While running under valgrind, the screen can take significantly longer to
update(especially on travis) so a higher timeout can be required. Also reduce
the timeout when not running on valgrind.
When a test that fails leaves nvim in a 'Press Enter...' state, the whole suite
will hang because the `qa!` command executed before the next test won't be
processed until '<enter>' is sent.
Now the lua client can send a signal with when `Session:exit()` is called, so
the `qa!` request is no longer necessary.
Also:
- Set noswapfile at startup to prevent tests from leaving .s* swap files(should
also improve test environment determinism)
- Use `assert(false, msg) instead of `error(msg)` to report screen assertion
failures.
Problem: In Insert mode, after inserting a newline that inserts a comment
leader, CTRL-O moves to the right. (ZyX) Issue 57.
Solution: Correct the condition for moving the cursor back to the NUL.
(Christian Brabandt)
https://code.google.com/p/vim/source/detail?r=v7-4-492
The primitive C canonicalizer we use to strip out duplicate header
declarations and keep luajit's ffi happy, didn't work properly in this case.
What happened is this (in /usr/include/ctype.h):
__DARWIN_CTYPE_TOP_inline int
isspecial(int _c)
{
return (__istype(_c, _CTYPE_T));
}
Gets preprocessed to something like:
__inline int
isspecial(int _c)
{
return (__istype(_c, _CTYPE_T));
}
On OSX/gcc. The formatter wasn't recognizing this entire function as
something to put on a single line because it naively just checks for
"static" or "inline" for that, but not "__inline".
This error doesn't occur on OSX/clang. Without looking further into it, I
guess that __DARWIN_CTYPE_TOP_inline gets defined to inline on clang, but
__inline on gcc, for some reason.
This helps issue #1572 along.
The second argument to lfs.attributes() serves only to select a specific
part of the normally returned table. It's not a file open flag (e.g.: as for
fopen() in C). Also made the (n)eq checks a bit more idiomatic.
Fixes#1831
Ignoring invalid key sequences simplifies input handling in UIs. The only
downside is having to use "<lt>" everytime a "<" is needed on functional tests.
Ignoring invalid key sequences simplifies input handling in UIs. The only
downside is having to use "<lt>" everytime a "<" is needed on functional tests.
While we're at, using the slightly more portable `command -v` technique
to detect the executable. Also, there's no need to use `io.popen()` if
we aren't going to record the path. Instead, let's use the simpler
`os.execute()` to detect the presence of xclip.
In Lua, all math is floating point. We need to coerce the result of a
division into a integer with the `{get,set}_height` and
`{get,set}_width` window_spec functional tests.
The $GDB env var can be set to run tests under gdbserver. If $VALGRIND is also
set, it will add the --vgdb=yes command-line option to valgrind instead of
starting gdbserver.
See https://github.com/neovim/neovim/issues/1519 for failure report.
Cause : In OSX, /tmp is a symbolic link to /private/tmp, which causes
expected and got results different because of implicit
resolution.
Solution : Resolve path before setting expected value.
Nvim wasn't exiting cleanly in some job tests due to errors.
This can't be noticed until the next commit, which will perform a refactoring to
selectively process K_EVENT, so the `qa!` command executed at the end of each
test blocks forever if there are errors which require the user to press ENTER(in
that state Nvim no longer will process events).
The vim_input function accepts raw terminal input and so is better to emulate
real user, especially because it is not deferred as vim_feedkeys.
Using this function required a number of changes:
- expect() was refactored to use curbuf_contents()
- The vim_eval function in request() was moved to curbuf_contents(). For most
cases this is enough(we only care for synchronizing api calls with user input
when verifying buffer contents).
- <C-@>(NUL) is preprocessed before being passed to replace_termcodes.
- Legacy test 4 had a bug that only became visible when using vim_input, it is
fixed now.
- An extra blank line deletion was required for test 101
The last two items show that vim_feedkeys because it is not 100% equivalent to
receiving terminal input.
Commit @45525853d352 removed usage of the `job_write_cb` for closing stdin due
to a memory error, but that doesn't work anymore because `job_close_in` closes
stdin immediately, possibly trimming input data before it is fully written.
Since most memory issues with jobs have been fixed, re-add the `job_write_cb`
call to ensure stdin is only closed when it should. Also add tests for scenarios
where using the callback makes a difference.
