1ATF-C-API(3) BSD Library Functions Manual ATF-C-API(3)
2
4 atf-c-api, ATF_CHECK, ATF_CHECK_MSG, ATF_CHECK_EQ, ATF_CHECK_EQ_MSG,
5 ATF_CHECK_MATCH, ATF_CHECK_MATCH_MSG, ATF_CHECK_STREQ,
6 ATF_CHECK_STREQ_MSG, ATF_CHECK_ERRNO, ATF_REQUIRE, ATF_REQUIRE_MSG,
7 ATF_REQUIRE_EQ, ATF_REQUIRE_EQ_MSG, ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH,
8 ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH_MSG, ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ, ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ_MSG,
9 ATF_REQUIRE_ERRNO, ATF_TC, ATF_TC_BODY, ATF_TC_BODY_NAME, ATF_TC_CLEANUP,
10 ATF_TC_CLEANUP_NAME, ATF_TC_HEAD, ATF_TC_HEAD_NAME, ATF_TC_NAME,
11 ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP, ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD, ATF_TP_ADD_TC, ATF_TP_ADD_TCS,
12 atf_tc_get_config_var, atf_tc_get_config_var_wd,
13 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool, atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool_wd,
14 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long, atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long_wd,
15 atf_no_error, atf_tc_expect_death, atf_tc_expect_exit,
16 atf_tc_expect_fail, atf_tc_expect_pass, atf_tc_expect_signal,
17 atf_tc_expect_timeout, atf_tc_fail, atf_tc_fail_nonfatal, atf_tc_pass,
18 atf_tc_skip, atf_utils_cat_file, atf_utils_compare_file,
19 atf_utils_copy_file, atf_utils_create_file, atf_utils_file_exists,
20 atf_utils_fork, atf_utils_free_charpp, atf_utils_grep_file,
21 atf_utils_grep_string, atf_utils_readline, atf_utils_redirect,
22 atf_utils_wait — C API to write ATF-based test programs
23
25 #include <atf-c.h>
26
27 ATF_CHECK(expression);
28
29 ATF_CHECK_MSG(expression, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
30
31 ATF_CHECK_EQ(expression_1, expression_2);
32
33 ATF_CHECK_EQ_MSG(expression_1, expression_2, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
34
35 ATF_CHECK_MATCH(regexp, string);
36
37 ATF_CHECK_MATCH_MSG(regexp, string, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
38
39 ATF_CHECK_STREQ(string_1, string_2);
40
41 ATF_CHECK_STREQ_MSG(string_1, string_2, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
42
43 ATF_CHECK_ERRNO(exp_errno, bool_expression);
44
45 ATF_REQUIRE(expression);
46
47 ATF_REQUIRE_MSG(expression, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
48
49 ATF_REQUIRE_EQ(expression_1, expression_2);
50
51 ATF_REQUIRE_EQ_MSG(expression_1, expression_2, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
52
53 ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH(regexp, string);
54
55 ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH_MSG(regexp, string, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
56
57 ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ(string_1, string_2);
58
59 ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ_MSG(string_1, string_2, fail_msg_fmt, ...);
60
61 ATF_REQUIRE_ERRNO(exp_errno, bool_expression);
62
63 ATF_TC(name);
64
65 ATF_TC_BODY(name, tc);
66
67 ATF_TC_BODY_NAME(name);
68
69 ATF_TC_CLEANUP(name, tc);
70
71 ATF_TC_CLEANUP_NAME(name);
72
73 ATF_TC_HEAD(name, tc);
74
75 ATF_TC_HEAD_NAME(name);
76
77 ATF_TC_NAME(name);
78
79 ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP(name);
80
81 ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD(name);
82
83 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tp_name, tc_name);
84
85 ATF_TP_ADD_TCS(tp_name);
86
87 atf_tc_get_config_var(tc, varname);
88
89 atf_tc_get_config_var_wd(tc, variable_name, default_value);
90
91 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool(tc, variable_name);
92
93 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool_wd(tc, variable_name, default_value);
94
95 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long(tc, variable_name);
96
97 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long_wd(tc, variable_name, default_value);
98
99 atf_no_error();
100
101 atf_tc_expect_death(reason, ...);
102
103 atf_tc_expect_exit(exitcode, reason, ...);
104
105 atf_tc_expect_fail(reason, ...);
106
107 atf_tc_expect_pass();
108
109 atf_tc_expect_signal(signo, reason, ...);
110
