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Autotest runs a series of tests on 1 or more programs comparing their behaviour to specified expected behaviour.

Autotest focuses on producing output comprehensible to a novice programmer perhaps in their first coding course.

The autotest syntax is designed to allow tests to be specified quickly and concisely.

Tests are typically specified in a single file named by default tests.txt.

Autotest syntax is designed to allow succinct convenient specification of tests, e.g.:

files=is_prime.c

1 stdin="39" expected_stdout="29 is not prime\n"
2 stdin="42" expected_stdout="42 is not prime\n"
3 stdin="47" expected_stdout="47 is prime\n"

Running Autotest

Autotest allows flexible specification of command line arguments, so it can be comfortable used by novices who little experience with command-line programs.

Autotest will typically be run via a wrapper shell script which specifies arguments and parameters values appropriate for a class, for example, specifiying the base directory to search for autotests, e.g:

#!/bin/sh

parameters="
	default_compilers = {'c' : [['clang', '-Werror', '-std=gnu11', '-g', '-lm']]}
	upload_url = https://example.com/autotest.cgi
"

exec /usr/local/autotest/autotest.py --exercise_directory /home/class/activities --parameters "$parameters" "$@"```

Students can then run the wrapper script simply specifying  the particular class exercise they wish to
autotest, perhaps:

```bash
$ autotest.sh is_prime

Some useful command-line options are useful when developing test specifications, include:

-a AUTOTEST_DIRECTORY, --autotest_directory AUTOTEST_DIRECTORY specify directly the location of the autotest specification.

-D DIRECTORY, --directory DIRECTORY copty files in the specified to the test directory.

-g, --generate_expected_output generate expected output for the tests by executing the supplied files.

for example, this will update the test specification in the directory my_autotest using a model solution in my_solution

$ autotest.py --generate_expected_output=update --directory my_solution  --autotest_directory my_autotest

Test Execution Environment

A temporary directory is created for autotests and the program to be tested is copied there and compiled there if needed.

By default any other files in the test specification directory are also copied to the temporary directory (see the supplied_files_directory parameter)

By default tests are executed in an environment stripped of most environment variables but this can be specified with test parameters.

By default tests are executed with resource limits which can be specified with test parameters.

Tests

A test consists of a label and set of parameter value.

Every test must have a unique label consisting of alphanumeric characters and underscore ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)

The file is read sequentially and when a test label is reached a test is created with the current values of parameters.

Assignments to parameter values apply to any following test or until a different value is assigned to the parameter.

Except assignments to parameter values on the same line as a test label are used only for that test. For example in the follow example the CPU limit for test1 is 5 seconds and the CPU limit for test2 is 10 seconds.

max_cpu_seconds=10

test1  max_cpu_seconds=5  command=./prime.py 41  expected_stdout="True\n"

test2  command=./prime.py 42  expected_stdout="False\n"

If a command is a single string it is passed to a shell for evaluation

A test label may be used multiple times to supply the value of different parameters for the test.

max_cpu_seconds=10
program=prime.py

test1  max_cpu_seconds=5  arguments=41 expected_stdout="True\n"

test2  arguments=42  expected_stdout="False\n"

Parameter Assignments

Tests are specified by assigning values to parameters, for example:

max_cpu_seconds=10

Parameter names start with an alphabetic letter and can contain alphanumeric characters and underscore ([a-zA-Z0-9_]+)

The values assigned to parameters can use Python syntax including single-quotes, double-quotes, triple-quotes and raw-quotes and f-strings. Values can also be lists or dicts specified in Python syntax.

Triple-quoted strings, lists and dicts can be multi-line.

Parameters specified in previous lines are available as parameters in f-strings. Parameters specified on the current line are not available in the evaluation of f-strings.

Assignment to a parameter name which is not a builtin parameter listed in the section below, will produce an error unless the parameter name begins with a single ''. Parameter names begining with '' can be given values to be used in later f-strings.

For convenience, values can also be written as shell-like unquoted strings if they contain only non-whitespace ASCII and none of these characters **\ = [ ] { } " ' **. So for example, these are equivalent parameter assignments.

command=./a.out
command="./a.out"

Multiple unquoted strings are aggregated into a list so these are equivalent commands:

command=./a.out --print example.txt
command=['./a.out', '--print', 'example.txt']

Parameter values are coerced to an appropriate type if possible. If a boolean type is expected, values are converted to be True or False following Python rules, so for example . 0 '' [] {} will all become False, except strings with a first characters of '0', 'f' or 'F' are considered False

Examples

files=prime.c

