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1 \input texinfo
2 @c %**start of header
3 @setfilename ../../info/ert.info
4 @settitle Emacs Lisp Regression Testing
5 @include docstyle.texi
6 @c %**end of header
7
8 @dircategory Emacs misc features
9 @direntry
10 * ERT: (ert). Emacs Lisp regression testing tool.
11 @end direntry
12
13 @copying
14 Copyright @copyright{} 2008, 2010--2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
15
16 @quotation
17 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
18 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
19 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
20 Invariant Sections, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU Manual,''
21 and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of the license
22 is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free Documentation License''.
23
24 (a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to copy and
25 modify this GNU manual.''
26 @end quotation
27 @end copying
28
29 @titlepage
30 @title Emacs Lisp Regression Testing
31 @page
32 @vskip 0pt plus 1filll
33 @insertcopying
34 @end titlepage
35
36 @contents
37
38 @ifnottex
39 @node Top
40 @top ERT: Emacs Lisp Regression Testing
41
42 @insertcopying
43
44 ERT is a tool for automated testing in Emacs Lisp. Its main features
45 are facilities for defining tests, running them and reporting the
46 results, and for debugging test failures interactively.
47
48 ERT is similar to tools for other environments such as JUnit, but has
49 unique features that take advantage of the dynamic and interactive
50 nature of Emacs. Despite its name, it works well both for test-driven
51 development (see
52 @url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Test-driven_development}) and for
53 traditional software development methods.
54
55 @menu
56 * Introduction:: A simple example of an ERT test.
57 * How to Run Tests:: Run tests in Emacs or from the command line.
58 * How to Write Tests:: How to add tests to your Emacs Lisp code.
59 * How to Debug Tests:: What to do if a test fails.
60 * Extending ERT:: ERT is extensible in several ways.
61 * Other Testing Concepts:: Features not in ERT.
62 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
63
64 @detailmenu
65 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
66
67 How to Run Tests
68
69 * Running Tests Interactively:: Run tests in your current Emacs.
70 * Running Tests in Batch Mode:: Run tests in emacs -Q.
71 * Test Selectors:: Choose which tests to run.
72
73 How to Write Tests
74
75 * The @code{should} Macro:: A powerful way to express assertions.
76 * Expected Failures:: Tests for known bugs.
77 * Tests and Their Environment:: Don't depend on customizations; no side effects.
78 * Useful Techniques:: Some examples.
79
80 How to Debug Tests
81
82 * Understanding Explanations:: How ERT gives details on why an assertion failed.
83 * Interactive Debugging:: Tools available in the ERT results buffer.
84
85 Extending ERT
86
87 * Defining Explanation Functions:: Teach ERT about more predicates.
88 * Low-Level Functions for Working with Tests:: Use ERT's data for your purposes.
89
90 Other Testing Concepts
91
92 * Mocks and Stubs:: Stubbing out code that is irrelevant to the test.
93 * Fixtures and Test Suites:: How ERT differs from tools for other languages.
94
95 Appendix
96
97 * GNU Free Documentation License:: The license for this documentation.
98
99 @end detailmenu
100 @end menu
101 @end ifnottex
102
103 @node Introduction
104 @chapter Introduction
105
106 ERT allows you to define @emph{tests} in addition to functions,
107 macros, variables, and the other usual Lisp constructs. Tests are
108 simply Lisp code: code that invokes other code and checks whether
109 it behaves as expected.
110
111 ERT keeps track of the tests that are defined and provides convenient
112 commands to run them to verify whether the definitions that are
113 currently loaded in Emacs pass the tests.
114
115 Some Lisp files have comments like the following (adapted from the
116 package @code{pp.el}):
117
118 @lisp
119 ;; (pp-to-string '(quote quote)) ; expected: "'quote"
120 ;; (pp-to-string '((quote a) (quote b))) ; expected: "('a 'b)\n"
121 ;; (pp-to-string '('a 'b)) ; same as above
122 @end lisp
123
124 The code contained in these comments can be evaluated from time to
125 time to compare the output with the expected output. ERT formalizes
126 this and introduces a common convention, which simplifies Emacs
127 development, since programmers no longer have to manually find and
128 evaluate such comments.
