Author | Tokens | Token Proportion | Commits | Commit Proportion |
---|---|---|---|---|
David Gow | 202 | 25.16% | 3 | 21.43% |
Daniel Latypov | 192 | 23.91% | 2 | 14.29% |
Brendan Higgins | 176 | 21.92% | 2 | 14.29% |
Michal Wajdeczko | 147 | 18.31% | 2 | 14.29% |
Maíra Canal | 52 | 6.48% | 1 | 7.14% |
Ricardo Ribalda Delgado | 14 | 1.74% | 1 | 7.14% |
Alan Maguire | 11 | 1.37% | 2 | 14.29% |
Rae Moar | 9 | 1.12% | 1 | 7.14% |
Total | 803 | 14 |
// SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 /* * Example KUnit test to show how to use KUnit. * * Copyright (C) 2019, Google LLC. * Author: Brendan Higgins <brendanhiggins@google.com> */ #include <kunit/test.h> #include <kunit/static_stub.h> /* * This is the most fundamental element of KUnit, the test case. A test case * makes a set EXPECTATIONs and ASSERTIONs about the behavior of some code; if * any expectations or assertions are not met, the test fails; otherwise, the * test passes. * * In KUnit, a test case is just a function with the signature * `void (*)(struct kunit *)`. `struct kunit` is a context object that stores * information about the current test. */ static void example_simple_test(struct kunit *test) { /* * This is an EXPECTATION; it is how KUnit tests things. When you want * to test a piece of code, you set some expectations about what the * code should do. KUnit then runs the test and verifies that the code's * behavior matched what was expected. */ KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 1 + 1, 2); } /* * This is run once before each test case, see the comment on * example_test_suite for more information. */ static int example_test_init(struct kunit *test) { kunit_info(test, "initializing\n"); return 0; } /* * This is run once after each test case, see the comment on * example_test_suite for more information. */ static void example_test_exit(struct kunit *test) { kunit_info(test, "cleaning up\n"); } /* * This is run once before all test cases in the suite. * See the comment on example_test_suite for more information. */ static int example_test_init_suite(struct kunit_suite *suite) { kunit_info(suite, "initializing suite\n"); return 0; } /* * This is run once after all test cases in the suite. * See the comment on example_test_suite for more information. */ static void example_test_exit_suite(struct kunit_suite *suite) { kunit_info(suite, "exiting suite\n"); } /* * This test should always be skipped. */ static void example_skip_test(struct kunit *test) { /* This line should run */ kunit_info(test, "You should not see a line below."); /* Skip (and abort) the test */ kunit_skip(test, "this test should be skipped"); /* This line should not execute */ KUNIT_FAIL(test, "You should not see this line."); } /* * This test should always be marked skipped. */ static void example_mark_skipped_test(struct kunit *test) { /* This line should run */ kunit_info(test, "You should see a line below."); /* Skip (but do not abort) the test */ kunit_mark_skipped(test, "this test should be skipped"); /* This line should run */ kunit_info(test, "You should see this line."); } /* * This test shows off all the types of KUNIT_EXPECT macros. */ static void example_all_expect_macros_test(struct kunit *test) { const u32 array1[] = { 0x0F, 0xFF }; const u32 array2[] = { 0x1F, 0xFF }; /* Boolean assertions */ KUNIT_EXPECT_TRUE(test, true); KUNIT_EXPECT_FALSE(test, false); /* Integer assertions */ KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 1, 1); /* check == */ KUNIT_EXPECT_GE(test, 1, 1); /* check >= */ KUNIT_EXPECT_LE(test, 1, 1); /* check <= */ KUNIT_EXPECT_NE(test, 1, 0); /* check != */ KUNIT_EXPECT_GT(test, 1, 0); /* check > */ KUNIT_EXPECT_LT(test, 0, 1); /* check < */ /* Pointer assertions */ KUNIT_EXPECT_NOT_ERR_OR_NULL(test, test); KUNIT_EXPECT_PTR_EQ(test, NULL, NULL); KUNIT_EXPECT_PTR_NE(test, test, NULL); KUNIT_EXPECT_NULL(test, NULL); KUNIT_EXPECT_NOT_NULL(test, test); /* String assertions */ KUNIT_EXPECT_STREQ(test, "hi", "hi"); KUNIT_EXPECT_STRNEQ(test, "hi", "bye"); /* Memory block assertions */ KUNIT_EXPECT_MEMEQ(test, array1, array1, sizeof(array1)); KUNIT_EXPECT_MEMNEQ(test, array1, array2, sizeof(array1)); /* * There are also ASSERT variants of all of the above