This page will teach you how to run the tests, selecting the ones you
want, and how to add new tests to the archive.
-\tableofcontents
+@tableofcontents
SimGrid code coverage is usually between 70% and 80%, which is much
more than most projects out there. This is because we consider SimGrid
prediction will be noticed. All these tests should ensure that SimGrid
is safe to use and to depend on.
-\section inside_tests_runintegration Running the tests
+@section inside_tests_runintegration Running the tests
Running the tests is done using the ctest binary that comes with
cmake. These tests are run for every commit and the result is publicly
<a href="https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/">available</a>.
-\verbatim
+@verbatim
ctest # Launch all tests
ctest -R msg # Launch only the tests which name match the string "msg"
ctest -j4 # Launch all tests in parallel, at most 4 at the same time
ctest -R msg- -j5 --output-on-failure # You changed MSG and want to check that you didn't break anything, huh?
# That's fine, I do so all the time myself.
-\endverbatim
+@endverbatim
-\section inside_tests_rununit Running the unit tests
+@section inside_tests_rununit Running the unit tests
All unit tests are packed into the testall binary, that lives at the
source root. These tests are run when you launch ctest, don't worry.
-\verbatim
+@verbatim
make testall # Rebuild the test runner on need
./testall # Launch all tests
./testall --help # revise how it goes if you forgot
./testall --dump-only # Display all existing test suites
./testall --tests=-all,+dict # Only launch the tests from the dict test suite
./testall --tests=-all,+foo:bar # run only the bar test from the foo suite.
-\endverbatim
+@endverbatim
-\section inside_tests_add_units Adding unit tests
+@section inside_tests_add_units Adding unit tests
-\warning this section is outdated. New unit tests should be written
+@warning this section is outdated. New unit tests should be written
using the unit_test_framework component of Boost. There is no such
example so far in our codebase, but that's definitely the way to go
for the future. STOP USING XBT.
example, if you want to create unit tests in the file src/xbt/plouf.c,
your changes should look like that:
-\verbatim
+@verbatim
--- a/tools/cmake/UnitTesting.cmake
+++ b/tools/cmake/UnitTesting.cmake
@@ -11,6 +11,7 @@ set(FILES_CONTAINING_UNITTESTS
- src/xbt/xbt_strbuff.c
src/xbt/xbt_sha.c
src/xbt/config.c
+ src/xbt/plouf.c
)
if(SIMGRID_HAVE_MC)
-\endverbatim
+@endverbatim
Then, you want to actually add your tests in the source file. All the
tests must be protected by "#ifdef SIMGRID_TEST" so that they don't
code with such unit tests, but make sure that it runs reasonably fast,
or nobody will run "ctest" before commiting code.
-\section inside_tests_add_integration Adding integration tests
+@section inside_tests_add_integration Adding integration tests
TESH (the TEsting SHell) is the test runner that we wrote for our
integration tests. It is distributed with the SimGrid source file, and
strive to make this code clear, well documented and informative for
the users. If you manage to do so, put this somewhere under
examples/ and modify the cmake files as explained on this page:
- \ref inside_cmake_examples. If you feel like you should write a
+ @ref inside_cmake_examples. If you feel like you should write a
torture test that is not interesting to the users (because nobody
would sanely write something similar in user code), then put it under
teshsuite/ somewhere.
- <b>Write the tesh file</b>, containing the command to run, the
provided input (if any, but almost no SimGrid test provide such an
input) and the expected output. Check the tesh man page for more
- details.\n
+ details.@n
Tesh is sometimes annoying as you have to ensure that the expected
output will always be exactly the same. In particular, your should
not output machine dependent informations such as absolute data
steps can be used here, such as the obfucation of the memory
adresses unless the verbose logs are displayed (using the
#XBT_LOG_ISENABLED() macro), or the modification of the log formats
- to hide the timings when they depend on the host machine.\n
+ to hide the timings when they depend on the host machine.@n
The script located in <project/directory>/tools/tesh/generate_tesh can
help you a lot in particular if the output is large (though a smaller output is preferable).
There are also example tesh files in the <project/directory>/tools/tesh/ directory, that can be useful to understand the tesh syntax.
Once the name is chosen, create a new test by adding a line similar to
the following (assuming that you use tesh as expected).
-\verbatim
+@verbatim
# Usage: ADD_TEST(test-name ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR}/bin/tesh <options> <tesh-file>)
# option --setenv bindir set the directory containing the binary
# --setenv srcdir set the directory containing the source file
--cd ${CMAKE_HOME_DIRECTORY}/examples/my-test/
${CMAKE_HOME_DIRECTORY}/examples/msg/io/io.tesh
)
-\endverbatim
+@endverbatim
As usual, you must run "make distcheck" after modifying the cmake files,
to ensure that you did not forget any files in the distributed archive.
-\section inside_tests_ci Continous Integration
+@section inside_tests_ci Continous Integration
We use several systems to automatically test SimGrid with a large set
of parameters, across as many platforms as possible.
issues but when it's green, then you know that SimGrid is very fit!
We use <a href="https://travis-ci.org/simgrid/simgrid">Travis</a> to
quickly run some tests on Linux and Mac. It answers quickly but may
-miss issues. And we use <a href="https://ci.appveyor.com/project/simgrid/simgrid">AppVeyor</a>
+miss issues. And we use <a href="https://ci.appveyor.com/project/mquinson/simgrid">AppVeyor</a>
to build and somehow test SimGrid on windows.
