u-boot/tools/u_boot_pylib/test_util.py
Simon Glass 407a1413e3 buildman: Enable test coverage
Enable measuring test coverage for buildman so we can see the gaps. It is
currently at 68%.

Signed-off-by: Simon Glass <sjg@chromium.org>
2023-07-24 09:34:11 -06:00

220 lines
8.5 KiB
Python

# SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0+
#
# Copyright (c) 2016 Google, Inc
#
from contextlib import contextmanager
import doctest
import glob
import multiprocessing
import os
import sys
import unittest
from u_boot_pylib import command
from io import StringIO
use_concurrent = True
try:
from concurrencytest import ConcurrentTestSuite
from concurrencytest import fork_for_tests
except:
use_concurrent = False
def run_test_coverage(prog, filter_fname, exclude_list, build_dir, required=None,
extra_args=None, single_thread='-P1'):
"""Run tests and check that we get 100% coverage
Args:
prog: Program to run (with be passed a '-t' argument to run tests
filter_fname: Normally all *.py files in the program's directory will
be included. If this is not None, then it is used to filter the
list so that only filenames that don't contain filter_fname are
included.
exclude_list: List of file patterns to exclude from the coverage
calculation
build_dir: Build directory, used to locate libfdt.py
required: List of modules which must be in the coverage report
extra_args (str): Extra arguments to pass to the tool before the -t/test
arg
single_thread (str): Argument string to make the tests run
single-threaded. This is necessary to get proper coverage results.
The default is '-P0'
Raises:
ValueError if the code coverage is not 100%
"""
# This uses the build output from sandbox_spl to get _libfdt.so
path = os.path.dirname(prog)
if filter_fname:
glob_list = glob.glob(os.path.join(path, '*.py'))
glob_list = [fname for fname in glob_list if filter_fname in fname]
else:
glob_list = []
glob_list += exclude_list
glob_list += ['*libfdt.py', '*site-packages*', '*dist-packages*']
glob_list += ['*concurrencytest*']
test_cmd = 'test' if 'binman' in prog or 'patman' in prog else '-t'
prefix = ''
if build_dir:
prefix = 'PYTHONPATH=$PYTHONPATH:%s/sandbox_spl/tools ' % build_dir
cmd = ('%spython3-coverage run '
'--omit "%s" %s %s %s %s' % (prefix, ','.join(glob_list),
prog, extra_args or '', test_cmd,
single_thread or '-P1'))
os.system(cmd)
stdout = command.output('python3-coverage', 'report')
lines = stdout.splitlines()
if required:
# Convert '/path/to/name.py' just the module name 'name'
test_set = set([os.path.splitext(os.path.basename(line.split()[0]))[0]
for line in lines if '/etype/' in line])
missing_list = required
missing_list.discard('__init__')
missing_list.difference_update(test_set)
if missing_list:
print('Missing tests for %s' % (', '.join(missing_list)))
print(stdout)
ok = False
coverage = lines[-1].split(' ')[-1]
ok = True
print(coverage)
if coverage != '100%':
print(stdout)
print("To get a report in 'htmlcov/index.html', type: python3-coverage html")
print('Coverage error: %s, but should be 100%%' % coverage)
ok = False
if not ok:
raise ValueError('Test coverage failure')
# Use this to suppress stdout/stderr output:
# with capture_sys_output() as (stdout, stderr)
# ...do something...
@contextmanager
def capture_sys_output():
capture_out, capture_err = StringIO(), StringIO()
old_out, old_err = sys.stdout, sys.stderr
try:
sys.stdout, sys.stderr = capture_out, capture_err
yield capture_out, capture_err
finally:
sys.stdout, sys.stderr = old_out, old_err
class FullTextTestResult(unittest.TextTestResult):
"""A test result class that can print extended text results to a stream
This is meant to be used by a TestRunner as a result class. Like
TextTestResult, this prints out the names of tests as they are run,
errors as they occur, and a summary of the results at the end of the
test run. Beyond those, this prints information about skipped tests,
expected failures and unexpected successes.
Args:
stream: A file-like object to write results to
descriptions (bool): True to print descriptions with test names
verbosity (int): Detail of printed output per test as they run
Test stdout and stderr always get printed when buffering
them is disabled by the test runner. In addition to that,
0: Print nothing
1: Print a dot per test
2: Print test names
"""
def __init__(self, stream, descriptions, verbosity):
self.verbosity = verbosity
super().__init__(stream, descriptions, verbosity)
def printErrors(self):
"Called by TestRunner after test run to summarize the tests"
# The parent class doesn't keep unexpected successes in the same
# format as the rest. Adapt it to what printErrorList expects.
unexpected_successes = [
(test, 'Test was expected to fail, but succeeded.\n')
for test in self.unexpectedSuccesses
]
super().printErrors() # FAIL and ERROR
self.printErrorList('SKIP', self.skipped)
self.printErrorList('XFAIL', self.expectedFailures)
self.printErrorList('XPASS', unexpected_successes)
def addSkip(self, test, reason):
"""Called when a test is skipped."""
# Add empty line to keep spacing consistent with other results
if not reason.endswith('\n'):
reason += '\n'
super().addSkip(test, reason)
def run_test_suites(toolname, debug, verbosity, test_preserve_dirs, processes,
test_name, toolpath, class_and_module_list):
"""Run a series of test suites and collect the results
Args:
toolname: Name of the tool that ran the tests
debug: True to enable debugging, which shows a full stack trace on error
verbosity: Verbosity level to use (0-4)
test_preserve_dirs: True to preserve the input directory used by tests
so that it can be examined afterwards (only useful for debugging
tests). If a single test is selected (in args[0]) it also preserves
the output directory for this test. Both directories are displayed
on the command line.
processes: Number of processes to use to run tests (None=same as #CPUs)
test_name: Name of test to run, or None for all
toolpath: List of paths to use for tools
class_and_module_list: List of test classes (type class) and module
names (type str) to run
"""
sys.argv = [sys.argv[0]]
if debug:
sys.argv.append('-D')
if verbosity:
sys.argv.append('-v%d' % verbosity)
if toolpath:
for path in toolpath:
sys.argv += ['--toolpath', path]
suite = unittest.TestSuite()
loader = unittest.TestLoader()
runner = unittest.TextTestRunner(
stream=sys.stdout,
verbosity=(1 if verbosity is None else verbosity),
resultclass=FullTextTestResult,
)
if use_concurrent and processes != 1:
suite = ConcurrentTestSuite(suite,
fork_for_tests(processes or multiprocessing.cpu_count()))
for module in class_and_module_list:
if isinstance(module, str) and (not test_name or test_name == module):
suite.addTests(doctest.DocTestSuite(module))
for module in class_and_module_list:
if isinstance(module, str):
continue
# Test the test module about our arguments, if it is interested
if hasattr(module, 'setup_test_args'):
setup_test_args = getattr(module, 'setup_test_args')
setup_test_args(preserve_indir=test_preserve_dirs,
preserve_outdirs=test_preserve_dirs and test_name is not None,
toolpath=toolpath, verbosity=verbosity)
if test_name:
# Since Python v3.5 If an ImportError or AttributeError occurs
# while traversing a name then a synthetic test that raises that
# error when run will be returned. Check that the requested test
# exists, otherwise these errors are included in the results.
if test_name in loader.getTestCaseNames(module):
suite.addTests(loader.loadTestsFromName(test_name, module))
else:
suite.addTests(loader.loadTestsFromTestCase(module))
print(f" Running {toolname} tests ".center(70, "="))
result = runner.run(suite)
print()
return result