xref: /llvm-project/libcxx/docs/TestingLibcxx.rst (revision de5ff8ad07ae824b86c5cefcba63f4b66607b759)
1.. _testing:
2
3==============
4Testing libc++
5==============
6
7.. contents::
8  :local:
9
10Getting Started
11===============
12
13libc++ uses LIT to configure and run its tests.
14
15The primary way to run the libc++ tests is by using ``make check-cxx``.
16
17However since libc++ can be used in any number of possible
18configurations it is important to customize the way LIT builds and runs
19the tests. This guide provides information on how to use LIT directly to
20test libc++.
21
22Please see the `Lit Command Guide`_ for more information about LIT.
23
24.. _LIT Command Guide: https://llvm.org/docs/CommandGuide/lit.html
25
26Usage
27-----
28
29After :ref:`building libc++ <VendorDocumentation>`, you can run parts of the libc++ test suite by simply
30running ``llvm-lit`` on a specified test or directory. If you're unsure
31whether the required libraries have been built, you can use the
32``cxx-test-depends`` target. For example:
33
34.. code-block:: bash
35
36  $ cd <monorepo-root>
37  $ make -C <build> cxx-test-depends # If you want to make sure the targets get rebuilt
38  $ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/re # Run all of the std::regex tests
39  $ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/depr/depr.c.headers/stdlib_h.pass.cpp # Run a single test
40  $ <build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv libcxx/test/std/atomics libcxx/test/std/threads # Test std::thread and std::atomic
41
42If you used **ninja** as your build system, running ``ninja -C <build> check-cxx`` will run
43all the tests in the libc++ testsuite.
44
45.. note::
46  If you used the Bootstrapping build instead of the default runtimes build, the
47  ``cxx-test-depends`` target is instead named ``runtimes-test-depends``, and
48  you will need to prefix ``<build>/runtimes/runtimes-<target>-bins/`` to the
49  paths of all tests. For example, to run all the libcxx tests you can do
50  ``<build>/bin/llvm-lit -sv <build>/runtimes/runtimes-bins/libcxx/test``.
51
52In the default configuration, the tests are built against headers that form a
53fake installation root of libc++. This installation root has to be updated when
54changes are made to the headers, so you should re-run the ``cxx-test-depends``
55target before running the tests manually with ``lit`` when you make any sort of
56change, including to the headers. We recommend using the provided ``libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit``
57script to automate this so you don't have to think about building test dependencies
58every time:
59
60.. code-block:: bash
61
62  $ cd <monorepo-root>
63  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build> -sv libcxx/test/std/re # Build testing dependencies and run all of the std::regex tests
64
65Sometimes you'll want to change the way LIT is running the tests. Custom options
66can be specified using the ``--param <name>=<val>`` flag. The most common option
67you'll want to change is the standard dialect (ie ``-std=c++XX``). By default the
68test suite will select the newest C++ dialect supported by the compiler and use
69that. However, you can manually specify the option like so if you want:
70
71.. code-block:: bash
72
73  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build> -sv libcxx/test/std/containers # Run the tests with the newest -std
74  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build> -sv libcxx/test/std/containers --param std=c++03 # Run the tests in C++03
75
76Other parameters are supported by the test suite. Those are defined in ``libcxx/utils/libcxx/test/params.py``.
77If you want to customize how to run the libc++ test suite beyond what is available
78in ``params.py``, you most likely want to use a custom site configuration instead.
79
80The libc++ test suite works by loading a site configuration that defines various
81"base" parameters (via Lit substitutions). These base parameters represent things
82like the compiler to use for running the tests, which default compiler and linker
83flags to use, and how to run an executable. This system is meant to be easily
84extended for custom needs, in particular when porting the libc++ test suite to
85new platforms.
86
87.. note::
88  If you run the test suite on Apple platforms, we recommend adding the terminal application
89  used to run the test suite to the list of "Developer Tools". This prevents the system from
90  trying to scan each individual test binary for malware and dramatically speeds up the test
91  suite.
