Real World Mozilla Unit Testing Lab
Revision as of 19:07, 28 February 2007 by David.humphrey (talk | contribs)
Dive into Mozilla > Dive into Mozilla Day 4 > Mozilla Unit Testing Lab
Overview
This lab is designed to give you first-hand experience writing a build-time xpcshell unit test for your XPCOM component. This lab will also serve as a starting point for our discussions of bugs and bugzilla.
NOTE: At the time of writing (February 28, 2007), this lab does not work due to bug bug 371329. While this is regrettable, it still shows an important concept, and further, deals with the reality of bugs in Mozilla.
Instructions
Mozilla currently uses three unit test methods:
- The first is xpcshell for C++ unit tests that run on the command line. These are the best method to use whenever possible. Using them effectively requires composing code as stateless functions that return values whenever possible--always a good practice.
- Second, since xpcshell tests are not always possible (i.e., a lot of code terminates at OS paint functions that return void, or depends on aspects of the entire browser), so called reftests are used. A reftest compares two screens side by side.
- For complex JavaScript and integration bugs, we have mochitest, based on the DHTML framework MochiKit. Mochitest is very flexible and powerful.
For purposes of testing our FirstXpcom component, we will use xpcshell tests. This will allow us to easily write tests to insure the functionality of our class's methods.
- Begin by creating a new directory to hold our tests:
$ cd mozilla/extensions/firstxpcom $ mkdir test
- Now copy the xpcshell test-harness code into this directory:
$ cd mozilla/extensions/firstxpcom/test $ cp -r ../../../tools/test-harness/xpcshell-simple/example/* .
- This will result in the following file/directories being copied to test:
$ ls CVS Makefile.in unit
- The file, test/Makefile.in, needs to be modified:
# Note: DEPTH should be set to the relative path to mozilla/ DEPTH = ../../.. topsrcdir = @top_srcdir@ srcdir = @srcdir@ VPATH = @srcdir@ include $(DEPTH)/config/autoconf.mk # Note: set the test module's name to test_<yourmodule> MODULE = test_firstxpcom # This is a list of directories containing tests to run, separated by spaces. # Most likely, tho, you won't use more than one directory here. XPCSHELL_TESTS = unit include $(topsrcdir)/config/rules.mk # Note: Invoke any additional (non-xpcshell) test programs here. check::
- Your component's Makefile needs to include this new test directory. Modify mozilla/extensions/firstxpcom/Makefile.in (change shown in bold):
DEPTH = ../.. topsrcdir = @top_srcdir@ srcdir = @srcdir@ VPATH = @srcdir@ include $(DEPTH)/config/autoconf.mk MODULE = firstxpcom DIRS = public \ src \ $(NULL) # Adding xpcshell unit tests ifdef ENABLE_TESTS DIRS += test endif XPI_NAME = firstxpcom # A Unique ID for your extension INSTALL_EXTENSION_ID = firstxpcom@senecac.on.ca # Will create a .xpi in /mozilla/$(MOZ_OBJDIR)/dist/xpi-stage/ XPI_PKGNAME = firstxpcom # install.rdf will tell Firefox how to install our extension and # this says, "copy install.rdf into our extension dir and xpi" DIST_FILES = install.rdf include $(topsrcdir)/config/rules.mk
- Recreate your component's Makefile (make sure you use your own objdir name below):
$ cd mozilla/objdir $ ../build/autoconf/make-makefile extensions/firstxpcom $ make
- Write you JavaScript unit tests for your FirstXpcom component in mozilla/extensions/firstxpcom/test/unit/test_firstxpcom.js:
function run_test() { // Create an instance of FirstXpcom to test try { const cid = "@senecac.on.ca/firstxpcom;1"; var obj = Components.classes[cid].createInstance(); obj = obj.QueryInterface(Components.interfaces.IFirstXpcom); } catch (err) { do_throw(err); return; } // Test Add var result = obj.add(1, 2); do_check_eq(3, result); // Test Name get and set var name = "New String"; obj.name = name; do_check_eq(name, obj.name); }
- Finally, run your test suite:
$ cd mozilla/objdir/extensions/firstxpcom $ make check
- You can safely delete mozilla/extensions/firstxpcom/test/unit/test_sample.js, as it is just an example of basic tests you can run:
/* This is the most basic testcase. It makes some trivial assertions, * then sets a timeout, and exits the test harness when that timeout * fires. This is meant to demonstrate that there is a complete event * system available to test scripts. * Available functions are described at: * http://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Writing_xpcshell-based_unit_tests */ function run_test() { do_check_eq(57, 57) do_check_neq(1, 2) do_check_true(true); do_test_pending(); do_timeout(100, "do_test_finished();"); }