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test-runner: run individual test functions manually

While losing the convenience of unittest this patch breaks out
each individual test function in order to run it manually and
get results. This vastly improves the user experience by seeing
which test file and function is being executed rather than simply
seeing "PASSED" for the entire test set.

In addition exceptions/failures are printed out as they happen
rather than at the end.
This commit is contained in:
James Prestwood 2021-08-12 16:07:16 -07:00 committed by Denis Kenzior
parent 89bddf551a
commit ba6c8174d2

View File

@ -1036,31 +1036,96 @@ def start_test(ctx, subtests, rqueue):
results queue which is required since this is using
multiprocessing.
'''
suite = unittest.TestSuite()
run = 0
errors = 0
failures = 0
skipped = 0
start = time.time()
#
# Iterate through each individual python test.
#
for s in subtests:
loader = unittest.TestLoader()
subtest = importlib.import_module(os.path.splitext(s)[0])
suite.addTests(loader.loadTestsFromModule(subtest))
module = importlib.import_module(os.path.splitext(s)[0])
subtest = loader.loadTestsFromModule(module)
# The test suite is being (ab)used to get a bit more granularity
# with individual tests. The 'normal' way to use unittest is to
# just create a test suite and run them. The problem here is that
# test results are queued and printed at the very end so its
# difficult to know *where* a test failed (python gives a stack
# trace but printing the exception/failure immediately shows
# where in the debug logs something failed). Moreso if there are
# several test functions inside a single python file they run
# as a single test and it is difficult (again) to know where
# something failed.
# Iterating through each python test file
for test in subtest:
# Iterating through individual test functions inside a
# Test() class. Due to the nature of unittest we have
# to jump through some hoops to set up the test class
# only once by turning the enumeration into a list, then
# enumerating (again) to keep track of the index (just
# enumerating the test class doesn't allow len() because
# it is not a list).
tlist = list(enumerate(test))
for index, t in enumerate(tlist):
# enumerate is returning a tuple, index 1 is our
# actual object.
t = t[1]
func, file = str(t).split(' ')
#
# TODO: There may be a better way of doing this
# but strigifying the test class gives us a string:
# <function> (<file>.<class>)
#
file = file.strip('()').split('.')[0] + '.py'
# Set up class only on first test
if index == 0:
dbg(file)
t.setUpClass()
dbg("\t%s RUNNING" % str(func), end='')
sys.__stdout__.flush()
# Run test (setUp/tearDown run automatically)
result = t()
# Tear down class only on last test
if index == len(tlist) - 1:
t.tearDownClass()
run += result.testsRun
errors += len(result.errors)
failures += len(result.failures)
skipped += len(result.skipped)
if len(result.errors) > 0 or len(result.failures) > 0:
dbg(colored(" FAILED", "red"))
for e in result.errors:
dbg(e[1])
for f in result.failures:
dbg(f[1])
elif len(result.skipped) > 0:
dbg(colored(" SKIPPED", "cyan"))
else:
dbg(colored(" PASSED", "green"))
# Prevents future test modules with the same name (e.g.
# connection_test.py) from being loaded from the cache
sys.modules.pop(subtest.__name__)
sys.modules.pop(module.__name__)
start = time.time()
runner = unittest.TextTestRunner()
result = runner.run(suite)
#
# The multiprocessing queue is picky with what objects it will serialize
# and send between processes. Because of this we put the important bits
# of the result into our own 'SimpleResult' tuple.
#
sresult = SimpleResult(run=result.testsRun, failures=len(result.failures),
errors=len(result.errors), skipped=len(result.skipped),
time=time.time() - start)
sresult = SimpleResult(run=run, failures=failures, errors=errors,
skipped=skipped, time=time.time() - start)
rqueue.put(sresult)
# This may not be required since we are manually popping sys.modules
@ -1072,7 +1137,7 @@ def pre_test(ctx, test, copied):
'''
os.chdir(test)
dbg("Starting test %s" % test)
dbg("\nStarting %s" % colored(os.path.basename(test), "white", attrs=['bold']))
if not os.path.exists(test + '/hw.conf'):
raise Exception("No hw.conf found for %s" % test)