129
130 An ERT test definition equivalent to the above comments is this:
131
132 @lisp
133 (ert-deftest pp-test-quote ()
134 "Tests the rendering of `quote' symbols in `pp-to-string'."
135 (should (equal (pp-to-string '(quote quote)) "'quote"))
136 (should (equal (pp-to-string '((quote a) (quote b))) "('a 'b)\n"))
137 (should (equal (pp-to-string '('a 'b)) "('a 'b)\n")))
138 @end lisp
139
140 If you know @code{defun}, the syntax of @code{ert-deftest} should look
141 familiar: This example defines a test named @code{pp-test-quote} that
142 will pass if the three calls to @code{equal} all return non-@code{nil}.
143
144 @code{should} is a macro with the same meaning as @code{cl-assert} but
145 better error reporting. @xref{The @code{should} Macro}.
146
147 Each test should have a name that describes what functionality it tests.
148 Test names can be chosen arbitrarily---they are in a
149 namespace separate from functions and variables---but should follow
150 the usual Emacs Lisp convention of having a prefix that indicates
151 which package they belong to. Test names are displayed by ERT when
152 reporting failures and can be used when selecting which tests to run.
153
154 The empty parentheses @code{()} in the first line don't currently have
155 any meaning and are reserved for future extension. They also make
156 the syntax of @code{ert-deftest} more similar to that of @code{defun}.
157
158 The docstring describes what feature this test tests. When running
159 tests interactively, the first line of the docstring is displayed for
160 tests that fail, so it is good if the first line makes sense on its
161 own.
162
163 The body of a test can be arbitrary Lisp code. It should have as few
164 side effects as possible; each test should be written to clean up
165 after itself, leaving Emacs in the same state as it was before the
166 test. Tests should clean up even if they fail. @xref{Tests and Their
167 Environment}.
168
169
170 @node How to Run Tests
171 @chapter How to Run Tests
172
173 You can run tests either in the Emacs you are working in, or on the
174 command line in a separate Emacs process in batch mode (i.e., with no
175 user interface). The former mode is convenient during interactive
176 development, the latter is useful to make sure that tests pass
177 independently of your customizations; and it allows you to invoke
178 tests from makefiles, and to write scripts that run tests in several
179 different Emacs versions.
180
181 @menu
182 * Running Tests Interactively:: Run tests in your current Emacs.
183 * Running Tests in Batch Mode:: Run tests in emacs -Q.
184 * Test Selectors:: Choose which tests to run.
185 @end menu
186
187
188 @node Running Tests Interactively
189 @section Running Tests Interactively
190
191 You can run the tests that are currently defined in your Emacs with
192 the command @kbd{@kbd{M-x} ert @kbd{RET} t @kbd{RET}}. (For an
193 explanation of the @code{t} argument, @pxref{Test Selectors}.) ERT will pop
194 up a new buffer, the ERT results buffer, showing the results of the
195 tests run. It looks like this:
196
197 @example
198 Selector: t
199 Passed: 31
200 Skipped: 0
201 Failed: 2 (2 unexpected)
202 Total: 33/33
203
204 Started at: 2008-09-11 08:39:25-0700
205 Finished.
206 Finished at: 2008-09-11 08:39:27-0700
207
208 FF...............................
209
210 F addition-test
211 (ert-test-failed
212 ((should
213 (=
214 (+ 1 2)
215 4))
216 :form
217 (= 3 4)
218 :value nil))
219
220 F list-test
221 (ert-test-failed
222 ((should
223 (equal
224 (list 'a 'b 'c)
225 '(a b d)))
226 :form
227 (equal
228 (a b c)
229 (a b d))
230 :value nil :explanation
231 (list-elt 2
232 (different-atoms c d))))
233 @end example
234
235 At the top, there is a summary of the results: we ran all tests defined
236 in the current Emacs (@code{Selector: t}), 31 of them passed, and 2
237 failed unexpectedly. @xref{Expected Failures}, for an explanation of
238 the term @emph{unexpected} in this context.
239
240 The line of dots and @code{F}s is a progress bar where each character
241 represents one test; it fills while the tests are running. A dot
242 means that the test passed, an @code{F} means that it failed. Below
243 the progress bar, ERT shows details about each test that had an
244 unexpected result. In the example above, there are two failures, both
245 due to failed @code{should} forms. @xref{Understanding Explanations},
246 for more details.
