Unit Testing

Testing Base Julia

Julia is under rapid development and has an extensive test suite to verify functionality across multiple platforms. If you build Julia from source, you can run this test suite with make test. In a binary install, you can run the test suite using Base.runtests().

Base.runtests — Function

  1. Base.runtests(tests=["all"]; ncores=ceil(Int, Sys.CPU_THREADS / 2),
  2. exit_on_error=false, revise=false, [seed])

Run the Julia unit tests listed in tests, which can be either a string or an array of strings, using ncores processors. If exit_on_error is false, when one test fails, all remaining tests in other files will still be run; they are otherwise discarded, when exit_on_error == true. If revise is true, the Revise package is used to load any modifications to Base or to the standard libraries before running the tests. If a seed is provided via the keyword argument, it is used to seed the global RNG in the context where the tests are run; otherwise the seed is chosen randomly.

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Basic Unit Tests

The Test module provides simple unit testing functionality. Unit testing is a way to see if your code is correct by checking that the results are what you expect. It can be helpful to ensure your code still works after you make changes, and can be used when developing as a way of specifying the behaviors your code should have when complete.

Simple unit testing can be performed with the @test and @test_throws macros:

Test.@test — Macro

  1. @test ex
  2. @test f(args...) key=val ...

Tests that the expression ex evaluates to true. Returns a Pass Result if it does, a Fail Result if it is false, and an Error Result if it could not be evaluated.

Examples

  1. julia> @test true
  2. Test Passed
  3. julia> @test [1, 2] + [2, 1] == [3, 3]
  4. Test Passed

The @test f(args...) key=val... form is equivalent to writing @test f(args..., key=val...) which can be useful when the expression is a call using infix syntax such as approximate comparisons:

  1. julia> @test π 3.14 atol=0.01
  2. Test Passed

This is equivalent to the uglier test @test ≈(π, 3.14, atol=0.01). It is an error to supply more than one expression unless the first is a call expression and the rest are assignments (k=v).

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Test.@test_throws — Macro

  1. @test_throws exception expr

Tests that the expression expr throws exception. The exception may specify either a type, or a value (which will be tested for equality by comparing fields). Note that @test_throws does not support a trailing keyword form.

Examples

  1. julia> @test_throws BoundsError [1, 2, 3][4]
  2. Test Passed
  3. Thrown: BoundsError
  4. julia> @test_throws DimensionMismatch [1, 2, 3] + [1, 2]
  5. Test Passed
  6. Thrown: DimensionMismatch

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For example, suppose we want to check our new function foo(x) works as expected:

  1. julia> using Test
  2. julia> foo(x) = length(x)^2
  3. foo (generic function with 1 method)

If the condition is true, a Pass is returned:

  1. julia> @test foo("bar") == 9
  2. Test Passed
  3. julia> @test foo("fizz") >= 10
  4. Test Passed

If the condition is false, then a Fail is returned and an exception is thrown:

  1. julia> @test foo("f") == 20
  2. Test Failed at none:1
  3. Expression: foo("f") == 20
  4. Evaluated: 1 == 20
  5. ERROR: There was an error during testing

If the condition could not be evaluated because an exception was thrown, which occurs in this case because length is not defined for symbols, an Error object is returned and an exception is thrown:

  1. julia> @test foo(:cat) == 1
  2. Error During Test
  3. Test threw an exception of type MethodError
  4. Expression: foo(:cat) == 1
  5. MethodError: no method matching length(::Symbol)
  6. Closest candidates are:
  7. length(::SimpleVector) at essentials.jl:256
  8. length(::Base.MethodList) at reflection.jl:521
  9. length(::MethodTable) at reflection.jl:597
  10. ...
  11. Stacktrace:
  12. [...]
  13. ERROR: There was an error during testing

If we expect that evaluating an expression should throw an exception, then we can use @test_throws to check that this occurs:

  1. julia> @test_throws MethodError foo(:cat)
  2. Test Passed
  3. Thrown: MethodError

Working with Test Sets

Typically a large number of tests are used to make sure functions work correctly over a range of inputs. In the event a test fails, the default behavior is to throw an exception immediately. However, it is normally preferable to run the rest of the tests first to get a better picture of how many errors there are in the code being tested.

The @testset macro can be used to group tests into sets. All the tests in a test set will be run, and at the end of the test set a summary will be printed. If any of the tests failed, or could not be evaluated due to an error, the test set will then throw a TestSetException.