92
93Using a Custom Site Configuration
94---------------------------------
95
96By default, the libc++ test suite will use a site configuration that matches
97the current CMake configuration. It does so by generating a ``lit.site.cfg``
98file in the build directory from one of the configuration file templates in
99``libcxx/test/configs/``, and pointing ``llvm-lit`` (which is a wrapper around
100``llvm/utils/lit/lit.py``) to that file. So when you're running
101``<build>/bin/llvm-lit`` either directly or indirectly, the generated ``lit.site.cfg``
102file is always loaded instead of ``libcxx/test/lit.cfg.py``. If you want to use a
103custom site configuration, simply point the CMake build to it using
104``-DLIBCXX_TEST_CONFIG=<path-to-site-config>``, and that site configuration
105will be used instead. That file can use CMake variables inside it to make
106configuration easier.
107
108   .. code-block:: bash
109
110     $ cmake <options> -DLIBCXX_TEST_CONFIG=<path-to-site-config>
111     $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build> -sv libcxx/test # will use your custom config file
112
113Additional tools
114----------------
115
116The libc++ test suite uses a few optional tools to improve the code quality.
117
118These tools are:
119- clang-tidy (you might need additional dev packages to compile libc++-specific clang-tidy checks)
120
121Reproducing CI issues locally
122-----------------------------
123
124Libc++ has extensive CI that tests various configurations of the library. The testing for
125all these configurations is located in ``libcxx/utils/ci/run-buildbot``. Most of our
126CI jobs are being run on a Docker image for reproducibility. The definition of this Docker
127image is located in ``libcxx/utils/ci/Dockerfile``. If you are looking to reproduce the
128failure of a specific CI job locally, you should first drop into a Docker container that
129matches our CI images by running ``libcxx/utils/ci/run-buildbot-container``, and then run
130the specific CI job that you're interested in (from within the container) using the ``run-buildbot``
131script above. If you want to control which compiler is used, you can set the ``CC`` and the
132``CXX`` environment variables before calling ``run-buildbot`` to select the right compiler.
133Take note that some CI jobs are testing the library on specific platforms and are *not* run
134in our Docker image. In the general case, it is not possible to reproduce these failures
135locally, unless they aren't specific to the platform.
136
137Also note that the Docker container shares the same filesystem as your local machine, so
138modifying files on your local machine will also modify what the Docker container sees.
139This is useful for editing source files as you're testing your code in the Docker container.
140
141Writing Tests
142=============
143
144When writing tests for the libc++ test suite, you should follow a few guidelines.
145This will ensure that your tests can run on a wide variety of hardware and under
146a wide variety of configurations. We have several unusual configurations such as
147building the tests on one host but running them on a different host, which add a
148few requirements to the test suite. Here's some stuff you should know:
149
150- All tests are run in a temporary directory that is unique to that test and
151  cleaned up after the test is done.
152- When a test needs data files as inputs, these data files can be saved in the
153  repository (when reasonable) and referenced by the test as
154  ``// FILE_DEPENDENCIES: <path-to-dependencies>``. Copies of these files or
155  directories will be made available to the test in the temporary directory
156  where it is run.
157- You should never hardcode a path from the build-host in a test, because that
158  path will not necessarily be available on the host where the tests are run.
159- You should try to reduce the runtime dependencies of each test to the minimum.
160  For example, requiring Python to run a test is bad, since Python is not
161  necessarily available on all devices we may want to run the tests on (even
162  though supporting Python is probably trivial for the build-host).
163
164Structure of the testing related directories
165--------------------------------------------
166
167The tests of libc++ are stored in libc++'s testing related subdirectories:
168
169- ``libcxx/test/support`` This directory contains several helper headers with
170  generic parts for the tests. The most important header is ``test_macros.h``.
171  This file contains configuration information regarding the platform used.
172  This is similar to the ``__config`` file in libc++'s ``include`` directory.
173  Since libc++'s tests are used by other Standard libraries, tests should use
174  the ``TEST_FOO`` macros instead of the ``_LIBCPP_FOO`` macros, which are
175  specific to libc++.
