github.com/hlts2/go@v0.0.0-20170904000733-812b34efaed8/src/testing/testing.go (about) 1 // Copyright 2009 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. 2 // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style 3 // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. 4 5 // Package testing provides support for automated testing of Go packages. 6 // It is intended to be used in concert with the ``go test'' command, which automates 7 // execution of any function of the form 8 // func TestXxx(*testing.T) 9 // where Xxx can be any alphanumeric string (but the first letter must not be in 10 // [a-z]) and serves to identify the test routine. 11 // 12 // Within these functions, use the Error, Fail or related methods to signal failure. 13 // 14 // To write a new test suite, create a file whose name ends _test.go that 15 // contains the TestXxx functions as described here. Put the file in the same 16 // package as the one being tested. The file will be excluded from regular 17 // package builds but will be included when the ``go test'' command is run. 18 // For more detail, run ``go help test'' and ``go help testflag''. 19 // 20 // Tests and benchmarks may be skipped if not applicable with a call to 21 // the Skip method of *T and *B: 22 // func TestTimeConsuming(t *testing.T) { 23 // if testing.Short() { 24 // t.Skip("skipping test in short mode.") 25 // } 26 // ... 27 // } 28 // 29 // Benchmarks 30 // 31 // Functions of the form 32 // func BenchmarkXxx(*testing.B) 33 // are considered benchmarks, and are executed by the "go test" command when 34 // its -bench flag is provided. Benchmarks are run sequentially. 35 // 36 // For a description of the testing flags, see 37 // https://golang.org/cmd/go/#hdr-Description_of_testing_flags. 38 // 39 // A sample benchmark function looks like this: 40 // func BenchmarkHello(b *testing.B) { 41 // for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ { 42 // fmt.Sprintf("hello") 43 // } 44 // } 45 // 46 // The benchmark function must run the target code b.N times. 47 // During benchmark execution, b.N is adjusted until the benchmark function lasts 48 // long enough to be timed reliably. The output 49 // BenchmarkHello 10000000 282 ns/op 50 // means that the loop ran 10000000 times at a speed of 282 ns per loop. 51 // 52 // If a benchmark needs some expensive setup before running, the timer 53 // may be reset: 54 // 55 // func BenchmarkBigLen(b *testing.B) { 56 // big := NewBig() 57 // b.ResetTimer() 58 // for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ { 59 // big.Len() 60 // } 61 // } 62 // 63 // If a benchmark needs to test performance in a parallel setting, it may use 64 // the RunParallel helper function; such benchmarks are intended to be used with 65 // the go test -cpu flag: 66 // 67 // func BenchmarkTemplateParallel(b *testing.B) { 68 // templ := template.Must(template.New("test").Parse("Hello, {{.}}!")) 69 // b.RunParallel(func(pb *testing.PB) { 70 // var buf bytes.Buffer 71 // for pb.Next() { 72 // buf.Reset() 73 // templ.Execute(&buf, "World") 74 // } 75 // }) 76 // } 77 // 78 // Examples 79 // 80 // The package also runs and verifies example code. Example functions may 81 // include a concluding line comment that begins with "Output:" and is compared with 82 // the standard output of the function when the tests are run. (The comparison 83 // ignores leading and trailing space.) These are examples of an example: 84 // 85 // func ExampleHello() { 86 // fmt.Println("hello") 87 // // Output: hello 88 // } 89 // 90 // func ExampleSalutations() { 91 // fmt.Println("hello, and") 92 // fmt.Println("goodbye") 93 // // Output: 94 // // hello, and 95 // // goodbye 96 // } 97 // 98 // The comment prefix "Unordered output:" is like "Output:", but matches any 99 // line order: 100 // 101 // func ExamplePerm() { 102 // for _, value := range Perm(4) { 103 // fmt.Println(value) 104 // } 105 // // Unordered output: 4 106 // // 2 107 // // 1 108 // // 3 109 // // 0 110 // } 111 // 112 // Example functions without output comments are compiled but not executed. 113 // 114 // The naming convention to declare examples for the package, a function F, a type T and 115 // method M on type T are: 116 // 117 // func Example() { ... } 118 // func ExampleF() { ... } 119 // func ExampleT() { ... } 120 // func ExampleT_M() { ... } 121 // 122 // Multiple example functions for a package/type/function/method may be provided by 123 // appending a distinct suffix to the name. The suffix must start with a 124 // lower-case letter. 125 // 126 // func Example_suffix() { ... } 127 // func ExampleF_suffix() { ... } 128 // func ExampleT_suffix() { ... } 129 // func ExampleT_M_suffix() { ... } 130 // 131 // The entire test file is presented as the example when it contains a single 132 // example function, at least one other function, type, variable, or constant 133 // declaration, and no test or benchmark functions. 134 // 135 // Subtests and Sub-benchmarks 136 // 137 // The Run methods of T and B allow defining subtests and sub-benchmarks, 138 // without having to define separate functions for each. This enables uses 139 // like table-driven benchmarks and creating hierarchical tests. 