1tdc - Adding test cases for tdc 2 3Author: Lucas Bates - lucasb@mojatatu.com 4 5ADDING TEST CASES 6----------------- 7 8User-defined tests should be added by defining a separate JSON file. This 9will help prevent conflicts when updating the repository. Refer to 10template.json for the required JSON format for test cases. 11 12Include the 'id' field, but do not assign a value. Running tdc with the -i 13option will generate a unique ID for that test case. 14 15tdc will recursively search the 'tc-tests' subdirectory (or the 16directories named with the -D option) for .json files. Any test case 17files you create in these directories will automatically be included. 18If you wish to store your custom test cases elsewhere, be sure to run 19tdc with the -f argument and the path to your file, or the -D argument 20and the path to your directory(ies). 21 22Be aware of required escape characters in the JSON data - particularly 23when defining the match pattern. Refer to the supplied json test files 24for examples when in doubt. The match pattern is written in json, and 25will be used by python. So the match pattern will be a python regular 26expression, but should be written using json syntax. 27 28 29TEST CASE STRUCTURE 30------------------- 31 32Each test case has required data: 33 34id: A unique alphanumeric value to identify a particular test case 35name: Descriptive name that explains the command under test 36skip: A completely optional key, if the corresponding value is "yes" 37 then tdc will not execute the test case in question. However, 38 this test case will still appear in the results output but 39 marked as skipped. This key can be placed anywhere inside the 40 test case at the top level. 41category: A list of single-word descriptions covering what the command 42 under test is testing. Example: filter, actions, u32, gact, etc. 43setup: The list of commands required to ensure the command under test 44 succeeds. For example: if testing a filter, the command to create 45 the qdisc would appear here. 46 This list can be empty. 47 Each command can be a string to be executed, or a list consisting 48 of a string which is a command to be executed, followed by 1 or 49 more acceptable exit codes for this command. 50 If only a string is given for the command, then an exit code of 0 51 will be expected. 52cmdUnderTest: The tc command being tested itself. 53expExitCode: The code returned by the command under test upon its termination. 54 tdc will compare this value against the actual returned value. 55verifyCmd: The tc command to be run to verify successful execution. 56 For example: if the command under test creates a gact action, 57 verifyCmd should be "$TC actions show action gact" 58matchPattern: A regular expression to be applied against the output of the 59 verifyCmd to prove the command under test succeeded. This pattern 60 should be as specific as possible so that a false positive is not 61 matched. 62matchCount: How many times the regex in matchPattern should match. A value 63 of 0 is acceptable. 64teardown: The list of commands to clean up after the test is completed. 65 The environment should be returned to the same state as when 66 this test was started: qdiscs deleted, actions flushed, etc. 67 This list can be empty. 68 Each command can be a string to be executed, or a list consisting 69 of a string which is a command to be executed, followed by 1 or 70 more acceptable exit codes for this command. 71 If only a string is given for the command, then an exit code of 0 72 will be expected. 73 74 75SETUP/TEARDOWN ERRORS 76--------------------- 77 78If an error is detected during the setup/teardown process, execution of the 79tests will immediately stop with an error message and the namespace in which 80the tests are run will be destroyed. This is to prevent inaccurate results 81in the test cases. tdc will output a series of TAP results for the skipped 82tests. 83 84Repeated failures of the setup/teardown may indicate a problem with the test 85case, or possibly even a bug in one of the commands that are not being tested. 86 87It's possible to include acceptable exit codes with the setup/teardown command 88so that it doesn't halt the script for an error that doesn't matter. Turn the 89individual command into a list, with the command being first, followed by all 90acceptable exit codes for the command. 91 92Example: 93 94A pair of setup commands. The first can have exit code 0, 1 or 255, the 95second must have exit code 0. 96 97 "setup": [ 98 [ 99 "$TC actions flush action gact", 100 0, 101 1, 102 255 103 ], 104 "$TC actions add action reclassify index 65536" 105 ], 106