247
248 In the ERT results buffer, @kbd{TAB} and @kbd{S-TAB} cycle between
249 buttons. Each name of a function or macro in this buffer is a button;
250 moving point to it and typing @kbd{RET} jumps to its definition.
251
252 Pressing @kbd{r} re-runs the test near point on its own. Pressing
253 @kbd{d} re-runs it with the debugger enabled. @kbd{.} jumps to the
254 definition of the test near point (@kbd{RET} has the same effect if
255 point is on the name of the test). On a failed test, @kbd{b} shows
256 the backtrace of the failure.
257
258 @kbd{l} shows the list of @code{should} forms executed in the test.
259 If any messages were generated (with the Lisp function @code{message})
260 in a test or any of the code that it invoked, @kbd{m} will show them.
261
262 By default, long expressions in the failure details are abbreviated
263 using @code{print-length} and @code{print-level}. Pressing @kbd{L}
264 while point is on a test failure will increase the limits to show more
265 of the expression.
266
267
268 @node Running Tests in Batch Mode
269 @section Running Tests in Batch Mode
270
271 ERT supports automated invocations from the command line or from
272 scripts or makefiles. There are two functions for this purpose,
273 @code{ert-run-tests-batch} and @code{ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit}.
274 They can be used like this:
275
276 @example
277 emacs -batch -l ert -l my-tests.el -f ert-run-tests-batch-and-exit
278 @end example
279
280 This command will start up Emacs in batch mode, load ERT, load
281 @code{my-tests.el}, and run all tests defined in it. It will exit
282 with a zero exit status if all tests passed, or nonzero if any tests
283 failed or if anything else went wrong. It will also print progress
284 messages and error diagnostics to standard output.
285
286 If ERT is not part of your Emacs distribution, you may need to use
287 @code{-L /path/to/ert/} so that Emacs can find it. You may need
288 additional @code{-L} flags to ensure that @code{my-tests.el} and all the
289 files that it requires are on your @code{load-path}.
290
291
292 @node Test Selectors
293 @section Test Selectors
294
295 Functions like @code{ert} accept a @emph{test selector}, a Lisp
296 expression specifying a set of tests. Test selector syntax is similar
297 to Common Lisp's type specifier syntax:
298
299 @itemize
300 @item @code{nil} selects no tests.
301 @item @code{t} selects all tests.
302 @item @code{:new} selects all tests that have not been run yet.
303 @item @code{:failed} and @code{:passed} select tests according to their most recent result.
304 @item @code{:expected}, @code{:unexpected} select tests according to their most recent result.
305 @item A string is a regular expression that selects all tests with matching names.
306 @item A test (i.e., an object of @code{ert-test} data type) selects that test.
307 @item A symbol selects the test that the symbol names.
308 @item @code{(member TESTS...)} selects the elements of TESTS, a list of
309 tests or symbols naming tests.
310 @item @code{(eql TEST)} selects TEST, a test or a symbol naming a test.
311 @item @code{(and SELECTORS...)} selects the tests that match all SELECTORS.
312 @item @code{(or SELECTORS...)} selects the tests that match any SELECTOR.
313 @item @code{(not SELECTOR)} selects all tests that do not match SELECTOR.
314 @item @code{(tag TAG)} selects all tests that have TAG on their tags list.
315 (Tags are optional labels you can apply to tests when you define them.)
316 @item @code{(satisfies PREDICATE)} selects all tests that satisfy PREDICATE,
317 a function that takes a test as argument and returns non-@code{nil} if
318 it is selected.
319 @end itemize
320
321 Selectors that are frequently useful when selecting tests to run
322 include @code{t} to run all tests that are currently defined in Emacs,
323 @code{"^foo-"} to run all tests in package @code{foo} (this assumes
324 that package @code{foo} uses the prefix @code{foo-} for its test names),
325 result-based selectors such as @code{(or :new :unexpected)} to
326 run all tests that have either not run yet or that had an unexpected
327 result in the last run, and tag-based selectors such as @code{(not
328 (tag :causes-redisplay))} to run all tests that are not tagged
329 @code{:causes-redisplay}.