111 atf_tc_expect_timeout(reason, ...);
112
113 atf_tc_fail(reason);
114
115 atf_tc_fail_nonfatal(reason);
116
117 atf_tc_pass();
118
119 atf_tc_skip(reason);
120
121 void
122 atf_utils_cat_file(const char *file, const char *prefix);
123
124 bool
125 atf_utils_compare_file(const char *file, const char *contents);
126
127 void
128 atf_utils_copy_file(const char *source, const char *destination);
129
130 void
131 atf_utils_create_file(const char *file, const char *contents, ...);
132
133 void
134 atf_utils_file_exists(const char *file);
135
136 pid_t
137 atf_utils_fork(void);
138
139 void
140 atf_utils_free_charpp(char **argv);
141
142 bool
143 atf_utils_grep_file(const char *regexp, const char *file, ...);
144
145 bool
146 atf_utils_grep_string(const char *regexp, const char *str, ...);
147
148 char *
149 atf_utils_readline(int fd);
150
151 void
152 atf_utils_redirect(const int fd, const char *file);
153
154 void
155 atf_utils_wait(const pid_t pid, const int expected_exit_status,
156 const char *expected_stdout, const char *expected_stderr);
157
159 ATF provides a C programming interface to implement test programs. C-
160 based test programs follow this template:
161
162 ... C-specific includes go here ...
163
164 #include <atf-c.h>
165
166 ATF_TC(tc1);
167 ATF_TC_HEAD(tc1, tc)
168 {
169 ... first test case's header ...
170 }
171 ATF_TC_BODY(tc1, tc)
172 {
173 ... first test case's body ...
174 }
175
176 ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP(tc2);
177 ATF_TC_HEAD(tc2, tc)
178 {
179 ... second test case's header ...
180 }
181 ATF_TC_BODY(tc2, tc)
182 {
183 ... second test case's body ...
184 }
185 ATF_TC_CLEANUP(tc2, tc)
186 {
187 ... second test case's cleanup ...
188 }
189
190 ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD(tc3);
191 ATF_TC_BODY(tc3, tc)
192 {
193 ... third test case's body ...
194 }
195
196 ... additional test cases ...
197
198 ATF_TP_ADD_TCS(tp)
199 {
200 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tcs, tc1);
201 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tcs, tc2);
202 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tcs, tc3);
203 ... add additional test cases ...
204
205 return atf_no_error();
206 }
207
208 Definition of test cases
209 Test cases have an identifier and are composed of three different parts:
210 the header, the body and an optional cleanup routine, all of which are
211 described in atf-test-case(4). To define test cases, one can use the
212 ATF_TC(), ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP() or the ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD() macros,
213 which take a single parameter specifiying the test case's name.
214 ATF_TC(), requires to define a head and a body for the test case,
215 ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP() requires to define a head, a body and a cleanup for
216 the test case and ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD() requires only a body for the test
217 case. It is important to note that these do not set the test case up for
218 execution when the program is run. In order to do so, a later registra‐
219 tion is needed with the ATF_TP_ADD_TC() macro detailed in Program
220 initialization.
221
222 Later on, one must define the three parts of the body by means of three
223 functions. Their headers are given by the ATF_TC_HEAD(), ATF_TC_BODY()
224 and ATF_TC_CLEANUP() macros, all of which take the test case name pro‐
225 vided to the ATF_TC() ATF_TC_WITH_CLEANUP(), or ATF_TC_WITHOUT_HEAD()
226 macros and the name of the variable that will hold a pointer to the test
227 case data. Following each of these, a block of code is expected, sur‐
228 rounded by the opening and closing brackets.
229
230 Program initialization
231 The library provides a way to easily define the test program's main()
232 function. You should never define one on your own, but rely on the
233 library to do it for you. This is done by using the ATF_TP_ADD_TCS()
234 macro, which is passed the name of the object that will hold the test
235 cases; i.e. the test program instance. This name can be whatever you
236 want as long as it is a valid variable identifier.
