On Fri, Oct 22, 2021 at 9:29 AM Daniel Latypov dlatypov@google.com wrote:
On Wed, Oct 20, 2021 at 11:28 PM David Gow davidgow@google.com wrote:
The (K)TAP spec encourages test output to begin with a 'test plan': a count of the number of tests being run of the form: 1..n
However, some test suites might not know the number of subtests in advance (for example, KUnit's parameterised tests use a generator function). In this case, it's not possible to print the test plan in advance.
kunit_tool already parses test output which doesn't contain a plan, but reports an error. Since we want to use nested subtests with KUnit paramterised tests, remove this error.
Signed-off-by: David Gow davidgow@google.com
tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py | 5 ++--- tools/testing/kunit/kunit_tool_test.py | 5 ++++- 2 files changed, 6 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py index 3355196d0515..50ded55c168c 100644 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_parser.py @@ -340,8 +340,8 @@ def parse_test_plan(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: """ Parses test plan line and stores the expected number of subtests in test object. Reports an error if expected count is 0.
Returns False and reports missing test plan error if fails to parse
test plan.
Returns False and sets expected_count to None if there is no valid test
plan. Accepted format: - '1..[number of subtests]'
@@ -356,7 +356,6 @@ def parse_test_plan(lines: LineStream, test: Test) -> bool: match = TEST_PLAN.match(lines.peek()) if not match: test.expected_count = None
test.add_error('missing plan line!')
This works well, but there's an edge case.
This patch means we no longer print an error when there are no test cases in a subtest. We relied on a check just a bit lower in this function.
Consider
$ ./tools/testing/kunit/kunit.py parse <<EOF TAP version 14 1..1 # Subtest: suite 1..1 # Subtest: case ok 1 - case ok 1 - suite EOF
This produces the following output (timestamps removed)
============================================================ ==================== suite (1 subtest) ===================== =========================== case =========================== ====================== [PASSED] case ======================= ====================== [PASSED] suite ====================== ============================================================
Should we surface some sort of error here?
I thought about this a bit (and started prototyping it), and think the answer is probably "no" (or, perhaps, "optionally"). Largely because I think it'd be technically valid to have, e.g., a parameterised test whose generator function can legitimately provide zero subtests. And while that's probably worth warning about if it's the only test running, if you're trying to run all tests, and one random subtest of a test of a suite has no subtests, that seems like it'd be more annoying to error on than anything else.
That being said, I'm not opposed to implementing it as an option, or at least having the test status set to NO_ERROR. The implementation I've experimented with basically moves the check to "parse_test", and errors if the number of subtests is 0 after parsing, if parent_test is true (or main, but my rough plan was to make main imply parent_test, and adjust the various conditions to match). I haven't looked into exactly how this is bubbled up yet, but I'd be okay with having an error if there are no tests run at all.
I'll keep playing with this anyway: it's definitely a bit more of a minefield than I'd originally thought. :-)
-- David
return False test.log.append(lines.pop()) expected_count = int(match.group(1))
diff --git a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_tool_test.py b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_tool_test.py index 9c4126731457..bc8793145713 100755 --- a/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_tool_test.py +++ b/tools/testing/kunit/kunit_tool_test.py @@ -191,7 +191,10 @@ class KUnitParserTest(unittest.TestCase): result = kunit_parser.parse_run_tests( kunit_parser.extract_tap_lines( file.readlines()))
self.assertEqual(2, result.test.counts.errors)
# A missing test plan is not an error.
self.assertEqual(0, result.test.counts.errors)
# All tests should be accounted for.
self.assertEqual(10, result.test.counts.total()) self.assertEqual( kunit_parser.TestStatus.SUCCESS, result.status)
-- 2.33.0.1079.g6e70778dc9-goog