127 lines
3.2 KiB
Common Lisp
127 lines
3.2 KiB
Common Lisp
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;;;; -*- Mode: Lisp; indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-
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;;;; * FiveAM Example (poor man's tutorial)
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(asdf:oos 'asdf:load-op :fiveam)
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(defpackage :it.bese.fiveam.example
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(:use :common-lisp
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:it.bese.fiveam))
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(in-package :it.bese.fiveam.example)
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;;;; First we need some functions to test.
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(defun add-2 (n)
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(+ n 2))
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(defun add-4 (n)
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(+ n 4))
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;;;; Now we need to create a test which makes sure that add-2 and add-4
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;;;; work as specified.
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;;;; we create a test named ADD-2 and supply a short description.
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(test add-2
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"Test the ADD-2 function" ;; a short description
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;; the checks
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(is (= 2 (add-2 0)))
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(is (= 0 (add-2 -2))))
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;;;; we can already run add-2. This will return the list of test
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;;;; results, it should be a list of two test-passed objects.
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(run 'add-2)
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;;;; since we'd like to have some kind of readbale output we'll explain
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;;;; the results
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(explain! (run 'add-2))
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;;;; or we could do both at once:
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(run! 'add-2)
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;;;; So now we've defined and run a single test. Since we plan on
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;;;; having more than one test and we'd like to run them together let's
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;;;; create a simple test suite.
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(def-suite example-suite :description "The example test suite.")
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;;;; we could explictly specify that every test we create is in the the
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;;;; example-suite suite, but it's easier to just change the default
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;;;; suite:
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(in-suite example-suite)
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;;;; now we'll create a new test for the add-4 function.
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(test add-4
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(is (= 0 (add-4 -4))))
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;;;; now let's run the test
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(run! 'add-4)
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;;;; we can get the same effect by running the suite:
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(run! 'example-suite)
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;;;; since we'd like both add-2 and add-4 to be in the same suite, let's
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;;;; redefine add-2 to be in this suite:
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(test add-2 "Test the ADD-2 function"
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(is (= 2 (add-2 0)))
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(is (= 0 (add-2 -2))))
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;;;; now we can run the suite and we'll see that both add-2 and add-4
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;;;; have been run (we know this since we no get 4 checks as opposed to
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;;;; 2 as before.
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(run! 'example-suite)
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;;;; Just for fun let's see what happens when a test fails. Again we'll
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;;;; redefine add-2, but add in a third, failing, check:
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(test add-2 "Test the ADD-2 function"
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(is (= 2 (add-2 0)))
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(is (= 0 (add-2 -2)))
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(is (= 0 (add-2 0))))
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;;;; Finally let's try out the specification based testing.
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(defun dummy-add (a b)
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(+ a b))
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(defun dummy-strcat (a b)
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(concatenate 'string a b))
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(test dummy-add
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(for-all ((a (gen-integer))
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(b (gen-integer)))
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;; assuming we have an "oracle" to compare our function results to
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;; we can use it:
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(is (= (+ a b) (dummy-add a b)))
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;; if we don't have an oracle (as in most cases) we just ensure
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;; that certain properties hold:
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(is (= (dummy-add a b)
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(dummy-add b a)))
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(is (= a (dummy-add a 0)))
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(is (= 0 (dummy-add a (- a))))
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(is (< a (dummy-add a 1)))
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(is (= (* 2 a) (dummy-add a a)))))
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(test dummy-strcat
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(for-all ((result (gen-string))
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(split-point (gen-integer :min 0 :max 10000)
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(< split-point (length result))))
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(is (string= result (dummy-strcat (subseq result 0 split-point)
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(subseq result split-point))))))
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(test random-failure
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(for-all ((result (gen-integer :min 0 :max 1)))
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(is (plusp result))
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(is (= result 0))))
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(run! 'example-suite)
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