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597 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
597 lines
25 KiB
Markdown
# How to Write Tests for PhantomJS
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PhantomJS's automated tests are `.js` files located in subdirectories
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of this directory. The test runner, [`run-tests.py`](run-tests.py),
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executes each as a PhantomJS controller script. (Not all
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subdirectories of this directory contain tests; the authoritative list
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of test subdirectories is in
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[the `TESTS` variable in `run-tests.py`](run-tests.py#L26).)
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In addition to all of the usual PhantomJS API, these scripts have
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access to a special testing API, loosely based on
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[W3C testharness.js](https://github.com/w3c/testharness.js) and
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defined in [`testharness.js`](testharness.js) in this directory. They
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also have access to HTTP and HTTPS servers on `localhost`, which serve
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the files in the [`www`](www) directory.
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## The Structure of Test Scripts
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Test scripts are divided into _subtests_. There are two kinds of
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subtest: synchronous and asynchronous. The only difference is that a
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synchronous subtest consists of a single JavaScript function (plus
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anything it calls) and is considered to be complete when that function
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returns. An asynchronous subtest, however, consists of many
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JavaScript functions; these functions are referred to as _steps_. One
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step will be invoked to start the subtest, and the others are called
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in response to events. Eventually one of the steps will indicate that
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the subtest is complete. (The single function used for a synchronous
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subtest is also referred to as a step, when the difference doesn't
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matter.)
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All of the code in a test script should be part of a subtest, or part
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of a setup function (see below). You may define helper functions at
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top level, so long as they are only ever _called_ from subtests. You
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may also initialize global variables at top level if this
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initialization cannot possibly fail, e.g. with constant data or with
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`require` calls for core PhantomJS modules.
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The testing API is visible to a test script as a collection of global
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functions and variables, documented below.
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A subtest is considered to have failed if any of its steps throws a
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JavaScript exception, if an `unreached_func` is called, if the
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per-test timeout expires, or if `done` is called before all of its
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steps have run. It is considered to succeed if `done` is called
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(explicitly or implicitly) after all of its steps have run to
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completion. Normally, you should use the assertion functions to detect
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failure conditions; these ensure that clear diagnostic information is
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printed when a test fails.
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Subtests are executed strictly in the order they appear in the file,
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even if some of them are synchronous and some are asynchronous. The
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order of steps *within* an asynchronous subtest, however, may be
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unpredictable. Also, subtests do not begin to execute until after all
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top-level code in the file has been evaluated.
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Some anomalous conditions are reported not as a failure, but as an
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"error". For instance, if PhantomJS crashes during a test run, or if
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an exception is thrown from outside a step, that is an error, and the
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entire test will be abandoned.
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**WARNING:** The harness will become confused if any function passed
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as the `func` argument to `test`, `async_test`, `generate_tests`,
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`Test.step`, `Test.step_func`, `Test.step_func_done`, or
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`Test.add_cleanup` has a name that ends with `_step`.
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### Accessing the HTTP and HTTPS Test Servers
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The global variables `TEST_HTTP_BASE` and `TEST_HTTPS_BASE` are the
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base URLs of the test HTTP and HTTPS servers, respectively. Their
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values are guaranteed to match the regex `/https?:\/\/localhost:[0-9]+\//`,
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but the port number is dynamically assigned for each test run, so you
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must not hardwire it.
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### Synchronous Subtests
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There are two functions for defining synchronous subtests.
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* `test(func, name, properties)`
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Run `func` as a subtest; the subtest is considered to be complete as
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soon as it returns. `name` is an optional descriptive name for the
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subtest. `func` will be called with no arguments, and `this` set to
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a `Test` object (see below). `properties` is an optional object
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containing properties to apply to the test. Currently there are
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three meaningful properties; any other keys in the `properties`
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object are ignored:
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* `timeout` - Maximum amount of time the subtest is allowed to run, in
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milliseconds. If the timeout expires, the subtest will be
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considered to have failed.
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* `expected_fail`: If truthy, this subtest is expected to fail. It will
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still be run, but a failure will be considered "normal" and the
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overall test will be reported as successful. Conversely, if the
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subtest *succeeds* that is considered "abnormal" and the overall
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test will be reported as failing.
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* `skip`: If truthy, this subtest will not be run at all, will be
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reported as "skipped" rather than "succeeded" or "failed", and
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will not affect the overall outcome of the test. Use `skip` only
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when `expected_fail` will not do—for instance, when a test
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provokes a PhantomJS crash (there currently being no way to label
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a crash as "expected").
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`test` returns the same `Test` object that is available as `this`
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within `func`.
