View Source Event Handling
General
The operator of a Common Test
system can receive event notifications
continuously during a test run. For example, Common Test
reports when a test
case starts and stops, the current count of successful, failed, and skipped
cases, and so on. This information can be used for different purposes such as
logging progress and results in another format than HTML, saving statistics to a
database for report generation, and test system supervision.
Common Test
has a framework for event handling based on the OTP event manager
concept and gen_event
behavior. When the Common Test
server starts, it
spawns an event manager. During test execution the manager gets a notification
from the server when something of potential interest happens. Any event handler
plugged into the event manager can match on events of interest, take action, or
pass the information on. The event handlers are Erlang modules implemented by
the Common Test
user according to the gen_event
behavior (for details, see
module gen_event
and section gen_event Behaviour
in OTP Design Principles in the System Documentation).
A Common Test
server always starts an event manager. The server also plugs in
a default event handler, which only purpose is to relay notifications to a
globally registered Common Test
Master event manager (if a Common Test
Master server is running in the system). The Common Test
Master also spawns an
event manager at startup. Event handlers plugged into this manager receives the
events from all the test nodes, plus information from the Common Test
Master
server.
User-specific event handlers can be plugged into a Common Test
event manager,
either by telling Common Test
to install them before the test run (described
later), or by adding the handlers dynamically during the test run using
gen_event:add_handler/3
or gen_event:add_sup_handler/3
. In the latter
scenario, the reference of the Common Test
event manager is required. To get
it, call ct:get_event_mgr_ref/0
or (on the Common Test
Master node)
ct_master:get_event_mgr_ref/0
.
Use
Event handlers can be installed by an event_handler
start flag
(ct_run
) or option ct:run_test/1
, where the argument
specifies the names of one or more event handler modules.
Example:
$ ct_run -suite test/my_SUITE -event_handler handlers/my_evh1 handlers/my_evh2 -pa $PWD/handlers
To pass start arguments to the event handler init function, use option
ct_run -event_handler_init
instead of -event_handler
.
Note
All event handler modules must have
gen_event
behavior. These modules must be precompiled and their locations must be added explicitly to the Erlang code server search path (as in the previous example).
An event_handler tuple in argument Opts
has the following definition (see
ct:run_test/1
):
{event_handler,EventHandlers}
EventHandlers = EH | [EH]
EH = atom() | {atom(),InitArgs} | {[atom()],InitArgs}
InitArgs = [term()]
In the following example, two event handlers for the my_SUITE
test are
installed:
1> ct:run_test([{suite,"test/my_SUITE"},{event_handler,[my_evh1,{my_evh2,[node()]}]}]).
Event handler my_evh1
is started with []
as argument to the init function.
Event handler my_evh2
is started with the name of the current node in the init
argument list.
Event handlers can also be plugged in using one of the following test specification terms:
{event_handler, EventHandlers}
{event_handler, EventHandlers, InitArgs}
{event_handler, NodeRefs, EventHandlers}
{event_handler, NodeRefs, EventHandlers, InitArgs}
EventHandlers
is a list of module names. Before a test session starts, the
init function of each plugged in event handler is called (with the InitArgs
list as argument or []
if no start arguments are specified).
To plug in a handler to the Common Test
Master event manager, specify master
as the node in NodeRefs
.
To be able to match on events, the event handler module must include the header
file ct_event.hrl
. An event is a record with the following definition:
#event{name, node, data}
name
- Label (type) of the event.node
- Name of the node that the event originated from (only relevant forCommon Test
Master event handlers).data
- Specific for the event.