237
238 After the macro, you are supposed to provide the body of a function,
239 which should only use the ATF_TP_ADD_TC() macro to register the test
240 cases the test program will execute and return a success error code. The
241 first parameter of this macro matches the name you provided in the former
242 call. The success status can be returned using the atf_no_error() func‐
243 tion.
244
245 Header definitions
246 The test case's header can define the meta-data by using the
247 atf_tc_set_md_var() method, which takes three parameters: the first one
248 points to the test case data, the second one specifies the meta-data
249 variable to be set and the third one specifies its value. Both of them
250 are strings.
251
252 Configuration variables
253 The test case has read-only access to the current configuration variables
254 by means of the bool atf_tc_has_config_var(), const char *
255 atf_tc_get_config_var(), const char * atf_tc_get_config_var_wd(), bool
256 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool(), bool atf_tc_get_config_var_as_bool_wd(),
257 long atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long(), and the long
258 atf_tc_get_config_var_as_long_wd() functions, which can be called in any
259 of the three parts of a test case.
260
261 The ‘_wd’ variants take a default value for the variable which is
262 returned if the variable is not defined. The other functions without the
263 ‘_wd’ suffix require the variable to be defined.
264
265 Access to the source directory
266 It is possible to get the path to the test case's source directory from
267 any of its three components by querying the ‘srcdir’ configuration vari‐
268 able.
269
270 Requiring programs
271 Aside from the require.progs meta-data variable available in the header
272 only, one can also check for additional programs in the test case's body
273 by using the atf_tc_require_prog() function, which takes the base name or
274 full path of a single binary. Relative paths are forbidden. If it is
275 not found, the test case will be automatically skipped.
276
277 Test case finalization
278 The test case finalizes either when the body reaches its end, at which
279 point the test is assumed to have passed, unless any non-fatal errors
280 were raised using atf_tc_fail_nonfatal(), or at any explicit call to
281 atf_tc_pass(), atf_tc_fail() or atf_tc_skip(). These three functions
282 terminate the execution of the test case immediately. The cleanup rou‐
283 tine will be processed afterwards in a completely automated way, regard‐
284 less of the test case's termination reason.
285
286 atf_tc_pass() does not take any parameters. atf_tc_fail(),
287 atf_tc_fail_nonfatal() and atf_tc_skip() take a format string and a vari‐
288 able list of parameters, which describe, in a user-friendly manner, why
289 the test case failed or was skipped, respectively. It is very important
290 to provide a clear error message in both cases so that the user can
291 quickly know why the test did not pass.
292
293 Expectations
294 Everything explained in the previous section changes when the test case
295 expectations are redefined by the programmer.
296
297 Each test case has an internal state called ‘expect’ that describes what
298 the test case expectations are at any point in time. The value of this
299 property can change during execution by any of:
300
301 atf_tc_expect_death(reason, ...)
302 Expects the test case to exit prematurely regardless of the
303 nature of the exit.
304
305 atf_tc_expect_exit(exitcode, reason, ...)
306 Expects the test case to exit cleanly. If exitcode is not ‘-1’,
307 atf-run(1) will validate that the exit code of the test case
308 matches the one provided in this call. Otherwise, the exact
309 value will be ignored.
310
311 atf_tc_expect_fail(reason, ...)
312 Any failure (be it fatal or non-fatal) raised in this mode is
313 recorded. However, such failures do not report the test case as
314 failed; instead, the test case finalizes cleanly and is reported
315 as ‘expected failure’; this report includes the provided reason
316 as part of it. If no error is raised while running in this mode,
317 then the test case is reported as ‘failed’.
318
319 This mode is useful to reproduce actual known bugs in tests.
320 Whenever the developer fixes the bug later on, the test case will
321 start reporting a failure, signaling the developer that the test
322 case must be adjusted to the new conditions. In this situation,
323 it is useful, for example, to set reason as the bug number for
324 tracking purposes.