140 // It also provides a way to share common setup and tear-down code: 141 // 142 // func TestFoo(t *testing.T) { 143 // // <setup code> 144 // t.Run("A=1", func(t *testing.T) { ... }) 145 // t.Run("A=2", func(t *testing.T) { ... }) 146 // t.Run("B=1", func(t *testing.T) { ... }) 147 // // <tear-down code> 148 // } 149 // 150 // Each subtest and sub-benchmark has a unique name: the combination of the name 151 // of the top-level test and the sequence of names passed to Run, separated by 152 // slashes, with an optional trailing sequence number for disambiguation. 153 // 154 // The argument to the -run and -bench command-line flags is an unanchored regular 155 // expression that matches the test's name. For tests with multiple slash-separated 156 // elements, such as subtests, the argument is itself slash-separated, with 157 // expressions matching each name element in turn. Because it is unanchored, an 158 // empty expression matches any string. 159 // For example, using "matching" to mean "whose name contains": 160 // 161 // go test -run '' # Run all tests. 162 // go test -run Foo # Run top-level tests matching "Foo", such as "TestFooBar". 163 // go test -run Foo/A= # For top-level tests matching "Foo", run subtests matching "A=". 164 // go test -run /A=1 # For all top-level tests, run subtests matching "A=1". 165 // 166 // Subtests can also be used to control parallelism. A parent test will only 167 // complete once all of its subtests complete. In this example, all tests are 168 // run in parallel with each other, and only with each other, regardless of 169 // other top-level tests that may be defined: 170 // 171 // func TestGroupedParallel(t *testing.T) { 172 // for _, tc := range tests { 173 // tc := tc // capture range variable 174 // t.Run(tc.Name, func(t *testing.T) { 175 // t.Parallel() 176 // ... 177 // }) 178 // } 179 // } 180 // 181 // Run does not return until parallel subtests have completed, providing a way 182 // to clean up after a group of parallel tests: 183 // 184 // func TestTeardownParallel(t *testing.T) { 185 // // This Run will not return until the parallel tests finish. 186 // t.Run("group", func(t *testing.T) { 187 // t.Run("Test1", parallelTest1) 188 // t.Run("Test2", parallelTest2) 189 // t.Run("Test3", parallelTest3) 190 // }) 191 // // <tear-down code> 192 // } 193 // 194 // Main 195 // 196 // It is sometimes necessary for a test program to do extra setup or teardown 197 // before or after testing. It is also sometimes necessary for a test to control 198 // which code runs on the main thread. To support these and other cases, 199 // if a test file contains a function: 200 // 201 // func TestMain(m *testing.M) 202 // 203 // then the generated test will call TestMain(m) instead of running the tests 204 // directly. TestMain runs in the main goroutine and can do whatever setup 205 // and teardown is necessary around a call to m.Run. It should then call 206 // os.Exit with the result of m.Run. When TestMain is called, flag.Parse has 207 // not been run. If TestMain depends on command-line flags, including those 208 // of the testing package, it should call flag.Parse explicitly. 209 // 210 // A simple implementation of TestMain is: 211 // 212 // func TestMain(m *testing.M) { 213 // // call flag.Parse() here if TestMain uses flags 214 // os.Exit(m.Run()) 215 // } 216 // 217 package testing 218 219 import ( 220 "bytes" 221 "errors" 222 "flag" 223 "fmt" 224 "internal/race" 225 "io" 226 "os" 227 "runtime" 228 "runtime/debug" 229 "runtime/trace" 230 "strconv" 231 "strings" 232 "sync" 233 "sync/atomic" 234 "time" 235 ) 236 237 var ( 238 // The short flag requests that tests run more quickly, but its functionality 239 // is provided by test writers themselves. The testing package is just its 240 // home. The all.bash installation script sets it to make installation more 241 // efficient, but by default the flag is off so a plain "go test" will do a 242 // full test of the package. 243 short = flag.Bool("test.short", false, "run smaller test suite to save time") 244 245 // The directory in which to create profile files and the like. When run from 246 // "go test", the binary always runs in the source directory for the package; 247 // this flag lets "go test" tell the binary to write the files in the directory where 248 // the "go test" command is run. 249 outputDir = flag.String("test.outputdir", "", "write profiles to `dir`") 250 251 // Report as tests are run; default is silent for success. 252 chatty = flag.Bool("test.v", false, "verbose: print additional output") 253 count = flag.Uint("test.count", 1, "run tests and benchmarks `n` times") 254 coverProfile = flag.String("test.coverprofile", "", "write a coverage profile to `file`") 255 matchList = flag.String("test.list", "", "list tests, examples, and benchmarks matching `regexp` then exit") 256 match = flag.String("test.run", "", "run only tests and examples matching `regexp`") 257 memProfile = flag.String("test.memprofile", "", "write a memory profile to `file`") 258 memProfileRate = flag.Int("test.memprofilerate", 0, "set memory profiling `rate` (see runtime.MemProfileRate)") 259 cpuProfile = flag.String("test.cpuprofile", "", "write a cpu profile to `file`") 260 blockProfile = flag.String("test.blockprofile", "", "write a