330
331
332 @node How to Write Tests
333 @chapter How to Write Tests
334
335 ERT lets you define tests in the same way you define functions. You
336 can type @code{ert-deftest} forms in a buffer and evaluate them there
337 with @code{eval-defun} or @code{compile-defun}, or you can save the
338 file and load it, optionally byte-compiling it first.
339
340 Just like @code{find-function} is only able to find where a function
341 was defined if the function was loaded from a file, ERT is only able
342 to find where a test was defined if the test was loaded from a file.
343
344
345 @menu
346 * The @code{should} Macro:: A powerful way to express assertions.
347 * Expected Failures:: Tests for known bugs.
348 * Tests and Their Environment:: Don't depend on customizations; no side effects.
349 * Useful Techniques:: Some examples.
350 @end menu
351
352 @node The @code{should} Macro
353 @section The @code{should} Macro
354
355 Test bodies can include arbitrary code; but to be useful, they need to
356 check whether the code being tested (or @emph{code under test})
357 does what it is supposed to do. The macro @code{should} is similar to
358 @code{cl-assert} from the cl package
359 (@pxref{Assertions,,, cl, Common Lisp Extensions}),
360 but analyzes its argument form and records information that ERT can
361 display to help debugging.
362
363 This test definition
364
365 @lisp
366 (ert-deftest addition-test ()
367 (should (= (+ 1 2) 4)))
368 @end lisp
369
370 will produce this output when run via @kbd{M-x ert}:
371
372 @example
373 F addition-test
374 (ert-test-failed
375 ((should
376 (=
377 (+ 1 2)
378 4))
379 :form
380 (= 3 4)
381 :value nil))
382 @end example
383
384 In this example, @code{should} recorded the fact that (= (+ 1 2) 4)
385 reduced to (= 3 4) before it reduced to @code{nil}. When debugging why the
386 test failed, it helps to know that the function @code{+} returned 3
387 here. ERT records the return value for any predicate called directly
388 within @code{should}.
389
390 In addition to @code{should}, ERT provides @code{should-not}, which
391 checks that the predicate returns @code{nil}, and @code{should-error}, which
392 checks that the form called within it signals an error. An example
393 use of @code{should-error}:
394
395 @lisp
396 (ert-deftest test-divide-by-zero ()
397 (should-error (/ 1 0)
398 :type 'arith-error))
399 @end lisp
400
401 This checks that dividing one by zero signals an error of type
402 @code{arith-error}. The @code{:type} argument to @code{should-error}
403 is optional; if absent, any type of error is accepted.
404 @code{should-error} returns an error description of the error that was
405 signaled, to allow additional checks to be made. The error
406 description has the format @code{(ERROR-SYMBOL . DATA)}.
407
408 There is no @code{should-not-error} macro since tests that signal an
409 error fail anyway, so @code{should-not-error} is effectively the
410 default.
411
412 @xref{Understanding Explanations}, for more details on what
413 @code{should} reports.
414
415
416 @node Expected Failures
417 @section Expected Failures
418
419 Some bugs are complicated to fix, or not very important, and are left as
420 @emph{known bugs}. If there is a test case that triggers the bug and
421 fails, ERT will alert you of this failure every time you run all
422 tests. For known bugs, this alert is a distraction. The way to
423 suppress it is to add @code{:expected-result :failed} to the test
424 definition:
425
426 @lisp
427 (ert-deftest future-bug ()
428 "Test `time-forward' with negative arguments.
429 Since this functionality isn't implemented, the test is known to fail."
430 :expected-result :failed
431 (time-forward -1))
432 @end lisp
433
434 ERT will still display a small @code{f} in the progress bar as a
435 reminder that there is a known bug, and will count the test as failed,
436 but it will be quiet about it otherwise.
437
438 An alternative to marking the test as a known failure this way is to
439 delete the test. This is a good idea if there is no intent to fix it,
440 i.e., if the behavior that was formerly considered a bug has become an
441 accepted feature.
442
443 In general, however, it can be useful to keep tests that are known to
444 fail. If someone wants to fix the bug, they will have a very good
445 starting point: an automated test case that reproduces the bug. This
446 makes it much easier to fix the bug, demonstrate that it is fixed, and
447 prevent future regressions.
