http://onyxneon.com/books/modern_perl/modern_perl_a4.pdf
2. The latest Perl documentation of the "i3test" (general testcase setup) and
"i3test::Test" (additional test instructions) modules:
- http://build.i3wm.org/docs/lib-i3test.html respectively
- http://build.i3wm.org/docs/lib-i3test-test.html
+ https://build.i3wm.org/docs/lib-i3test.html respectively
+ https://build.i3wm.org/docs/lib-i3test-test.html
3. The latest documentation on i3’s IPC interface:
- http://build.i3wm.org/docs/ipc.html
+ https://build.i3wm.org/docs/ipc.html
== Implementation
+cpanminus+ instead, though (because it asks no questions and just works):
The tests additionally require +Xephyr(1)+ to run a nested X server. Install
-+xserver-xephyr+ on Debian or +xorg-xserver-xephyr+ on Arch Linux.
++xserver-xephyr+ on Debian or +xorg-server-xephyr+ on Arch Linux.
.Installing testsuite dependencies using cpanminus (preferred)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$ cd ~/i3/testcases
$ sudo apt-get install cpanminus
$ sudo cpanm .
+$ cd ~/i3/AnyEvent-I3
+$ sudo cpanm Module::Install
+$ sudo cpanm .
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you don’t want to use cpanminus for some reason, the same works with cpan:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
$ cd ~/i3/testcases
$ sudo cpan .
+$ cd ~/i3/AnyEvent-I3
+$ sudo cpan Module::Install
+$ sudo cpan .
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In case you don’t have root permissions, you can also install into your home
-directory, see http://michael.stapelberg.de/cpan/
+directory, see https://michael.stapelberg.de/cpan/
=== Mechanisms
always be found under the symlink +latest/+. Unless told differently, it will
run the tests on a separate X server instance (using Xephyr).
-Xephyr will open a window where you can inspect the running test. You can run
-the tests without an X session with Xvfb, such as with +xvfb-run
-./complete-run+. This will also speed up the tests signficantly especially on
-machines without a powerful video card.
+Xephyr will open a window where you can inspect the running test. By default,
+tests are run under Xvfb.
-.Example invocation of complete-run.pl+
+.Example invocation of +complete-run.pl+
---------------------------------------
-$ cd ~/i3/testcases
+$ cd ~/i3
+
+$ autoreconf -fi
+
+$ mkdir -p build && cd build
+
+$ ../configure
+
+$ make -j8
+# output omitted because it is very long
+
+$ cd testcases
$ ./complete-run.pl
# output omitted because it is very long
This will show the output of Xephyr, which is the X server implementation we
use for testing.
+===== make command: +make check+
+Make check runs the i3 testsuite.
+You can still use ./testcases/complete-run.pl to get the interactive progress output.
+
+.Example invocation of +make check+
+---------------------------------------
+$ cd ~/i3
+
+$ autoreconf -fi
+
+$ mkdir -p build && cd build
+
+$ ../configure
+
+$ make -j8
+# output omitted because it is very long
+
+$ make check
+# output omitted because it is very long
+PASS: testcases/complete-run.pl
+============================================================================
+Testsuite summary for i3 4.13
+============================================================================
+# TOTAL: 1
+# PASS: 1
+# SKIP: 0
+# XFAIL: 0
+# FAIL: 0
+# XPASS: 0
+# ERROR: 0
+============================================================================
+
+$ less test-suite.log
+----------------------------------------
+
+==== Coverage testing
+
+Coverage testing is possible with +lcov+, the front-end for GCC's coverage
+testing tool +gcov+. The testcases can generate a nice html report that tells
+you which functions and lines were covered during a run of the tests. You can
+use this tool to judge how effective your tests are.
+
+To use test coverage tools, first compile with coverage enabled.
+
+---------------------------------------------------
+COVERAGE=1 make
+---------------------------------------------------
+
+Then run the tests with the +--coverage-testing+ flag.
+
+---------------------------------------------------
+./complete-run.pl --coverage-testing
+---------------------------------------------------
+
+Then open +latest/i3-coverage/index.html+ in your web browser.
+
==== IPC interface
The testsuite makes extensive use of the IPC (Inter-Process Communication)
terminating it cleanly and (most importantly) for modifying and getting the
current state (layout tree).
-See [http://i3wm.org/docs/ipc.html] for documentation on the IPC interface.
+See [https://i3wm.org/docs/ipc.html] for documentation on the IPC interface.
==== X11::XCB
testsuite uses X11::XCB, a new (and quite specific to i3 at the moment) Perl
module which uses the XCB protocol description to generate Perl bindings to
X11. They work in a very similar way to libxcb (which i3 uses) and provide
-relatively high-level interfaces (objects such as +X11::XCB::Window+) aswell as
+relatively high-level interfaces (objects such as +X11::XCB::Window+) as well as
access to the low-level interface, which is very useful when testing a window
manager.
is($x->input_focus, $left->id, 'left window focused');
----------
-However, the test fails. Sometimes. Apparantly, there is a race condition in
+However, the test fails. Sometimes. Apparently, there is a race condition in
your test. If you think about it, this is because you are using two different
pieces of software: You tell i3 to update focus, i3 confirms that, and then you
ask X11 to give you the current focus. There is a certain time i3 needs to
it significantly more attractive to run the test suite more often (or at all)
during development.
-An alternative approach to using socket activation is polling for the existance
+An alternative approach to using socket activation is polling for the existence
of the IPC socket and connecting to it. While this might be slightly easier to
implement, it wastes CPU time and is considerably uglier than this solution
:). After all, +lib/SocketActivation.pm+ contains only 54 SLOC.