176- ``libcxx/test/std`` This directory contains the tests that validate the library under
177  test conforms to the C++ Standard. The paths and the names of the test match
178  the section names in the C++ Standard. Note that the C++ Standard sometimes
179  reorganises its structure, therefore some tests are at a location based on
180  where they appeared historically in the standard. We try to strike a balance
181  between keeping things at up-to-date locations and unnecessary churn.
182- ``libcxx/test/libcxx`` This directory contains the tests that validate libc++
183  specific behavior and implementation details. For example, libc++ has
184  "wrapped iterators" that perform bounds checks. Since those are specific to
185  libc++ and not mandated by the Standard, tests for those are located under
186  ``libcxx/test/libcxx``. The structure of this directories follows the
187  structure of ``libcxx/test/std``.
188
189Structure of a test
190-------------------
191
192Some platforms where libc++ is tested have requirement on the signature of
193``main`` and require ``main`` to explicitly return a value. Therefore the
194typical ``main`` function should look like:
195
196.. code-block:: cpp
197
198  int main(int, char**) {
199    ...
200    return 0;
201  }
202
203
204The C++ Standard has ``constexpr`` requirements. The typical way to test that,
205is to create a helper ``test`` function that returns a ``bool`` and use the
206following ``main`` function:
207
208.. code-block:: cpp
209
210  constexpr bool test() {
211    ...
212    return true;
213  }
214
215  int main(int, char**) {
216    test()
217    static_assert(test());
218
219    return 0;
220  }
221
222Tests in libc++ mainly use ``assert`` and ``static_assert`` for testing. There
223are a few helper macros and function that can be used to make it easier to
224write common tests.
225
226libcxx/test/support/assert_macros.h
227~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
228
229The header contains several macros with user specified log messages. This is
230useful when a normal assertion failure lacks the information to easily
231understand why the test has failed. This usually happens when the test is in a
232helper function. For example the ``std::format`` tests use a helper function
233for its validation. When the test fails it will give the line in the helper
234function with the condition ``out == expected`` failed. Without knowing what
235the value of ``format string``, ``out`` and ``expected`` are it is not easy to
236understand why the test has failed. By logging these three values the point of
237failure can be found without resorting to a debugger.
238
239Several of these macros are documented to take an ``ARG``. This ``ARG``:
240
241 - if it is a ``const char*`` or ``std::string`` its contents are written to
242   the ``stderr``,
243 - otherwise it must be a callable that is invoked without any additional
244   arguments and is expected to produce useful output to e.g. ``stderr``.
245
246This makes it possible to write additional information when a test fails,
247either by supplying a hard-coded string or generate it at runtime.
248
249TEST_FAIL(ARG)
250^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
251
252This macro is an unconditional failure with a log message ``ARG``. The main
253use-case is to fail when code is reached that should be unreachable.
254
255
256TEST_REQUIRE(CONDITION, ARG)
257^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
258
259This macro requires its ``CONDITION`` to evaluate to ``true``. If that fails it
260will fail the test with a log message ``ARG``.
261
262
263TEST_LIBCPP_REQUIRE((CONDITION, ARG)
264^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
265
266If the library under test is libc++ it behaves like ``TEST_REQUIRE``, else it
267is a no-op. This makes it possible to test libc++ specific behaviour. For
268example testing whether the ``what()`` of an exception thrown matches libc++'s
269expectations. (Usually the Standard requires certain exceptions to be thrown,
270but not the contents of its ``what()`` message.)
271
272
273TEST_DOES_NOT_THROW(EXPR)
274^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
275
276Validates execution of ``EXPR`` does not throw an exception.
277
278TEST_THROWS_TYPE(TYPE, EXPR)
279^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
280
281Validates the execution of ``EXPR`` throws an exception of the type ``TYPE``.
