esp-idf/tools/unit-test-app
morris 9e532696f4 pcnt: add const qualifier to event data 2022-07-20 14:59:50 +08:00
..
components/test_utils pcnt: add const qualifier to event data 2022-07-20 14:59:50 +08:00
configs esp_ringbuf: placement in flash is no longer controlled by CONFIG_FREERTOS_PLACE_FUNCTIONS_INTO_FLASH 2022-07-11 09:24:20 +08:00
disabled_configs
main
tools feat: use standalone project idf-build-apps for find/build apps utils 2022-07-14 08:26:31 +08:00
CMakeLists.txt tools: Increase the minimal supported CMake version to 3.16 2022-06-01 06:35:02 +00:00
README.md
idf_ext.py
partition_table_unit_test_app.csv
partition_table_unit_test_app_2m.csv
partition_table_unit_test_two_ota.csv
partition_table_unit_test_two_ota_2m.csv ci: add ut configs for ESP32-C2 2022-06-02 11:10:29 +08:00
sdkconfig.defaults
sdkconfig.defaults.esp32
sdkconfig.defaults.esp32c2
sdkconfig.defaults.esp32c3
sdkconfig.defaults.esp32s2
sdkconfig.defaults.esp32s3
unit_test.py

README.md

Unit Test App

ESP-IDF unit tests are run using Unit Test App. The app can be built with the unit tests for a specific component. Unit tests are in test subdirectories of respective components.

Building Unit Test App

CMake

  • Follow the setup instructions in the top-level esp-idf README.
  • Set IDF_PATH environment variable to point to the path to the esp-idf top-level directory.
  • Change into tools/unit-test-app directory
  • idf.py menuconfig to configure the Unit Test App.
  • idf.py -T <component> -T <component> ... build with component set to names of the components to be included in the test app. Or idf.py -T all build to build the test app with all the tests for components having test subdirectory.
  • Follow the printed instructions to flash, or run idf.py -p PORT flash.
  • Unit test have a few preset sdkconfigs. It provides command idf.py ut-clean-config_name and idf.py ut-build-config_name (where config_name is the file name under unit-test-app/configs folder) to build with preset configs. For example, you can use idf.py -T all ut-build-default to build with config file unit-test-app/configs/default. Built binary for this config will be copied to unit-test-app/output/config_name folder.
  • You may extract the test cases presented in the built elf file by calling ElfUnitTestParser.py <your_elf>.

Flash Size

The unit test partition table assumes a 4MB flash size. When testing -T all, this additional factory app partition size is required.

If building unit tests to run on a smaller flash size, edit partition_table_unit_tests_app.csv and use -T <component> <component> ... or instead of -T all tests don't fit in a smaller factory app partition (exact size will depend on configured options).

Running Unit Tests

The unit test loader will prompt by showing a menu of available tests to run:

  • Type a number to run a single test.
  • * to run all tests.
  • [tagname] to run tests with "tag"
  • ![tagname] to run tests without "tag" (![ignore] is very useful as it runs all CI-enabled tests.)
  • "test name here" to run test with given name

Testing Unit Tests with CI

CI Test Flow for Unit Test

Unit test uses 3 stages in CI: build, assign_test, unit_test.

Build Stage:

build_esp_idf_tests job will build all UT configs and run script UnitTestParser.py to parse test cases form built elf files. Built binary (tools/unit-test-app/output) and parsed cases (components/idf_test/unit_test/TestCaseAll.yml) will be saved as artifacts.

When we add new test case, it will construct a structure to save case data during build. We'll parse the test case from this structure. The description (defined in test case: TEST_CASE("name", "description")) is used to extend test case definition. The format of test description is a list of tags:

  1. first tag is always group of test cases, it's mandatory
  2. the rest tags should be [type=value]. Tags could have default value and omitted value. For example, reset tag default value is "POWERON_RESET", omitted value is "" (do not reset) :
    • "[reset]" equal to [reset=POWERON_RESET]
    • if reset tag doesn't exist, then it equals to [reset=""]
  3. the [leaks] tag is used to disable the leak checking. A specific maximum memory leakage can be set as follows: [leaks=500]. This allows no more than 500 bytes of heap to be leaked. Also there is a special function to set the critical level of leakage not through a tag, just directly in the test code test_utils_set_critical_leak_level().

The priority of using leakage level is as follows:

  1. Setting by tag [leaks=500].
  2. Setting by test_utils_set_critical_leak_level() function.
  3. Setting by default leakage in Kconfig CONFIG_UNITY_CRITICAL_LEAK_LEVEL_GENERAL.

Tests marked as [leaks] or [leaks=xxx] reset the device after completion (or after each stage in multistage tests).

TagDefinition.yml defines how we should parse the description. In TagDefinition.yml, we declare the tags we are interested in, their default value and omitted value. Parser will parse the properities of test cases according to this file, and add them as test case attributes.