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* `generate_tests(func, args, properties)`
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Define a group of synchronous subtests, each of which will call
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`func`, but with different arguments. This is easiest to explain by
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example:
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generate_tests(assert_equals, [
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["Sum one and one", 1 + 1, 2],
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["Sum one and zero", 1 + 0, 1]
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]);
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... is equivalent to ...
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test(function() {assert_equals(1+1, 2)}, "Sum one and one");
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test(function() {assert_equals(1+0, 1)}, "Sum one and zero");
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Of course `func` may be as complicated as you like, and there is no
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limit either to the number of arguments passed to each subtest, or
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to the number of subtests.
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The `properties` argument may be a single properties object, which
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will be applied uniformly to all the subtests, or an array of the
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same length as `args`, containing appropriate property objects for
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each subtest.
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`generate_tests` returns no value.
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### Asynchronous Subtests
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An asynchronous subtest consists of one or more _step_ functions, and
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unlike a synchronous subtest, it is not considered to be complete until
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the `done` method is called on its `Test` object. When this happens,
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if any of the step functions have not been executed, the subtest is a
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failure.
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Asynchronous subtests are defined with the `async_test` function, which
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is almost the same as `test`:
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* `async_test(func, name, properties)`
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Define an asynchronous subtest. The arguments and their
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interpretation are the same as for `test`, except that `func` is
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optional, and the subtest is *not* considered to be complete after
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`func` returns; `func` (if present) is only the first step of the
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subtest. Additional steps may be defined, either within `func` or
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outside the call to `async_test`, by use of methods on the `Test`
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object that is returned (and available as `this` within `func`).
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Normally, an asynchronous subtest's first step will set up whatever
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is being tested, and define the remainder of the steps, which will
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be run in response to events.
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### Test Object Methods
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These methods are provided by the `Test` object which is returned by
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`test` and `async_test`, and available as `this` within step
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functions.
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* `Test.step(func[, this_obj, ...])`
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Queue one step of a subtest. `func` will eventually be called, with
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`this` set to `this_obj`, or (if `this_obj` is null or absent) to
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the `Test` object. Any further arguments will be passed down to
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`func`. `func` will _not_ be called if a previous step has failed.
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Do not use this function to define steps that should run in response
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to event callbacks; only steps that should be automatically run by
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the test harness.
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The object returned by this function is private. Please let us know
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if you think you need to use it.
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* `Test.done()`
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Indicate that this subtest is complete. One, and only one, step of
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an asynchronous subtest must call this function, or the subtest will
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never complete (and eventually it will time out).
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If an asynchronous subtest has several steps, but not all of them
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have run when `done` is called, the subtest is considered to have
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failed.
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* `Test.step_func(func[, this_obj])`
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Register `func` as a step that will *not* be run automatically by
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the test harness. Instead, the function *returned* by this function
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(the "callback") will run `func`'s step when it is called.
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(`func`'s step must still somehow get run before `done` is called,
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or the subtest will be considered to have failed.)
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`this_obj` will be supplied as `this` to `func`; if omitted, it
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defaults to the `Test` object. Further arguments are ignored.
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However, `func` will receive all of the arguments passed to the
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callback, and the callback will return whatever `func` returns.
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This is the normal way to register a step that should run in
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response to an event. For instance, here is a minimal test of a
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page load:
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async_test(function () {
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var p = require('webpage').create();
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p.open(TEST_HTTP_BASE + 'hello.html',
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this.step_func(function (status) {
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assert_equals(status, 'success');
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this.done();
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}));
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});
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This also serves to illustrate why asynchronous subtests may be
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necessary: this subtest is not complete when its first step returns,
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only when the `onLoadFinished` event fires.
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* `Test.step_func_done([func[, this_obj]])`
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Same as `Test.step_func`, but the callback additionally calls `done`
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after `func` returns. `func` may be omitted, in which case the
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callback just calls `done`.
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The example above can be shortened to
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async_test(function () {
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var p = require('webpage').create();
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p.open(TEST_HTTP_BASE + 'hello.html',
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this.step_func_done(function (status) {
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assert_equals(status, 'success');
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}));
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});
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* `Test.unreached_func([description])`
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Returns a function that, if called, will call
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`assert_unreached(description)` inside a step. Use this to set
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event handlers for events that should _not_ happen. You need to use
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this method instead of `step_func(function () { assert_unreached(); })`
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so the step is properly marked as expected _not_ to run; otherwise
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the test will fail whether or not the event happens.