goroutine blocking profile to `file`") 261 blockProfileRate = flag.Int("test.blockprofilerate", 1, "set blocking profile `rate` (see runtime.SetBlockProfileRate)") 262 mutexProfile = flag.String("test.mutexprofile", "", "write a mutex contention profile to the named file after execution") 263 mutexProfileFraction = flag.Int("test.mutexprofilefraction", 1, "if >= 0, calls runtime.SetMutexProfileFraction()") 264 traceFile = flag.String("test.trace", "", "write an execution trace to `file`") 265 timeout = flag.Duration("test.timeout", 0, "panic test binary after duration `d` (0 means unlimited)") 266 cpuListStr = flag.String("test.cpu", "", "comma-separated `list` of cpu counts to run each test with") 267 parallel = flag.Int("test.parallel", runtime.GOMAXPROCS(0), "run at most `n` tests in parallel") 268 269 haveExamples bool // are there examples? 270 271 cpuList []int 272 ) 273 274 // common holds the elements common between T and B and 275 // captures common methods such as Errorf. 276 type common struct { 277 mu sync.RWMutex // guards this group of fields 278 output []byte // Output generated by test or benchmark. 279 w io.Writer // For flushToParent. 280 ran bool // Test or benchmark (or one of its subtests) was executed. 281 failed bool // Test or benchmark has failed. 282 skipped bool // Test of benchmark has been skipped. 283 done bool // Test is finished and all subtests have completed. 284 helpers map[string]struct{} // functions to be skipped when writing file/line info 285 286 chatty bool // A copy of the chatty flag. 287 finished bool // Test function has completed. 288 hasSub int32 // written atomically 289 raceErrors int // number of races detected during test 290 runner string // function name of tRunner running the test 291 292 parent *common 293 level int // Nesting depth of test or benchmark. 294 name string // Name of test or benchmark. 295 start time.Time // Time test or benchmark started 296 duration time.Duration 297 barrier chan bool // To signal parallel subtests they may start. 298 signal chan bool // To signal a test is done. 299 sub []*T // Queue of subtests to be run in parallel. 300 } 301 302 // Short reports whether the -test.short flag is set. 303 func Short() bool { 304 return *short 305 } 306 307 // CoverMode reports what the test coverage mode is set to. The 308 // values are "set", "count", or "atomic". The return value will be 309 // empty if test coverage is not enabled. 310 func CoverMode() string { 311 return cover.Mode 312 } 313 314 // Verbose reports whether the -test.v flag is set. 315 func Verbose() bool { 316 return *chatty 317 } 318 319 // frameSkip searches, starting after skip frames, for the first caller frame 320 // in a function not marked as a helper and returns the frames to skip 321 // to reach that site. The search stops if it finds a tRunner function that 322 // was the entry point into the test. 323 // This function must be called with c.mu held. 324 func (c *common) frameSkip(skip int) int { 325 if c.helpers == nil { 326 return skip 327 } 328 var pc [50]uintptr 329 // Skip two extra frames to account for this function 330 // and runtime.Callers itself. 331 n := runtime.Callers(skip+2, pc[:]) 332 if n == 0 { 333 panic("testing: zero callers found") 334 } 335 frames := runtime.CallersFrames(pc[:n]) 336 var frame runtime.Frame 337 more := true 338 for i := 0; more; i++ { 339 frame, more = frames.Next() 340 if frame.Function == c.runner { 341 // We've gone up all the way to the tRunner calling 342 // the test function (so the user must have 343 // called tb.Helper from inside that test function). 344 // Only skip up to the test function itself. 345 return skip + i - 1 346 } 347 if _, ok := c.helpers[frame.Function]; !ok { 348 // Found a frame that wasn't inside a helper function. 349 return skip + i 350 } 351 } 352 return skip 353 } 354 355 // decorate prefixes the string with the file and line of the call site 356 // and inserts the final newline if needed and indentation tabs for formatting. 357 // This function must be called with c.mu held. 358 func (c *common) decorate(s string) string { 359 skip := c.frameSkip(3) // decorate + log + public function. 360 _, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(skip) 361 if ok { 362 // Truncate file name at last file name separator. 363 if index := strings.LastIndex(file, "/"); index >= 0 { 364 file = file[index+1:] 365 } else if index = strings.LastIndex(file, "\\"); index >= 0 { 366 file = file[index+1:] 367 } 368 } else { 369 file = "???" 370 line = 1 371 } 372 buf := new(bytes.Buffer) 373 // Every line is indented at least one tab. 374 buf.WriteByte('\t') 375 fmt.Fprintf(buf, "%s:%d: ", file, line) 376 lines := strings.Split(s, "\n") 377 if l := len(lines); l > 1 && lines[l-1] == "" { 378 lines = lines[:l-1] 379 } 380 for i, line := range lines { 381 if i > 0 { 382 // Second and subsequent lines are indented an extra tab. 383 buf.WriteString("\n\t\t") 384 } 385 buf.WriteString(line) 386 } 387 buf.WriteByte('\n') 388 return buf.String() 389 } 390 391 // flushToParent writes c.output to the parent after first writing the header 392 // with the given format and arguments. 