| --- |
| short-description: Meson's own unit-test system |
| ... |
| |
| # Unit tests |
| |
| Meson comes with a fully functional unit test system. To use it simply |
| build an executable and then use it in a test. |
| |
| ```meson |
| e = executable('prog', 'testprog.c') |
| test('name of test', e) |
| ``` |
| |
| You can add as many tests as you want. They are run with the command `meson |
| test`. |
| |
| Meson captures the output of all tests and writes it in the log file |
| `meson-logs/testlog.txt`. |
| |
| ## Test parameters |
| |
| Some tests require the use of command line arguments or environment |
| variables. These are simple to define. |
| |
| ```meson |
| test('command line test', exe, args : ['first', 'second']) |
| test('envvar test', exe2, env : ['key1=value1', 'key2=value2']) |
| ``` |
| |
| Note how you need to specify multiple values as an array. |
| |
| ### MALLOC_PERTURB_ |
| |
| By default, environment variable |
| [`MALLOC_PERTURB_`](http://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man3/mallopt.3.html) is |
| set to a random value between 1..255. This can help find memory leaks on |
| configurations using glibc, including with non-GCC compilers. This feature |
| can be disabled as discussed in [[test]]. |
| |
| ## Coverage |
| |
| If you enable coverage measurements by giving Meson the command line |
| flag `-Db_coverage=true`, you can generate coverage reports after |
| running the tests (running the tests is required to gather the list of |
| functions that get called). Meson will autodetect what coverage |
| generator tools you have installed and will generate the corresponding |
| targets. These targets are `coverage-xml` and `coverage-text` which |
| are both provided by [Gcovr](http://gcovr.com) (version 3.3 or higher) |
| `coverage-sonarqube` which is provided by [Gcovr](http://gcovr.com) (version 4.2 or higher) |
| and `coverage-html`, which requires |
| [Lcov](https://ltp.sourceforge.io/coverage/lcov.php) and |
| [GenHTML](https://linux.die.net/man/1/genhtml) or |
| [Gcovr](http://gcovr.com). As a convenience, a high-level `coverage` |
| target is also generated which will produce all 3 coverage report |
| types, if possible. |
| |
| The output of these commands is written to the log directory `meson-logs` in |
| your build directory. |
| |
| ## Parallelism |
| |
| To reduce test times, Meson will by default run multiple unit tests in |
| parallel. It is common to have some tests which can not be run in |
| parallel because they require unique hold on some resource such as a |
| file or a D-Bus name. You have to specify these tests with a keyword |
| argument. |
| |
| ```meson |
| test('unique test', t, is_parallel : false) |
| ``` |
| |
| Meson will then make sure that no other unit test is running at the |
| same time. Non-parallel tests take longer to run so it is recommended |
| that you write your unit tests to be parallel executable whenever |
| possible. |
| |
| By default Meson uses as many concurrent processes as there are cores |
| on the test machine. You can override this with the environment |
| variable `MESON_TESTTHREADS` like this. |
| |
| ```console |
| $ MESON_TESTTHREADS=5 meson test |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Priorities |
| |
| *(added in version 0.52.0)* |
| |
| Tests can be assigned a priority that determines when a test is |
| *started*. Tests with higher priority are started first, tests with |
| lower priority started later. The default priority is 0, Meson makes |
| no guarantee on the ordering of tests with identical priority. |
| |
| ```meson |
| test('started second', t, priority : 0) |
| test('started third', t, priority : -50) |
| test('started first', t, priority : 1000) |
| ``` |
| |
| Note that the test priority only affects the starting order of tests |
| and subsequent tests are affected by how long it takes previous tests |
| to complete. It is thus possible that a higher-priority test is still |
| running when lower-priority tests with a shorter runtime have |
| completed. |
| |
| ## Skipped tests and hard errors |
| |
| Sometimes a test can only determine at runtime that it can not be run. |
| |
| For the default `exitcode` testing protocol, the GNU standard approach |
| in this case is to exit the program with error code 77. Meson will |
| detect this and report these tests as skipped rather than failed. This |
| behavior was added in version 0.37.0. |
| |
| For TAP-based tests, skipped tests should print a single line starting |
| with `1..0 # SKIP`. |
| |
| In addition, sometimes a test fails set up so that it should fail even |
| if it is marked as an expected failure. The GNU standard approach in |
| this case is to exit the program with error code 99. Again, Meson will |
| detect this and report these tests as `ERROR`, ignoring the setting of |
| `should_fail`. This behavior was added in version 0.50.0. |
| |
| ## Testing tool |
| |
| The goal of the Meson test tool is to provide a simple way to run |