General Events
The general events are as follows:
#event{name = start_logging, data = LogDir}
-LogDir = string()
, top-level log directory for the test run.This event indicates that the logging process of
Common Test
has started successfully and is ready to receive I/O messages.#event{name = stop_logging, data = []}
- This event indicates that the logging process ofCommon Test
was shut down at the end of the test run.#event{name = test_start, data = {StartTime,LogDir}}
-StartTime = {date(),time()}
, test run start date and time.LogDir = string()
, top-level log directory for the test run.This event indicates that
Common Test
has finished initial preparations and begins executing test cases.#event{name = test_done, data = EndTime}
-EndTime = {date(),time()}
, date and time the test run finished.This event indicates that the last test case has been executed and
Common Test
is shutting down.#event{name = start_info, data = {Tests,Suites,Cases}}
-Tests = integer()
, number of tests.Suites = integer()
, total number of suites.Cases = integer() | unknown
, total number of test cases.This event gives initial test run information that can be interpreted as: "This test run will execute
Tests
separate tests, in total containingCases
number of test cases, inSuites
number of suites". However, if a test case group with a repeat property exists in any test, the total number of test cases cannot be calculated (unknown).#event{name = tc_start, data = {Suite,FuncOrGroup}}
-Suite = atom()
, name of the test suite.FuncOrGroup = Func | {Conf,GroupName,GroupProperties}
Func = atom()
, name of test case or configuration function.Conf = init_per_group | end_per_group
, group configuration function.GroupName = atom()
, name of the group.GroupProperties = list()
, list of execution properties for the group.This event informs about the start of a test case, or a group configuration function. The event is sent also for
init_per_suite
andend_per_suite
, but not forinit_per_testcase
andend_per_testcase
. If a group configuration function starts, the group name and execution properties are also specified.#event{name = tc_logfile, data = {{Suite,Func},LogFileName}}
-Suite = atom()
, name of the test suite.Func = atom()
, name of test case or configuration function.LogFileName = string()
, full name of the test case log file.This event is sent at the start of each test case (and configuration function except
init/end_per_testcase
) and carries information about the full name (that is, the file name including the absolute directory path) of the current test case log file.#event{name = tc_done, data = {Suite,FuncOrGroup,Result}}
-Suite = atom()
, name of the suite.FuncOrGroup = Func | {Conf,GroupName,GroupProperties}
Func = atom()
, name of test case or configuration function.Conf = init_per_group | end_per_group
, group configuration function.GroupName = unknown | atom()
, name of the group (unknown if init- or end function times out).GroupProperties = list()
, list of execution properties for the group.Result = ok | {auto_skipped,SkipReason} | {skipped,SkipReason} | {failed,FailReason}
, the result.SkipReason = {require_failed,RequireInfo} | {require_failed_in_suite0,RequireInfo} | {failed,{Suite,init_per_testcase,FailInfo}} | UserTerm
, why the case was skipped.FailReason = {error,FailInfo} | {error,{RunTimeError,StackTrace}} | {timetrap_timeout,integer()} | {failed,{Suite,end_per_testcase,FailInfo}}
, reason for failure.RequireInfo = {not_available,atom() | tuple()}
, why require failed.FailInfo = {timetrap_timeout,integer()} | {RunTimeError,StackTrace} | UserTerm
, error details.RunTimeError = term()
, a runtime error, for example,badmatch
orundef
.StackTrace = list()
, list of function calls preceding a runtime error.UserTerm = term()
, any data specified by user, orexit/1
information.This event informs about the end of a test case or a configuration function (see event
tc_start
for details on elementFuncOrGroup
). With this event comes the final result of the function in question. It is possible to determine on the top level ofResult
if the function was successful, skipped (by the user), or if it failed.It is also possible to dig deeper and, for example, perform pattern matching on the various reasons for skipped or failed. Notice that
{'EXIT',Reason}
tuples are translated into{error,Reason}
. Notice also that if a{failed,{Suite,end_per_testcase,FailInfo}
result is received, the test case was successful, butend_per_testcase
for the case failed.#event{name = tc_auto_skip, data = {Suite,TestName,Reason}}
