Syntax extension for writing in-line tests in ocaml code.
The following constructs are now valid structure items:
let%test "name" = <boolean expr> (* true means ok, false or exn means broken *)
let%test_unit "name" = <unit expr> (* () means ok, exn means broken *)
let%test_module "name" = (module <module-expr>) (* to group tests (to share
some setup for instance) *)
We may write _
instead of "name"
for anonymous tests. It is also possible to use
[%name <string expr>]
for a dynamically computed name.
When running tests, they will be executed when the control flow reaches the structure item (i.e. at toplevel for a toplevel test; when the functor is applied for a test defined in the body of a functor, etc.).
One can tag tests with the following construct:
let%test "name" [@tags "no-js"] = <expr>
let%test "name" [@tags "no-js", "other-tag"] = <expr>
let%test _ [@tags "no-js"] = <expr>
let%test _ [@tags "js-only"] = <expr>
Available tags are:
-
no-js
for tests that should not run when compiling Ocaml to Javascript -
js-only
for tests that should only run in Javascript -
32-bits-only
for tests that should only run in 32 bits architectures -
64-bits-only
for tests that should only run in 64 bits architectures -
fast-flambda
for tests that might only pass when compiling with flambda or flambda2, -O3, and cross library inlining -
fast-flambda2
for tests that might only pass when compiling with flambda2, -O3, and cross library inlining -
x-library-inlining-sensitive
for tests that might only pass when compiling with cross library inlining switched on -
disabled
for tests that should not run (unless requested with -require-tag)
One can also tag entire test modules similarly:
let%test_module "name" [@tags "no-js"] = (module struct end)
The flags -drop-tag
and -require-tag
can be passed to the test runner to restrict
which tests are run. We say the tags of a test are the union of the tags applied directly
to that test using [@tags ...]
and the tags of all enclosing modules. It is to this
union that the predicates -drop-tag
and -require-tag
are applied.
If it is clear, from a test-module's tags, that none of the tests within will possibly match the tag predicates imposed by the command line flags, then additionally the top-level of that module will not be run.
let is_prime = <magic>
let%test _ = is_prime 5
let%test _ = is_prime 7
let%test _ = not (is_prime 1)
let%test _ = not (is_prime 8)
module Make(C : S) = struct
<magic>
let%test _ = <some expression>
end
module M = Make(Int)
Since the module passed as an argument to let%test_module
is only initialised when we
run the tests, it is ok to perform side-effects in the module-expression argument.
let%test_module _ = (module struct
module UID = Unique_id.Int(struct end)
let%test _ = UID.create() <> UID.create()
end)
Inline tests can only be used in libraries, not executables.
The standard build rules create an executable script inline_tests_runner
which runs all
tests in the directory. This script takes optional arguments (see below) to restrict which
tests are run.
The full set of tests are run when building the jenga runtest
alias.
jenga .runtest
Inline tests can only be used in libraries, not executables.
To use this with dune, see dune's documentation. At the time of writing of the current document, the short version is:
- define a library this way:
(library
(name foo)
(inline_tests)
(preprocess (pps ppx_inline_test)))
- add tests to it
- call
dune runtest
Code using this extension must be compiled and linked using the
ppx_inline_test.runtime-lib
library. The ppx_inline_test
syntax extension will reject
any test if it wasn't passed a -inline-test-lib libname
flag.
Tests are only executed when both these conditions are met:
-
the executable containing the tests is linked with
ppx_inline_test.runner.lib
-
the executable containing the tests is called with command line arguments:
your.exe inline-test-runner libname [options]
This libname
is a way of restricting the tests run by the executable. The dependencies
of your library (or executable) could also use ppx_inline_test
, but you don't
necessarily want to run their tests too. For instance, core
is built by giving
-inline-test-lib core
and core_extended
is built by giving -inline-test-lib core_extended
. And now when an executable linked with both core
and core_extended
is
run with a libname
of core_extended
, only the tests of core_extended
are run.
Finally, after running tests, Ppx_inline_test_lib.exit ()
should be called (to
exit with an error and a summary of the number of failed tests if there were errors or
exit normally otherwise).
One can construct a dual-use binary that only runs the tests when prompted to (through the
command line), by sticking the following piece of code in it, after the tests have run but
before the binary starts doing non-test side effects. However be aware that
Base.am_testing
will be true
even when not running tests, which may be undesirable.
match Ppx_inline_test_lib.testing with
| `Testing `Am_test_runner ->
print_endline "Exiting test suite";
Ppx_inline_test_lib.exit ()
| `Testing _ -> exit 0
| `Not_testing -> ()
The executable that runs tests can take additional command line arguments. The most useful of these are:
-
-stop-on-error
Stop running tests after the first error.
-
-verbose
to see the tests as they run
-
-only-test location
where location is either a filename
-only-test main.ml
, a filename with a line number-only-test main.ml:32
, or with the syntax that the compiler uses:File "main.ml"
, orFile "main.ml", line 32
orFile "main.ml", line 32, characters 2-6
(characters are ignored). The position that matters is the position of thelet%test
orlet%test_unit
.The positions shown by
-verbose
are valid inputs for-only-test
.If no
-only-test
flag is given, all the tests are run. Otherwise all the tests matching any of the locations are run. -
-drop-tag tag
drop all the tests tagged with
tag
.
These can be specified to jenga like this:
(library
(...
(inline_tests ((flags (-stop-on-error))))
...
))
and to dune like this:
(library
...
(inline_tests (flags (-stop-on-error)))
...)
If you pass arguments of the form -inline-test-lib lib:partition
to ppx_inline_test
,
then you will be able to run tests from a given source file in parallel with tests from
other source files. All the tests inside the same source file are still run sequentially.
You should pick different partition
names for the different files in your library (the
name of the .ml files for instance).
ppx_inline_test_lib
currently requires some external system like a build system to run
it multiple times in parallel, although we may make it possible to run the inline tests in
parallel directly in the future.
If you do that, you can now use two new flags of the executable containing the tests:
-
-list-partitions
lists all the partitions that contain at least one test, one per line.
-
-partition P
only run the tests of the library that are encountered at toplevel of the source file that was preprocessed with the given partition
P
(the tests need not be syntactically in the file, they could be the result of applying a functor)
A build system can combine these two commands by first listing partitions, and then running one command for each partition.