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README.txt (10490B)


      1 /*!
      2 
      3 \mainpage Visual and Interactive Test Automation for SDL 2.0
      4 
      5 \section license_sec License
      6 Check the file \c COPYING.txt for licensing information.
      7 
      8 \section intro_sec Introduction
      9 The goal of this GSoC project is to automate the testing of testsprite2.
     10 testsprite2 takes 26 parameters which have thousands of valid combinations and is
     11 used to validate SDL's window, mouse and rendering behaviour. By having a test
     12 harness that runs testsprite2 with various command line argument strings and
     13 validates the output for each run, we can make testing an easier task for
     14 maintainers, contributors and testers. The test harness can be used by a continuous
     15 integration system (like buildbot or jenkins) to validate SDL after checkins.
     16 
     17 SDL Homepage: http://libsdl.org/
     18 
     19 \section build_sec Building
     20 
     21 \subsection build_linux Building on Linux/Cygwin
     22 <tt>./autogen.sh; ./configure; make;</tt>
     23 
     24 \subsection build_windows Building on Windows
     25 Use the Visual Studio solution under \c SDL/VisualC/visualtest.
     26 
     27 \section docs_sec Documentation
     28 Documentation is available via Doxygen. To build the documentation, cd to the
     29 SDL/visualtest/docs directory and run \c doxygen. A good starting point for
     30 exploring the documentation is \c SDL/visualtest/docs/html/index.html
     31 
     32 \section usage_sec Usage
     33 To see all the options supported by the test harness, just run \c testharness
     34 with no arguments.
     35 
     36 At the moment the following options are supported:
     37 \li \c sutapp - Path to the system under test (SUT) application
     38 \li \c sutargs - Launch the SUT with the specified arguments string
     39 \li \c timeout - The maximum time after which the SUT process will be killed;
     40 	passed as hh:mm:ss; default 00:01:00
     41 \li \c variator - Which variator to use; see \ref variators_sec
     42 \li \c num-variations - The number of variations to run for; taken to be 
     43 	1 for the random variator and ALL for the exhaustive variator by default
     44 \li \c no-launch - Just print the arguments string for each variation without
     45 	launching the SUT or performing any actions
     46 \li \c parameter-config - A config file that describes the command line parameters
     47 	supported by the SUT; see \ref paramconfig_sec or the sample *.parameters files
     48 	for more details
     49 \li \c action-config - A config file with a list of actions to be performed while
     50 	the SUT is running; see \ref actionconfig_sec or the sample *.actions files
     51 \li \c output-dir - Path to the directory where screenshots should be saved; is
     52 	created if it doesn't exist; taken to be "./output" by default
     53 \li \c verify-dir - Path to the directory with the verification images; taken to 
     54 	be "./verify" by default
     55 
     56 Paths can be relative or absolute.
     57 
     58 Alternatively, the options can be passed as a config file for convenience:
     59 
     60 <tt>testharness \-\-config testsprite2_sample.config</tt>
     61 
     62 For a sample, take a look at the *.config files in this repository.
     63 
     64 We can also pass a config file and override certain options as necessary:
     65 <tt>testharness \-\-config testsprite2_sample.config \-\-num-variations 10</tt>
     66 
     67 Note: You may find it convenient to copy the SUT executable along with any
     68 resources to the test harness directory. Also note that testsprite2 and its
     69 resources (icon.bmp) are automatically copied when using the Visual Studio
     70 solution.
     71 
     72 \subsection usageexamples_subsec Usage examples:
     73 
     74 Passing a custom arguments string:
     75 <tt>testharness \-\-sutapp testsprite2 \-\-sutargs "\-\-cyclecolor \-\-blend mod
     76 \-\-iterations 2" \-\-action-config xyz.actions</tt>
     77 
     78 Using the random variator:
     79 <tt>testharness \-\-sutapp testsprite2 \-\-variator random \-\-num-variations 5
     80 \-\-parameter-config xyz.parameters \-\-action-config xyz.actions</tt>
     81 
     82 \subsection config_subsec Config Files
     83 Config files are an alternate way to pass parameters to the test harness. We
     84 describe the paramters in a config file and pass that to the test harness using
     85 the \-\-config option. The config file consists of lines of the form "x=y" where
     86 x is an option and y is it's value. For boolean options, we simply give the name
     87 of the option to indicate that it is to be passed to the testharness.
     88 
     89 The hash '#' character can be used to start a comment from that point to the end
     90 of the line.
     91 
     92 \section paramconfig_sec The SUT Parameters File
     93 To generate variations we need to describe the parameters the will be passed to
     94 the SUT. This description is given in a parameters file. Each line of the parameters
     95 file (except the blank lines) represents one command line option with five
     96 comma separated fields:
     97 <tt>name, type, values, required, categories</tt>
     98 
     99 \li \c name is the name of the option, e.g., \c \-\-cyclecolor.
    100 \li \c type can have one of three values - integer, boolean and enum.
    101 \li \c values - for integer options this is the valid range of values the option
    102 	can take, i.e., [min max]. For enum options this is a list of strings that
    103 	the option can take, e.g., [val1 val2 val3]. For boolean options this field
    104 	is ignored.
    105 \li \c required - true if the option is required, false otherwise.
    106 \li \c categories - a list of categories that the option belongs to. For example,
    107 	[video mouse audio]
    108 
    109 Just like with config files, hash characters can be used to start comments.
    110 
    111 \subsection additionalnotes_subsec Additional Notes
    112 
    113 \li If you want to have an option that always takes a certain value, use an enum
    114 	with only one value.
