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[tor-commits] [tor/master] finish up doc/WritingTests.txt



commit f3804a4d6f488e2cd35001ec856ebc79ed769bbb
Author: Nick Mathewson <nickm@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Date:   Thu Oct 8 10:55:31 2015 -0400

    finish up doc/WritingTests.txt
---
 doc/WritingTests.txt |  144 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 1 file changed, 136 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/WritingTests.txt b/doc/WritingTests.txt
index 62a17e3..977b836 100644
--- a/doc/WritingTests.txt
+++ b/doc/WritingTests.txt
@@ -66,6 +66,8 @@ and stuff like that.
 
 === Finding test coverage
 
+Test coverage is a measurement of which lines your tests actually visit.
+
 When you configure Tor with the --enable-coverage option, it should
 build with support for coverage in the unit tests, and in a special
 "tor-cov" binary.
@@ -245,29 +247,155 @@ And later, you can restore the original function with:
 For more information, see the definitions of this mocking logic in
 testsupport.h.
 
+=== Okay but what should my tests actually do?
+
+We talk above  about "test coverage" -- making sure that your tests visit
+every line of code, or every branch of code.  But visiting the code isn't
+enough: we want to verify that it's correct.
+
+So when writing tests, try to make tests that should pass with any correct
+implementation of the code, and that should fail if the code doesn't do what
+it's supposed to do.
+
+You can write "black-box" tests or "glass-box" tests.  A black-box test is
+one that you write without looking at the structure of the function.  A
+glass-box one is one you implement while looking at how the function is
+implemented.
+
+In either case, make sure to consider common cases *and* edge cases; success
+cases and failure csaes.
+
+For example, consider testing this function:
+
+  /** Remove all elements E from sl such that E==element.  Preserve
+   * the order of any elements before E, but elements after E can be
+   * rearranged.
+   */
+  void smartlist_remove(smartlist_t *sl, const void *element);
+
+In order to test it well, you should write tests for at least all of the
+following cases.  (These would be black-box tests, since we're only looking
+at the declared behavior for the function:
+
+   * Remove an element that is in the smartlist.
+   * Remove an element that is not in the smartlist.
+   * Remove an element that appears in the smartlist more than once.
+
+And your tests should verify that it behaves correct.  At minimum, you should
+test:
+
+   * That other elements before E are in the same order after you call the
+     functions.
+   * That the target element is really removed.
+   * That _only_ the target element is removed.
+
+When you consider edge cases, you might try:
+
+   * Remove an element from an empty list.
+   * Remove an element from a singleton list containing that element.
+   * Remove an element for a list containing several instances of that
+     element, and nothing else.
+
+Now let's look at the implementation:
+
+  void
+  smartlist_remove(smartlist_t *sl, const void *element)
+  {
+    int i;
+    if (element == NULL)
+      return;
+    for (i=0; i < sl->num_used; i++)
+      if (sl->list[i] == element) {
+        sl->list[i] = sl->list[--sl->num_used]; /* swap with the end */
+        i--; /* so we process the new i'th element */
+        sl->list[sl->num_used] = NULL;
+      }
+  }
+
+Based on the implementation, we now see three more edge cases to test:
+
+   * Removing NULL from the list.
+   * Removing an element from the end of the list
+   * Removing an element from a position other than the end of the list.
+
+
+=== What should my tests NOT do?
+
+Tests shouldn't require a network connection.
+
+Whenever possible, tests shouldn't take more than a second.  Put the test
+into test/slow if it genuinely needs to be run.
+
+Tests should not alter global state unless they run with TT_FORK: Tests
+should not require other tests to be run before or after them.
+
+Tests should not leak memory or other resources.
+
+When possible, tests should not be over-fit to the implementation.  That is,
+the test should verify that the documented behavior is implemented, but
+should not break if other permissible behavior is later implemented.
+
 
 === Advanced techniques: Namespaces
 
-XXXX write this.  danah boyd made us some really awesome stuff here.
+Sometimes, when you're doing a lot of mocking at once, it's convenient to
+isolate your identifiers within a single namespace.  If this were C++, we'd
+already have namespaces, but for C, we do the best we can with macros and
+token-pasting.
+
+We have some macros defined for this purpose in src/test/test.h.  To use
+them, you define NS_MODULE to a prefix to be used for your identifiers, and
+then use other macros in place of identifier names.  See src/test/test.h for
+more documentation.
 
 
 Integration tests: Calling Tor from the outside
 -----------------------------------------------
 
-XXXX WRITEME
+Some tests need to invoke Tor from the outside, and shouldn't run from the
+same process as the Tor test program.  Reasons for doing this might include:
+
+    * Testing the actual behavior of Tor when run from the command line
+    * Testing that a crash-handler correctly logs a stack trace
+    * Verifying that a violating a sandbox or capability requirement will
+      actually crash the program.
+    * Needing to run as root in order to test capability inheritance or
+      user switching.
+
+To add one of these, you generally want a new C program in src/test.  Add it
+to TESTS and noinst_PROGRAMS if it can run on its own and return success or
+failure.  If it needs to be invoked multiple times, or it needs to be
+wrapped, add a new shell script to TESTS, and the new program to
+noinst_PROGRAMS.  If you need access to any environment variable from the
+makefile (eg ${PYTHON} for a python interpreter), then make sure that the
+makefile exports them.
 
 Writing integration tests with Stem
 -----------------------------------
 
-XXXX WRITEME
+The 'stem' library includes extensive unit tests for the Tor controller
+protocol.
+
+For more information on writing new tests for stem, have a look around
+the tst/* directory in stem, and find a good example to emulate.  You
+might want to start with
+https://gitweb.torproject.org/stem.git/tree/test/integ/control/controller.py
+to improve Tor's test coverage.
+
+You can run stem tests from tor with "make test-stem", or see
+https://stem.torproject.org/faq.html#how-do-i-run-the-tests .
 
 System testing with Chutney
 ---------------------------
 
-XXXX WRITEME
-
-Who knows what evil lurks in the timings of networks? The Shadow knows!
------------------------------------------------------------------------
+The 'chutney' program configures and launches a set of Tor relays,
+authorities, and clients on your local host.  It has a 'test network'
+functionality to send traffic through them and verify that the traffic
+arrives correctly.
 
-XXXX WRITEME
+You can write new test networks by adding them to 'networks'.  To add
+them to Tor's tests, add them to the test-network or test-network-all
+targets in Makefile.am.
 
+(Adding new kinds of program to chutney will still require hacking the
+code.)

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