393 func (c *common) flushToParent(format string, args ...interface{}) { 394 p := c.parent 395 p.mu.Lock() 396 defer p.mu.Unlock() 397 398 fmt.Fprintf(p.w, format, args...) 399 400 c.mu.Lock() 401 defer c.mu.Unlock() 402 io.Copy(p.w, bytes.NewReader(c.output)) 403 c.output = c.output[:0] 404 } 405 406 type indenter struct { 407 c *common 408 } 409 410 func (w indenter) Write(b []byte) (n int, err error) { 411 n = len(b) 412 for len(b) > 0 { 413 end := bytes.IndexByte(b, '\n') 414 if end == -1 { 415 end = len(b) 416 } else { 417 end++ 418 } 419 // An indent of 4 spaces will neatly align the dashes with the status 420 // indicator of the parent. 421 const indent = " " 422 w.c.output = append(w.c.output, indent...) 423 w.c.output = append(w.c.output, b[:end]...) 424 b = b[end:] 425 } 426 return 427 } 428 429 // fmtDuration returns a string representing d in the form "87.00s". 430 func fmtDuration(d time.Duration) string { 431 return fmt.Sprintf("%.2fs", d.Seconds()) 432 } 433 434 // TB is the interface common to T and B. 435 type TB interface { 436 Error(args ...interface{}) 437 Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) 438 Fail() 439 FailNow() 440 Failed() bool 441 Fatal(args ...interface{}) 442 Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) 443 Log(args ...interface{}) 444 Logf(format string, args ...interface{}) 445 Name() string 446 Skip(args ...interface{}) 447 SkipNow() 448 Skipf(format string, args ...interface{}) 449 Skipped() bool 450 Helper() 451 452 // A private method to prevent users implementing the 453 // interface and so future additions to it will not 454 // violate Go 1 compatibility. 455 private() 456 } 457 458 var _ TB = (*T)(nil) 459 var _ TB = (*B)(nil) 460 461 // T is a type passed to Test functions to manage test state and support formatted test logs. 462 // Logs are accumulated during execution and dumped to standard output when done. 463 // 464 // A test ends when its Test function returns or calls any of the methods 465 // FailNow, Fatal, Fatalf, SkipNow, Skip, or Skipf. Those methods, as well as 466 // the Parallel method, must be called only from the goroutine running the 467 // Test function. 468 // 469 // The other reporting methods, such as the variations of Log and Error, 470 // may be called simultaneously from multiple goroutines. 471 type T struct { 472 common 473 isParallel bool 474 context *testContext // For running tests and subtests. 475 } 476 477 func (c *common) private() {} 478 479 // Name returns the name of the running test or benchmark. 480 func (c *common) Name() string { 481 return c.name 482 } 483 484 func (c *common) setRan() { 485 if c.parent != nil { 486 c.parent.setRan() 487 } 488 c.mu.Lock() 489 defer c.mu.Unlock() 490 c.ran = true 491 } 492 493 // Fail marks the function as having failed but continues execution. 494 func (c *common) Fail() { 495 if c.parent != nil { 496 c.parent.Fail() 497 } 498 c.mu.Lock() 499 defer c.mu.Unlock() 500 // c.done needs to be locked to synchronize checks to c.done in parent tests. 501 if c.done { 502 panic("Fail in goroutine after " + c.name + " has completed") 503 } 504 c.failed = true 505 } 506 507 // Failed reports whether the function has failed. 508 func (c *common) Failed() bool { 509 c.mu.RLock() 510 failed := c.failed 511 c.mu.RUnlock() 512 return failed || c.raceErrors+race.Errors() > 0 513 } 514 515 // FailNow marks the function as having failed and stops its execution 516 // by calling runtime.Goexit. 517 // Execution will continue at the next test or benchmark. 518 // FailNow must be called from the goroutine running the 519 // test or benchmark function, not from other goroutines 520 // created during the test. Calling FailNow does not stop 521 // those other goroutines. 522 func (c *common) FailNow() { 523 c.Fail() 524 525 // Calling runtime.Goexit will exit the goroutine, which 526 // will run the deferred functions in this goroutine, 527 // which will eventually run the deferred lines in tRunner, 528 // which will signal to the test loop that this test is done. 529 // 530 // A previous version of this code said: 531 // 532 // c.duration = ... 533 // c.signal <- c.self 534 // runtime.Goexit() 535 // 536 // This previous version duplicated code (those lines are in 537 // tRunner no matter what), but worse the goroutine teardown 538 // implicit in runtime.Goexit was not guaranteed to complete 539 // before the test exited. If a test deferred an important cleanup 540 // function (like removing temporary files), there was no guarantee 541 // it would run on a test failure. Because we send on c.signal during 542 // a top-of-stack deferred function now, we know that the send 543 // only happens after any other stacked defers have completed. 544 c.finished = true 545 runtime.Goexit() 546 } 547 548 // log generates the output. It's always at the same stack depth. 549 func (c *common) log(s string) { 550 c.mu.Lock() 551 defer c.mu.Unlock() 552 c.output = append(c.output, c.decorate(s)...) 