xref: /freebsd/contrib/netbsd-tests/lib/libcurses/testframe.txt (revision b3e7694832e81d7a904a10f525f8797b753bf0d3)
1
2CURSES TESTFRAME
3----------------
4
51. Introduction
6
7The curses library is a complex piece of software and, often, changes
8made to the library may introduce subtle bugs that are hidden by other
9actions so a visual check of the curses output may look correct in
10some circumstances and the bug only show itself after a certain
11sequence of actions.  To assist with validating that changes made to
12the curses library have no undesired effects an automated test is
13needed to detect and highlight any changes in the curses application
14output stream.  The programmer can then analyse the output changes and
15either correct a bug or update the automated test to accept the new
16output as valid.
17
182. Architecture
19
20The curses testframe consists of two separate programs connected by a
21number of pipes and a pseudo-tty (pty).  The programs are called the
22director and the slave.  The director reads a configuration file of
23tests to perform, passes these commands to the slave over a pipe and
24reads the pty for any output from the slave.  Data from the slave is
25compared against expected output held in a file and any differences
26are highlighted to the tester.  The slave is a curses application that
27is forked by the director on start up.  It reads commands from the
28director over a pipe, these commands are calls to curses routines
29along with the parameters required for the call.  The slave takes the
30parameters and uses them as arguments for the requested curses routine
31call.  The return value from the curses routine is passed back to the
32director over another pipe, if the curses routine updates any passed
33by reference arguments then these are also passed back to the director
34for analysis.
35
363. Director
37
38The director has the following optional command line options:
39
40    -v	     	     enables verbose output to assist debugging
41    -s slave_path    the director will execute slave_path as the slave
42       		     process.  The default is ./slave
43    -t term	     Sets the TERM environment variable to term when
44       		     executing the slave.  The default is atf
45
46There is one mandatory command line parameter, that is a file name
47that contains the test command file.  The test command file holds the
48calls required to exercise a particular curses routine and validate
49both the return codes from the routines and the output from the
50slave.  The test language has a small number of commands, they are:
51
52assign:
53      Assign a value to a variable.  The syntax is:
54
55      	     assign var_name value
56
57      Where var_name is the name of the variable.  Variable names are
58      an arbitrary sequence of alphanumeric characters, the variable
59      name must start with an alphabetic character. Value is the value
60      to be assigned.  The value can either be a numeric or a string
61      type.  Variables are created on first use and will be
62      overwritten on each subsequent use.
63
64call, call2, call3, call4:
65      All these are used to call curses routines, the only difference
66      between then is the number of expected return values.  Call
67      expects one return value, call2 expects 2, call3 expects 3 and
68      call4 expects four.  Any parameters that are passed by reference
69      and updated by the call are treated like returns.  So, for
70      example, calling the function getyx() which has three
71      parameters, the window, a pointer to storage for y and a pointer
72      to storage for x would be called like this:
73
74      	 	 call3 OK 4 5 getyx $win1
75
76      Which calls getyx, the first (and possibly only) return is the
77      return status of the function call, in this case we expect "OK"
78      indicating that the call succeeded.  The next two returns are
79      the values of y and x respectively, the parameter $win1 is a
80      variable that was assigned by a previous call.  Any return can
81      be assigned to a variable by including the variable name in a
82      call return list.  Variables are referenced in a call parameter
83      list by prefixing the name with a $ character.  All returns are
84      validated against the expected values and an error raised if
85      there is a mismatch.  The only exception to this is when the
86      return is assigned to a variable.  Valid values for the returns
87      list are:
88
89      	  	  variable - assign the return to the given variable
90		             name.
91      	  	  numeric  - the value of the return must match the
92      	  	  	     number given.
93		  string   - an arbitrary sequence of characters
94      	  	  	     enclosed in double quotes.
95		  ERR      - expect an ERR return
96		  OK	   - expect an OK return
97		  NULL	   - expect a NULL pointer return
98		  NON_NULL - expect a pointer that is not NULL valued
99
100      There is one special parameter that can be passed to a call,
101      that is the label STDSCR.  This parameter will be substituted by
102      the value of stdscr when the function call is made.
103
104check:
105      Validate the value of a variable.  This allows a variable to be
106      checked for an expected return after it has been assigned in a
107      previous call.  The syntax is:
108
109      	       check var_name expected_result
110
111      Where var_name is a variable previously assigned and
112      expected_result is one of the valid return values listed in the
113      above call section.