325
326 atf_tc_expect_pass()
327 This is the normal mode of execution. In this mode, any failure
328 is reported as such to the user and the test case is marked as
329 ‘failed’.
330
331 atf_tc_expect_signal(signo, reason, ...)
332 Expects the test case to terminate due to the reception of a sig‐
333 nal. If signo is not ‘-1’, atf-run(1) will validate that the
334 signal that terminated the test case matches the one provided in
335 this call. Otherwise, the exact value will be ignored.
336
337 atf_tc_expect_timeout(reason, ...)
338 Expects the test case to execute for longer than its timeout.
339
340 Helper macros for common checks
341 The library provides several macros that are very handy in multiple situ‐
342 ations. These basically check some condition after executing a given
343 statement or processing a given expression and, if the condition is not
344 met, they report the test case as failed.
345
346 The ‘REQUIRE’ variant of the macros immediately abort the test case as
347 soon as an error condition is detected by calling the atf_tc_fail() func‐
348 tion. Use this variant whenever it makes no sense to continue the execu‐
349 tion of a test case when the checked condition is not met. The ‘CHECK’
350 variant, on the other hand, reports a failure as soon as it is encoun‐
351 tered using the atf_tc_fail_nonfatal() function, but the execution of the
352 test case continues as if nothing had happened. Use this variant when‐
353 ever the checked condition is important as a result of the test case, but
354 there are other conditions that can be subsequently checked on the same
355 run without aborting.
356
357 Additionally, the ‘MSG’ variants take an extra set of parameters to
358 explicitly specify the failure message. This failure message is format‐
359 ted according to the printf(3) formatters.
360
361 ATF_CHECK(), ATF_CHECK_MSG(), ATF_REQUIRE() and ATF_REQUIRE_MSG() take an
362 expression and fail if the expression evaluates to false.
363
364 ATF_CHECK_EQ(), ATF_CHECK_EQ_MSG(), ATF_REQUIRE_EQ() and
365 ATF_REQUIRE_EQ_MSG() take two expressions and fail if the two evaluated
366 values are not equal.
367
368 ATF_CHECK_MATCH(), ATF_CHECK_MATCH_MSG(), ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH() and
369 ATF_REQUIRE_MATCH_MSG() take a regular expression and a string and fail
370 if the regular expression does not match the given string. Note that the
371 regular expression is not anchored, so it will match anywhere in the
372 string.
373
374 ATF_CHECK_STREQ(), ATF_CHECK_STREQ_MSG(), ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ() and
375 ATF_REQUIRE_STREQ_MSG() take two strings and fail if the two are not
376 equal character by character.
377
378 ATF_CHECK_ERRNO() and ATF_REQUIRE_ERRNO() take, first, the error code
379 that the check is expecting to find in the errno variable and, second, a
380 boolean expression that, if evaluates to true, means that a call failed
381 and errno has to be checked against the first value.
382
383 Utility functions
384 The following functions are provided as part of the atf-c-api API to sim‐
385 plify the creation of a variety of tests. In particular, these are use‐
386 ful to write tests for command-line interfaces.
387
388 void atf_utils_cat_file(const char *file, const char *prefix)
389
390 Prints the contents of file to the standard output, prefixing every
391 line with the string in prefix.
392
393 bool atf_utils_compare_file(const char *file, const char *contents)
394
395 Returns true if the given file matches exactly the expected inlined
396 contents.
397
398 void atf_utils_copy_file(const char *source, const char *destination)
399
400 Copies the file source to destination. The permissions of the file
401 are preserved during the code.
402
403 void atf_utils_create_file(const char *file, const char *contents, ...)
404
405 Creates file with the text given in contents, which is a formatting
406 string that uses the rest of the variable arguments.
407
408 void atf_utils_file_exists(const char *file)
409
410 Checks if file exists.
411
412 pid_t atf_utils_fork(void)
413
414 Forks a process and redirects the standard output and standard
415 error of the child to files for later validation with
416 atf_utils_wait(). Fails the test case if the fork fails, so this
417 does not return an error.
418
419 void atf_utils_free_charpp(char **argv)
420
421 Frees a dynamically-allocated array of dynamically-allocated
422 strings.