Test.@testset — Macro

  1. @testset [CustomTestSet] [option=val ...] ["description"] begin ... end
  2. @testset [CustomTestSet] [option=val ...] ["description $v"] for v in (...) ... end
  3. @testset [CustomTestSet] [option=val ...] ["description $v, $w"] for v in (...), w in (...) ... end

Starts a new test set, or multiple test sets if a for loop is provided.

If no custom testset type is given it defaults to creating a DefaultTestSet. DefaultTestSet records all the results and, if there are any Fails or Errors, throws an exception at the end of the top-level (non-nested) test set, along with a summary of the test results.

Any custom testset type (subtype of AbstractTestSet) can be given and it will also be used for any nested @testset invocations. The given options are only applied to the test set where they are given. The default test set type does not take any options.

The description string accepts interpolation from the loop indices. If no description is provided, one is constructed based on the variables.

By default the @testset macro will return the testset object itself, though this behavior can be customized in other testset types. If a for loop is used then the macro collects and returns a list of the return values of the finish method, which by default will return a list of the testset objects used in each iteration.

Before the execution of the body of a @testset, there is an implicit call to Random.seed!(seed) where seed is the current seed of the global RNG. Moreover, after the execution of the body, the state of the global RNG is restored to what it was before the @testset. This is meant to ease reproducibility in case of failure, and to allow seamless re-arrangements of @testsets regardless of their side-effect on the global RNG state.

Examples

  1. julia> @testset "trigonometric identities" begin
  2. θ = 2/3
  3. @test sin(-θ) -sin(θ)
  4. @test cos(-θ) cos(θ)
  5. @test sin(2θ) 2*sin(θ)*cos(θ)
  6. @test cos(2θ) cos(θ)^2 - sin(θ)^2
  7. end;
  8. Test Summary: | Pass Total
  9. trigonometric identities | 4 4

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We can put our tests for the foo(x) function in a test set:

  1. julia> @testset "Foo Tests" begin
  2. @test foo("a") == 1
  3. @test foo("ab") == 4
  4. @test foo("abc") == 9
  5. end;
  6. Test Summary: | Pass Total
  7. Foo Tests | 3 3

Test sets can also be nested:

  1. julia> @testset "Foo Tests" begin
  2. @testset "Animals" begin
  3. @test foo("cat") == 9
  4. @test foo("dog") == foo("cat")
  5. end
  6. @testset "Arrays $i" for i in 1:3
  7. @test foo(zeros(i)) == i^2
  8. @test foo(fill(1.0, i)) == i^2
  9. end
  10. end;
  11. Test Summary: | Pass Total
  12. Foo Tests | 8 8

In the event that a nested test set has no failures, as happened here, it will be hidden in the summary. If we do have a test failure, only the details for the failed test sets will be shown:

  1. julia> @testset "Foo Tests" begin
  2. @testset "Animals" begin
  3. @testset "Felines" begin
  4. @test foo("cat") == 9
  5. end
  6. @testset "Canines" begin
  7. @test foo("dog") == 9
  8. end
  9. end
  10. @testset "Arrays" begin
  11. @test foo(zeros(2)) == 4
  12. @test foo(fill(1.0, 4)) == 15
  13. end
  14. end
  15. Arrays: Test Failed
  16. Expression: foo(fill(1.0, 4)) == 15
  17. Evaluated: 16 == 15
  18. [...]
  19. Test Summary: | Pass Fail Total
  20. Foo Tests | 3 1 4
  21. Animals | 2 2
  22. Arrays | 1 1 2
  23. ERROR: Some tests did not pass: 3 passed, 1 failed, 0 errored, 0 broken.

Other Test Macros

As calculations on floating-point values can be imprecise, you can perform approximate equality checks using either @test a ≈ b (where , typed via tab completion of \approx, is the isapprox function) or use isapprox directly.

  1. julia> @test 1 0.999999999
  2. Test Passed
  3. julia> @test 1 0.999999
  4. Test Failed at none:1
  5. Expression: 1 0.999999
  6. Evaluated: 1 0.999999
  7. ERROR: There was an error during testing

Test.@inferred — Macro

  1. @inferred [AllowedType] f(x)

Tests that the call expression f(x) returns a value of the same type inferred by the compiler. It is useful to check for type stability.

f(x) can be any call expression. Returns the result of f(x) if the types match, and an Error Result if it finds different types.