448
449 ERT displays the same kind of alerts for tests that pass unexpectedly
450 as it displays for unexpected failures. This way, if you make code
451 changes that happen to fix a bug that you weren't aware of, you will
452 know to remove the @code{:expected-result} clause of that test and
453 close the corresponding bug report, if any.
454
455 Since @code{:expected-result} evaluates its argument when the test is
456 loaded, tests can be marked as known failures only on certain Emacs
457 versions, specific architectures, etc.:
458
459 @lisp
460 (ert-deftest foo ()
461 "A test that is expected to fail on Emacs 23 but succeed elsewhere."
462 :expected-result (if (string-match "GNU Emacs 23[.]" (emacs-version))
463 :failed
464 :passed)
465 ...)
466 @end lisp
467
468
469 @node Tests and Their Environment
470 @section Tests and Their Environment
471
472 Sometimes, it doesn't make sense to run a test due to missing
473 preconditions. A required Emacs feature might not be compiled in, the
474 function to be tested could call an external binary which might not be
475 available on the test machine, you name it. In this case, the macro
476 @code{skip-unless} could be used to skip the test:
477
478 @lisp
479 (ert-deftest test-dbus ()
480 "A test that checks D-BUS functionality."
481 (skip-unless (featurep 'dbusbind))
482 ...)
483 @end lisp
484
485 The outcome of running a test should not depend on the current state
486 of the environment, and each test should leave its environment in the
487 same state it found it in. In particular, a test should not depend on
488 any Emacs customization variables or hooks, and if it has to make any
489 changes to Emacs's state or state external to Emacs (such as the file
490 system), it should undo these changes before it returns, regardless of
491 whether it passed or failed.
492
493 Tests should not depend on the environment because any such
494 dependencies can make the test brittle or lead to failures that occur
495 only under certain circumstances and are hard to reproduce. Of
496 course, the code under test may have settings that affect its
497 behavior. In that case, it is best to make the test @code{let}-bind
498 all such setting variables to set up a specific configuration for the
499 duration of the test. The test can also set up a number of different
500 configurations and run the code under test with each.
501
502 Tests that have side effects on their environment should restore it to
503 its original state because any side effects that persist after the
504 test can disrupt the workflow of the programmer running the tests. If
505 the code under test has side effects on Emacs's current state, such as
506 on the current buffer or window configuration, the test should create
507 a temporary buffer for the code to manipulate (using
508 @code{with-temp-buffer}), or save and restore the window configuration
509 (using @code{save-window-excursion}), respectively. For aspects of
510 the state that can not be preserved with such macros, cleanup should
511 be performed with @code{unwind-protect}, to ensure that the cleanup
512 occurs even if the test fails.
513
514 An exception to this are messages that the code under test prints with
515 @code{message} and similar logging; tests should not bother restoring
516 the @file{*Message*} buffer to its original state.
517
518 The above guidelines imply that tests should avoid calling highly
519 customizable commands such as @code{find-file}, except, of course, if
520 such commands are what they want to test. The exact behavior of
521 @code{find-file} depends on many settings such as
522 @code{find-file-wildcards}, @code{enable-local-variables}, and
523 @code{auto-mode-alist}. It is difficult to write a meaningful test if
524 its behavior can be affected by so many external factors. Also,
525 @code{find-file} has side effects that are hard to predict and thus
526 hard to undo: It may create a new buffer or reuse an existing
527 buffer if one is already visiting the requested file; and it runs
528 @code{find-file-hook}, which can have arbitrary side effects.
529
530 Instead, it is better to use lower-level mechanisms with simple and
531 predictable semantics like @code{with-temp-buffer}, @code{insert} or
532 @code{insert-file-contents-literally}, and to activate any desired mode
533 by calling the corresponding function directly, after binding the
534 hook variables to @code{nil}. This avoids the above problems.
