Aleksandr Kuzmenko 4f2b86af17 allow parentheses for intersection constraints (#8869) 5 anni fa
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benchs be08600765 [benchs] add some string creation benchmarks 5 anni fa
display 042a66d8c3 [display] show private abstract fields in completion inside that abstract 5 anni fa
echoServer 019ea83cdb Bytes API for haxe.Http (#8570) 6 anni fa
misc 9fd86d599b [php] keep iterator fields on maps (fixes #8851) 5 anni fa
nullsafety 8663dea0e8 [nullsafety] validate @:nullSafety meta arguments (closes #8116) 5 anni fa
optimization a8d036760e better inlining of ctors and anons 5 anni fa
runci 348192fff4 [ci] use additional args provided by RunCi where possible 6 anni fa
server 97d365b7f9 [server] reverted module recaching on display requests (#8596) 5 anni fa
sourcemaps 2454b76809 [tests] sourcemap tests compile fix 6 anni fa
sys 24b8830663 [lua] fix io process (address #8216) 5 anni fa
threads 37698d5e0c [tests] improve thread test printing 6 anni fa
unit 4f2b86af17 allow parentheses for intersection constraints (#8869) 5 anni fa
.gitattributes 08d190aab0 Preserve line-endings for all tests. 10 anni fa
Brewfile 306840f03c use camlp5 instead of camlp4 (see #8547) 6 anni fa
README.md 8efda536b9 tests/README.md: run times -> compilation times (#5571) 9 anni fa
RunCi.hx 158db6c0a8 don't run http tests locally 6 anni fa
RunCi.hxml da2836597b Clean up CLI usage/help output, standardize flag naming (#6862) 7 anni fa
TestMakefile.hx 3df5463bd8 add makefile test 9 anni fa
TestMakefile.hxml da2836597b Clean up CLI usage/help output, standardize flag naming (#6862) 7 anni fa

README.md

Tests

We have a number of test suites, which are placed in their own folders in this directory.

"RunCi.hx" is the script used by our CIs to run all the test suites. It is possible to configure CIs for your own fork of Haxe on Github using the instructions as follows.

TravisCI

TravisCI provides Linux and Mac builds. However, for forks, it only provides Linux builds unless requested manually.

To set up TravisCI:

  1. Head to TravisCI, go to the profile page.
  2. Turn on the switch of your fork. If you couldn't find the repo, try the Sync button on the top to refresh the list.
  3. If you want to enable browser testing for the JS target, follow the instructions in the SauceLabs section. If not, go to the next step.
  4. Push to the repo to trigger a new build. The build result should be available at https://travis-ci.org/<user_name>/haxe.

AppVeyor

AppVeyor provides Windows builds.

To set up AppVeyor:

  1. Head to AppVeyor, add a new project.
  2. Select the forked repo under your account.
  3. Push to the repo to trigger a new build. The build result should be available at https://ci.appveyor.com/project/<user_name>/haxe.

SauceLabs

SauceLabs provides browser testings. We use TravisCI to drive the test, so you should have TravisCI configured.

To set up SauceLabs:

  1. Head to the project page of your fork at https://travis-ci.org/<user_name>/haxe
  2. Select Settings -> Settings.
  3. Select the Environment Variables tab.
  4. Select Add a new variable for the following pairs, keeping the switch off for Display value in build logs.
    • name: SAUCE_USERNAME, value: your SauceLabs account name
    • name: SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY, value: your SauceLabs access key, which can be found at https://saucelabs.com/account
  5. Push to the repo to trigger a new TravisCI build. SauceLabs test results should be available in the JS build log.

Local testing

It is possible to run it in local machines too:

  1. Change to this directory.
  2. Compile the script: haxe RunCi.hxml.
  3. Define the test target by export TEST=$TARGET (or set "TEST=$TARGET" on Windows), where $TARGET should be a comma-seperated list of targets, e.g. neko,macro. Possible targets are macro, neko, js, lua, php, cpp, flash9, as3, java, cs, python, and third-party. However, flash9, as3, and third-party are not likely to work on local machines (TODO).
  4. Run it: neko RunCi.n.

Note that the script will try to look for test dependencies and install them if they are not found. Look at the getXXXDependencies functions for the details.

Unit tests

The "unit" folder contains a set of unit tests for the Haxe std library. Unit tests can be run separately instead of using "RunCi.hx", which runs all test suites.

Assuming all test dependencies has been installed, we compile and run the unit tests for all targets at once as follows:

  1. Change to the "unit" directory.
  2. Compile: haxe compile.hxml.
  3. Start a dev server: nekotools server.
  4. Open http://localhost:2000/unit.html in your browser.

Cpp unit tests

Cpp unit tests are compiled with -D HXCPP_NO_DEBUG_LINK (removes debug symbols) to speed up compilation times. You can remove this from compile-cpp.hxml to be able to open the generated Test-debug.exe in Visual Studio and debug it. This is useful if it's difficult to figure out why a test is failing, or also which test is failing (for instance with a segmentation fault).

Sys tests

The "sys" folder contains tests for the system targets. It can also be run separately instead of using "RunCi.hx".

Assuming all test dependencies has been installed, we compile and run the sys tests for all targets at once as follows:

  1. Change to the "sys" directory.
  2. If you're on Windows, comment out the relevant lines in "run.hxml". haxe run.hxml.