282
283
284TEST_VALIDATE_EXCEPTION(TYPE, PRED, EXPR)
285^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
286
287Validates the execution of ``EXPR`` throws an exception of the type ``TYPE``
288which passes validation of ``PRED``. Using this macro makes it easier to write
289tests using exceptions. The code to write a test manually would be:
290
291
292.. code-block:: cpp
293
294  void test_excption([[maybe_unused]] int arg) {
295  #ifndef TEST_HAS_NO_EXCEPTIONS // do nothing when tests are disabled
296    try {
297      foo(arg);
298      assert(false); // validates foo really throws
299    } catch ([[maybe_unused]] const bar& e) {
300      LIBCPP_ASSERT(e.what() == what);
301      return;
302    }
303    assert(false); // validates bar was thrown
304  #endif
305    }
306
307The same test using a macro:
308
309.. code-block:: cpp
310
311  void test_excption([[maybe_unused]] int arg) {
312    TEST_VALIDATE_EXCEPTION(bar,
313                            [](const bar& e) {
314                              LIBCPP_ASSERT(e.what() == what);
315                            },
316                            foo(arg));
317    }
318
319
320libcxx/test/support/concat_macros.h
321~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
322
323This file contains a helper macro ``TEST_WRITE_CONCATENATED`` to lazily
324concatenate its arguments to a ``std::string`` and write it to ``stderr``. When
325the output can't be concatenated a default message will be written to
326``stderr``. This is useful for tests where the arguments use different
327character types like ``char`` and ``wchar_t``, the latter can't simply be
328written to ``stderr``.
329
330This macro is in a different header as ``assert_macros.h`` since it pulls in
331additional headers.
332
333 .. note: This macro can only be used in test using C++20 or newer. The macro
334          was added at a time where most of libc++'s C++17 support was complete.
335          Since it is not expected to add this to existing tests no effort was
336          taken to make it work in earlier language versions.
337
338
339Test names
340----------
341
342The names of test files have meaning for the libc++-specific configuration of
343Lit. Based on the pattern that matches the name of a test file, Lit will test
344the code contained therein in different ways. Refer to the `Lit Meaning of libc++
345Test Filenames`_ when determining the names for new test files.
346
347.. _Lit Meaning of libc++ Test Filenames:
348.. list-table:: Lit Meaning of libc++ Test Filenames
349   :widths: 25 75
350   :header-rows: 1
351
352   * - Name Pattern
353     - Meaning
354   * - ``FOO.pass.cpp``
355     - Checks whether the C++ code in the file compiles, links and runs successfully.
356   * - ``FOO.pass.mm``
357     - Same as ``FOO.pass.cpp``, but for Objective-C++.
358
359   * - ``FOO.compile.pass.cpp``
360     - Checks whether the C++ code in the file compiles successfully. In general, prefer ``compile`` tests over ``verify`` tests,
361       subject to the specific recommendations, below, for when to write ``verify`` tests.
362   * - ``FOO.compile.pass.mm``
363     - Same as ``FOO.compile.pass.cpp``, but for Objective-C++.
364   * - ``FOO.compile.fail.cpp``
365     - Checks that the code in the file does *not* compile successfully.
366
367   * - ``FOO.verify.cpp``
368     - Compiles with clang-verify. This type of test is automatically marked as UNSUPPORTED if the compiler does not support clang-verify.
369       For additional information about how to write ``verify`` tests, see the `Internals Manual <https://clang.llvm.org/docs/InternalsManual.html#verifying-diagnostics>`_.
370       Prefer `verify` tests over ``compile`` tests to test that compilation fails for a particular reason. For example, use a ``verify`` test
371       to ensure that
372
373       * an expected ``static_assert`` is triggered;
374       * the use of deprecated functions generates the proper warning;
375       * removed functions are no longer usable; or
376       * return values from functions marked ``[[nodiscard]]`` are stored.
377
378   * - ``FOO.link.pass.cpp``
379     - Checks that the C++ code in the file compiles and links successfully -- no run attempted.
380   * - ``FOO.link.pass.mm``
381     - Same as ``FOO.link.pass.cpp``, but for Objective-C++.
382   * - ``FOO.link.fail.cpp``
383     - Checks whether the C++ code in the file fails to link after successful compilation.
