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15.2 Simple Tests using ‘parallel-tests

The option ‘parallel-tests’ (see section Changing Automake’s Behavior) enables a test suite driver that is mostly compatible to the simple test driver described in the previous section, but provides a few more features and slightly different semantics. It features concurrent execution of tests with make -j and automatic collection of the test scripts output and summary thereof in ‘.log’ files, and allows to specify inter-test dependencies, lazy reruns of tests that have not completed in a prior run, and hard errors for exceptional failures. Similar to the simple test driver, TESTS_ENVIRONMENT, AM_COLOR_TESTS, XFAIL_TESTS, and the check_* variables are honored, and the environment variable srcdir is set during test execution.

This test driver is still experimental and may undergo changes in order to satisfy additional portability requirements.

The driver operates by defining a set of make rules to create a summary log file, TEST_SUITE_LOG, which defaults to ‘test-suite.log’ and requires a ‘.log’ suffix. This file depends upon log files created for each single test program listed in TESTS, which in turn contain all output produced by the corresponding tests.

Each log file is created when the corresponding test has completed. The set of log files is listed in the read-only variable TEST_LOGS, and defaults to TESTS, with the executable extension if any (see section Support for executable extensions), as well as any suffix listed in TEST_EXTENSIONS removed, and ‘.log’ appended. Results are undefined if a test file name ends in several concatenated suffixes. TEST_EXTENSIONS defaults to ‘.test’; it can be overridden by the user, in which case any extension listed in it must be constituted by a dot, followed by a non-digit alphabetic character, followed by any number of alphabetic characters. For example, ‘.sh’, ‘.T’ and ‘.t1’ are valid extensions, while ‘.x-y’, ‘.6c’ and ‘.t.1’ are not.

For tests that match an extension .ext listed in TEST_EXTENSIONS, you can provide a test driver using the variable ext_LOG_COMPILER (note the upper-case extension) and pass options in AM_ext_LOG_FLAGS and allow the user to pass options in ext_LOG_FLAGS. It will cause all tests with this extension to be called with this driver. For all tests without a registered extension, the variables LOG_COMPILER, AM_LOG_FLAGS, and LOG_FLAGS may be used. For example,

TESTS = foo.pl bar.py baz
TEST_EXTENSIONS = .pl .py
PL_LOG_COMPILER = $(PERL)
AM_PL_LOG_FLAGS = -w
PY_LOG_COMPILER = $(PYTHON)
AM_PY_LOG_FLAGS = -v
LOG_COMPILER = ./wrapper-script
AM_LOG_FLAGS = -d

will invoke ‘$(PERL) -w foo.pl’, ‘$(PYTHON) -v bar.py’, and ‘./wrapper-script -d baz’ to produce ‘foo.log’, ‘bar.log’, and ‘baz.log’, respectively. The ‘TESTS_ENVIRONMENT’ variable is still expanded before the driver, but should be reserved for the user.

As with the simple driver above, by default one status line is printed per completed test, and a short summary after the suite has completed. However, standard output and standard error of the test are redirected to a per-test log file, so that parallel execution does not produce intermingled output. The output from failed tests is collected in the ‘test-suite.log’ file. If the variable ‘VERBOSE’ is set, this file is output after the summary. For best results, the tests should be verbose by default now.

Previous versions of automake used to provide a check-html target to convert the log files to HTML. This feature is now deprecated, and will be removed in the next major Automake release, so don’t rely on it anymore.

Even in the presence of expected failures (see XFAIL_TESTS), there may be conditions under which a test outcome needs attention. For example, with test-driven development, you may write tests for features that you have not implemented yet, and thus mark these tests as expected to fail. However, you may still be interested in exceptional conditions, for example, tests that fail due to a segmentation violation or another error that is independent of the feature awaiting implementation. Tests can exit with an exit status of 99 to signal such a hard error. Unless the variable DISABLE_HARD_ERRORS is set to a nonempty value, such tests will be counted as failed.

By default, the test suite driver will run all tests, but there are several ways to limit the set of tests that are run:

In order to guarantee an ordering between tests even with make -jN, dependencies between the corresponding log files may be specified through usual make dependencies. For example, the following snippet lets the test named ‘foo-execute.test’ depend upon completion of the test ‘foo-compile.test’:

TESTS = foo-compile.test foo-execute.test
foo-execute.log: foo-compile.log

Please note that this ordering ignores the results of required tests, thus the test ‘foo-execute.test’ is run even if the test ‘foo-compile.test’ failed or was skipped beforehand. Further, please note that specifying such dependencies currently works only for tests that end in one of the suffixes listed in TEST_EXTENSIONS.

Tests without such specified dependencies may be run concurrently with parallel make -jN, so be sure they are prepared for concurrent execution.

The combination of lazy test execution and correct dependencies between tests and their sources may be exploited for efficient unit testing during development. To further speed up the edit-compile-test cycle, it may even be useful to specify compiled programs in EXTRA_PROGRAMS instead of with check_PROGRAMS, as the former allows intertwined compilation and test execution (but note that EXTRA_PROGRAMS are not cleaned automatically, see section The Uniform Naming Scheme).

The variables TESTS and XFAIL_TESTS may contain conditional parts as well as configure substitutions. In the latter case, however, certain restrictions apply: substituted test names must end with a nonempty test suffix like ‘.test’, so that one of the inference rules generated by automake can apply. For literal test names, automake can generate per-target rules to avoid this limitation.

Please note that it is currently not possible to use $(srcdir)/ or $(top_srcdir)/ in the TESTS variable. This technical limitation is necessary to avoid generating test logs in the source tree and has the unfortunate consequence that it is not possible to specify distributed tests that are themselves generated by means of explicit rules, in a way that is portable to all make implementations (see Make Target Lookup in The Autoconf Manual, the semantics of FreeBSD and OpenBSD make conflict with this). In case of doubt you may want to require to use GNU make, or work around the issue with inference rules to generate the tests.


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