We will build unit-test-app with different sdkconfigs. Some config items requires specific board to run. For example, if CONFIG_SPIRAM is enabled, then unit test app must run on board supports PSRAM. ConfigDependency.yml is used to define the mapping between sdkconfig items and tags. The tags will be saved as case attributes, used to select jobs and runners. In the previous example, psram tag is generated, will only select jobs and runners also contains psram tag.

Assign Test Stage:

assign_test job will try to assign all cases to test jobs defined in .gitlab-ci.yml, according to test environment and tags. For each job, one config file with same name of test job will be generated in components/idf_test/unit_test/CIConfigs/(this folder will be passed to test jobs as artifacts). These config files will tell test jobs which cases it need to run, and pass some extra configs (like if the case will reset) of test case to runner.

Please check related document in tiny-test-fw for details.

Unit Test Stage:

All jobs in unit_test stage will run job according to unit test configs. Then unit test jobs will use tiny-test-fw runner to run the test cases. The test logs will be saved as artifacts.

Unit test jobs will do reset before running each case (because some cases do not cleanup when failed). This makes test cases independent with each other during execution.

Handle Unit Test CI Issues

1. Assign Test Failures

Gitlab CI do not support create jobs at runtime. We must maunally add all jobs to CI config file. To make test running in parallel, we limit the number of cases running on each job. When add new unit test cases, it could exceed the limitation that current unit test jobs support. In this case, assign test job will raise error, remind you to add jobs to .gitlab-ci.yml.

Too many test cases vs jobs to run. Please add the following jobs to .gitlab-ci.yml with specific tags:
* Add job with: UT_T1_1, ESP32_IDF, psram
* Add job with: UT_T1_1, ESP32_IDF

The above is an example of error message in assign test job. In this case, please add the following jobs in .gitlab-ci.yml:

UT_001_25:
  <<: *unit_test_template
  tags:
    - ESP32_IDF
    - UT_T1_1

UT_004_09:
  <<: *unit_test_template
  tags:
    - ESP32_IDF
    - UT_T1_1
    - psram

The naming rule of jobs are UT + job type index + job index. Each combination of tags is a different job type.

2. Debugging Failed Cases

First you can check the logs. It's saved as unit test job artifacts. You can download from the test job page.

If you want to reproduce locally, you need to:

  1. Download artifacts of build_esp_idf_tests. The built binary is in tools/unit-test-app/output folder.
    • Built binary in CI could be slightly different from locally built binary with the same revision, some cases might only fails with CI built binary.
  2. Check the following print in CI job to get the config name: Running unit test for config: config_name. Then flash the binary of this config to your board.
  3. Run the failed case on your board (refer to Running Unit Tests section).
    • There're some special UT cases (multiple stages case, multiple devices cases) which requires user interaction:
      • You can refer to unit test document to run test manually.
      • Or, you can use tools/unit-test-app/unit_test.py to run the test cases (see below)

Testing and debugging on local machine

Running unit tests on local machine by unit_test.py

First, install Python dependencies and export the Python path where the IDF CI Python modules are found:

pip install -r $IDF_PATH/tools/ci/python_packages/tiny_test_fw/requirements.txt
export PYTHONPATH=$IDF_PATH/tools/ci/python_packages

Change to the unit test app directory, configure the app as needed and build it in the default "build" directory. For example:

cd $IDF_PATH/tools/unit-test-app
idf.py ut-apply-config-psram
idf.py build -T vfs

(Instead of these steps, you can do whatever is needed to configure & build a unit test app with the tests and config that you need.)

run a single test case by name


./unit_test.py "UART can do select()"

unit_test.py script will flash the unit test binary from the (default) build directory, then run the test case.

Run a single test case twice

./unit_test.py -r 2 "UART can do select()"

run multiple unit test cases

./unit_test.py "UART can do select()" "concurrent selects work"

run a multi-stage test (type of test and child case numbers are autodetected)

./unit_test.py "check a time after wakeup from deep sleep"

run a list of different unit tests (one simple and one multi-stage test)

./unit_test.py "concurrent selects work" "check a time after wakeup from deep sleep"

Use custom environment config file

./unit_test.py -e /tmp/EnvConfigTemplate.yml "UART can do select()"

Note: No sample YAML file is currently available.

use custom application binary

./unit_test.py -b /tmp/app.bin "UART can do select()"

Note: This option doesn't currently work without an EnvConfigTemplate also supplied, use the default unit-test-app binaries only.

add some options for unit tests

./unit_test.py "UART can do select()",timeout:10 "concurrent selects work",config:release,env_tag:UT_T2_1

Note: Setting the config and env_tag values doesn't significantly change anything but the console log output, the same binary is used.