# Repeat until no more failures
$ prove -j 15 --state=failed,save ./t[0-9]*.sh
+You can give DEFAULT_TEST_TARGET=prove on the make command (or define it
+in config.mak) to cause "make test" to run tests under prove.
+GIT_PROVE_OPTS can be used to pass additional options, e.g.
+
+ $ make DEFAULT_TEST_TARGET=prove GIT_PROVE_OPTS='--timer --jobs 16' test
+
You can also run each test individually from command line, like this:
$ sh ./t3010-ls-files-killed-modified.sh
--debug::
This may help the person who is developing a new test.
It causes the command defined with test_debug to run.
+ The "trash" directory (used to store all temporary data
+ during testing) is not deleted even if there are no
+ failed tests so that you can inspect its contents after
+ the test finished.
--immediate::
This causes the test to immediately exit upon the first
not see any output, this option implies --verbose. For
convenience, it also implies --tee.
+ Note that valgrind is run with the option --leak-check=no,
+ as the git process is short-lived and some errors are not
+ interesting. In order to run a single command under the same
+ conditions manually, you should set GIT_VALGRIND to point to
+ the 't/valgrind/' directory and use the commands under
+ 't/valgrind/bin/'.
+
--tee::
In addition to printing the test output to the terminal,
write it to files named 't/test-results/$TEST_NAME.out'.
If you create files under t/ directory (i.e. here) that is not
the top-level test script, never name the file to match the above
pattern. The Makefile here considers all such files as the
-top-level test script and tries to run all of them. A care is
+top-level test script and tries to run all of them. Care is
especially needed if you are creating a common test library
file, similar to test-lib.sh, because such a library file may
not be suitable for standalone execution.
test ...
That way all of the commands in your tests will succeed or fail. If
- you must ignore the return value of something (e.g., the return
- after unsetting a variable that was already unset is unportable) it's
- best to indicate so explicitly with a semicolon:
-
- unset HLAGH;
- git merge hla &&
- git push gh &&
- test ...
+ you must ignore the return value of something, consider using a
+ helper function (e.g. use sane_unset instead of unset, in order
+ to avoid unportable return value for unsetting a variable that was
+ already unset), or prepending the command with test_might_fail or
+ test_must_fail.
- Check the test coverage for your tests. See the "Test coverage"
below.
- Don't blindly follow test coverage metrics, they're a good way to
- spot if you've missed something. If a new function you added
- doesn't have any coverage you're probably doing something wrong,
+ Don't blindly follow test coverage metrics; if a new function you added
+ doesn't have any coverage, then you're probably doing something wrong,
but having 100% coverage doesn't necessarily mean that you tested
everything.
Tests that are likely to smoke out future regressions are better
than tests that just inflate the coverage metrics.
+ - When a test checks for an absolute path that a git command generated,
+ construct the expected value using $(pwd) rather than $PWD,
+ $TEST_DIRECTORY, or $TRASH_DIRECTORY. It makes a difference on
+ Windows, where the shell (MSYS bash) mangles absolute path names.
+ For details, see the commit message of 4114156ae9.
+
Don't:
- exit() within a <script> part.
Skipping tests
--------------
-If you need to skip tests you should do so be using the three-arg form
+If you need to skip tests you should do so by using the three-arg form
of the test_* functions (see the "Test harness library" section
below), e.g.:
Like test_expect_success this function can optionally use a three
argument invocation with a prerequisite as the first argument.
- - test_expect_code [<prereq>] <code> <message> <script>
-
- Analogous to test_expect_success, but pass the test if it exits
- with a given exit <code>
-
- test_expect_code 1 'Merge with d/f conflicts' 'git merge "merge msg" B master'
-
- test_debug <script>
This takes a single argument, <script>, and evaluates it only
- test_tick
Make commit and tag names consistent by setting the author and
- committer times to defined stated. Subsequent calls will
+ committer times to defined state. Subsequent calls will
advance the times by a fixed amount.
- test_commit <message> [<filename> [<contents>]]
'Perl API' \
"$PERL_PATH" "$TEST_DIRECTORY"/t9700/test.pl
+ - test_expect_code <exit-code> <command>
+
+ Run a command and ensure that it exits with the given exit code.
+ For example:
+
+ test_expect_success 'Merge with d/f conflicts' '
+ test_expect_code 1 git merge "merge msg" B master
+ '
+
- test_must_fail <git-command>
Run a git command and ensure it fails in a controlled way. Use
<expected> file. This behaves like "cmp" but produces more
helpful output when the test is run with "-v" option.
+ - test_line_count (= | -lt | -ge | ...) <length> <file>
+
+ Check whether a file has the length it is expected to.
+
- test_path_is_file <file> [<diagnosis>]
test_path_is_dir <dir> [<diagnosis>]
test_path_is_missing <path> [<diagnosis>]