zsh-syntax-highlighting/tests/README.md
Daniel Shahaf f63f07417d Merge remote-tracking branch 'danielsh/tests-skip-cardinality-v1'
* danielsh/tests-skip-cardinality-v1:
  tests: Minor documentation readability tweak
  Add a test for issue #641.5, using the infrastructure added in the previous commits.
  tests: Skip cardinality tests whenever any test point is expected to fail.
  tests: Make $expected_mismatch skip the cardinality check, rather than consider it an expected failure.
  tests: Include the name of the 'cardinality check' test point in the output
2020-03-15 18:38:26 +00:00

3.5 KiB

zsh-syntax-highlighting / tests

Utility scripts for testing zsh-syntax-highlighting highlighters.

The tests harness expects the highlighter directory to contain a test-data
directory with test data files.
See the main highlighter for examples.

Tests should set the following variables:

Each test should define the string $BUFFER that is to be highlighted and the
array parameter $expected_region_highlight.
The value of that parameter is a list of strings of the form "$i $j $style".
or "$i $j $style $todo".
Each string specifies the highlighting that $BUFFER[$i,$j] should have;
that is, $i and $j specify a range, 1-indexed, inclusive of both endpoints.
$style is a key of $ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES.
If $todo exists, the test point is marked as TODO (the failure of that test
point will not fail the test), and $todo is used as the explanation.

If a test sets $skip_test to a non-empty string, the test will be skipped
with the provided string as the reason.

If a test sets unsorted=1 the order of highlights in $expected_region_highlight
need not match the order in $region_highlight.

Normally, tests fail if $expected_region_highlight and $region_highlight
have different numbers of elements. Tests may set $expected_mismatch to an
explanation string (like $todo) to avoid this and skip the cardinality check.
$expected_mismatch is set implicitly if the $todo component is present.

Note: $region_highlight uses the same "$i $j $style" syntax but
interprets the indexes differently.

Note: Tests are run with setopt NOUNSET WARN_CREATE_GLOBAL, so any
variables the test creates must be declared local.

Isolation: Each test is run in a separate subshell, so any variables,
aliases, functions, etc., it defines will be visible to the tested code (that
computes $region_highlight), but will not affect subsequent tests. The
current working directory of tests is set to a newly-created empty directory,
which is automatically cleaned up after the test exits. For example:

setopt PATH_DIRS
mkdir -p foo/bar
touch foo/bar/testing-issue-228
chmod  +x foo/bar/testing-issue-228
path+=( "$PWD"/foo )

BUFFER='bar/testing-issue-228'

expected_region_highlight=(
  "1 21 command" # bar/testing-issue-228
)

Writing new tests

An experimental tool is available to generate test files:

zsh -f tests/generate.zsh 'ls -x' acme newfile

This generates a highlighters/acme/test-data/newfile.zsh test file based on
the current highlighting of the given $BUFFER (in this case, ls -x).

This tool is experimental. Its interface may change. In particular it may
grow ways to set $PREBUFFER to inject free-form code into the generated file.

Highlighting test

test-highlighting.zsh tests the correctness of
the highlighting. Usage:

zsh test-highlighting.zsh <HIGHLIGHTER NAME>

All tests may be run with

make test

which will run all highlighting tests and report results in TAP format.
By default, the results of all tests will be printed; to show only "interesting"
results (tests that failed but were expected to succeed, or vice-versa), run
make quiet-test (or make test QUIET=y).

Performance test

test-perfs.zsh measures the time spent doing the
highlighting. Usage:

zsh test-perfs.zsh <HIGHLIGHTER NAME>

All tests may be run with

make perf