Subclass TestCase to create your own tests. Typically you'll want a TestCase subclass per implementation class.
Adds a block of code that will be executed before every TestCase is run. Equivalent to setup, but usable multiple times and without re-opening any classes.
All of the setup hooks will run in order after the setup method, if one is defined.
The argument can be any object that responds to call or a block. That means that this call,
MiniTest::Unit::TestCase.add_setup_hook { puts "foo" }
... is equivalent to:
module MyTestSetup def self.call puts "foo" end end MiniTest::Unit::TestCase.add_setup_hook MyTestSetup
The blocks passed to add_setup_hook take an optional parameter that will be the TestCase instance that is executing the block.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1227 def self.add_setup_hook arg=nil, &block hook = arg || block @setup_hooks << hook end
Adds a block of code that will be executed after every TestCase is run. Equivalent to teardown, but usable multiple times and without re-opening any classes.
All of the teardown hooks will run in reverse order after the teardown method, if one is defined.
The argument can be any object that responds to call or a block. That means that this call,
MiniTest::Unit::TestCase.add_teardown_hook { puts "foo" }
... is equivalent to:
module MyTestTeardown def self.call puts "foo" end end MiniTest::Unit::TestCase.add_teardown_hook MyTestTeardown
The blocks passed to add_teardown_hook take an optional parameter that will be the TestCase instance that is executing the block.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1276 def self.add_teardown_hook arg=nil, &block hook = arg || block @teardown_hooks << hook end
Returns a set of ranges stepped exponentially from min to max by powers of base. Eg:
bench_exp(2, 16, 2) # => [2, 4, 8, 16]
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 20 def self.bench_exp min, max, base = 10 min = (Math.log10(min) / Math.log10(base)).to_i max = (Math.log10(max) / Math.log10(base)).to_i (min..max).map { |m| base ** m }.to_a end
Returns a set of ranges stepped linearly from min to max by step. Eg:
bench_linear(20, 40, 10) # => [20, 30, 40]
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 33 def self.bench_linear min, max, step = 10 (min..max).step(step).to_a rescue LocalJumpError # 1.8.6 r = []; (min..max).step(step) { |n| r << n }; r end
Specifies the ranges used for benchmarking for that class. Defaults to exponential growth from 1 to 10k by powers of 10. Override if you need different ranges for your benchmarks.
See also: ::bench_exp and ::bench_linear.
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 61 def self.bench_range bench_exp 1, 10_000 end
Returns all test suites that have benchmark methods.
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 50 def self.benchmark_suites TestCase.test_suites.reject { |s| s.benchmark_methods.empty? } end
Call this at the top of your tests when you absolutely positively need to have ordered tests. In doing so, you're admitting that you suck and your tests are weak.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1120 def self.i_suck_and_my_tests_are_order_dependent! class << self undef_method :test_order if method_defined? :test_order define_method :test_order do :alpha end end end
Runs before every test after setup. Use this to refactor test initialization.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1171 def after_setup; end
Runs after every teardown. Use this to refactor test cleanup.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1192 def after_teardown; end
Runs the given work, gathering the times of each run. Range and times are then passed to a given validation proc. Outputs the benchmark name and times in tab-separated format, making it easy to paste into a spreadsheet for graphing or further analysis.
Ranges are specified by ::bench_range.
Eg:
def bench_algorithm validation = proc { |x, y| ... } assert_performance validation do |n| @obj.algorithm(n) end end
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 83 def assert_performance validation, &work range = self.class.bench_range io.print "#{__name__}" times = [] range.each do |x| GC.start t0 = Time.now instance_exec(x, &work) t = Time.now - t0 io.print "\t%9.6f" % t times << t end io.puts validation[range, times] end
Runs the given work and asserts that the times gathered fit to match a constant rate (eg, linear slope == 0) within a given threshold. Note: because we're testing for a slope of 0, R^2 is not a good determining factor for the fit, so the threshold is applied against the slope itself. As such, you probably want to tighten it from the default.
See www.graphpad.com/curvefit/goodness_of_fit.htm for more details.
Fit is calculated by fit_linear.
Ranges are specified by ::bench_range.
Eg:
def bench_algorithm assert_performance_constant 0.9999 do |n| @obj.algorithm(n) end end
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 127 def assert_performance_constant threshold = 0.99, &work validation = proc do |range, times| a, b, rr = fit_linear range, times assert_in_delta 0, b, 1 - threshold [a, b, rr] end assert_performance validation, &work end
Runs the given work and asserts that the times gathered fit to match a exponential curve within a given error threshold.
Fit is calculated by fit_exponential.
Ranges are specified by ::bench_range.
Eg:
def bench_algorithm assert_performance_exponential 0.9999 do |n| @obj.algorithm(n) end end
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 153 def assert_performance_exponential threshold = 0.99, &work assert_performance validation_for_fit(:exponential, threshold), &work end
Runs the given work and asserts that the times gathered fit to match a straight line within a given error threshold.
Fit is calculated by fit_linear.
Ranges are specified by ::bench_range.
