The scripts in this folder comprise a cross-platform unit test runner. The components of this runner are as follows:
This script is used to run unit test binaries on multiple platforms. To see a full list of parameters that can be supplied to the script, run:
python test_runner.py --help
To run all tests for a given platform, execute the test_runner.py
script and provide at minimum the --platform
and --config
arguments.
Example:
python test_runner.py --platform=android-x86 --config=devel
Running this command will run all unit tests for the devel
build of the android-x86
platform. To specify a device to run the tests on, provide the --device_id
argument, as shown below:
python test_runner.py --platform=android-x86 --config=devel \ --device_id=emulator-4
If you would like to run a single unit test binary and view its output, you can do so by using the --target_name
parameter and providing a test binary name, as shown below:
python test_runner.py --platform=android-x86 --config=devel \ --device_id=emulator-4 --target_name=audio_test
You can also use this script to build your unit test binaries before running them. To do this, provide the -b
command line flag. If you would like to build the tests and then run them, provide the flags -br
.
In your application's starboard_configuration.py
file, define a variable called TEST_TARGETS. It should be a list containing the names of all of the test binaries that you want the test runner to run. An example is shown below:
TEST_TARGETS =[ 'audio_test', 'bindings_test', ]
If your ‘starboard_configuration.py’ file contains this list, then every platform you support in Starboard will try to run these test binaries unless they are filtered out as described below.
To filter out tests that you do not want to run for a specific platform, implement a method within the platform's PlatformConfiguration
subclass called GetTestFilters()
. The PlatformConfiguration
subclass lives in the gyp_configuration.py
file for each platform. If the tests are application-specific, you may define GetTestFilters()
on an optional ApplicationConfiguration
subclass, which will be found in the <platform-directory>/<application-name>/configuration.py
subdirectory. See this Linux implementation for an example.
The GetTestFilters()
function should return a list of TestFilter
objects, which can be constructed by importing starboard.tools.testing.test_filter
. To make a TestFilter
object, provide the constructor with the test target name, the name of the actual unit test that the target runs, and optionally, the build configuration from which the test should be excluded. An example is shown below:
test_filter.TestFilter('math_test', 'Vector3dTest.IsZero', 'debug')
If a configuration is not provided, then the test will be excluded from all configurations.
To filter out all tests for a particular target, provide test_filter.FILTER_ALL
as the test name.
To disable unit testing for all targets and all configurations, return a list containing test_filter.DISABLE_TESTING
.
If a platform requires extra environment variables in order to run tests properly, implement a method called GetTestEnvVariables()
in the same PlatformConfiguration
or ApplicationConfiguration
mentioned above. The application-level variables will be merged on top of the platform-level variables. There is an example of this method in the provided Linux implementation. The method should return a dictionary that maps test binary names to dictionaries of environment variables that they need.
Example:
def GetTestEnvVariables(self): return { 'base_unittests': {'ASAN_OPTIONS': 'detect_leaks=0'}, 'crypto_unittests': {'ASAN_OPTIONS': 'detect_leaks=0'}, 'net_unittests': {'ASAN_OPTIONS': 'detect_leaks=0'} }