553 } 554 555 // Log formats its arguments using default formatting, analogous to Println, 556 // and records the text in the error log. For tests, the text will be printed only if 557 // the test fails or the -test.v flag is set. For benchmarks, the text is always 558 // printed to avoid having performance depend on the value of the -test.v flag. 559 func (c *common) Log(args ...interface{}) { c.log(fmt.Sprintln(args...)) } 560 561 // Logf formats its arguments according to the format, analogous to Printf, and 562 // records the text in the error log. A final newline is added if not provided. For 563 // tests, the text will be printed only if the test fails or the -test.v flag is 564 // set. For benchmarks, the text is always printed to avoid having performance 565 // depend on the value of the -test.v flag. 566 func (c *common) Logf(format string, args ...interface{}) { c.log(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) } 567 568 // Error is equivalent to Log followed by Fail. 569 func (c *common) Error(args ...interface{}) { 570 c.log(fmt.Sprintln(args...)) 571 c.Fail() 572 } 573 574 // Errorf is equivalent to Logf followed by Fail. 575 func (c *common) Errorf(format string, args ...interface{}) { 576 c.log(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) 577 c.Fail() 578 } 579 580 // Fatal is equivalent to Log followed by FailNow. 581 func (c *common) Fatal(args ...interface{}) { 582 c.log(fmt.Sprintln(args...)) 583 c.FailNow() 584 } 585 586 // Fatalf is equivalent to Logf followed by FailNow. 587 func (c *common) Fatalf(format string, args ...interface{}) { 588 c.log(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) 589 c.FailNow() 590 } 591 592 // Skip is equivalent to Log followed by SkipNow. 593 func (c *common) Skip(args ...interface{}) { 594 c.log(fmt.Sprintln(args...)) 595 c.SkipNow() 596 } 597 598 // Skipf is equivalent to Logf followed by SkipNow. 599 func (c *common) Skipf(format string, args ...interface{}) { 600 c.log(fmt.Sprintf(format, args...)) 601 c.SkipNow() 602 } 603 604 // SkipNow marks the test as having been skipped and stops its execution 605 // by calling runtime.Goexit. 606 // If a test fails (see Error, Errorf, Fail) and is then skipped, 607 // it is still considered to have failed. 608 // Execution will continue at the next test or benchmark. See also FailNow. 609 // SkipNow must be called from the goroutine running the test, not from 610 // other goroutines created during the test. Calling SkipNow does not stop 611 // those other goroutines. 612 func (c *common) SkipNow() { 613 c.skip() 614 c.finished = true 615 runtime.Goexit() 616 } 617 618 func (c *common) skip() { 619 c.mu.Lock() 620 defer c.mu.Unlock() 621 c.skipped = true 622 } 623 624 // Skipped reports whether the test was skipped. 625 func (c *common) Skipped() bool { 626 c.mu.RLock() 627 defer c.mu.RUnlock() 628 return c.skipped 629 } 630 631 // Helper marks the calling function as a test helper function. 632 // When printing file and line information, that function will be skipped. 633 // Helper may be called simultaneously from multiple goroutines. 634 // Helper has no effect if it is called directly from a TestXxx/BenchmarkXxx 635 // function or a subtest/sub-benchmark function. 636 func (c *common) Helper() { 637 c.mu.Lock() 638 defer c.mu.Unlock() 639 if c.helpers == nil { 640 c.helpers = make(map[string]struct{}) 641 } 642 c.helpers[callerName(1)] = struct{}{} 643 } 644 645 // callerName gives the function name (qualified with a package path) 646 // for the caller after skip frames (where 0 means the current function). 647 func callerName(skip int) string { 648 // Make room for the skip PC. 649 var pc [2]uintptr 650 n := runtime.Callers(skip+2, pc[:]) // skip + runtime.Callers + callerName 651 if n == 0 { 652 panic("testing: zero callers found") 653 } 654 frames := runtime.CallersFrames(pc[:n]) 655 frame, _ := frames.Next() 656 return frame.Function 657 } 658 659 // Parallel signals that this test is to be run in parallel with (and only with) 660 // other parallel tests. When a test is run multiple times due to use of 661 // -test.count or -test.cpu, multiple instances of a single test never run in 662 // parallel with each other. 663 func (t *T) Parallel() { 664 if t.isParallel { 665 panic("testing: t.Parallel called multiple times") 666 } 667 t.isParallel = true 668 669 // We don't want to include the time we spend waiting for serial tests 670 // in the test duration. Record the elapsed time thus far and reset the 671 // timer afterwards. 672 t.duration += time.Since(t.start) 673 674 // Add to the list of tests to be released by the parent. 675 t.parent.sub = append(t.parent.sub, t) 676 t.raceErrors += race.Errors() 677 678 t.signal <- true // Release calling test. 679 <-t.parent.barrier // Wait for the parent test to complete. 680 t.context.waitParallel() 681 t.start = time.Now() 682 t.raceErrors += -race.Errors() 683 } 684 685 // An internal type but exported because it is cross-package; part of the implementation 686 // of the "go test" command. 687 type InternalTest struct { 688 Name string 689 F func(*T) 690 } 691 692 func tRunner(t *T, fn func(t *T)) { 693 t.runner = callerName(0) 694 695 // When this goroutine is done, either because fn(t) 696 // returned normally or because a test failure triggered 697 // a call to runtime.Goexit, record the duration and send 698 // a signal saying that the test is done. 699 defer func() { 700 if t.raceErrors+race.Errors() > 0 { 701 t.Errorf("race detected during execution of test") 702 } 703 704 t.duration += time.Now().Sub(t.start) 705 // If the test panicked, print any test output before dying. 