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gc-aot | ||
README.md |
Requirement Engineering Tests
This directory contains requirement engineering test cases. Each directory corresponds to a test case suite for a requirement, comprised of test cases for sub-requirements.
How to Run a Requirement Test
You can use the all-in-one script. Here are examples of its usage for testing the "gc-aot" requirement:
cd ../wamr-test-suites
# Run "gc-aot" requirement test on cases corresponding to sub-requirement ids 1, 2, 3
./test_wamr.sh -r "gc-aot" 1 2 3
# If no sub-requirement id is specified, it will test all cases for this requirement
./test_wamr.sh -r "gc-aot"
Or, use the helper scripts under a specific requirement directory. Refer to the help information of that helper script:
cd gc-aot
# Build first
./build.py
# Print help info
./run.py -h
# Test sub-requirement 1, and output to file output.csv
./run.py -o output 1
# Test all sub-requirements, and output to file output.csv
./run.py -o output
How to Add a New Requirement Test
-
First, create a subdirectory, e.g.,
new-requirement
, in this directory. Its name should reflect the requirement, like "gc-aot", and it should contain two helper scripts (build.py
andrun.py
) to build and run tests under thenew-requirement
sub-directory.If you need to use relative paths in your script, it's fine. The caller Python script ../wamr-test-suites/requirement-engineering-test-script/run_requirement.py will use
os.chdir()
to change to that sub-directory.Start by writing and testing the helper script in that sub-directory, and add anything helpful (for instance, a main function and CLI argument parser).
-
After finishing the helper script, to let the all-in-one script
test_wamr.sh
-> ../wamr-test-suites/requirement-engineering-test-script/run_requirement.py invoke the new requirement test, you don't have to modify this script. Just ensure your helper script follows these guidelines:-
The
build.py
should have a build function to build everything necessary for running the requirement tests. The signature should be:def build(verbose: bool) -> None: # your implementation
-
The
run.py
should have a run function to execute the test cases. The signature should be:def run(output_dir: str, subrequirement_ids: List[int]) -> Dict[int, Dict[Tuple[str, str], bool]]: # your implementation
The result should be a dictionary with sub-requirement ids as keys and inner dictionaries as values. The inner dictionary should map tuples of (test_case, test_case_description) to a boolean indicating the test case's success.
run.py
should also contain a SUBREQUIREMENT_DESCRIPTIONS dictionary, describing each sub-requirement. For example:SUBREQUIREMENT_DESCRIPTIONS = { 1: ("633", "Modify existing opcodes to conform to the semantics of the GC proposal when needed."), 2: ("634", "Supporting new GC opcodes(semantics of GC MVP proposal spec)."), 3: ("635", "Supporting new GC opcode(semantics of Binaryen GC spec)."), }
PS: If anything goes wrong during the build and run process, throw an exception and let it crash, so that it can be seen by the top-level caller (shell script).
-
-
Now you can test whether the all-in-one script
test_wamr.sh
can correctly executenew-requirement
and generate a report../test_wamr.sh -r "new-requirement"