-\subsection inside_tests_jenkins Jenkins on the Inria CI servers
+@subsection inside_tests_jenkins Jenkins on the Inria CI servers
You should not have to change the configuration of the Jenkins tool
yourself, although you could have to change the slaves' configuration
The result can be seen here: https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/
We have 2 interesting projects on Jenkins:
-\li <a href="https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/job/SimGrid-Multi/">SimGrid-Multi</a>
- is the main project, running the tests that we spoke about.\n It is
+@li <a href="https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/job/SimGrid/">SimGrid</a>
+ is the main project, running the tests that we spoke about.@n It is
configured (on Jenkins) to run the script <tt>tools/jenkins/build.sh</tt>
-\li <a href="https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/job/SimGrid-DynamicAnalysis/">SimGrid-DynamicAnalysis</a>
- runs the tests both under valgrind to find the memory errors and
- under gcovr to report the achieved test coverage.\n It is configured
+@li <a href="https://ci.inria.fr/simgrid/job/SimGrid-DynamicAnalysis/">SimGrid-DynamicAnalysis</a>
+ should be called "nightly" because it does not only run dynamic
+ tests, but a whole bunch of long lasting tests: valgrind (memory
+ errors), gcovr (coverage), Sanitizers (bad pointer usage, threading
+ errors, use of unspecified C constructs) and the clang static analyzer.@n It is configured
(on Jenkins) to run the script <tt>tools/jenkins/DynamicAnalysis.sh</tt>
In each case, SimGrid gets built in
/builds/workspace/$PROJECT/build_mode/$CONFIG/label/$SERVER/build
-with $PROJECT being for instance "SimGrid-Multi", $CONFIG "DEBUG" or
+with $PROJECT being for instance "SimGrid", $CONFIG "DEBUG" or
"ModelChecker" and $SERVER for instance "simgrid-fedora20-64-clang".
If some configurations are known to fail on some systems (such as
order to disable the "ModelChecker" build on host
"small-netbsd-64-clang", use:
-\verbatim
+@verbatim
(label=="small-netbsd-64-clang").implies(build_mode!="ModelChecker")
-\endverbatim
+@endverbatim
-\subsection inside_tests_travis Travis
+Just for the record, the slaves were created from the available
+template with the following commands:
+@verbatim
+#debian/ubuntu
+apt-get install gcc g++ gfortran automake cmake libboost-dev openjdk-8-jdk openjdk-8-jre libxslt-dev libxml2-dev libevent-dev libunwind-dev libdw-dev htop git python3 xsltproc libboost-context-dev
+#for dynamicanalysis:
+apt-get install jacoco libjacoco-java libns3-dev pcregrep gcovr ant lua5.3-dev sloccount
+
+#fedora
+dnf install libboost-devel openjdk-8-jdk openjdk-8-jre libxslt-devel libxml2-devel xsltproc git python3 libdw-devel libevent-devel libunwind-devel htop lua5.3-devel
+
+#netbsd
+pkg_add cmake gcc7 boost boost-headers automake openjdk8 libxslt libxml2 libunwind git htop python36
+
+#opensuse
+zypper install cmake automake clang boost-devel java-1_8_0-openjdk-devel libxslt-devel libxml2-devel xsltproc git python3 libdw-devel libevent-devel libunwind-devel htop binutils ggc7-fortran
+
+#freebsd
+pkg install boost-libs cmake openjdk8 automake libxslt libxml2 libunwind git htop python3 automake gcc6 flang elfutils libevent
+#+ clang-devel from ports
+
+#osx
+brew install cmake boost libunwind-headers libxslt git python3
+@endverbatim
+
+@subsection inside_tests_travis Travis
Travis is a free (as in free beer) Continuous Integration system that
open-sourced project can use freely. It is very well integrated in the
result is here: https://travis-ci.org/simgrid/simgrid
The .travis.yml configuration file can be useful if you fail to get
-SimGrid to compile on modern mac systems. We use the \c brew package
+SimGrid to compile on modern mac systems. We use the @c brew package
manager there, and it works like a charm.
-\subsection inside_tests_appveyor AppVeyor
+@subsection inside_tests_appveyor AppVeyor
AppVeyor aims at becoming the Travis of Windows. It is maybe less
mature than Travis, or maybe it is just that I'm less trained in
Windows. Our configuration is in the file appveyor.yml as it should
-be, and the result is here: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/simgrid/simgrid
+be, and the result is here: https://ci.appveyor.com/project/mquinson/simgrid
-We use \c Choco as a package manager on AppVeyor, and it is sufficient
+We use @c Choco as a package manager on AppVeyor, and it is sufficient
for us. In the future, we will probably move to the ubuntu subsystem
-of Windows 10: SimGrid performs very well under these settings, but
-unfortunately we have no continuous integration service providing it
-yet, so we cannot drop AppVeyor yet.
+of Windows 10: SimGrid performs very well under these settings, as
+tested on Inria's CI servers. For the time being having a native
+library is still useful for the Java users that don't want to install
+anything beyond Java on their windows.
-\subsection inside_tests_debian Debian builders
+@subsection inside_tests_debian Debian builders
Since SimGrid is packaged in Debian, we benefit from their huge
testing infrastructure. That's an interesting torture test for our
The build results are here:
https://buildd.debian.org/status/package.php?p=simgrid
-\subsection inside_tests_sonarqube SonarQube
+@subsection inside_tests_sonarqube SonarQube
SonarQube is an open-source code quality analysis solution. Their nice
code scanners are provided as plugin. The one for C++ is not free, but
open-source project can use it at no cost. That is what we are doing.
Don't miss the great looking dashboard here:
-https://nemo.sonarqube.org/overview?id=simgrid
+https://sonarcloud.io/dashboard?id=simgrid
This tool is enriched by the script @c tools/internal/travis-sonarqube.sh
that is run from @c .travis.yml