706 err := recover() 707 if !t.finished && err == nil { 708 err = fmt.Errorf("test executed panic(nil) or runtime.Goexit") 709 } 710 if err != nil { 711 t.Fail() 712 t.report() 713 panic(err) 714 } 715 716 if len(t.sub) > 0 { 717 // Run parallel subtests. 718 // Decrease the running count for this test. 719 t.context.release() 720 // Release the parallel subtests. 721 close(t.barrier) 722 // Wait for subtests to complete. 723 for _, sub := range t.sub { 724 <-sub.signal 725 } 726 if !t.isParallel { 727 // Reacquire the count for sequential tests. See comment in Run. 728 t.context.waitParallel() 729 } 730 } else if t.isParallel { 731 // Only release the count for this test if it was run as a parallel 732 // test. See comment in Run method. 733 t.context.release() 734 } 735 t.report() // Report after all subtests have finished. 736 737 // Do not lock t.done to allow race detector to detect race in case 738 // the user does not appropriately synchronizes a goroutine. 739 t.done = true 740 if t.parent != nil && atomic.LoadInt32(&t.hasSub) == 0 { 741 t.setRan() 742 } 743 t.signal <- true 744 }() 745 746 t.start = time.Now() 747 t.raceErrors = -race.Errors() 748 fn(t) 749 t.finished = true 750 } 751 752 // Run runs f as a subtest of t called name. It reports whether f succeeded. Run 753 // runs f in a separate goroutine and will block until all its parallel subtests 754 // have completed. 755 // 756 // Run may be called simultaneously from multiple goroutines, but all such calls 757 // must return before the outer test function for t returns. 758 func (t *T) Run(name string, f func(t *T)) bool { 759 atomic.StoreInt32(&t.hasSub, 1) 760 testName, ok, _ := t.context.match.fullName(&t.common, name) 761 if !ok { 762 return true 763 } 764 t = &T{ 765 common: common{ 766 barrier: make(chan bool), 767 signal: make(chan bool), 768 name: testName, 769 parent: &t.common, 770 level: t.level + 1, 771 chatty: t.chatty, 772 }, 773 context: t.context, 774 } 775 t.w = indenter{&t.common} 776 777 if t.chatty { 778 // Print directly to root's io.Writer so there is no delay. 779 root := t.parent 780 for ; root.parent != nil; root = root.parent { 781 } 782 root.mu.Lock() 783 fmt.Fprintf(root.w, "=== RUN %s\n", t.name) 784 root.mu.Unlock() 785 } 786 // Instead of reducing the running count of this test before calling the 787 // tRunner and increasing it afterwards, we rely on tRunner keeping the 788 // count correct. This ensures that a sequence of sequential tests runs 789 // without being preempted, even when their parent is a parallel test. This 790 // may especially reduce surprises if *parallel == 1. 791 go tRunner(t, f) 792 <-t.signal 793 return !t.failed 794 } 795 796 // testContext holds all fields that are common to all tests. This includes 797 // synchronization primitives to run at most *parallel tests. 798 type testContext struct { 799 match *matcher 800 801 mu sync.Mutex 802 803 // Channel used to signal tests that are ready to be run in parallel. 804 startParallel chan bool 805 806 // running is the number of tests currently running in parallel. 807 // This does not include tests that are waiting for subtests to complete. 808 running int 809 810 // numWaiting is the number tests waiting to be run in parallel. 811 numWaiting int 812 813 // maxParallel is a copy of the parallel flag. 814 maxParallel int 815 } 816 817 func newTestContext(maxParallel int, m *matcher) *testContext { 818 return &testContext{ 819 match: m, 820 startParallel: make(chan bool), 821 maxParallel: maxParallel, 822 running: 1, // Set the count to 1 for the main (sequential) test. 823 } 824 } 825 826 func (c *testContext) waitParallel() { 827 c.mu.Lock() 828 if c.running < c.maxParallel { 829 c.running++ 830 c.mu.Unlock() 831 return 832 } 833 c.numWaiting++ 834 c.mu.Unlock() 835 <-c.startParallel 836 } 837 838 func (c *testContext) release() { 839 c.mu.Lock() 840 if c.numWaiting == 0 { 841 c.running-- 842 c.mu.Unlock() 843 return 844 } 845 c.numWaiting-- 846 c.mu.Unlock() 847 c.startParallel <- true // Pick a waiting test to be run. 848 } 849 850 // No one should be using func Main anymore. 851 // See the doc comment on func Main and use MainStart instead. 852 var errMain = errors.New("testing: unexpected use of func Main") 853 854 type matchStringOnly func(pat, str string) (bool, error) 855 856 func (f matchStringOnly) MatchString(pat, str string) (bool, error) { return f(pat, str) } 857 func (f matchStringOnly) StartCPUProfile(w io.Writer) error { return errMain } 858 func (f matchStringOnly) StopCPUProfile() {} 859 func (f matchStringOnly) WriteHeapProfile(w io.Writer) error { return errMain } 860 func (f matchStringOnly) WriteProfileTo(string, io.Writer, int) error { return errMain } 861 func (f matchStringOnly) ImportPath() string { return "" } 862 863 // Main is an internal function, part of the implementation of the "go test" command. 864 // It was exported because it is cross-package and predates "internal" packages. 865 // It is no longer used by "go test" but preserved, as much as possible, for other 866 // systems that simulate "go test" using Main, but Main sometimes cannot be updated as 867 // new functionality is added to the testing package. 