535
536
537 @node Useful Techniques
538 @section Useful Techniques when Writing Tests
539
540 Testing simple functions that have no side effects and no dependencies
541 on their environment is easy. Such tests often look like this:
542
543 @lisp
544 (ert-deftest ert-test-mismatch ()
545 (should (eql (ert--mismatch "" "") nil))
546 (should (eql (ert--mismatch "" "a") 0))
547 (should (eql (ert--mismatch "a" "a") nil))
548 (should (eql (ert--mismatch "ab" "a") 1))
549 (should (eql (ert--mismatch "Aa" "aA") 0))
550 (should (eql (ert--mismatch '(a b c) '(a b d)) 2)))
551 @end lisp
552
553 This test calls the function @code{ert--mismatch} several times with
554 various combinations of arguments and compares the return value to the
555 expected return value. (Some programmers prefer @code{(should (eql
556 EXPECTED ACTUAL))} over the @code{(should (eql ACTUAL EXPECTED))}
557 shown here. ERT works either way.)
558
559 Here's a more complicated test:
560
561 @lisp
562 (ert-deftest ert-test-record-backtrace ()
563 (let ((test (make-ert-test :body (lambda () (ert-fail "foo")))))
564 (let ((result (ert-run-test test)))
565 (should (ert-test-failed-p result))
566 (with-temp-buffer
567 (ert--print-backtrace (ert-test-failed-backtrace result))
568 (goto-char (point-min))
569 (end-of-line)
570 (let ((first-line (buffer-substring-no-properties
571 (point-min) (point))))
572 (should (equal first-line
573 " signal(ert-test-failed (\"foo\"))")))))))
574 @end lisp
575
576 This test creates a test object using @code{make-ert-test} whose body
577 will immediately signal failure. It then runs that test and asserts
578 that it fails. Then, it creates a temporary buffer and invokes
579 @code{ert--print-backtrace} to print the backtrace of the failed test
580 to the current buffer. Finally, it extracts the first line from the
581 buffer and asserts that it matches what we expect. It uses
582 @code{buffer-substring-no-properties} and @code{equal} to ignore text
583 properties; for a test that takes properties into account,
584 @code{buffer-substring} and @code{ert-equal-including-properties}
585 could be used instead.
586
587 The reason why this test only checks the first line of the backtrace
588 is that the remainder of the backtrace is dependent on ERT's internals
589 as well as whether the code is running interpreted or compiled. By
590 looking only at the first line, the test checks a useful property---that
591 the backtrace correctly captures the call to @code{signal} that
592 results from the call to @code{ert-fail}---without being brittle.
593
594 This example also shows that writing tests is much easier if the code
595 under test was structured with testing in mind.
596
597 For example, if @code{ert-run-test} accepted only symbols that name
598 tests rather than test objects, the test would need a name for the
599 failing test, which would have to be a temporary symbol generated with
600 @code{make-symbol}, to avoid side effects on Emacs's state. Choosing
601 the right interface for @code{ert-run-tests} allows the test to be
602 simpler.
603
604 Similarly, if @code{ert--print-backtrace} printed the backtrace to a
605 buffer with a fixed name rather than the current buffer, it would be
606 much harder for the test to undo the side effect. Of course, some
607 code somewhere needs to pick the buffer name. But that logic is
608 independent of the logic that prints backtraces, and keeping them in
609 separate functions allows us to test them independently.
610
611 A lot of code that you will encounter in Emacs was not written with
612 testing in mind. Sometimes, the easiest way to write tests for such
613 code is to restructure the code slightly to provide better interfaces
614 for testing. Usually, this makes the interfaces easier to use as
615 well.
616
617
618 @node How to Debug Tests
619 @chapter How to Debug Tests
620
621 This section describes how to use ERT's features to understand why
622 a test failed.
623
624
625 @menu
626 * Understanding Explanations:: How ERT gives details on why an assertion failed.
627 * Interactive Debugging:: Tools available in the ERT results buffer.
628 @end menu
629
630
631 @node Understanding Explanations
632 @section Understanding Explanations
633
634 Failed @code{should} forms are reported like this:
635
636 @example
637 F addition-test
638 (ert-test-failed
639 ((should
640 (=
641 (+ 1 2)
642 4))
643 :form
644 (= 3 4)
645 :value nil))
646 @end example
647
648 ERT shows what the @code{should} expression looked like and what
649 values its subexpressions had: The source code of the assertion was
650 @code{(should (= (+ 1 2) 4))}, which applied the function @code{=} to
651 the arguments @code{3} and @code{4}, resulting in the value
652 @code{nil}. In this case, the test is wrong; it should expect 3
653 rather than 4.
