mirror of
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/glib.git
synced 2025-01-26 05:56:14 +01:00
Merge branch 'testing-docs' into 'main'
docs: Add a testing policy See merge request GNOME/glib!2748
This commit is contained in:
commit
89b1fe42d7
@ -95,7 +95,8 @@ they are imported into GLib and marked as stable.
|
||||
|
||||
Each feature should also come fully documented, and with tests which approach
|
||||
full branch coverage of the new code. GLib’s CI system generates code coverage
|
||||
reports which are viewable for each merge request.
|
||||
reports which are viewable for each merge request. See
|
||||
[the testing policy](./docs/testing.md) for more details.
|
||||
|
||||
If proposing a large feature or change, it’s better to discuss it (on the
|
||||
`#gtk` IRC channel or on [Discourse](https://discourse.gnome.org) before
|
||||
|
71
docs/testing.md
Normal file
71
docs/testing.md
Normal file
@ -0,0 +1,71 @@
|
||||
Testing policy
|
||||
===
|
||||
|
||||
Aims
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
* Maintainers should be able to make a release of GLib at any time, confident
|
||||
that it will not contain regressions or obvious bugs with new functionality
|
||||
* Speed up review of submitted changes by deferring some of the review effort
|
||||
to automated testing
|
||||
* Allow fast detection of bugs in new or changed code, particularly if they are
|
||||
only present on platforms not regularly used by the maintainers
|
||||
* Allow easy dynamic and static analysis of a significant proportion of the
|
||||
GLib code
|
||||
* Statistics on tests (such as pass/failure) should be easily and mechanically
|
||||
collectable to allow analysis and highlight problems
|
||||
* Code for tests and code for production should be easily separable so that
|
||||
statistics on them can be grouped separately
|
||||
* Performance measurement tools for GLib should be reusable over time to allow
|
||||
comparable measurements to be collected and to discourage use of lower
|
||||
quality and throwaway tests when prototyping improvements to GLib
|
||||
|
||||
Policy
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
* Tests must be written for all new code, and any existing code which is being
|
||||
non-trivially modified (for example to fix a bug), to give confidence to the
|
||||
author and reviewer of the changes that they are correct for all platforms
|
||||
that GLib runs CI on.
|
||||
* Tests live in the `{glib,gobject,gio}/tests` directories. This allows their
|
||||
code to be counted separately when analysing statistics such as code
|
||||
coverage.
|
||||
- Performance tests live in `{glib,gobject,gio}/tests/performance`, as they
|
||||
are executed and results interpreted differently due to giving a result on
|
||||
a continuous scale rather than a pass/fail result.
|
||||
* All tests must use the GTest framework, as it supports
|
||||
[structured output](https://testanything.org/) which exposes test results to
|
||||
the test runner for analysis.
|
||||
- Use `g_test_bug()` and `g_test_summary()` in unit tests to link them to
|
||||
contextual information in bug reports, and to provide a summary of what
|
||||
each test checks and how it goes about doing those checks. Sometimes a
|
||||
test’s behaviour can be quite complex, and needs to be explained so that
|
||||
future developers can understand and build on such tests in future.
|
||||
- Use the `g_assert_*()` functions inside unit tests, and do not use
|
||||
`g_assert()`. The latter is compiled out when GLib is built with
|
||||
`G_DISABLE_ASSERT`, and the former are not. The `g_assert_*()` functions
|
||||
also give more helpful error messages on test failure.
|
||||
* Performance tests must be able to be run unattended. In this mode they must
|
||||
choose default argument values which check that the performance test
|
||||
functions (i.e. without crashing) and doesn’t take too long to complete. This
|
||||
is used to automatically verify that performance tests still work, as they
|
||||
are typically used infrequently and are subject to bitrot.
|
||||
* Code coverage reports must be used to demonstrate that unit tests reach all
|
||||
newly submitted or significantly modified code, reaching all lines of code
|
||||
and a significant majority of branches. If this is not enforced, code ends up
|
||||
never being tested.
|
||||
* Code should be structured to be testable, which is typically only possible by
|
||||
writing tests at the same time as the code. Otherwise it is easy to design
|
||||
APIs which cannot easily be unit tested, and once those APIs are stable it is
|
||||
hard to retrofit tests to them.
|
||||
* Parsers, network-facing code or code which handles untrusted user input must
|
||||
have fuzz tests added, in the `fuzzing` directory. These are run by
|
||||
[oss-fuzz](https://github.com/google/oss-fuzz/) and are very effective at
|
||||
catching exploitable security issues. See the
|
||||
[fuzzing README](../fuzzing/README.md) for more details.
|
||||
* When fixing bugs in existing code, regression tests must be added when it is
|
||||
straightforward to do so. If it’s difficult to do so (such as if the code
|
||||
needs to be significantly restructured or APIs need to be changed), adding
|
||||
the regression tests can be deferred to a follow-up issue so as not to slow
|
||||
down bug fixing. In that case, the bug fix must be carefully manually tested
|
||||
before being merged.
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user