868 // Systems simulating "go test" should be updated to use MainStart. 869 func Main(matchString func(pat, str string) (bool, error), tests []InternalTest, benchmarks []InternalBenchmark, examples []InternalExample) { 870 os.Exit(MainStart(matchStringOnly(matchString), tests, benchmarks, examples).Run()) 871 } 872 873 // M is a type passed to a TestMain function to run the actual tests. 874 type M struct { 875 deps testDeps 876 tests []InternalTest 877 benchmarks []InternalBenchmark 878 examples []InternalExample 879 880 timer *time.Timer 881 afterOnce sync.Once 882 } 883 884 // testDeps is an internal interface of functionality that is 885 // passed into this package by a test's generated main package. 886 // The canonical implementation of this interface is 887 // testing/internal/testdeps's TestDeps. 888 type testDeps interface { 889 MatchString(pat, str string) (bool, error) 890 StartCPUProfile(io.Writer) error 891 StopCPUProfile() 892 WriteHeapProfile(io.Writer) error 893 WriteProfileTo(string, io.Writer, int) error 894 ImportPath() string 895 } 896 897 // MainStart is meant for use by tests generated by 'go test'. 898 // It is not meant to be called directly and is not subject to the Go 1 compatibility document. 899 // It may change signature from release to release. 900 func MainStart(deps testDeps, tests []InternalTest, benchmarks []InternalBenchmark, examples []InternalExample) *M { 901 return &M{ 902 deps: deps, 903 tests: tests, 904 benchmarks: benchmarks, 905 examples: examples, 906 } 907 } 908 909 // Run runs the tests. It returns an exit code to pass to os.Exit. 910 func (m *M) Run() int { 911 // TestMain may have already called flag.Parse. 912 if !flag.Parsed() { 913 flag.Parse() 914 } 915 916 if *parallel < 1 { 917 fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "testing: -parallel can only be given a positive integer") 918 flag.Usage() 919 return 2 920 } 921 922 if len(*matchList) != 0 { 923 listTests(m.deps.MatchString, m.tests, m.benchmarks, m.examples) 924 return 0 925 } 926 927 parseCpuList() 928 929 m.before() 930 defer m.after() 931 m.startAlarm() 932 haveExamples = len(m.examples) > 0 933 testRan, testOk := runTests(m.deps.MatchString, m.tests) 934 exampleRan, exampleOk := runExamples(m.deps.MatchString, m.examples) 935 m.stopAlarm() 936 if !testRan && !exampleRan && *matchBenchmarks == "" { 937 fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "testing: warning: no tests to run") 938 } 939 if !testOk || !exampleOk || !runBenchmarks(m.deps.ImportPath(), m.deps.MatchString, m.benchmarks) || race.Errors() > 0 { 940 fmt.Println("FAIL") 941 return 1 942 } 943 944 fmt.Println("PASS") 945 return 0 946 } 947 948 func (t *T) report() { 949 if t.parent == nil { 950 return 951 } 952 dstr := fmtDuration(t.duration) 953 format := "--- %s: %s (%s)\n" 954 if t.Failed() { 955 t.flushToParent(format, "FAIL", t.name, dstr) 956 } else if t.chatty { 957 if t.Skipped() { 958 t.flushToParent(format, "SKIP", t.name, dstr) 959 } else { 960 t.flushToParent(format, "PASS", t.name, dstr) 961 } 962 } 963 } 964 965 func listTests(matchString func(pat, str string) (bool, error), tests []InternalTest, benchmarks []InternalBenchmark, examples []InternalExample) { 966 if _, err := matchString(*matchList, "non-empty"); err != nil { 967 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: invalid regexp in -test.list (%q): %s\n", *matchList, err) 968 os.Exit(1) 969 } 970 971 for _, test := range tests { 972 if ok, _ := matchString(*matchList, test.Name); ok { 973 fmt.Println(test.Name) 974 } 975 } 976 for _, bench := range benchmarks { 977 if ok, _ := matchString(*matchList, bench.Name); ok { 978 fmt.Println(bench.Name) 979 } 980 } 981 for _, example := range examples { 982 if ok, _ := matchString(*matchList, example.Name); ok { 983 fmt.Println(example.Name) 984 } 985 } 986 } 987 988 // An internal function but exported because it is cross-package; part of the implementation 989 // of the "go test" command. 990 func RunTests(matchString func(pat, str string) (bool, error), tests []InternalTest) (ok bool) { 991 ran, ok := runTests(matchString, tests) 992 if !ran && !haveExamples { 993 fmt.Fprintln(os.Stderr, "testing: warning: no tests to run") 994 } 995 return ok 996 } 997 998 func runTests(matchString func(pat, str string) (bool, error), tests []InternalTest) (ran, ok bool) { 999 ok = true 1000 for _, procs := range cpuList { 1001 runtime.GOMAXPROCS(procs) 1002 for i := uint(0); i < *count; i++ { 1003 ctx := newTestContext(*parallel, newMatcher(matchString, *match, "-test.run")) 1004 t := &T{ 1005 common: common{ 1006 signal: make(chan bool), 1007 barrier: make(chan bool), 1008 w: os.Stdout, 1009 chatty: *chatty, 1010 }, 1011 context: ctx, 1012 } 1013 tRunner(t, func(t *T) { 1014 for _, test := range tests { 1015 t.Run(test.Name, test.F) 1016 } 1017 // Run catching the signal rather than the tRunner as a separate 1018 // goroutine to avoid adding a goroutine during the sequential 1019 // phase as this pollutes the stacktrace output when aborting. 1020 go func() { <-t.signal }() 1021 }) 1022 ok = ok && !t.Failed() 1023 ran = ran || t.ran 1024 } 1025 } 1026 return ran, ok 1027 } 1028 1029 // before runs before all testing. 