Optionally, AllowedType relaxes the test, by making it pass when either the type of f(x) matches the inferred type modulo AllowedType, or when the return type is a subtype of AllowedType. This is useful when testing type stability of functions returning a small union such as Union{Nothing, T} or Union{Missing, T}.

  1. julia> f(a) = a > 1 ? 1 : 1.0
  2. f (generic function with 1 method)
  3. julia> typeof(f(2))
  4. Int64
  5. julia> @code_warntype f(2)
  6. Variables
  7. #self#::Core.Compiler.Const(f, false)
  8. a::Int64
  9. Body::UNION{FLOAT64, INT64}
  10. 1 %1 = (a > 1)::Bool
  11. └── goto #3 if not %1
  12. 2 return 1
  13. 3 return 1.0
  14. julia> @inferred f(2)
  15. ERROR: return type Int64 does not match inferred return type Union{Float64, Int64}
  16. [...]
  17. julia> @inferred max(1, 2)
  18. 2
  19. julia> g(a) = a < 10 ? missing : 1.0
  20. g (generic function with 1 method)
  21. julia> @inferred g(20)
  22. ERROR: return type Float64 does not match inferred return type Union{Missing, Float64}
  23. [...]
  24. julia> @inferred Missing g(20)
  25. 1.0
  26. julia> h(a) = a < 10 ? missing : f(a)
  27. h (generic function with 1 method)
  28. julia> @inferred Missing h(20)
  29. ERROR: return type Int64 does not match inferred return type Union{Missing, Float64, Int64}
  30. [...]

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Test.@test_logs — Macro

  1. @test_logs [log_patterns...] [keywords] expression

Collect a list of log records generated by expression using collect_test_logs, check that they match the sequence log_patterns, and return the value of expression. The keywords provide some simple filtering of log records: the min_level keyword controls the minimum log level which will be collected for the test, the match_mode keyword defines how matching will be performed (the default :all checks that all logs and patterns match pairwise; use :any to check that the pattern matches at least once somewhere in the sequence.)

The most useful log pattern is a simple tuple of the form (level,message). A different number of tuple elements may be used to match other log metadata, corresponding to the arguments to passed to AbstractLogger via the handle_message function: (level,message,module,group,id,file,line). Elements which are present will be matched pairwise with the log record fields using == by default, with the special cases that Symbols may be used for the standard log levels, and Regexs in the pattern will match string or Symbol fields using occursin.

Examples

Consider a function which logs a warning, and several debug messages:

  1. function foo(n)
  2. @info "Doing foo with n=$n"
  3. for i=1:n
  4. @debug "Iteration $i"
  5. end
  6. 42
  7. end

We can test the info message using

  1. @test_logs (:info,"Doing foo with n=2") foo(2)

If we also wanted to test the debug messages, these need to be enabled with the min_level keyword:

  1. @test_logs (:info,"Doing foo with n=2") (:debug,"Iteration 1") (:debug,"Iteration 2") min_level=Debug foo(2)

If you want to test that some particular messages are generated while ignoring the rest, you can set the keyword match_mode=:any:

  1. @test_logs (:info,) (:debug,"Iteration 42") min_level=Debug match_mode=:any foo(100)

The macro may be chained with @test to also test the returned value:

  1. @test (@test_logs (:info,"Doing foo with n=2") foo(2)) == 42

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Test.@test_deprecated — Macro

  1. @test_deprecated [pattern] expression

When --depwarn=yes, test that expression emits a deprecation warning and return the value of expression. The log message string will be matched against pattern which defaults to r"deprecated"i.

When --depwarn=no, simply return the result of executing expression. When --depwarn=error, check that an ErrorException is thrown.

Examples

  1. # Deprecated in julia 0.7
  2. @test_deprecated num2hex(1)
  3. # The returned value can be tested by chaining with @test:
  4. @test (@test_deprecated num2hex(1)) == "0000000000000001"

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Test.@test_warn — Macro

  1. @test_warn msg expr

Test whether evaluating expr results in stderr output that contains the msg string or matches the msg regular expression. If msg is a boolean function, tests whether msg(output) returns true. If msg is a tuple or array, checks that the error output contains/matches each item in msg. Returns the result of evaluating expr.

See also @test_nowarn to check for the absence of error output.

Note: Warnings generated by @warn cannot be tested with this macro. Use @test_logs instead.