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A slightly more thorough test of a page load might read
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async_test(function () {
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var p = require('webpage').create();
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p.onResourceError = this.unreached_func("onResourceError");
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p.open(TEST_HTTP_BASE + 'hello.html',
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this.step_func_done(function (status) {
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assert_equals(status, 'success');
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}));
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});
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* `Test.add_cleanup(func)`
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Register `func` to be called (with no arguments, and `this` set to
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the `Test` object) when `done` is called, whether or not the subtest
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has failed. Use this to deallocate persistent resources or undo
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changes to global state. For example, a subtest that uses a scratch
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file might read
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test(function () {
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var fs = require('fs');
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var f = fs.open('scratch_file', 'w');
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this.add_cleanup(function () {
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f.close();
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fs.remove('scratch_file');
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});
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// ... more test logic here ...
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});
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If the step function had simply deleted the file at its end, the
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file would only get deleted when the test succeeds. This example
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could be rewritten using `try ... finally ...`, but that will not
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work for asynchronous tests.
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* `Test.fail(message)`
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Explicitly mark this subtest has having failed, with failure message
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`message`. You should not normally need to call this function yourself.
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* `Test.force_timeout()`
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Explicitly mark this subtest as having failed because its timeout has
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expired. You should not normally need to call this function yourself.
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### Test Script-Wide Setup
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All of the subtests of a test script are normally run, even if one of
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them fails. Complex tests may involve complex initialization actions
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that may fail, in which case the entire test script should be aborted.
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There is also a small amount of harness-wide configuration that is
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possible. Both these tasks are handled by the global function
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`setup`.
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* `setup([func], [properties])`
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One may specify either `func` or `properties` or both, but if both
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are specified, `func` must be first.
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`func` is called immediately, with no arguments. If it throws an
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exception, the entire test script is considered to have failed and
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none of the subtests are run.
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`properties` is an object containing one or more of the following
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keys:
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* `explicit_done`: Wait for the global function `done` (not to be
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confused with `Test.done` to be called, before declaring the test
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script complete.
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* `allow_uncaught_exception`: Don't treat an uncaught exception from
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non-test code as an error. (Exceptions thrown out of test steps
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are still errors.)
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* `timeout`: Overall timeout for the test script, in milliseconds.
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The default is five seconds. Note that `run-tests.py` imposes a
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"backstop" timeout itself; if you raise this timeout you may also
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need to raise that one.
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* `test_timeout`: Default timeout for individual subtests. This may
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be overridden by the `timeout` property on a specific subtest.
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The default is not to have a timeout for individual subtests.
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### Assertions
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Whenever possible, use these functions to detect failure conditions.
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All of them either throw a JavaScript exception (when the test fails)
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or return no value (when the test succeeds). All take one or more
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values to be tested, and an optional _description_. If present, the
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description should be a string to be printed to clarify why the test
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has failed. (The assertions all go to some length to print out values
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that were not as expected in a clear format, so descriptions will
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often not be necessary.)
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* `assert_is_true(value[, description])`
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`value` must be strictly equal to `true`.
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* `assert_is_false(value[, description])`
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`value` must be strictly equal to `false`.
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* `assert_equals(actual, expected[, description])`
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`actual` and `expected` must be shallowly, strictly equal. The
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criterion used is `===` with the following exceptions:
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* If `x === y`, but one of them is `+0` and the other is `-0`, they
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are *not* considered equal.
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* If `x !== y`, but one of the following cases holds, they *are*
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considered equal:
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* both are `NaN`
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* both are `Date` objects and `x.getTime() === y.getTime()`
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* both are `RegExp` objects and `x.toString() === y.toString()`
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* `assert_not_equals(actual, expected[, description])`
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`actual` and `expected` must *not* be shallowly, strictly equal,
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using the same criterion as `assert_equals`.
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* `assert_deep_equals(actual, expected[, description])`
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If `actual` and `expected` are not objects, or if they are
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`Date` or `RegExp` objects, this is the same as `assert_equals`.
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Objects that are not `Date` or `RegExp` must have the same set of
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own-properties (including non-enumerable own-properties), and each
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pair of values for with each own-property must be `deep_equals`,
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recursively. Prototype chains are ignored. Back-references are
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detected and ignored; they will not cause an infinite recursion.
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* `assert_approx_equals(actual, expected, epsilon[, description])`
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The absolute value of the difference between `actual` and `expected`
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must be no greater than `epsilon`. All three arguments must be
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primitive numbers.
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* `assert_less_than(actual, expected[, description])`
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* `assert_less_than_equal(actual, expected[, description])`
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* `assert_greater_than(actual, expected[, description])`
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* `assert_greater_than_equal(actual, expected[, description])`
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`actual` and `expected` must be primitive numbers, and `actual` must
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be, respectively: less than, less than or equal to, greater than,
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greater than or equal to `expected`.
