# -*- mode:org -*- #+TITLE: Org-mode Testing #+PROPERTY: results silent * Dependencies The only dependency is [[http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/ErtTestLibrary][ERT]] the Emacs testing library which ships with Emacs24. If you are running an older version of Emacs and don't already have ERT installed it can be installed from its old [[https://github.com/ohler/ert][git repository]]. * Non-interactive batch testing from the command line The simplest way to run the Org-mode test suite is from the command line with the following invocation. Note that the paths below are relative to the base of the Org-mode directory. Also note that many of the current tests uses babel evaluation... #+BEGIN_SRC sh :dir (expand-file-name "..") # For Emacs earlier than 24, add -L /path/to/ert emacs -Q --batch \ -L lisp/ -L testing/ -L testing/lisp -l lisp/org.el \ -l lisp/org-id.el -l testing/org-test.el \ --eval "(progn (org-reload) (setq org-confirm-babel-evaluate nil) \ (org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages \ '((emacs-lisp . t) (shell . t) (org . t))))" \ -f org-test-run-batch-tests #+END_SRC The options in the above command are explained below. | -Q | ignores any personal configuration ensuring a vanilla Emacs instance is used | | --batch | runs Emacs in "batch" mode with no gui and termination after execution | | -l | loads Org-mode and the org mode test suite defined in testing/org-test.el | | --eval | reloads Org-mode and allows evaluation of code blocks by the tests | | -f | actually runs the tests using the `org-test-run-batch-tests' function | * Trigger testing with 'make test' Target ~test~ can be used to trigger a test run. #+BEGIN_SRC sh :dir (expand-file-name "..") make test #+END_SRC See ../mk/default.mk for details. * Interactive testing from within Emacs To run the Org-mode test suite from a current Emacs instance simply load and run the test suite with the following commands. 1) First load the test suite. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp :var here=(buffer-file-name) (add-to-list 'load-path (file-name-directory here)) (require 'org-test) #+END_SRC 2) Load required Babel languages #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (org-babel-do-load-languages 'org-babel-load-languages (and (mapc (lambda (lang) (add-to-list 'org-babel-load-languages (cons lang t))) '(emacs-lisp shell org)) org-babel-load-languages)) #+END_SRC 3) Then run the test suite. Babel evaluation confirmation is disabled and ~C-c C-c~ is enabled while running the tests. #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (let (org-babel-no-eval-on-ctrl-c-ctrl-c org-confirm-babel-evaluate) (org-test-run-all-tests)) #+END_SRC When a test fails, run it interactively and investigate the problem in the ERT results buffer. To run one test: Use this as a demo example of a failing test #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (ert-deftest test-org/org-link-escape-ascii-character-demo-of-fail () (should (string= "%5B" ; Expecting %5B is correct. (org-link-escape "["))) (should (string= "%5C" ; Expecting %5C is wrong, %5D correct. (org-link-escape "]")))) #+END_SRC or evaluate the ~ert-deftest form~ of the test you want to run. Then ~M-x ert RET test-org/org-link-escape-ascii-character-demo-of-fail RET~. When not visible yet switch to the ERT results buffer named ~*ert*~. When a test failed the ERT results buffer shows the details of the first ~should~ that failed. See ~(info "(ert)Running Tests Interactively")~ on how to re-run, start the debugger etc. To run several tests: ~M-x ert RET "" RET~. To run all tests of a single test file: ~M-x ert-delete-all-tests RET~ and confirm. ~M-x load-file RET testing/lisp/.el RET M-x ert RET t RET~. Consider to set #+BEGIN_SRC emacs-lisp (setq pp-escape-newlines nil) #+END_SRC before running the test when looking at ~should~ in the ERT results buffer. Especially when using ~l~ to look at passed test results and possibly missing an appropriate setting of ~pp-escape-newlines~ made only temporarily for the running time of the test as e. g. tests using ~org-test-table-target-expect-tblfm~ do. * Troubleshooting - If the variable ~org-babel-no-eval-on-ctrl-c-ctrl-c~ is non-nil then it will result in some test failure, as there are tests which rely on this behavior.