Difference between revisions of "Test Results Format Notes"
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For the Linux kernel selftests, the preferred output format is [https://testanything.org/ TAP (TestAnythingProtocol)] | For the Linux kernel selftests, the preferred output format is [https://testanything.org/ TAP (TestAnythingProtocol)] | ||
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Revision as of 08:34, 19 June 2020
This document has information about various test results formats, and their strengths and weaknesses.
Contents
Introduction
The results format is the output from the test and creates is part of the interface between the test program and the test execution layer (or test harness).
The main thing that the format communicates is the list of testcases (or metrics, in the case of benchmarks) and the result of the testcase (pass, fail, etc.)
A good starting document that describes different test report formats is:
- https://github.com/ligurio/testres/wiki/Everything-you-need-to-know-about-software-testing-report-formats
- comparison of TAP, SubUnit and JUnit output formats.
Existing output formats
Here are some of the existing formats that are used by various test programs and frameworks:
- TAP (TestAnythingProtocol)
- SubUnit
- xUnit (junit, xunit, etc.)
Elements
A test output format needs to communicate the following information:
- testcase identifiers (names or descriptions or ID numbers)
- result of the testcase (pass, fail, skip, error, xfail)
- additional information
- counts (aggregate data)
- subtest results
- diagnostic information - general information that may help diagnose the test operation
- reason - text explaining why a test passed or failed
testcase identifiers
There should be a way to identify a test, so that when a test is repeated it can be determined if the test result changed or not. The testcase identifier could be a number or a short name, or a description. But it should be the same ever time the test is run (it should be invariant over test invocations).
Many test developers will change the output related to a testcase based on the testcase result. There needs to be a portion of the testcase output that is invariant, and which can be parsed to an identifier that is unique within a single run of the test.
result strings
One aspect of the result format is the result or status code for individual test cases or the test itself.
Result codes
- test log output format
Metric data
Metric or measurement data is a a string indicating the value for an operation. This is usually used for performance, timing or other number-related data (such as that reported by benchmarks)
The metric data needs to report a number, and most likely a 'units' indicating how the number should be interpreted.
There may also be associated with a metric (or measurement), some additional information indicating parameters associated with the metric used to determine whether the value indicates success or failure of the related testcase.
parser helper information
Some tests use simple line-based output. Here is an idea for how a program or log might provide information about it's output format, allowing the test framework to perform introspection on the logs.
Note that this is a fallback mechanism for when a test has already been written to with some ad-hoc consistency in its output. It is much preferred when writing new tests to use one of the existing test output formats.
More notes
TAP version 14
The effort to create TAP version 14 has stalled.
Version 14 was intended to capture current practices that are already in use. The pull request for version 14, and resulting discussion is at:
* https://github.com/TestAnything/testanything.github.io/pull/36/files
You can see the full version 14 document in the submitter's repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/isaacs/testanything.github.io.git $ cd testanything.github.io $ git checkout tap14 $ ls tap-version-14-specification.md
Standards
For the Linux kernel selftests, the preferred output format is TAP (TestAnythingProtocol)