Testing ======= Examples below assume cwd at the gradlew script in the top directory of the project's checkout. Generic test/ checkup commands ------------------------------ Run all unit tests: gradlew test Run all verification tasks, including tests: gradlew check Run all verification tasks, excluding tests (-x is gradle's generic task exclusion mechanism): gradlew check -x test Run verification for a selected module only: gradlew :lucene:core:check # By full gradle project path gradlew -p lucene/core check # By folder designation + task Randomization ------------- To run tests with the given starting seed pass 'tests.seed' property: gradlew :lucene:misc:test -Ptests.seed=DEADBEEF There are a lot of other test randomization properties available. To list them, their defaults and current values run the testOpts task against a project that has tests. For example: gradlew -p lucene/core testOpts Filtering --------- Run tests of lucene-core module: gradlew -p lucene/core test Run a single test case (from a single module). Uses gradle's built-in filtering (https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/java_testing.html#test_filtering): gradlew -p lucene/core test --tests TestDemo Run all tests in a package: gradlew -p lucene/core test --tests "org.apache.lucene.document.*" Run all test classes/ methods that match this pattern: gradlew -p lucene/core test --tests "*testFeatureMissing*" Test groups ----------- Tests can be filtered by an annotation they're marked with. Some test group annotations include: @AwaitsFix, @Nightly, @Slow This uses filtering infrastructure on the *runner* (randomizedtesting), not gradle's built-in mechanisms (but it can be combined with "--tests"). For example, run all lucene-core tests annotated as @Slow: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.filter=@Slow Test group filters can be combined into Boolean expressions: gradlew -p lucene/core test "default and not(@awaitsfix or @slow)" Reiteration ("beasting") ------------------------ Multiply each test case N times (this works by repeating the same test within the same JVM; it also works in IDEs): gradlew -p lucene/core test --tests TestDemo -Ptests.iters=5 Tests tasks will be (by default) re-executed on each invocation because we pick a random global tests.seed and because we want them to (force the test task to run). If you want to make the 'tests' task obey up-to-date gradle rules, fix the seed and turn off up to date trigger: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.seed=deadbeef -Ptests.neverUpToDate=false These properties can be set in your local gradle.properties. To force re-execution of tests, even for the same master seed, apply cleanTest task: gradlew -p lucene/core cleanTest test -Ptests.seed=deadbeef The 'tests.iters' option should be sufficient for individual test cases and is *much* faster than trying to duplicate re-runs of the entire test suites. When it is absolutely needed to re-run an entire suite (because of randomization in the static initialization, for example), you can do it by running the 'beast' task with 'tests.dups' option: gradlew -p lucene/core beast -Ptests.dups=10 --tests TestPerFieldDocValuesFormat Note the filter (--tests) used to narrow down test reiterations to a particular class. You can use any filter, including no filter at all, but it rarely makes sense (will take ages). By default the test tasks generated by the 'beast' mode use a random starting seed for randomization. If you pass an explicit seed, this won't be the case (all tasks will use exactly the same starting seed): gradlew -p lucene/core beast -Ptests.dups=10 --tests TestPerFieldDocValuesFormat -Dtests.seed=deadbeef Verbose mode and debugging -------------------------- The "tests.verbose" mode switch enables standard streams from tests to be dumped directly to the console. Run your verbose tests explicitly specifying the project and test task or a fully qualified task path. Example: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.verbose=true --tests "TestDemo" Profiling slow tests -------------------- The "tests.profile" mode switch turns on a sampling profiler during test execution, and prints a simple summary at the end. For example, top-10 histogram of methods (cpu samples): gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.profile=true Alternatively, you can profile heap allocations instead: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.profile=true -Ptests.profile.mode=heap By default, results are computed (deduplicated) on just the method name, folding together all events from the same method. To drill down further, you can increase the stack size from the default of 1, to get a histogram of stacktraces instead: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.profile=true -Ptests.profile.stacksize=8 For big methods, it can also be helpful to include line numbers for more granularity: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.profile=true -Ptests.profile.linenumbers=true Using these additional options will make the results more sparse, so it may be useful to increase the top-N count: gradlew -p lucene/core test -Ptests.profile=true -Ptests.profile.count=100 Generating Coverage Reports ------------------------------ Running the "coverage" task (or setting the property "tests.coverage" to true) will run the tests with instrumentation to record code coverage. Example: gradlew -p lucene/core coverage open lucene/core/build/reports/jacoco/test/html/index.html If you want to use test filtering to just check a particular test, specify the "test" task explicitly before "coverage": gradlew -p lucene/core test --tests TestDemo coverage open lucene/core/build/reports/jacoco/test/html/index.html External data sets ------------------ Some tests may require external (and large) data sets. To see relevant tasks that download and extract these data files automatically, run the following: gradlew tasks --group "Data set download"