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Test.@test_nowarn — Macro

  1. @test_nowarn expr

Test whether evaluating expr results in empty stderr output (no warnings or other messages). Returns the result of evaluating expr.

Note: The absence of warnings generated by @warn cannot be tested with this macro. Use @test_logs expr instead.

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Broken Tests

If a test fails consistently it can be changed to use the @test_broken macro. This will denote the test as Broken if the test continues to fail and alerts the user via an Error if the test succeeds.

Test.@test_broken — Macro

  1. @test_broken ex
  2. @test_broken f(args...) key=val ...

Indicates a test that should pass but currently consistently fails. Tests that the expression ex evaluates to false or causes an exception. Returns a Broken Result if it does, or an Error Result if the expression evaluates to true.

The @test_broken f(args...) key=val... form works as for the @test macro.

Examples

  1. julia> @test_broken 1 == 2
  2. Test Broken
  3. Expression: 1 == 2
  4. julia> @test_broken 1 == 2 atol=0.1
  5. Test Broken
  6. Expression: ==(1, 2, atol = 0.1)

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@test_skip is also available to skip a test without evaluation, but counting the skipped test in the test set reporting. The test will not run but gives a Broken Result.

Test.@test_skip — Macro

  1. @test_skip ex
  2. @test_skip f(args...) key=val ...

Marks a test that should not be executed but should be included in test summary reporting as Broken. This can be useful for tests that intermittently fail, or tests of not-yet-implemented functionality.

The @test_skip f(args...) key=val... form works as for the @test macro.

Examples

  1. julia> @test_skip 1 == 2
  2. Test Broken
  3. Skipped: 1 == 2
  4. julia> @test_skip 1 == 2 atol=0.1
  5. Test Broken
  6. Skipped: ==(1, 2, atol = 0.1)

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Creating Custom AbstractTestSet Types

Packages can create their own AbstractTestSet subtypes by implementing the record and finish methods. The subtype should have a one-argument constructor taking a description string, with any options passed in as keyword arguments.

Test.record — Function

  1. record(ts::AbstractTestSet, res::Result)

Record a result to a testset. This function is called by the @testset infrastructure each time a contained @test macro completes, and is given the test result (which could be an Error). This will also be called with an Error if an exception is thrown inside the test block but outside of a @test context.

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Test.finish — Function

  1. finish(ts::AbstractTestSet)

Do any final processing necessary for the given testset. This is called by the @testset infrastructure after a test block executes. One common use for this function is to record the testset to the parent’s results list, using get_testset.

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Test takes responsibility for maintaining a stack of nested testsets as they are executed, but any result accumulation is the responsibility of the AbstractTestSet subtype. You can access this stack with the get_testset and get_testset_depth methods. Note that these functions are not exported.

Test.get_testset — Function

  1. get_testset()

Retrieve the active test set from the task’s local storage. If no test set is active, use the fallback default test set.

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Test.get_testset_depth — Function

  1. get_testset_depth()

Returns the number of active test sets, not including the default test set

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Test also makes sure that nested @testset invocations use the same AbstractTestSet subtype as their parent unless it is set explicitly. It does not propagate any properties of the testset. Option inheritance behavior can be implemented by packages using the stack infrastructure that Test provides.

Defining a basic AbstractTestSet subtype might look like:

  1. import Test: Test, record, finish
  2. using Test: AbstractTestSet, Result, Pass, Fail, Error
  3. using Test: get_testset_depth, get_testset
  4. struct CustomTestSet <: Test.AbstractTestSet
  5. description::AbstractString
  6. foo::Int
  7. results::Vector
  8. # constructor takes a description string and options keyword arguments
  9. CustomTestSet(desc; foo=1) = new(desc, foo, [])
  10. end
  11. record(ts::CustomTestSet, child::AbstractTestSet) = push!(ts.results, child)
  12. record(ts::CustomTestSet, res::Result) = push!(ts.results, res)
  13. function finish(ts::CustomTestSet)
  14. # just record if we're not the top-level parent
  15. if get_testset_depth() > 0
  16. record(get_testset(), ts)
  17. end
  18. ts
  19. end

And using that testset looks like:

  1. @testset CustomTestSet foo=4 "custom testset inner 2" begin
  2. # this testset should inherit the type, but not the argument.
  3. @testset "custom testset inner" begin
  4. @test true
  5. end
  6. end