Skip to content

jtpaasch/scram

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

56 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Scram

scram runs shell commands in a file and checks that they pass (execute successfully).

It is inspired by cram tests, hence the name.

Requirements

  • OCaml 4.05+

If you don't have OCaml on your system, run bash in a docker container that does. For instance:

$ docker run --rm -ti -v $(pwd):/srv -w /srv ocaml/opam:ubuntu-16.04_ocaml-4.06.0 bash

Quick start

Build the tool, and then use it to check the sample markdown file example.md.

git clone [this-repo]
cd [repo-dir]
make
bin/scram example.md

The file example.md describes all cases scram covers.

More detailed explanation/examples come next.

Build/install instructions are farther down, near the end of this README.

Example: testing README.md files

Suppose you have a README.md which has some shell commands in it. Something like this:

To print something to stdout, run the `echo` command:

    $ echo hello world

To print another message, try this:

    $ echo goodbye

To check this file, point the scram executable at it:

bin/scram README.md

scram will read the file, run the commands it finds in it, and print output that looks something like this:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
To print something to stdout, run the `echo` command:

    $ echo hello world
    1> hello world
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

To print another message, try this:

    $ echo goodbye
    1> goodbye
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

========================================
Test: PASSED

You can see that scram echos back the contents of the file, but it fills in information about the commands it ran. Note in particular:

  • It prints the captured stdout, prefixed by 1> (stderr gets prefixed by 2>)
  • It prints the captured exit codes in brackets, e.g., [0]
  • It says if (and why) the commands succeed (or fail)

By default, commands that exit with a zero exit code pass.

The whole check passes if all commands in a file pass.

Note: a command must follow four spaces, a dollar sign, and another space.

Non-zero exit codes

If a command exits with a non-zero exit code, it will fail. Consider this README.md:

List the files:

    $ ls -z

This command tries to invoke ls with a -z option, but -z is not a valid option for ls. So this should fail.

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will mark it a failure:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
List the files:

    $ ls -z
    2> ls: illegal option -- z
    2> usage: ls [-ABCFGHLOPRSTUWabcdefghiklmnopqrstuwx1] [file ...]
    [1]
    ==> FAILED (Non-zero exit code)

========================================
Test: FAILED

Matching output exactly

You can specify what the output of the command ought to be, by writing the expected output immediately below the command. For instance, consider this README.md:

If you echo `hello world`, it should print `hello world` to stdout:

    $ echo hello world
    hello world

This asserts that the command echo hello world should output hello world.

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will mark this as OK, since the output is an exact match:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
If you echo `hello world`, it should print `hello world` to stdout:

    $ echo hello world
    hello world
    1> hello world
    [0]
    ==> OK (Output was as expected)

========================================
Test: PASSED

Suppose a command produces output that doesn't match. For instance, consider this README.md:

This should output `goodbye`:

    $ echo hello
    goodbye

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will mark this as a failure, since the output doesn't match:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
This should output `goodbye`:

    $ echo hello
    goodbye
    1> hello
    [0]
    ==> FAILED (Unexpected output)

========================================
Test: FAILED

Matching output with regular expressions

If you don't want exact matches, you can use regular expressions. For example, consider this README.md:

If you echo `Today is: $(date)` from the command line,
the output should begin with `Today is`:

    $ echo Today is: $(date)
    ^Today is.*

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will mark the command OK, since the output matches the regular expression:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
If you echo `Today is: $(date)` from the command line,
the output should begin with `Today is`:

    $ echo Today is: $(date)
    ^Today is.*
    1> Today is: Wed May 30 14:50:56 UTC 2018
    [0]
    ==> OK (Output was as expected)

========================================
Test: PASSED

Profiling commands

You can tell scram to profile the execution time of a command. To do that, put an asterisk before the command.

Consider this README.md:

Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"

Note: The format is four spaces, an asterisk, a dollar sign, another space, and then the command.

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will pause for a moment, before printing the output:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> dolor sit
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> sit dolor
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

The pause occurs because scram runs each of the asterisk-marked commands a number of times to calculate average running time. It also measures and averages other statistics like memory usage (e.g., resident set size).