384   * - ``FOO.link.fail.mm``
385     - Same as ``FOO.link.fail.cpp``, but for Objective-C++.
386
387   * - ``FOO.sh.<anything>``
388     - A *builtin Lit Shell* test.
389   * - ``FOO.gen.<anything>``
390     - A variant of a *Lit Shell* test that generates one or more Lit tests on the fly. Executing this test must generate one or more files as expected
391       by LLVM split-file. Each generated file will drive an invocation of a separate Lit test. The format of the generated file will determine the type
392       of Lit test to be executed. This can be used to generate multiple Lit tests from a single source file, which is useful for testing repetitive properties
393       in the library. Be careful not to abuse this since this is not a replacement for usual code reuse techniques.
394
395   * - ``FOO.bench.cpp``
396     - A benchmark test. These tests are linked against the GoogleBenchmark library and generally consist of micro-benchmarks of individual
397       components of the library.
398
399
400libc++-Specific Lit Features
401----------------------------
402
403Custom Directives
404~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
405
406Lit has many directives built in (e.g., ``DEFINE``, ``UNSUPPORTED``). In addition to those directives, libc++ adds two additional libc++-specific directives that makes
407writing tests easier. See `libc++-specific Lit Directives`_ for more information about the ``FILE_DEPENDENCIES``, ``ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS``, and ``MODULE_DEPENDENCIES`` libc++-specific directives.
408
409.. _libc++-specific Lit Directives:
410.. list-table:: libc++-specific Lit Directives
411   :widths: 20 35 45
412   :header-rows: 1
413
414   * - Directive
415     - Parameters
416     - Usage
417   * - ``FILE_DEPENDENCIES``
418     - ``// FILE_DEPENDENCIES: file, directory, /path/to/file, ...``
419     - The paths given to the ``FILE_DEPENDENCIES`` directive can specify directories or specific files upon which a given test depend. For example, a test that requires some test
420       input stored in a data file would use this libc++-specific Lit directive. When a test file contains the ``FILE_DEPENDENCIES`` directive, Lit will collect the named files and copy
421       them to the directory represented by the ``%T`` substitution before the test executes. The copy is performed from the directory represented by the ``%S`` substitution
422       (i.e. the source directory of the test being executed) which makes it possible to use relative paths to specify the location of dependency files. After Lit copies
423       all the dependent files to the directory specified by the ``%T`` substitution, that directory should contain *all* the necessary inputs to run. In other words,
424       it should be possible to copy the contents of the directory specified by the ``%T`` substitution to a remote host where the execution of the test will actually occur.
425   * - ``ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS``
426     - ``// ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS: flag1 flag2 ...``
427     - The additional compiler flags specified by a space-separated list to the ``ADDITIONAL_COMPILE_FLAGS`` libc++-specific Lit directive will be added to the end of the ``%{compile_flags}``
428       substitution for the test that contains it. This libc++-specific Lit directive makes it possible to add special compilation flags without having to resort to writing a ``.sh.cpp`` test (see
429       `Lit Meaning of libc++ Test Filenames`_), more powerful but perhaps overkill.
430   * - ``MODULE_DEPENDENCIES``
431     - ``// MODULE_DEPENDENCIES: std std.compat``
432     - This directive will build the required C++23 standard library
433       modules and add the additional compiler flags in
434       %{compile_flags}. (Libc++ offers these modules in C++20 as an
435       extension.)
436
437
438C++ Standard version tests
439~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
440
441Historically libc++ tests used to filter the tests for C++ Standard versions
442with lit directives like:
443
444.. code-block:: cpp
445
446   // UNSUPPORTED: c++03, c++11, c++14, c++17, c++20, c++23
447
448With C++ Standards released every 3 years, this solution is not scalable.