# specifying command-lines arguments
test1  arguments=41  expected_stdout="41 is prime.\n"

# specifying stdin
test2  stdin="42"  expected_stdout="42 is not prime.\n"

# using files to specify stdin and expected_stdout
test3  stdin=['43.txt']  expected_stdout=['43_expected_output.txt']

# running a  Shell command
test4 command="echo 44 | prime"   expected_stdout="44 is not prime.\n"

# using two line to specifiy test plus triple-quote for a multi-line string
test5  arguments=45
test5  expected_stdout="""45 is not prime.
"""

# specify more flexibility in test acceptance
# by ignoring white space, some punctuation characters (",.!") and extra new lines
test6  ignore_whitespace=True  ignore_blank_lines=True  ignore_characters=",.!"
test6  arguments=46  expected_stdout="46 is not prime.\n"


# make test succeed if it has just right digits in output
test7  arguments=47 compare_only_characters="0123456789" expected_stdout="47 is not prime.\n"

Test Parameters

Parameters specifying command to be run

program

The name of script/binary to run for this test.
If program is not specified it is heuristically inferred from command, if possible.

arguments = []

Command-line arguments for this test. Used only if command is not specified.

command

Command to run for this test.

If command is a string, it is passed to a shell.
If command is a list, it is executed directly.
If command is not specified and program is specified, command is set to a list containing program with arguments appended.
Otherwise command is inferred heuristically from the first filename specified in by parameter files, if possible.

Parameters specifying files needed for for a test

files

Input files required to be supplied for a test.
If files is not specified it is set to the parameter program with a .c appended iff program does not contain a '.'.
For example if files is not specified and program == hello, files will be set to hello.c, but if program == hello.sh files will be set to hello.c

optional_files = []

Input files which may be optionally supplied for a test.

Parameters specifying actions performed prior to test

check_hash_bang_line = True

Check Perl, Python, Shell scripts have appropriate #! line.

pre_compile_command

If set pre_compile_command is executed once before compilation.
This is invisible to the user, unless pre_compile_command produces output.
Compilation does not occur if pre_compile_command has a non-zero exit-status.
If pre_compile_command is a string, it is passed to a shell.
If pre_compile_command is a list, it is executed directly.

default_checkers = {'js': [['node', '--check']], 'pl': [['perl', '-cw']], 'py': [['python3', '-B', '-m', 'py_compile']], 'sh': [['bash', '-n']]}

A dict which supplies a default value for the parameter checkers based on the suffix for the the first file specified by the parameter files.

checkers

List of checkers. Each checker is run once for each file supplied for a test. The filename is appended as argument.
Checkers are only run once for a file.
If checker is a string it is run by passing it to a shell. Deprocated: if the value is a string containing ':' a list is formed by splitting the string at the ':'s.

default_compilers = {'c': [[['dcc'], ['clang', '-Wall'], ['gcc', '-Wall']]], 'cc': [['g++', '-Wall']], 'java': [['javac']], 'rs': [['rustc']]}

A dict which supplies a default value for the parameter compilers based on the suffix for the the first file specified by the parameter files. If '%' is present in a list, it is replaced by the program.

compilers

List of compilers + arguments.
files are compiled with each member of list and test is run once for each member of the list.
For example, given:

# run all tests twice once compiled with gcc -fsanitize=address, once with clang -fsanitize=memory
compilers = [['gcc', '-fsanitize=address'], ['clang', '-fsanitize=memory']]

Element of the list of compilers can themselves be a list specifying a list of alternative compilers.
For example:

# run all tests twice once compiled with gcc -fsanitize=address, once with clang -fsanitize=memory
compilers = [[['dcc'], ['clang', '-Wall'], ['gcc', -Wall]]]

The first element of this sub-list where the compiler can be found in PATH is used.
If compiler is a string it is run by passing it to a shell.
Deprocated: if the value is a string containing ':' a list is formed by splitting the string at the ':'s.

default_compiler_args = {'c': [['-o', '%']], 'cc': [['-o', '%']]}

A dict which supplies a default value for the parameter compilers based on the suffix for the the first file specified by the parameter files. If '%' is present in a list, it is replaced by the program.

compiler_args = []

"List of arguments strings added to every compilation" If '%' is present in a list, it is replaced by the program.

compile_commands

List of compile commands.
Test is run once for each member of the list.
If command is a string it is run by passing it to a shell.
compile_commands is not normally set directly.
If not set, it is formed from compilers and compiler_args and files.
In most cases, set these parameters will be more appropriate.

setup_command

If set setup_command is executed once before a test.
This is invisible to the user, unless setup_command produces output.
The test is not run if setup_command has a non-zero exit-status.
If setup_command is a string, it is passed to a shell. If setup_command is a list, it is executed directly.

Parameters specifying inputs for test

supplied_files_directory

If set to a non-empty string, any files in this directory are copied to the directory before testing.