You can tell scram to print the profile stats with the #stats directive. Alter the README.md so it looks like this:

Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"

Print profiling statistics:

    #stats

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

The output now looks something like this:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> dolor sit
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> sit dolor
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

Print profiling statistics:

    #stats
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | Id | Avg time | Total time | Trials | Avg # Stats | Avg RSS | Avg min RSS | Avg max RSS | Min RSS | Max RSS |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | 1  | 0.2509s  | 1.2547s    | 5      | 1           | 609Kb   | 609Kb       | 609Kb       | 4Kb     | 792Kb   |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | 2  | 0.2515s  | 1.2576s    | 5      | 1           | 518Kb   | 518Kb       | 518Kb       | 4Kb     | 904Kb   |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+

========================================
Test: PASSED

In the stats table, the first row shows info about the first asterisk-marked command, and the second row shows info about the second asterisk-marked command.

You can also tell scram to print the output of the profiled commands side by side, in case you want to visually compare them. To do this, use the #diff directive. Modify the README.md again:

Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"

Print profiling statistics:

    #stats

Show the different output:

    #diff

Check it with scram:

bin/scram README.md

scram will print output that looks something like this:

========================================
Test 'README.md'
----------------------------------------
Echo two lines:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "dolor sit"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> dolor sit
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

Echo two lines again:

    *$ echo "Lorem ipsum" && echo "sit dolor"
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> sit dolor
    [0]
    ==> OK (Exited with a 0 exit code)

Print profiling statistics:

    #stats
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | Id | Avg time | Total time | Trials | Avg # Stats | Avg RSS | Avg min RSS | Avg max RSS | Min RSS | Max RSS |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | 1  | 0.2509s  | 1.2547s    | 5      | 1           | 609Kb   | 609Kb       | 609Kb       | 4Kb     | 792Kb   |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+
    | 2  | 0.2515s  | 1.2576s    | 5      | 1           | 518Kb   | 518Kb       | 518Kb       | 4Kb     | 904Kb   |
    +----+----------+------------+--------+-------------+---------+-------------+-------------+---------+---------+

Show the different output:

    #diff
    ---------------- [ echo "Lorem ... ]
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> dolor sit
    ---------------- [ echo "Lorem ... ]
    1> Lorem ipsum
    1> sit dolor

========================================
Test: PASSED

Summary of syntax

  • scram sees any empty line, or any line that consists only of whitespace characters, as a blank line.
  • scram sees any fully left-justified lines as commentary.
  • scram identifies commands by looking exactly for strings that follow four spaces, a dollar sign, and another space, i.e.,[space][space][space][space][dollar-sign][space][command-string].
  • scram identifies commands to profile by looking exactly for strings that follow four spaces, an asterisk, a dollar sign, and another space, i.e., [space][space][space][space][asterisk][dollar-sign][space][command-string].
  • Lines of expected output (literal or regular expression) must be indented four spaces, and they must immediately follow a command (or a command marked by an asterisk).
  • The stats directive is the string #stats, indented four spaces.
  • The diff directive is the string #diff, indented four spaces.

Build and install

To build and install, you need OCaml 4.05+.

If you don't have OCaml on your system, run bash in a docker container that does. For instance:

$ docker run --rm -ti -v $(pwd):/srv -w /srv ocaml/opam:ubuntu-16.04_ocaml-4.06.0 bash

Clone the repo, then from the root of the repo:

make

The runnable executable will be created inside the repo, at bin/scram. Confirm it:

bin/scram --help

You may install the executable wherever you like. There are no dependencies.

This of course can be done in an ocaml docker container.

Usage

To run scram, point the runner (the executable) to a file, for instance:

bin/scram example.md

scram will then run example.md, and print the results to the screen.

Number of trials

As mentioned above, scram profiles a command by running it a number of times and then calculating its average running time.

You can change the number of trials with the --num-trials parameter. For instance, to profile a command by running it through 10 time trials:

bin/scram example.md --num-trials 10

Logs

By default, scram sends its main output to stdout, and it sends any error messages to stderr. You may specify different places for these. For example, you can send them to files:

bin/scram example.md --main-log out.log --error-log err.log

Other valid log destinations are stdout, stderr, /dev/null, or a filepath.

scram also has a verbose log, which by default sends its messages to /dev/null. You can send the verbose log to stdout:

bin/scram example.md --verbose-log stdout

Or any other valid log destination, like a file:

bin/scram example.md --verbose-log verbose.log

Library docs

The make command builds the OCaml code documentation, which is placed in a docs folder, at the root of the repo.

Clean

Run make clean to delete the build, bin, and docs directories.

About

A simple cram-like test runner.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published