This documents describe the testing infrastructure of Slint
The syntax tests are testing that the compiler show the right error messages in case of error.
The syntax tests are located in slint_compiler/tests/syntax/
and it is driven by the
syntax_tests.rs
file. More info in the comments of that file.
In summary, each .slint files have comments with ^error
like so:
foo bar
// ^error{parse error}
Meaning that there must be an error on the line above at the location pointed by the caret.
Ideally, each error message must be tested like so.
The syntax test can be run alone with
cargo test --test syntax_tests
These tests make sure that feature in .slint behave as expected. All the .slint files in the sub directories are going to be test by the drivers with the different language frontends.
The .slint
code contains a comment with some block of code which is extracted by the relevant driver.
The interpreter test is the faster test to compile and run. It test the compiler and the eval feature as run by the viewer or such. It can be run like so:
cargo test -p test-driver-interpreter --
You can add an argument to test only for particular tests.
If there is a property test
in the last component of the file, the test will make sure this
property equal to bool.
example:
Foo := Rectangle {
// test would fail if that property was false
property <bool> test: 1 + 1 == 2;
}
The rust driver will compile each snippet of code and put it in a slint!
macro in its own module
In addition, if there are ```rust
blocks in a comment, they are extracted into a #[test]
function in the same module. This is usefull to test the rust api.
This is all compiled in a while program, so the SLINT_TEST_FILTER
environment variable can be
set while building to only build the test that matches the filter.
Example: to test all the layout test:
SLINT_TEST_FILTER=layout cargo test -p test-driver-rust
Instead of putting everything in a slint! macro, it is possible to tell the driver to do the compilation in the build.rs, with the builod-time feature:
SLINT_TEST_FILTER=layout cargo test -p test-driver-rust --features build-time
The C++ test driver will take each .slint and generate a .h for it. It will also generate a .cpp that
includes it, and add the ```cpp
block in the main function.
Each program is compiled separately. And then run.
Some macro like assert_eq
are defined to look similar o the rust equivalent.
To run the test, you must make sure to first build the slint-cpp shared library:
cargo build --lib -p slint-cpp --features testing --no-default-features && cargo test -p test-driver-cpp --
You can omit the first part that compiles slint-cpp if you only want to test the compiler and the runtime library is uptodate.
Note that there are also C++ unit tests that can be run by CMake
This is used to test the NodeJS API. It takes the ```js
blocks in comment and make .js file
with it that loads the .slint and runs node with it.
Each test is run in a different node process.
You need to build the node integration before running the tests, even if the change was on the compiler
cargo build -p slint-node && cargo test -p test-driver-nodejs
cargo test -p doctests
The doctests extracts the ```slint
from the files in the docs folder and make sure that
the snippets can be build without errors