils.square.SquareRootError, docutils.square.sqrt, 20) if __name__ == '__main__': unittest.main() For more details on how to write tests, please refer to the documentation of the ``unittest`` module. .. _functional: Functional Tests ================ The directory ``test/functional/`` contains data for functional tests. Performing functional testing means testing the Docutils system as a whole (i.e. blackbox testing). Directory Structure ------------------- + ``functional/`` The main data directory. + ``input/`` The input files. - ``some_test.txt``, for example. + ``output/`` The actual output. - ``some_test.html``, for example. + ``expected/`` The expected output. - ``some_test.html``, for example. + ``tests/`` The config files for processing the input files. - ``some_test.py``, for example. - ``_default.py``, the `default configuration file`_. The Testing Process ------------------- When running ``test_functional.py``, all config files in ``functional/tests/`` are processed. (Config files whose names begin with an underscore are ignored.) The current working directory is always Docutils' main test directory (``test/``). For example, ``functional/tests/some_test.py`` could read like this:: # Source and destination file names. test_source = "some_test.txt" test_destination = "some_test.html" # Keyword parameters passed to publish_file. reader_name = "standalone" parser_name = "rst" writer_name = "html" settings_overrides['output-encoding'] = 'utf-8' # Relative to main ``test/`` directory. settings_overrides['stylesheet_path'] = '../docutils/writers/html4css1/html4css1.css' The two variables ``test_source`` and ``test_destination`` contain the input file name (relative to ``functional/input/``) and the output file name (relative to ``functional/output/`` and ``functional/expected/``). Note that the file names can be chosen arbitrarily. However, the file names in ``functional/output/`` *must* match the file names in ``functional/expected/``. If defined, ``_test_more`` must be a function with the following signature:: def _test_more(expected_dir, output_dir, test_case, parameters): This function is called from the test case to perform tests beyond the simple comparison of expected and actual output files. ``test_source`` and ``test_destination`` are removed from the namespace, as are all variables whose names begin with an underscore ("_"). The remaining names are passed as keyword arguments to ``docutils.core.publish_file``, so you can set reader, parser, writer and anything else you want to configure. Note that ``settings_overrides`` is already initialized as a dictionary *before* the execution of the config file. Creating New Tests ------------------ In order to create a new test, put the input test file into ``functional/input/``. Then create a config file in ``functional/tests/`` which sets at least input and output file names, reader, parser and writer. Now run ``test_functional.py``. The test will fail, of course, because you do not have an expected output yet. However, an output file will have been generated in ``functional/output/``. Check this output file for validity and correctness. Then copy the file to ``functional/expected/``. If you rerun ``test_functional.py`` now, it should pass. If you run ``test_functional.py`` later and the actual output doesn't match the expected output anymore, the test will fail. If this is the case and you made an intentional change, check the actual output for validity and correctness, copy it to ``functional/expected/`` (overwriting the old expected output), and commit the change. .. _default configuration file: The Default Configuration File ------------------------------ The file ``functional/tests/_default.py`` contains default settings. It is executed just before the actual configuration files, which has the same effect as if the contents of ``_default.py`` were prepended to every configuration file.