423
424 bool atf_utils_grep_file(const char *regexp, const char *file, ...)
425
426 Searches for the regexp, which is a formatting string representing
427 the regular expression, in the file. The variable arguments are
428 used to construct the regular expression.
429
430 bool atf_utils_grep_string(const char *regexp, const char *str, ...)
431
432 Searches for the regexp, which is a formatting string representing
433 the regular expression, in the literal string str. The variable
434 arguments are used to construct the regular expression.
435
436 char * atf_utils_readline(int fd)
437
438 Reads a line from the file descriptor fd. The line, if any, is
439 returned as a dynamically-allocated buffer that must be released
440 with free(3). If there was nothing to read, returns ‘NULL’.
441
442 void atf_utils_redirect(const int fd, const char *file)
443
444 Redirects the given file descriptor fd to file. This function
445 exits the process in case of an error and does not properly mark
446 the test case as failed. As a result, it should only be used in
447 subprocesses of the test case; specially those spawned by
448 atf_utils_fork().
449
450 void atf_utils_wait(const pid_t pid, const int expected_exit_status,
451 const char *expected_stdout, const char *expected_stderr)
452
453 Waits and validates the result of a subprocess spawned with
454 atf_utils_wait(). The validation involves checking that the sub‐
455 process exited cleanly and returned the code specified in
456 expected_exit_status and that its standard output and standard
457 error match the strings given in expected_stdout and
458 expected_stderr.
459
460 If any of the expected_stdout or expected_stderr strings are pre‐
461 fixed with ‘save:’, then they specify the name of the file into
462 which to store the stdout or stderr of the subprocess, and no com‐
463 parison is performed.
464
466 The following shows a complete test program with a single test case that
467 validates the addition operator:
468
469 #include <atf-c.h>
470
471 ATF_TC(addition);
472 ATF_TC_HEAD(addition, tc)
473 {
474 atf_tc_set_md_var(tc, "descr",
475 "Sample tests for the addition operator");
476 }
477 ATF_TC_BODY(addition, tc)
478 {
479 ATF_CHECK_EQ(0 + 0, 0);
480 ATF_CHECK_EQ(0 + 1, 1);
481 ATF_CHECK_EQ(1 + 0, 1);
482
483 ATF_CHECK_EQ(1 + 1, 2);
484
485 ATF_CHECK_EQ(100 + 200, 300);
486 }
487
488 ATF_TC(string_formatting);
489 ATF_TC_HEAD(string_formatting, tc)
490 {
491 atf_tc_set_md_var(tc, "descr",
492 "Sample tests for the snprintf");
493 }
494 ATF_TC_BODY(string_formatting, tc)
495 {
496 char buf[1024];
497 snprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), "a %s", "string");
498 ATF_CHECK_STREQ_MSG("a string", buf, "%s is not working");
499 }
500
501 ATF_TC(open_failure);
502 ATF_TC_HEAD(open_failure, tc)
503 {
504 atf_tc_set_md_var(tc, "descr",
505 "Sample tests for the open function");
506 }
507 ATF_TC_BODY(open_failure, tc)
508 {
509 ATF_CHECK_ERRNO(ENOENT, open("non-existent", O_RDONLY) == -1);
510 }
511
512 ATF_TC(known_bug);
513 ATF_TC_HEAD(known_bug, tc)
514 {
515 atf_tc_set_md_var(tc, "descr",
516 "Reproduces a known bug");
517 }
518 ATF_TC_BODY(known_bug, tc)
519 {
520 atf_tc_expect_fail("See bug number foo/bar");
521 ATF_CHECK_EQ(3, 1 + 1);
522 atf_tc_expect_pass();
523 ATF_CHECK_EQ(3, 1 + 2);
524 }
525
526 ATF_TP_ADD_TCS(tp)
527 {
528 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tp, addition);
529 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tp, string_formatting);
530 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tp, open_failure);
531 ATF_TP_ADD_TC(tp, known_bug);
532
533 return atf_no_error();
534 }
535
537 atf-test-program(1), atf-test-case(4), atf(7)
538
539BSD November 15, 2013 BSD