654
655 If a predicate like @code{equal} is used with @code{should}, ERT
656 provides a so-called @emph{explanation}:
657
658 @example
659 F list-test
660 (ert-test-failed
661 ((should
662 (equal
663 (list 'a 'b 'c)
664 '(a b d)))
665 :form
666 (equal
667 (a b c)
668 (a b d))
669 :value nil :explanation
670 (list-elt 2
671 (different-atoms c d))))
672 @end example
673
674 In this case, the function @code{equal} was applied to the arguments
675 @code{(a b c)} and @code{(a b d)}. ERT's explanation shows that
676 the item at index 2 differs between the two lists; in one list, it is
677 the atom c, in the other, it is the atom d.
678
679 In simple examples like the above, the explanation is unnecessary.
680 But in cases where the difference is not immediately apparent, it can
681 save time:
682
683 @example
684 F test1
685 (ert-test-failed
686 ((should
687 (equal x y))
688 :form
689 (equal a a)
690 :value nil :explanation
691 (different-symbols-with-the-same-name a a)))
692 @end example
693
694 ERT only provides explanations for predicates that have an explanation
695 function registered. @xref{Defining Explanation Functions}.
696
697
698 @node Interactive Debugging
699 @section Interactive Debugging
700
701 Debugging failed tests essentially works the same way as debugging any
702 other problems with Lisp code. Here are a few tricks specific to
703 tests:
704
705 @itemize
706 @item Re-run the failed test a few times to see if it fails in the same way
707 each time. It's good to find out whether the behavior is
708 deterministic before spending any time looking for a cause. In the
709 ERT results buffer, @kbd{r} re-runs the selected test.
710
711 @item Use @kbd{.} to jump to the source code of the test to find out exactly
712 what it does. Perhaps the test is broken rather than the code
713 under test.
714
715 @item If the test contains a series of @code{should} forms and you can't
716 tell which one failed, use @kbd{l}, which shows you the list of all
717 @code{should} forms executed during the test before it failed.
718
719 @item Use @kbd{b} to view the backtrace. You can also use @kbd{d} to re-run
720 the test with debugging enabled, this will enter the debugger and show
721 the backtrace as well; but the top few frames shown there will not be
722 relevant to you since they are ERT's own debugger hook. @kbd{b}
723 strips them out, so it is more convenient.
724
725 @item If the test or the code under testing prints messages using
726 @code{message}, use @kbd{m} to see what messages it printed before it
727 failed. This can be useful to figure out how far it got.
728
729 @item You can instrument tests for debugging the same way you instrument
730 @code{defun}s for debugging: go to the source code of the test and
731 type @kbd{@kbd{C-u} @kbd{C-M-x}}. Then, go back to the ERT buffer and
732 re-run the test with @kbd{r} or @kbd{d}.
733
734 @item If you have been editing and rearranging tests, it is possible that
735 ERT remembers an old test that you have since renamed or removed:
736 renamings or removals of definitions in the source code leave around a
737 stray definition under the old name in the running process (this is a
738 common problem in Lisp). In such a situation, hit @kbd{D} to let ERT
739 forget about the obsolete test.
740 @end itemize
741
742
743 @node Extending ERT
744 @chapter Extending ERT
745
746 There are several ways to add functionality to ERT.
747
748 @menu
749 * Defining Explanation Functions:: Teach ERT about more predicates.
750 * Low-Level Functions for Working with Tests:: Use ERT's data for your purposes.
751 @end menu
752
753
754 @node Defining Explanation Functions
755 @section Defining Explanation Functions
756
757 The explanation function for a predicate is a function that takes the
758 same arguments as the predicate and returns an @emph{explanation}.
759 The explanation should explain why the predicate, when invoked with
760 the arguments given to the explanation function, returns the value
761 that it returns. The explanation can be any object but should have a
762 comprehensible printed representation. If the return value of the
763 predicate needs no explanation for a given list of arguments, the
764 explanation function should return @code{nil}.
765
766 To associate an explanation function with a predicate, add the
767 property @code{ert-explainer} to the symbol that names the predicate.