This directory is also prepended to any relative file pathnames in test specifications.
Its default value is the directory containing the test specification file (tests.txt).
Only one directory is copied for all tests. This parameter must be set as a global parameter. It is usually specified in a wrapper shell script via -P.

stdin

Bytes supplied on stdin for test.
Deprocated: stdin is not specified and the file test_label.stdin exists, its contents are used.
Not yet implemented: if value is a list it is treated as list of pathname of file(s) containing bytes.

unicode_stdin = True

Whether or not the specified stdin should be treated as unicode. Default is True.

unicode_stdout = True

Whether or not the program's stdout should be treated as unicode. Default is True.

unicode_stderr = True

Whether or not the program's stderr should be treated as unicode. Default is True.

unicode_files = True

Describes whether or not output files should be treated as unicode. Default is True.

environment_kept = 'ARCH|C_CHECK_.|DCC_.|DRYRUN_.|LANG|LANGUAGE|LC_.|LOGNAME|USER'

Environment variables are by default deleted to avoid them affecting testing.
Environment variables whose entire name matches this regex are not deleted.
All other environment variables are deleted.

environment_base

Dict specifying values for environment variables.
Default:

{
'LC_COLLATE' : 'POSIX',
'LC_NUMERIC' : 'POSIX',
'PERL5LIB' : '.',
'HOME' : '.',
'PATH' : '/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:.:$PATH',
},

where $PATH is the original value of PATH.

The environment variables in environment_base are set and then, environment variables specified in environment_set are set. This parameter should not normally be used. The parameter environment_set should normally be used instead of this parameter. It is only necessary to specify environment_base if these variables need to be unset rather than given different values for a test.

environment_set = {}

Dict specifying environment variables to be set for this test.
For example: environment_set={'answer' : 42 }
This is the parameter that should normally be used to manipulate environment variables.

environment

Dict specifying all environment variables for this test.
This parameter should not normally be specified, environment_set will serve most purposes.
By default environment is formed by taking original environment variables provided to autotest,
removing all but those matching the regex in environment_variables_kept,
setting any variables specified in environment_base and then
setting any variables specified in environment_set.

Parameters specifying expected output for test

expected_stdout

Bytes expected on stdout for this test.
If value is a list it is treated as list of pathname of file(s) containing expected bytes.
Deprocated: if expected_stdout is not specified and the file test_label.expected_stdout exists, its contents are used.
Not yet implemented: handling of non-unicode output.

expected_stderr

Bytes expected on stderr for this test.
If value is a list it is treated as list of pathname of file(s) containing expected bytes.
Deprocated: if expected_stderr is not specified and the file test_label.stderr exists, its contents are used.
Not yet implemented: handling of non-unicode output.

expected_file_name = ''

Pathname of file expected to exist after this test.
Expected contents specified by expected_file_contents.
Use expected_files to specify creation of multiple files.

expected_file_contents = ''

Bytes expected in file expected_file_name expected to exist after this test.
Not yet implemented: handling of non-unicode output.

expected_files = {}

Dict specified bytes expected to be written to files.
if value is an string, it is specifies bytes expected to be written to that filename.
If a value is a list it is treated as list of pathname of file(s) containing expected bytes.
For example: this indicates a file named answer.txtshould be created containing42. expected_files={"answer.txt":"42 "}`

Not yet implemented: handling of non-unicode output.

Parameters specifying resource limits for test

Resource limits are mostly implemented on via setrlimit and more information can be found in its documentation.

If a resource limit is exceeded, the test is failed with an explanatory message.

max_stdout_bytes

Maximum number of bytes that can be written to stdout.

max_stderr_bytes

Maximum number of bytes that can be written to stderr.

max_real_seconds

Maximum elapsed real time in seconds (0 for no limit).
If not specified, defaults to 20 * max_cpu_seconds

max_cpu_seconds = 60

Maximum CPU time in seconds (0 for no limit).

max_core_size = 0

Maximum size of any core file written in bytes.

max_stack_bytes = 32000000

Maximum stack size in bytes.

max_rss_bytes = 100000000

Maximum resident set size in bytes.

max_file_size_bytes = 8192000

Maximum size of any file created in bytes.

max_processes = 4096

Maximum number of processes the current process may create. Note: unfortunately this is total per user processes not child processes

max_open_files = 256

Maximum number of files that can be simultaneously open

Parameters controlling comparison of expected to actual output

These apply to comparision for stdout, stderr, and files

ignore_case = False

Ignore case when comparing actual & expected output

ignore_whitespace = False

Ignore white space when comparing actual & expected output.

ignore_trailing_whitespace = True

