These tests don't have their own source code but rather reuse the
counting selftest with additional command-line options.
Note that currently the -v1 switch only changes the plain text output,
and the expected xml output is identical to that of the counting test.
This may change in the future however.
This commit also restores a couple of lists to alphabetical order, where
the findtestdata selftest was not sorted into the list correctly.
Change-Id: Ie38e255f8029157b34162b3864b5fa66e137d74a
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
The private git history shows that the test program associated with this
data file was missing from the original commit and was never
subsequently added.
Change-Id: I3401724ac04168158a48eb06436db83d3557711f
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
Previously the silent logging mode suppressed passes, skips and internal
testlib info messages, but did not suppress debugging output, making it
hard to see the fails in a noisy test. This commit changes silent mode
so that it suppresses all output except test failures and fatal errors,
making silent mode truly useful for seeing just the important test
output.
This commit also adds a selftest to verify the behaviour of silent mode.
Change-Id: I75420aead03682306210746a87e2a3b608b58fc6
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
Prior to this commit, a benchmark test could report 0..n passes and 0..m
fails or skips, where n is the number of accumulation iterations used to
collect benchmark data and m is the number of times the test function
was invoked. Depending on the type of benchmark measurer being used,
this could result in a very large volume of test output and inconsistent
pass, fail and skip counts between test runs.
This commit changes the behaviour so that each benchmark test reports
one pass, fail or skip, regardless of the number of iterations used to
collect benchmark data.
This commit also prevents benchmark data being reported in the test
output if the benchmark test failed or skipped, as any benchmark data is
of dubious value in such cases.
The latter change in behaviour requires a minor modification to the
badxml selftest, which now tests quoting of literal strings in xml test
output for both passing and failing benchmarks.
Finally, this commit also adds a new selftest specifically for verifying
correct behaviour for benchmarks that fail or skip.
Task-number: QTBUG-24313
Change-Id: I3426dc659a7511b62fd183a031c7235bc753f497
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
Some of the subtests are only run with plain-text output format. For
those subtests, the other output formats were unused and gradually
becoming out-of-date.
Change-Id: I4c10f7f5bab2d2cc7d2d2ad641fbf5d4df02b798
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
The test simply generates each possible pair of Pass, Fail and Skip
results. At present the test simply serves to demonstrate the current
shortcomings of testlib's plain text logging, namely:
* If a test function passes for all data rows, that is counted as one
pass, but each skipped or failed row counts as one skip or fail.
* Only skipped and failed rows are reported individually in the test
output. Passed rows are not reported, so it is impossible to see how
many rows were executed.
* A skip followed by a pass will be reported as an overall pass for the
test function, but the same rows in reverse order will not report any
overall result for the test function.
Future commits will attempt to correct these problems.
Task-number: QTBUG-22124
Change-Id: If8c7ea15fc43ba9a1bccd0e881c1efc18e705b25
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
The overload is used in Qt Creator
(see src/libs/extensionsystem/pluginmanager.cpp).
The use case here is an application whose internal
QObjects can be tested by passing a command line parameter.
For this use case, it is inconvenient to have to allocate
memory and create a char argv[]- array.
This reverts commit ad80d42f8e.
Change-Id: I2a2f91e2840100fd62743f6d03b33005d67b18f8
Reviewed-by: Daniel Teske <daniel.teske@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
The overload of QTest::qExec() that takes a QStringList is not used
anywhere in Qt's autotests, despite having been in the qtestlib API
since Qt 4.4.
This lack of use most likely derives from the fact that none of the
QTEST_MAIN macros use the overload, and more than 99% of Qt's tests
use those macros to avoid explicitly calling QTest::qExec().
Change-Id: I264b21d7fe1a9f2d565f748cf8bbe32414a73bb0
Reviewed-by: Lars Knoll <lars.knoll@nokia.com>
Automated tests often need to load some data from external files.
Currently, a wide variety of approaches for this have been used in Qt
autotests, including:
- embed the source directory into the test binary at compile time, and
find the testdata relative to that; this fails when the source tree
is no longer available (e.g. when the tests are deployed to a device).
- use a path relative to the current working directory, and trust that
the caller always sets the current working directory such that the
testdata can be found; this fails when the caller uses a different
working directory than expected.
- use a path relative to QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath();
this fails when source tree != build tree (since testdata is not
automatically copied into the build tree).
- compile the files into the binary using the Qt resource system; this
should work, but does not allow for testing of code which genuinely
needs external files.
It seems that there is not a simple method for determining the testdata
path which can be reliably used in all circumstances, so various tests
have reinvented the testdata location method in different ways.
Therefore, this is a good candidate for an addition to the testlib API.
The current implementation of QFINDTESTDATA is able to find testdata
in all three of (build tree, install tree, source tree), in that order.
Change-Id: Ib2fed860723ccf437240da3b00db22dfe1a6b56c
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
(Note: This feature is ported from Qt 4.8.
See the following commits:
01575deafb7d26ca2431374e92c6d71de96547c7
4866d1ba8afbab61e102942d1ea93b81fea053d6
)
Passing the -datatags option to a QTestLib program prints the
available data tags to standard output.
For completeness, the test case name is also printed
at the start of each output line. (Although the file name
is supposed to match the lower-case version of the test case
name, this is currently not true in all cases (particularly not
under tests/benchmarks/). Even if there was a script to enforce this
convention, the -datatags option provides this information in a
reliable way.)
Data tags for each test function (f() in this case) are printed in
four different ways depending on the presence of local and global
data tags:
Case 1: No tags:
tst_MyTestCasetst_MyTestCase f
Case 2: Local tags only:
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 1
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 2
...
Case 3: Global tags only:
tst_MyTestCase f __global__ global tag 1
tst_MyTestCase f __global__ global tag 2
...
Case 4: Local and global tags:
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 1 __global__ global tag 1
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 2 __global__ global tag 1
...
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 1 __global__ global tag 2
tst_MyTestCase f local tag 2 __global__ global tag 2
...
...
Note that the string __global__ is assumed to be highly unlikely to occur
in a data tag (if it does, an ambiguity results).
Change-Id: Ib51aa0c3c32ad52e52ce519729292cf8f0ec5d50
Reviewed-by: Jason McDonald <jason.mcdonald@nokia.com>
Reviewed-by: Sergio Ahumada <sergio.ahumada@nokia.com>
This test duplicates the skipinitdata selftest and has slightly less
informative output.
Change-Id: Ifd40e3ef8030059ec8fa0089ce5b2a994624abeb
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
This test was attempting to verify two completely unrelated things, so
this commit splits it into two tests.
Also, printf calls are replaced by qDebug so that the test does not
bypass the testlib loggers.
Change-Id: I1a202af38ce2c69690a32d93405ba604ec6cabee
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt-project.org/5178
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>
This test is not useful for finding bugs in qtestlib's logging code,
because it bypasses the qtestlib loggers and doesn't play nice with
tst_selftest. Neither is this test very useful for finding bugs in
QTest::qWait(), as the test only proves the qWait() terminates, not that
it waits accurately, or even that it waits at all.
Change-Id: Ia5dd7cbaf3a6fbb4e94e54ed155263580e495694
Reviewed-on: http://codereview.qt-project.org/5173
Reviewed-by: Qt Sanity Bot <qt_sanity_bot@ovi.com>
Reviewed-by: Rohan McGovern <rohan.mcgovern@nokia.com>