114
115compare:
116      Compares the output stream from the slave against the contents
117      of a file that contains the expected
118      output.  The syntax is:
119
120      	       compare filename
121
122      Where filename is the name of the file containing the expected
123      output.  The file can either be an absolute path or relative
124      path.  In the latter case the value of the environment variable
125      CHECK_PATH will be prepended to the argument to provide the path
126      to the file.  The contents of this file will be compared byte by
127      byte against the output from the slave, any differences in the
128      output will be flagged.  If the director is not in verbose mode
129      then the first mismatch in the byte stream will cause the
130      director to exit.
131
132comparend:
133      Performs the same function as the above compare except that
134      excess output from the slave is not discarded if there is more
135      data from the slave than there is in the check file.  This
136      allows chaining of multiple check files.
137
138delay:
139      Defines an inter-character delay to be inserted between
140      characters being fed into the input of the slave.  The syntax
141      is:
142
143		delay time
144
145      Where time is the amount of time to delay in milliseconds.
146
147include:
148      Include the contents of another test file, the parser will
149      suspend reading the current file and read commands from the
150      include file until the end of file of the include file is
151      reached at which point it will continue reading the original
152      file.  Include files may be nested.  The syntax is:
153
154      	     	include filename
155
156      Where filename is the name of the file to include.  If the
157      filename is not an absolute path then the contents of the
158      environment variable INCLUDE_PATH are prepended to the file
159      name.
160
161input:
162      Defines a string of characters that will be fed to the slave
163      when a call requires input.  Any unused input will be discarded
164      after the call that required the input is called.  The syntax
165      is:
166
167		input "string to pass"
168
169noinput:
170      Normally the director will error if an input function is called
171      without input being previously defined, this is to prevent input
172      functions causing the test to hang waiting for input that never
173      comes.  If it is known that there is pending input for the slave
174      then the noinput keyword can be used to flag that the input
175      function has data available for it to read.  The noinput command
176      only applies to the next function call then behaviour reverts to
177      the default.
178
179The testframe can define different types of strings, the type of string
180depends on the type of enclosing quotes.  A null terminated string is
181indicated by enclosing double (") quotes.  A byte string, one that is
182not null terminated and may contain the nul character within it is
183indicated by enclosing single (') quotes.  A string of chtype
184character which are a combined attribute and character value is
185indicated by enclosing backticks (`), for this type of string pairs of
186bytes between the backticks are converted to an array of chtype, the
187first byte is the attribute and the second is the character.
188
189All strings defined will have a simple set of character substitutions
190performed on them when they are parsed.  This allows the tester to
191embed some control characters into the string.  Valid substitutions
192are:
193
194	\e	escape
195	\n	new line
196	\r	carriage return
197	\t	tab
198	\\	\ character
199	\nnn	Where nnn is three octal digits, the character
200		represented by the octal number will be inserted into
201		the string.
202
203Any other invalid conversions will have the \ stripped and the
204subsequent characters inserted into the string.
205
206Integers may be specified by either a plain numeric (e.g. 12345) or by
207hexadecimal notation by prefixing the number with 0x (e.g. 0x3039).
208Internally, no distinction is made between the two formats and they
209can be freely intermixed.
210
211Integers and variables containing integers can have operations
212performed on them.  Currently only bitwise ORing numbers together is
213supported.  This can be done by separating a list of integers and
214variables with the pipe (|) symbol and enclosing the entire list in
215round brackets "()" like this:
216
217      ( $var1 | 0x0100 | $var2 | 512 )
218
219Variables and integer constants may be freely intermixed.  The result
220of the operation can either be used as an argument for a call or can
221be used as an expected result for a call.
222
223In addition to all the curses calls being supported by the slave,
224there is one more special call called "drain".  This call repeatedly
225called getch() until there are no more characters in stdin.  The call
226assumes that the curses input is either in no delay or timed input
227mode otherwise the test will time out and fail.  This call can be used
228to clear any pending input when testing testing a timed read to
229prevent the input being used in a later test.
230
2314. Slave
232
233The user has no direct interaction with the slave process.  The slave
234is forked off by the director communicates to the director over a set
235of pipes and a pseudo-tty connected to its standard i/o file
236descriptors.  The slave executes the passed curses calls and passes
237back return values to the director.  The slave automatically calls
238initscr() on start up.
239
240
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242