| tests in a variety of different ways. The tool is designed to be run |
| in the build directory. |
| |
| The simplest thing to do is just to run all tests. |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test |
| ``` |
| |
| ### Run subsets of tests |
| |
| For clarity, consider the meson.build containing: |
| |
| ```meson |
| |
| test('A', ..., suite: 'foo') |
| test('B', ..., suite: ['foo', 'bar']) |
| test('C', ..., suite: 'bar') |
| test('D', ..., suite: 'baz') |
| |
| ``` |
| |
| Specify test(s) by name like: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test A D |
| ``` |
| |
| Tests belonging to a suite `suite` can be run as follows |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --suite (sub)project_name:suite |
| ``` |
| |
| Since version *0.46*, `(sub)project_name` can be omitted if it is the |
| top-level project. |
| |
| Multiple suites are specified like: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --suite foo --suite bar |
| ``` |
| |
| NOTE: If you choose to specify both suite(s) and specific test |
| name(s), the test name(s) must be contained in the suite(s). This |
| however is redundant-- it would be more useful to specify either |
| specific test names or suite(s). |
| |
| ### Other test options |
| |
| Sometimes you need to run the tests multiple times, which is done like this: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --repeat=10 |
| ``` |
| |
| Invoking tests via a helper executable such as Valgrind can be done with the |
| `--wrap` argument |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --wrap=valgrind testname |
| ``` |
| |
| Arguments to the wrapper binary can be given like this: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --wrap='valgrind --tool=helgrind' testname |
| ``` |
| |
| Meson also supports running the tests under GDB. Just doing this: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --gdb testname |
| ``` |
| |
| Meson will launch `gdb` all set up to run the test. Just type `run` in |
| the GDB command prompt to start the program. |
| |
| The second use case is a test that segfaults only rarely. In this case |
| you can invoke the following command: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --gdb --repeat=10000 testname |
| ``` |
| |
| This runs the test up to 10 000 times under GDB automatically. If the |
| program crashes, GDB will halt and the user can debug the application. |
| Note that testing timeouts are disabled in this case so `meson test` |
| will not kill `gdb` while the developer is still debugging it. The |
| downside is that if the test binary freezes, the test runner will wait |
| forever. |
| |
| Sometimes, the GDB binary is not in the PATH variable or the user |
| wants to use a GDB replacement. Therefore, the invoked GDB program can |
| be specified *(added 0.52.0)*: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --gdb --gdb-path /path/to/gdb testname |
| ``` |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --print-errorlogs |
| ``` |
| |
| Meson will report the output produced by the failing tests along with |
| other useful information as the environmental variables. This is |
| useful, for example, when you run the tests on Travis-CI, Jenkins and |
| the like. |
| |
| **Timeout** |
| |
| In the test case options, the `timeout` option is specified in a number of seconds. |
| |
| To disable timeout in test cases, add `timeout: 0` or a negative value to allow |
| infinite duration for the test case to complete. |
| |
| For running tests, you can specify a command line argument for overriding the |
| timeout as well: |
| |
| ```console |
| $ meson test --timeout-multiplier 0 |
| ``` |
| |
| For further information see the command line help of Meson by running |
| `meson test -h`. |
| |
| ## Legacy notes |
| |
| If `meson test` does not work for you, you likely have a old version |
| of Meson. In that case you should call `mesontest` instead. If |
| `mesontest` doesn't work either you have a very old version prior to |
| 0.37.0 and should upgrade. |
| |
| ## Test outputs |
| |
| Meson will write several different files with detailed results of |
| running tests. These will be written into $builddir/meson-logs/ |
| |
| ### testlog.json |
| |
| This is not a proper json file, but a file containing one valid json |
| object per line. This is file is designed so each line is streamed out |
| as each test is run, so it can be read as a stream while the test |
| harness is running |
| |
| ### testlog.junit.xml |
| |
| This is a valid JUnit XML description of all tests run. It is not |
| streamed out, and is written only once all tests complete running. |
| |
| When tests use the `tap` protocol each test will be recorded as a |
| testsuite container, with each case named by the number of the result. |
| |
| When tests use the `gtest` protocol Meson will inject arguments to the |
| test to generate its own JUnit XML, which Meson will include as part |
| of this XML file. |
| |
| *New in 0.55.0* |