.. | ||
biab | ||
capella | ||
importmidi | ||
libmscore | ||
musicxml | ||
omr | ||
build.xml | ||
cmake.inc | ||
CMakeLists.txt | ||
config.h | ||
mscoreapi.h | ||
mtest.cpp | ||
mtest.qrc | ||
openscore.h | ||
README.md | ||
test.mscx | ||
testutils.cpp | ||
testutils.h |
Building the tests
Adapt for your own platform
make debug
make debug install
cd build.debug/mtest
make
running them all
ctest
running only one for debug purpose
cd libmscore/join/
./tst_join
To see how the CI environment is doing it check .travis.yml
and build/run_tests.sh
Note: You need to have diff
in your path. For Windows, get a copy of diffutils for Windows.
Test cases convention
Tests are grouped in directories by feature (like libmscore or mxl). In these directories, each subdirectory represent a test suite for a particular sub feature.
A test suite directory for a test suite should be descriptive. The CPP file for the tests should use the same name than the directory tst_foo.cpp
. It's good practise to include a README file in a test suite directory.
A test suite CPP files contains a signal per test case. Each signal should be called fooXX with XX being incremental. If a test case refers to a file and ref file, they should be call fooXX.mscx
and foo-ref.mscx
. A test case should not reuse a file from another test case.
To create reference or original files, MuseScore can be run with the -t
command line argument and it will save all the files in the session in test mode. Such files do not contain platform specific information, version information, and can be instrumented (for example, they contains pixel level position for beams)
How to write a test case
Import test
- Open a short file in one of the format supported by MuseScore and containing a special case
- Save in MuseSCore format
- Compare with reference file
First the test will fail because there is no reference file. Open the file created by the test case in MuseScore and try to edit it to be sure it's sane. If the file is sane, save it (without your edition) as a reference file.
Object read write
Create a test case for all elements and all properties in each element. See libmscore/note
- Create an object
- Set a property
- Write and read the object
- Check if the property has the right value
Action tests
See libmscore/join
or libmscore/split
for example
- Read a score file
- Apply an action
- Write the file
- Compare with a reference
- (Undo the action)
- (Compare with original file)
Compatibility tests
Most of them are in mtest/libmscore/compat
- Read a score file from an older version of MuseScore (currently only 1.2)
- Write the file
- Compare with a reference file