449Instead use:
450
451.. code-block:: cpp
452
453   // UNSUPPORTED: std-at-least-c++26
454
455There is no corresponding ``std-at-most-c++23``. This could be useful when
456tests are only valid for a small set of standard versions. For example, a
457deprecation test is only valid when the feature is deprecated until it is
458removed from the Standard. These tests should be written like:
459
460.. code-block:: cpp
461
462   // REQUIRES: c++17 || c++20 || c++23
463
464.. note::
465
466   There are a lot of tests with the first style, these can remain as they are.
467   The new style is only intended to be used for new tests.
468
469
470Benchmarks
471==========
472
473Libc++ contains benchmark tests separately from the test of the test suite.
474The benchmarks are written using the `Google Benchmark`_ library, a copy of which
475is stored in the libc++ repository.
476
477For more information about using the Google Benchmark library, see the
478`official documentation <https://github.com/google/benchmark>`_.
479
480The benchmarks are located under ``libcxx/test/benchmarks``. Running a benchmark
481works in the same way as running a test. Both the benchmarks and the tests share
482the same configuration, so make sure to enable the relevant optimization level
483when running the benchmarks. For example,
484
485.. code-block:: bash
486
487  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build> libcxx/test/benchmarks/string.bench.cpp --show-all --param optimization=speed
488
489Note that benchmarks are only dry-run when run via the ``check-cxx`` target since
490we only want to make sure they don't rot. Do not rely on the results of benchmarks
491run through ``check-cxx`` for anything, instead run the benchmarks manually using
492the instructions for running individual tests.
493
494If you want to compare the results of different benchmark runs, we recommend using the
495``libcxx-compare-benchmarks`` helper tool. First, configure CMake in a build directory
496and run the benchmark:
497
498.. code-block:: bash
499
500  $ cmake -S runtimes -B <build1> [...]
501  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build1> libcxx/test/benchmarks/string.bench.cpp --param optimization=speed
502
503Then, do the same for the second configuration you want to test. Use a different build
504directory for that configuration:
505
506.. code-block:: bash
507
508  $ cmake -S runtimes -B <build2> [...]
509  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-lit <build2> libcxx/test/benchmarks/string.bench.cpp --param optimization=speed
510
511Finally, use ``libcxx-compare-benchmarks`` to compare both:
512
513.. code-block:: bash
514
515  $ libcxx/utils/libcxx-compare-benchmarks <build1> <build2> libcxx/test/benchmarks/string.bench.cpp
516
517.. _`Google Benchmark`: https://github.com/google/benchmark
518
519.. _testing-hardening-assertions:
520
521Testing hardening assertions
522============================
523
524Each hardening assertion should be tested using death tests (via the
525``TEST_LIBCPP_ASSERT_FAILURE`` macro). Use the ``libcpp-hardening-mode`` Lit
526feature to make sure the assertion is enabled in (and only in) the intended
527modes. The convention is to use `assert.` in the name of the test file to make
528it easier to identify as a hardening test, e.g. ``assert.my_func.pass.cpp``.
529A toy example:
530
531.. code-block:: cpp
532
533  // Note: the following three annotations are currently needed to use the
534  // `TEST_LIBCPP_ASSERT_FAILURE`.
535  // REQUIRES: has-unix-headers
536  // UNSUPPORTED: c++03
537  // XFAIL: libcpp-hardening-mode=debug && availability-verbose_abort-missing
538
539  // Example: only run this test in `fast`/`extensive`/`debug` modes.
540  // UNSUPPORTED: libcpp-hardening-mode=none
541  // Example: only run this test in the `debug` mode.
542  // REQUIRES: libcpp-hardening-mode=debug
543  // Example: only run this test in `extensive`/`debug` modes.
544  // REQUIRES: libcpp-hardening-mode={{extensive|debug}}
545
546  #include <header_being_tested>
547
548  #include "check_assertion.h" // Contains the `TEST_LIBCPP_ASSERT_FAILURE` macro
549
550  int main(int, char**) {
551    std::type_being_tested foo;
552    int bad_input = -1;
553    TEST_LIBCPP_ASSERT_FAILURE(foo.some_function_that_asserts(bad_input),
554        "The expected assertion message");
555
556    return 0;
557  }
558
559Note that error messages are only tested (matched) if the ``debug``
560hardening mode is used.
561