Eg:
def bench_algorithm assert_performance_linear 0.9999 do |n| @obj.algorithm(n) end end
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 173 def assert_performance_linear threshold = 0.99, &work assert_performance validation_for_fit(:linear, threshold), &work end
Runs the given work and asserts that the times gathered curve fit to match a power curve within a given error threshold.
Fit is calculated by fit_power.
Ranges are specified by ::bench_range.
Eg:
def bench_algorithm assert_performance_power 0.9999 do |x| @obj.algorithm end end
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 193 def assert_performance_power threshold = 0.99, &work assert_performance validation_for_fit(:power, threshold), &work end
Runs before every setup. Use this to refactor test initialization.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1176 def before_setup; end
Runs after every test before teardown. Use this to refactor test initialization.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1187 def before_teardown; end
Takes an array of x/y pairs and calculates the general R^2 value.
See: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coefficient_of_determination
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 202 def fit_error xys y_bar = sigma(xys) { |x, y| y } / xys.size.to_f ss_tot = sigma(xys) { |x, y| (y - y_bar) ** 2 } ss_err = sigma(xys) { |x, y| (yield(x) - y) ** 2 } 1 - (ss_err / ss_tot) end
To fit a functional form: y = ae^(bx).
Takes x and y values and returns [a, b, r^2].
See: mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFittingExponential.html
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 217 def fit_exponential xs, ys n = xs.size xys = xs.zip(ys) sxlny = sigma(xys) { |x,y| x * Math.log(y) } slny = sigma(xys) { |x,y| Math.log(y) } sx2 = sigma(xys) { |x,y| x * x } sx = sigma xs c = n * sx2 - sx ** 2 a = (slny * sx2 - sx * sxlny) / c b = ( n * sxlny - sx * slny ) / c return Math.exp(a), b, fit_error(xys) { |x| Math.exp(a + b * x) } end
Fits the functional form: a + bx.
Takes x and y values and returns [a, b, r^2].
See: mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFitting.html
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 239 def fit_linear xs, ys n = xs.size xys = xs.zip(ys) sx = sigma xs sy = sigma ys sx2 = sigma(xs) { |x| x ** 2 } sxy = sigma(xys) { |x,y| x * y } c = n * sx2 - sx**2 a = (sy * sx2 - sx * sxy) / c b = ( n * sxy - sx * sy ) / c return a, b, fit_error(xys) { |x| a + b * x } end
To fit a functional form: y = ax^b.
Takes x and y values and returns [a, b, r^2].
See: mathworld.wolfram.com/LeastSquaresFittingPowerLaw.html
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 261 def fit_power xs, ys n = xs.size xys = xs.zip(ys) slnxlny = sigma(xys) { |x, y| Math.log(x) * Math.log(y) } slnx = sigma(xs) { |x | Math.log(x) } slny = sigma(ys) { | y| Math.log(y) } slnx2 = sigma(xs) { |x | Math.log(x) ** 2 } b = (n * slnxlny - slnx * slny) / (n * slnx2 - slnx ** 2); a = (slny - b * slnx) / n return Math.exp(a), b, fit_error(xys) { |x| (Math.exp(a) * (x ** b)) } end
Return the output IO object
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1097 def io @__io__ = true MiniTest::Unit.output end
Have we hooked up the IO yet?
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1105 def io? @__io__ end
Returns true if the test passed.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1158 def passed? @passed end
Runs the tests reporting the status to runner
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1041 def run runner trap "INFO" do runner.report.each_with_index do |msg, i| warn "\n%3d) %s" % [i + 1, msg] end warn '' time = runner.start_time ? Time.now - runner.start_time : 0 warn "Current Test: %s#%s %.2fs" % [self.class, self.__name__, time] runner.status $stderr end if SUPPORTS_INFO_SIGNAL result = "" begin @passed = nil self.before_setup self.setup self.after_setup self.run_test self.__name__ result = "." unless io? @passed = true rescue *PASSTHROUGH_EXCEPTIONS raise rescue Exception => e @passed = false result = runner.puke self.class, self.__name__, e ensure %{ before_teardown teardown after_teardown }.each do |hook| begin self.send hook rescue *PASSTHROUGH_EXCEPTIONS raise rescue Exception => e result = runner.puke self.class, self.__name__, e end end trap 'INFO', 'DEFAULT' if SUPPORTS_INFO_SIGNAL end result end
Runs before every test. Use this to refactor test initialization.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1165 def setup; end
Enumerates over enum mapping block if given, returning the sum of the result. Eg:
sigma([1, 2, 3]) # => 1 + 2 + 3 => 7 sigma([1, 2, 3]) { |n| n ** 2 } # => 1 + 4 + 9 => 14
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 282 def sigma enum, &block enum = enum.map(&block) if block enum.inject { |sum, n| sum + n } end
Runs after every test. Use this to refactor test cleanup.
# File lib/minitest/unit.rb, line 1181 def teardown; end
Returns a proc that calls the specified fit method and asserts that the error is within a tolerable threshold.
# File lib/minitest/benchmark.rb, line 291 def validation_for_fit msg, threshold proc do |range, times| a, b, rr = send "fit_#{msg}", range, times assert_operator rr, :>=, threshold [a, b, rr] end end
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