1030 func (m *M) before() { 1031 if *memProfileRate > 0 { 1032 runtime.MemProfileRate = *memProfileRate 1033 } 1034 if *cpuProfile != "" { 1035 f, err := os.Create(toOutputDir(*cpuProfile)) 1036 if err != nil { 1037 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: %s\n", err) 1038 return 1039 } 1040 if err := m.deps.StartCPUProfile(f); err != nil { 1041 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: can't start cpu profile: %s\n", err) 1042 f.Close() 1043 return 1044 } 1045 // Could save f so after can call f.Close; not worth the effort. 1046 } 1047 if *traceFile != "" { 1048 f, err := os.Create(toOutputDir(*traceFile)) 1049 if err != nil { 1050 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: %s\n", err) 1051 return 1052 } 1053 if err := trace.Start(f); err != nil { 1054 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: can't start tracing: %s\n", err) 1055 f.Close() 1056 return 1057 } 1058 // Could save f so after can call f.Close; not worth the effort. 1059 } 1060 if *blockProfile != "" && *blockProfileRate >= 0 { 1061 runtime.SetBlockProfileRate(*blockProfileRate) 1062 } 1063 if *mutexProfile != "" && *mutexProfileFraction >= 0 { 1064 runtime.SetMutexProfileFraction(*mutexProfileFraction) 1065 } 1066 if *coverProfile != "" && cover.Mode == "" { 1067 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: cannot use -test.coverprofile because test binary was not built with coverage enabled\n") 1068 os.Exit(2) 1069 } 1070 } 1071 1072 // after runs after all testing. 1073 func (m *M) after() { 1074 m.afterOnce.Do(func() { 1075 m.writeProfiles() 1076 }) 1077 } 1078 1079 func (m *M) writeProfiles() { 1080 if *cpuProfile != "" { 1081 m.deps.StopCPUProfile() // flushes profile to disk 1082 } 1083 if *traceFile != "" { 1084 trace.Stop() // flushes trace to disk 1085 } 1086 if *memProfile != "" { 1087 f, err := os.Create(toOutputDir(*memProfile)) 1088 if err != nil { 1089 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: %s\n", err) 1090 os.Exit(2) 1091 } 1092 runtime.GC() // materialize all statistics 1093 if err = m.deps.WriteHeapProfile(f); err != nil { 1094 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: can't write %s: %s\n", *memProfile, err) 1095 os.Exit(2) 1096 } 1097 f.Close() 1098 } 1099 if *blockProfile != "" && *blockProfileRate >= 0 { 1100 f, err := os.Create(toOutputDir(*blockProfile)) 1101 if err != nil { 1102 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: %s\n", err) 1103 os.Exit(2) 1104 } 1105 if err = m.deps.WriteProfileTo("block", f, 0); err != nil { 1106 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: can't write %s: %s\n", *blockProfile, err) 1107 os.Exit(2) 1108 } 1109 f.Close() 1110 } 1111 if *mutexProfile != "" && *mutexProfileFraction >= 0 { 1112 f, err := os.Create(toOutputDir(*mutexProfile)) 1113 if err != nil { 1114 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: %s\n", err) 1115 os.Exit(2) 1116 } 1117 if err = m.deps.WriteProfileTo("mutex", f, 0); err != nil { 1118 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: can't write %s: %s\n", *blockProfile, err) 1119 os.Exit(2) 1120 } 1121 f.Close() 1122 } 1123 if cover.Mode != "" { 1124 coverReport() 1125 } 1126 } 1127 1128 // toOutputDir returns the file name relocated, if required, to outputDir. 1129 // Simple implementation to avoid pulling in path/filepath. 1130 func toOutputDir(path string) string { 1131 if *outputDir == "" || path == "" { 1132 return path 1133 } 1134 if runtime.GOOS == "windows" { 1135 // On Windows, it's clumsy, but we can be almost always correct 1136 // by just looking for a drive letter and a colon. 1137 // Absolute paths always have a drive letter (ignoring UNC). 1138 // Problem: if path == "C:A" and outputdir == "C:\Go" it's unclear 1139 // what to do, but even then path/filepath doesn't help. 1140 // TODO: Worth doing better? Probably not, because we're here only 1141 // under the management of go test. 1142 if len(path) >= 2 { 1143 letter, colon := path[0], path[1] 1144 if ('a' <= letter && letter <= 'z' || 'A' <= letter && letter <= 'Z') && colon == ':' { 1145 // If path starts with a drive letter we're stuck with it regardless. 1146 return path 1147 } 1148 } 1149 } 1150 if os.IsPathSeparator(path[0]) { 1151 return path 1152 } 1153 return fmt.Sprintf("%s%c%s", *outputDir, os.PathSeparator, path) 1154 } 1155 1156 // startAlarm starts an alarm if requested. 1157 func (m *M) startAlarm() { 1158 if *timeout > 0 { 1159 m.timer = time.AfterFunc(*timeout, func() { 1160 m.after() 1161 debug.SetTraceback("all") 1162 panic(fmt.Sprintf("test timed out after %v", *timeout)) 1163 }) 1164 } 1165 } 1166 1167 // stopAlarm turns off the alarm. 1168 func (m *M) stopAlarm() { 1169 if *timeout > 0 { 1170 m.timer.Stop() 1171 } 1172 } 1173 1174 func parseCpuList() { 1175 for _, val := range strings.Split(*cpuListStr, ",") { 1176 val = strings.TrimSpace(val) 1177 if val == "" { 1178 continue 1179 } 1180 cpu, err := strconv.Atoi(val) 1181 if err != nil || cpu <= 0 { 1182 fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "testing: invalid value %q for -test.cpu\n", val) 1183 os.Exit(1) 1184 } 1185 cpuList = append(cpuList, cpu) 1186 } 1187 if cpuList == nil { 1188 cpuList = append(cpuList, runtime.GOMAXPROCS(-1)) 1189 } 1190 }