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* `assert_in_array(value, array[, description])`
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`array` must contain `value` according to `Array.indexOf`.
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* `assert_regexp_match(string, regexp[, description])`
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The regular expression `regexp` must match the string `string`,
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according to `RegExp.test()`.
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* `assert_regexp_not_match(string, regexp[, description])`
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The regular expression `regexp` must *not* match the string `string`,
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according to `RegExp.test()`.
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* `assert_type_of(object, type[, description])`
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`typeof object` must be strictly equal to `type`.
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* `assert_instance_of(object, type[, description])`
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`object instanceof type` must be true.
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* `assert_class_string(object, expected[, description])`
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`object` must have the class string `expected`. The class string is
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the second word in the string returned by `Object.prototype.toString`:
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for instance, `({}).toString.call([])` returns `[object Array]`, so
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`[]`'s class string is `Array`.
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* `assert_own_property(object, name[, description])`
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`object` must have an own-property named `name`.
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* `assert_inherits(object, name[, description])`
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`object` must inherit a property named `name`; that is,
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`name in object` must be true but `object.hasOwnProperty(name)`
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must be false.
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* `assert_no_property(object, name[, description])`
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`object` must neither have nor inherit a property named `name`.
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* `assert_readonly(object, name[, description])`
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`object` must have an own-property named `name` which is marked
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read-only (according to `Object.getOwnPropertyDescriptor`).
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* `assert_throws(code, func[, description])`
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`func` must throw an exception described by `code`. `func` is
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called with no arguments and no `this` (you can supply arguments
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using `bind`). `code` can take one of two forms. If it is a
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string, the thrown exception must either stringify to that string,
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or it must be a DOMException whose `name` property is that string.
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Otherwise, `code` must be an object with one or more of the
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properties `code`, `name`, and `message`; whichever properties are
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present must be `===` to the corresponding properties of the
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exception. As a special case, if `message` is present in the
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`code` object but *not* on the exception object, and the exception
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stringifies to the same string as `message`, that's also considered
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valid.
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`assert_throws` cannot be used to catch the exception thrown by any
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of the other `assert_*` functions when they fail. (You might be
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looking for the `expected_fail` property on a subtest.)
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* `assert_unreached([description])`
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Control flow must not reach the point where this assertion appears.
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(In other words, this assertion fails unconditionally.)
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## Test Annotations
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Some tests need to be run in a special way. You can indicate this to
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the test runner with _annotations_. Annotations are lines in the test
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script that begin with the three characters '`//!`'. They must be all
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together at the very top of the script; `run-tests.py` stops parsing
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at the first line that does _not_ begin with the annotation marker.
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Annotation lines are split into _tokens_ in a shell-like fashion,
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which means they are normally separated by whitespace, but you can use
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backslashes or quotes to put whitespace inside a token. Backslashes
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are significant inside double quotes, but not inside single quotes.
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There can be any number of tokens on a line. Everything following an
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unquoted, un-backslashed `#` is discarded. (The exact algorithm is
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[`shlex.split`](https://docs.python.org/2/library/shlex.html), in
|
|
`comments=True`, `posix=True` mode.)
|
|
|
|
These are the recognized tokens:
|
|
|
|
* `no-harness`: Run this test script directly; the testing API
|
|
described above will not be available. This is necessary to
|
|
test PhantomJS features that `testharness.js` reserves for its
|
|
own use, such as `phantom.onError` and `phantom.exit`. No-harness
|
|
tests will usually also be output-expectations tests (see below)
|
|
but this is not required.
|
|
|
|
* `snakeoil`: Instruct PhantomJS to accept the self-signed
|
|
certificate presented by the HTTPS test server.
|
|
|
|
* `timeout:` The next token on the line must be a positive
|
|
floating-point number. `run-tests.py` will kill the PhantomJS
|
|
process, and consider the test to have failed, if it runs for longer
|
|
than that many seconds. The default timeout is seven seconds.
|
|
|
|
This timeout is separate from the per-subtest and global timeouts
|
|
enforced by the testing API. It is intended as a backstop against
|
|
bugs which cause PhantomJS to stop executing the controller script.
|
|
(In no-harness mode, it's the only timeout, unless you implement
|
|
your own.)
|
|
|
|
* `phantomjs:` All subsequent tokens on the line will be passed as
|
|
command-line arguments to PhantomJS, before the controller script.