-Suite = atom()
, the name of the suite.TestName = init_per_suite | end_per_suite | {init_per_group,GroupName} | {end_per_group,GroupName} | {FuncName,GroupName} | FuncName
FuncName = atom()
, the name of the test case or configuration function.GroupName = atom()
, the name of the test case group.Reason = {failed,FailReason} | {require_failed_in_suite0,RequireInfo}
, reason for auto-skippingFunc
.FailReason = {Suite,ConfigFunc,FailInfo}} | {Suite,FailedCaseInSequence}
, reason for failure.RequireInfo = {not_available,atom() | tuple()}
, why require failed.ConfigFunc = init_per_suite | init_per_group
FailInfo = {timetrap_timeout,integer()} | {RunTimeError,StackTrace} | bad_return | UserTerm
, error details.FailedCaseInSequence = atom()
, the name of a case that failed in a sequence.RunTimeError = term()
, a runtime error, for examplebadmatch
orundef
.StackTrace = list()
, list of function calls preceding a runtime error.UserTerm = term()
, any data specified by user, orexit/1
information.This event is sent for every test case or configuration function that
Common Test
has skipped automatically because of either a failedinit_per_suite
orinit_per_group
, a failedrequire
insuite/0
, or a failed test case in a sequence. Notice that this event is never received as a result of a test case getting skipped because ofinit_per_testcase
failing, as that information is carried with eventtc_done
. If a failed test case belongs to a test case group, the second data element is a tuple{FuncName,GroupName}
, otherwise only the function name.#event{name = tc_user_skip, data = {Suite,TestName,Comment}}
-Suite = atom()
, the name of the suite.TestName = init_per_suite | end_per_suite | {init_per_group,GroupName} | {end_per_group,GroupName} | {FuncName,GroupName} | FuncName
FuncName = atom()
, the name of the test case or configuration function.GroupName = atom()
, the name of the test case group.Comment = string()
, why the test case was skipped.This event specifies that a test case was skipped by the user. It is only received if the skip is declared in a test specification. Otherwise, user skip information is received as a
{skipped,SkipReason}
result in eventtc_done
for the test case. If a skipped test case belongs to a test case group, the second data element is a tuple{FuncName,GroupName}
, otherwise only the function name.#event{name = test_stats, data = {Ok,Failed,Skipped}}
-Ok = integer()
, current number of successful test cases.Failed = integer()
, current number of failed test cases.Skipped = {UserSkipped,AutoSkipped}
UserSkipped = integer()
, current number of user-skipped test cases.AutoSkipped = integer()
, current number of auto-skipped test cases.This is a statistics event with current count of successful, skipped, and failed test cases so far. This event is sent after the end of each test case, immediately following event
tc_done
.
Internal Events
The internal events are as follows:
#event{name = start_make, data = Dir}
-Dir = string()
, running make in this directory.This internal event says that
Common Test
starts compiling modules in directoryDir
.#event{name = finished_make, data = Dir}
-Dir = string()
, finished running make in this directory.This internal event says that
Common Test
is finished compiling modules in directoryDir
.#event{name = start_write_file, data = FullNameFile}
-FullNameFile = string(), full name of the file.
This internal event is used by the
Common Test
Master process to synchronize particular file operations.#event{name = finished_write_file, data = FullNameFile}
-FullNameFile = string(), full name of the file.
This internal event is used by the
Common Test
Master process to synchronize particular file operations.
Notes
The events are also documented in ct_event.erl
. This module can serve as an
example of what an event handler for the Common Test
event manager can look
like.
Note
To ensure that printouts to
stdout
(or printouts made withct:log/2,3
orct:pal,2,3
) get written to the test case log file, and not to theCommon Test
framework log, you can synchronize with theCommon Test
server by matching on eventstc_start
andtc_done
. In the period between these events, all I/O is directed to the test case log file. These events are sent synchronously to avoid potential timing problems (for example, that the test case log file is closed just before an I/O message from an external process gets through). Knowing this, you need to be careful that yourhandle_event/2
callback function does not stall the test execution, possibly causing unexpected behavior as a result.