that abort test * execution if they fail. Useful for memory allocations, etc. */ KUNIT_ASSERT_GT(test, sizeof(char), 0); /* * There are also _MSG variants of all of the above that let you include * additional text on failure. */ KUNIT_EXPECT_GT_MSG(test, sizeof(int), 0, "Your ints are 0-bit?!"); KUNIT_ASSERT_GT_MSG(test, sizeof(int), 0, "Your ints are 0-bit?!"); } /* This is a function we'll replace with static stubs. */ static int add_one(int i) { /* This will trigger the stub if active. */ KUNIT_STATIC_STUB_REDIRECT(add_one, i); return i + 1; } /* This is used as a replacement for the above function. */ static int subtract_one(int i) { /* We don't need to trigger the stub from the replacement. */ return i - 1; } /* * This test shows the use of static stubs. */ static void example_static_stub_test(struct kunit *test) { /* By default, function is not stubbed. */ KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, add_one(1), 2); /* Replace add_one() with subtract_one(). */ kunit_activate_static_stub(test, add_one, subtract_one); /* add_one() is now replaced. */ KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, add_one(1), 0); /* Return add_one() to normal. */ kunit_deactivate_static_stub(test, add_one); KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, add_one(1), 2); } static const struct example_param { int value; } example_params_array[] = { { .value = 3, }, { .value = 2, }, { .value = 1, }, { .value = 0, }, }; static void example_param_get_desc(const struct example_param *p, char *desc) { snprintf(desc, KUNIT_PARAM_DESC_SIZE, "example value %d", p->value); } KUNIT_ARRAY_PARAM(example, example_params_array, example_param_get_desc); /* * This test shows the use of params. */ static void example_params_test(struct kunit *test) { const struct example_param *param = test->param_value; /* By design, param pointer will not be NULL */ KUNIT_ASSERT_NOT_NULL(test, param); /* Test can be skipped on unsupported param values */ if (!is_power_of_2(param->value)) kunit_skip(test, "unsupported param value %d", param->value); /* You can use param values for parameterized testing */ KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, param->value % param->value, 0); } /* * This test should always pass. Can be used to practice filtering attributes. */ static void example_slow_test(struct kunit *test) { KUNIT_EXPECT_EQ(test, 1 + 1, 2); } /* * Here we make a list of all the test cases we want to add to the test suite * below. */ static struct kunit_case example_test_cases[] = { /* * This is a helper to create a test case object from a test case * function; its exact function is not important to understand how to * use KUnit, just know that this is how you associate test cases with a * test suite. */ KUNIT_CASE(example_simple_test), KUNIT_CASE(example_skip_test), KUNIT_CASE(example_mark_skipped_test), KUNIT_CASE(example_all_expect_macros_test), KUNIT_CASE(example_static_stub_test), KUNIT_CASE_PARAM(example_params_test, example_gen_params), KUNIT_CASE_SLOW(example_slow_test), {} }; /* * This defines a suite or grouping of tests. * * Test cases are defined as belonging to the suite by adding them to * `kunit_cases`. * * Often it is desirable to run some function which will set up things which * will be used by every test; this is accomplished with an `init` function * which runs before each test case is invoked. Similarly, an `exit` function * may be specified which runs after every test case and can be used to for * cleanup. For clarity, running tests in a test suite would behave as follows: * * suite.suite_init(suite); * suite.init(test); * suite.test_case[0](test); * suite.exit(test); * suite.init(test); * suite.test_case[1](test); * suite.exit(test); * suite.suite_exit(suite); * ...; */ static struct kunit_suite example_test_suite = { .name = "example", .init = example_test_init, .exit = example_test_exit, .suite_init = example_test_init_suite, .suite_exit = example_test_exit_suite, .test_cases = example_test_cases, }; /* * This registers the above test suite telling KUnit that this is a suite of * tests that need to be run. */ kunit_test_suites(&example_test_suite); MODULE_LICENSE("GPL v2");
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