    115 \li Currently there isn't any way to turn an option off, i.e., all options will
    116 	be included in the command line options string that is generated using the
    117 	config. If you don't want an option to be passed to the SUT, remove it from
    118 	the config file or comment it out.
    119 
    120 \section variators_sec Variators
    121 Variators are the mechanism by which we generate strings of command line arguments
    122 to test the SUT with. A variator is quite simply an iterator that iterates through
    123 different variations of command line options. There are two variators supported at
    124 the moment:
    125 \li \b Exhaustive - Generate all possible combinations of command line arguments
    126 	that are valid.
    127 \li \b Random - Generate a random variation each time the variator is called.
    128 
    129 As an example, let's try a simple .parameters file:\n
    130 <tt>
    131 \-\-blend, enum, [add mod], false, [] \n
    132 \-\-fullscreen, boolean, [], false, []
    133 </tt>
    134 
    135 The exhaustive variator would generate the following four variations:\n
    136 <tt>
    137 \-\-blend add \n
    138 \-\-blend mod \n
    139 \-\-blend add \-\-fullscreen \n
    140 \-\-blend mod \-\-fullscreen \n
    141 </tt>
    142 
    143 The random variator would simply generate a random variation like the following:\n
    144 <tt>\-\-blend mod</tt>
    145 
    146 \section actionconfig_sec The Actions File
    147 Once the SUT process has been launched, automated testing happens using a mechanism
    148 called actions. A list of actions is read from a file and each action is performed
    149 on the SUT process sequentially. Each line in the actions file describes an action.
    150 The format for an action is <tt>hh:mm:ss ACTION_NAME additional parameters</tt>.
    151 There are five actions supported at the moment:
    152 \li \b SCREENSHOT - Takes a screenshot of each window owned by the SUT process. The
    153 	images are saved as \c [hash]_[i].bmp where \c [hash] is the 32 character long
    154 	hexadecimal MD5 hash of the arguments string that was passed to the SUT while
    155 	launching it and \c i is the window number. i = 1 is an exceptional case
    156 	where the \c _[i] is dropped and the filename is simply \c [hash].bmp\n
    157 	Note: The screenshots are only of the window's client area.
    158 \li \b VERIFY - Verifies the screenshots taken by the last SCREENSHOT action by
    159 	comparing them against a verification image. Each \c [hash]_i.bmp image output
    160 	by the SCREENSHOT action is compared against a \c [hash].bmp image in the
    161 	verify-dir.
    162 \li \b QUIT - Gracefully quits the SUT process. On Windows this means sending a
    163 	WM_CLOSE message to each window owned by the SUT process. On Linux it means
    164 	sending a SIGQUIT signal to the SUT process.
    165 \li \b KILL - Forcefully kills the SUT process. This is useful when the SUT process
    166 	doesn't respond to the QUIT action.
    167 \li <b>LAUNCH [/path/to/executable] [args]</b> - Runs an executable with \c [args]
    168 	as the arguments string.
    169 
    170 Just like with config files, hash characters can be used to start comments.
    171 
    172 \section contint_sec Continuous Integration (CI)
    173 One of the goals of the project was to create a test harness that integrates
    174 with CI systems to provide automated visual and interactive testing to SDL.
    175 
    176 At the moment the test harness can be run in two modes that are useful for CI:
    177 \li Crash testing mode - launch the SUT with every variation and all parameters,
    178 	report to the CI if there's a crash
    179 \li Visual testing mode - launch and visually verify the SUT for a smaller subset
    180 	of the parameters
    181 
    182 Look at the launch_harness.sh/launch_harness.cmd for an example scripts that run the
    183 test harness for all variations with all parameters and report an error on a crash.
    184 The script uses the testsprite2_crashtest config, so remember to copy those files
    185 over to the test harness executable directory along with the script.
    186 
    187 \section todo_sec TODOs
    188 \li Allow specifying a clipping box along with the VERIFY action, i.e., hh:mm:ss
    189 	VERIFY x, y, w, h
    190 \li Add support for spaces between the equals sign in test harness config files
    191 \li Implement the SCREENSHOT action on Linux
    192 \li Add a pairwise variator
    193 \li Add actions to inject keyboard/mouse events
    194 \li Add actions to manipulate the SUT window, e.g., minimize, restore, resize
    195 \li Add support to load and save screenshots as .pngs instead of .bmps
    196 
    197 \section issues_sec Known Issues
    198 \li The QUIT action does not work on a testsprite2 process with multiple windows.
    199 	This appears to be an issue with testsprite2.
    200 \li The SCREENSHOT action doesn't capture the testsprite2 window correctly if the
    201 	--fullscreen option is supplied. It works with --fullscreen-desktop, however.
    202 
    203 \section moreinfo_sec More Information
    204 
    205 Author Contact Info:\n
    206 Apoorv Upreti \c \<apoorvupreti@gmail.com\>
    207 
    208 Other useful links:
    209 - Project Repository: https://bitbucket.org/nerdap/sdlvisualtest
    210 - Project Wiki: https://github.com/nerdap/autotestsprite2/wiki
    211 - Project Blog: http://nerdap.github.io
    212 - Verification images for testsprite2_blendmodes: https://www.dropbox.com/s/nm02aem76m812ng/testsprite2_blendmodes.zip
    213 - Verification images for testsprite2_geometry: https://www.dropbox.com/s/csypwryopaslpaf/testsprite2_geometry.zip
    214 */