|
|
Note that `run-tests.py` sets several PhantomJS command line options
|
|
itself; you must take care not to do something contradictory.
|
|
|
|
* `script:` All subsequent tokens on the line will be passed as
|
|
command-line arguments to the *controller script*; that is, they
|
|
will be available in
|
|
[`system.args`](http://phantomjs.org/api/system/property/args.html).
|
|
Note that your controller script will only be `system.args[0]` if
|
|
you are using no-harness mode, and that `run-tests.py` may pass
|
|
additional script arguments of its own.
|
|
|
|
* `stdin:` All subsequent tokens on the line will be concatenated
|
|
(separated by a single space) and fed to PhantomJS's standard input,
|
|
with a trailing newline. If this token is used more than once,
|
|
that produces several lines of input. If this token is not used at
|
|
all, standard input will read as empty.
|
|
|
|
* `unsupported:` The whole file will be skipped.
|
|
This directive should be used to notify that the functionality is not yet
|
|
implemented by Puppeteer. Tests could be run ignoring this directive
|
|
with the `--run-unsupported` flag.
|
|
|
|
## Output-Expectations Tests
|
|
|
|
Normally, `run-tests.py` expects each test to produce parseable output
|
|
in the [TAP](http://testanything.org/tap-specification.html) format.
|
|
This is too inflexible for testing things like `system.stdout.write`,
|
|
so there is also a mode in which you specify exactly what output the
|
|
test should produce, with additional annotations. Output-expectations
|
|
tests are not *required* to be no-harness tests, but the only reason
|
|
to use this mode for harness tests would be to test the harness
|
|
itself, and it's not sophisticated enough for that.
|
|
|
|
Using any of the following annotations makes a test an
|
|
output-expectations test:
|
|
|
|
* `expect-exit:` The next token on the line must be an integer. If it
|
|
is nonnegative, the PhantomJS process is expected to exit with that
|
|
exit code. If it is negative, the process is expected to be
|
|
terminated by the signal whose number is the absolute value of the
|
|
token. (For instance, `expect-exit: -15` for a test that is
|
|
expected to hit the backstop timeout.)
|
|
|
|
* `expect-stdout:` All subsequent tokens on the line are concatenated,
|
|
with spaces in between, and a newline is appeneded. The PhantomJS
|
|
process is expected to emit that text, verbatim, on its standard
|
|
output. If used more than once, that produces multiple lines of
|
|
expected output.
|
|
|
|
* `expect-stderr:` Same as `expect-stdout`, but the output is expected
|
|
to appear on standard error.
|
|
|
|
* `expect-exit-fails`, `expect-stdout-fails`, `expect-stderr-fails`:
|
|
The corresponding test (of the exit code, stdout, or stderr) is
|
|
expected to fail.
|
|
|
|
If some but not all of these annotations are used in a test, the
|
|
omitted ones default to exit code 0 (success) and no output on their
|
|
respective streams.
|
|
|
|
## Test Server Modules
|
|
|
|
The HTTP and HTTPS servers exposed to the test suite serve the static
|
|
files in the `www` subdirectory with URLs corresponding to their paths
|
|
relative to that directory. If you need more complicated server
|
|
behavior than that, you can write custom Python code that executes
|
|
when the server receives a request. Any `.py` file below the `www`
|
|
directory will be invoked to provide the response for that path
|
|
*without* the `.py` suffix. (For instance, `www/echo.py` provides
|
|
responses for `TEST_HTTP_BASE + 'echo'`.) Such files must define a
|
|
top-level function named `handle_request`. This function receives a
|
|
single argument, which is an instance of a subclass of
|
|
[`BaseHTTPServer.BaseHTTPRequestHandler`](https://docs.python.org/2/library/basehttpserver.html#BaseHTTPServer.BaseHTTPRequestHandler).
|
|
The request headers and body (if any) may be retrieved from this
|
|
object. The function must use the `send_response`, `send_header`, and
|
|
`end_headers` methods of this object to generate HTTP response
|
|
headers, and then return a *file-like object* (**not** a string)
|
|
containing the response body. The function is responsible for
|
|
generating appropriate `Content-Type` and `Content-Length` headers;
|
|
the server framework does not do this automatically.
|
|
|
|
Test server modules cannot directly cause a test to fail; the server
|
|
does not know which test is responsible for any given request. If
|
|
there is something wrong with a request, generate an HTTP error
|
|
response; then write your test to fail if it receives an error
|
|
response.
|
|
|
|
Python exceptions thrown by test server modules are treated as
|
|
failures *of the testsuite*, but they are all attributed to a virtual
|
|
"HTTP server errors" test.
|