768 The value of the property should be the symbol that names the
769 explanation function.
770
771
772 @node Low-Level Functions for Working with Tests
773 @section Low-Level Functions for Working with Tests
774
775 Both @code{ert-run-tests-interactively} and @code{ert-run-tests-batch}
776 are implemented on top of the lower-level test handling code in the
777 sections of @file{ert.el} labeled ``Facilities for running a single test'',
778 ``Test selectors'', and ``Facilities for running a whole set of tests''.
779
780 If you want to write code that works with ERT tests, you should take a
781 look at this lower-level code. Symbols that start with @code{ert--}
782 are internal to ERT, whereas those that start with @code{ert-} are
783 meant to be usable by other code. But there is no mature API yet.
784
785 Contributions to ERT are welcome.
786
787
788 @node Other Testing Concepts
789 @chapter Other Testing Concepts
790
791 For information on mocks, stubs, fixtures, or test suites, see below.
792
793
794 @menu
795 * Mocks and Stubs:: Stubbing out code that is irrelevant to the test.
796 * Fixtures and Test Suites:: How ERT differs from tools for other languages.
797 @end menu
798
799 @node Mocks and Stubs
800 @section Other Tools for Emacs Lisp
801
802 Stubbing out functions or using so-called @emph{mocks} can make it
803 easier to write tests. See
804 @url{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_object} for an explanation of
805 the corresponding concepts in object-oriented languages.
806
807 ERT does not have built-in support for mocks or stubs. The package
808 @code{el-mock} (see @url{http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/el-mock.el})
809 offers mocks for Emacs Lisp and can be used in conjunction with ERT.
810
811
812 @node Fixtures and Test Suites
813 @section Fixtures and Test Suites
814
815 In many ways, ERT is similar to frameworks for other languages like
816 SUnit or JUnit. However, two features commonly found in such
817 frameworks are notably absent from ERT: fixtures and test suites.
818
819 Fixtures are mainly used (e.g., in SUnit or JUnit) to provide an
820 environment for a set of tests, and consist of set-up and tear-down
821 functions.
822
823 While fixtures are a useful syntactic simplification in other
824 languages, this does not apply to Lisp, where higher-order functions
825 and @code{unwind-protect} are available. One way to implement and use a
826 fixture in ERT is
827
828 @lisp
829 (defun my-fixture (body)
830 (unwind-protect
831 (progn [set up]
832 (funcall body))
833 [tear down]))
834
835 (ert-deftest my-test ()
836 (my-fixture
837 (lambda ()
838 [test code])))
839 @end lisp
840
841 (Another way would be a @code{with-my-fixture} macro.) This solves
842 the set-up and tear-down part, and additionally allows any test
843 to use any combination of fixtures, so it is more flexible than what
844 other tools typically allow.
845
846 If the test needs access to the environment the fixture sets up, the
847 fixture can be modified to pass arguments to the body.
848
849 These are well-known Lisp techniques. Special syntax for them could
850 be added but would provide only a minor simplification.
851
852 (If you are interested in such syntax, note that splitting set-up and
853 tear-down into separate functions, like *Unit tools usually do, makes
854 it impossible to establish dynamic @code{let} bindings as part of the
855 fixture. So, blindly imitating the way fixtures are implemented in
856 other languages would be counter-productive in Lisp.)
857
858 The purpose of test suites is to group related tests together.
859
860 The most common use of this is to run just the tests for one
861 particular module. Since symbol prefixes are the usual way of
862 separating module namespaces in Emacs Lisp, test selectors already
863 solve this by allowing regexp matching on test names; e.g., the
864 selector "^ert-" selects ERT's self-tests.
865
866 Other uses include grouping tests by their expected execution time,
867 e.g., to run quick tests during interactive development and slow tests less
868 often. This can be achieved with the @code{:tag} argument to
869 @code{ert-deftest} and @code{tag} test selectors.
870
871 @node GNU Free Documentation License
872 @appendix GNU Free Documentation License
873 @include doclicense.texi
874
875 @bye
876
877 @c LocalWords: ERT JUnit namespace docstring ERT's
878 @c LocalWords: backtrace makefiles workflow backtraces API SUnit
879 @c LocalWords: subexpressions