Ignore white space at end of lines when comparing actual & expected output.

ignore_blank_lines = False

Ignore lines containing only white space when comparing actual & expected output.

ignore_characters = ''

Ignore these characters when comparing actual & expected output.
Ignoring " " has no effect, use **ignore_blank_lines** to ignore empty lines.
Unimplemented: handling of UNICODE.

compare_only_characters

Ignore all but these characters and newline when comparing actual & expected output.
Unimplemented: handling of UNICODE.

postprocess_output_command

Pass expected and actual output through this command before comparison.
If command is a string, it is passed to a shell.
If it is a list it is executed directly.

allow_unexpected_stderr = False

Do not fail a test if there is unexpected output on stderr but other expected outputs are correct.
This means warning messages don't cause a test to be failed.

Parameters controlling information printed about test

colorize_output

If true highlight parts of output using ANSI colour sequences. Default is true if stdout is a terminal

description

String describing test printed with its execution - defaults to command.

show_actual_output = True

If true, the actual output is included in a test failure explanation.

show_expected_output = True

If true, the expected output is included in a test failure explanation.

show_diff = True

If true, a description of the difference between expected output is included in a test failure explanation.

show_stdout_if_errors = False

Unless true the actual output is not included in a test failure explanation, when there are unexpected bytes on stderr.

show_reproduce_command = True

If true the command to reproduce the test is included in a test failure explanation

show_compile_command = True

If true the command to compile the binary for a test is included in the test output.

show_stdin = True

If true the stdin is included in a test failure explanation

max_lines_shown = 32

Maximum lines included in components of test explanations. Any further lines are elided. Likely to be replaced with improved controls.

max_line_length_shown = 1024

Maximum line lengths included in components of text explanations. Any further characters are elided.

no_replace_semicolon_reproduce_command = False

If true semicolons are not replaced with newlines in the command to reproduce the test if it is included in a test failure explanation.
Likely to be replaced with improved controls.

dcc_output_checking

Use dcc's builtin output checking to check for tests's expected output. This is done by setting several environment variables for the test

Miscellaneous parameters

upload_url = ''

Files tested and the output of the tests are uploaded to this URL using a POST request.
No more than upload_max_bytes will be uploaded. Any field/values specified in upload_max_bytes will be included in the POST request. In addition 'exercise', 'hostname' and 'login' fields are included in the POST request.
A zip archive containing the files tested is passed as the field zip.
This zip archive includes the output of the test in a file named autotest.log.
Only one upload is done for all tests. This parameter must be set as a global parameter.

upload_max_bytes = 2048000

Maximum number of bytes uploaded if `upload_url is set.

upload_fields = {}

Any specified fields/values are added to upload requests.

debug = 0

Level of internal debugging output to print.

sandbox

Run tests within a sandbox - currently requires /usr/bin/unshare. Deliberate escape from sandbox may be possible. Only one sandbox is used for all tests. This parameter must be set as a global parameter.

sandbox_network = True

If running in a sandbox, sandbox network.

sandbox_read_only_mount = []

Pathnames of files or directories mounted read-only in the sandbox in addition to files or directories specified by sandbox_read_only_mount_base. A tuple can be to specify a diferent mount point in the sandbox.

sandbox_read_write_mount = []

Pathnames of files or directories visible mounted read-write in the sandbox in addition to files or directories specified by sandbox_read_write_mount_base. A tuple can be to specify a different mount point in the sandbox /tmp, /proc, /sys and /dev are always mounted directly read-write in the sandbox

sandbox_read_only_mount_base = ['/bin', '/etc', '/lib', '/lib32', '/lib64', '/libx32', '/sbin', '/usr']

Pathnames of files or directories mounted read-only in the sandbox The parameter sandbox_read_only_mount should be used to add extra pathnames. This parameter need only be set to stop one of these pathnames being mounted.

sandbox_command

Command used to create sandbox It is given two arguments: the full pathname of the autotest.py and '--inside_sandbox'

Debugging Autotests

The command line parameter -d/--debug set increasing levels of debug output.

This can also be done using the environmental variable AUTOTEST_DEBUG Python stack backtraces are only shown if AUTOTEST_DEBUG is set to a non-zero integer.

Embedding Autotests

The script bundle_autotests.sh generates a single executable for autotest.

It can also embed specified autotests in the executable allowing distribution of a single file containing a set of autotests and the code to run them.

$ bundle_autotests.sh my_autotest exercise1/autotest exercise2/autotest exercise3/autotest
$ ./my_autotest exercise2
Test 0 (./prime 42) - passed
1 tests passed 0 tests failed

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