Tests which spin the event loop and stop it in a notification handler have a
chance of re-entering the event loop due to the `vim_eval` call in the
`request()` helper(assuming the request call is what triggered the
notification). Since this will cause an error to be thrown by the lua client,
don't send the extra `vim_eval` request when the loop has been stopped.
Use save_tv_as_string(), same as vimL system(). This also makes
jobsend() more liberal in what it can accept. For example,
`jobsend(j, 123)` is now valid.
Closes#1176
Factor out string_to_list() from f_system()'s implementation
and use that to set job_data. This has the technical advantage of
preserving NULs, and may be more convenient for users.
Required for #1176.
During test setup, we used to call a vimscript function(BeforeEachTest) that
attempted to restore Nvim to it's initial state as much as possible in order to
provide a clean environment for running new tests. This approach has proven to
be unreliable, as some tests leave state that can affect other tests, eventually
causing failures that are difficult to debug.
This commit changes the 'clear' function so it will restart Nvim every time it
is called, which is a slower, but more reliable solution that will simplify
spotting bugs in the future.
Some other improvements/fixes were also performed:
- Whenever an error is detected in a handler passed to "run()", the event loop
will be stopped and the error will be propagated to the main thread.
- Errors and the "cleanup()" function will always send a quit command to the
current Nvim instance. This should prevent memory starvation when running
tests under valgrind(where each Nvim instance can consume a lot of memory).
- Fixed a wrong assertion in server_requests_spec.lua. Previously the failure
was undetected in a notification handler.
- Fixed some tests to expect fully clean registers. The deleted cleanup function
used to put an empty string in every register, but that resulted in a extra
line being added.
It is currently possible for a client to send a response that doesn't match the
current server->client request(at the top of the stack). This commit fixes that
by delaying notifications to until the first `channel_send_call` invocation
returns.
Also remove the "call stack" size check, vim will already break if the call
stack goes too deep.
The options_spec.lua suite has one purpose: Check if the :options commands will
throw any exception(:options is implemented by $VIMRUNTIME/optwin.vim). For this
it is best to use the `vim_command` API function since it will automatically
catch exceptions and forward them via msgpack-rpc.
Also, the option window seems to affect other tests, so call `restart` in the
teardown hook.
Since the introduction of the FOR_ALL_BUFFERS macro, 'sign unplace id'
without a buffer was only removing the sign from the first buffer rather
than all buffers, as described in the documentation.
:help sign-unplace
--
modeline discussion: https://github.com/akkartik/neovim/commit/7863c247db#commitcomment-8342590
- Move the cleanup function definition into `restart()` so restart can be
selectively used as a hook
- Improve error handling: Before this, errors while running the event loop would
cause busted to get stuck. Now the error is properly raised by stopping the
event loop first.
It's possible that a child process won't close it's standard streams, even after
it exits. This can be evidenced with the "xclip" program:
:call system('xclip -i -selection clipboard', 'DATA')
Before this commit, the above command wouldn't return, even though the xclip
program had exited. That is because `xclip` wasn't closing it's stdout/stderr
streams, which would block pending_refs from ever reaching 0.
Now the job.c module was refactored to ensure all streams are closed when the
uv_process_t handle is closed.
Sanity API checks made by the python-client in the api-python travis target were
converted to lua and will now live in this repository. This will simplify
performing breaking changes to the API as it won't be necessary to send parallel
PRs the python-client.
Now that the lua client is available, python/lupa are no longer necessary to run
the functional tests. The helper functions previously defined in
run-functional-tests.py were adapted to test/functional/helpers.lua.
Busted can only discover tests from a single directory. In order to allow tests
under 'legacy' to run as a functional test, it needed to be moved to
'test/functional'.
The 'lupa' python package provides a simple way to seamless integrate lua and
python code.
This commit replaces vroom by a python script that exposes the 'neovim' package
to a lua state, and invokes busted to run functional tests. This is a temporary
solution that will enable writing functional tests using lua/bused while a lua
client library is not available.
The reason for dropping vroom is flexibility: Lua/busted has a nice DSL-style
syntax while also providing the customization power of a full programming
language. Another reason is to use a single framework for unit/functional tests.
Two other changes were performed in this commit:
- Instead of "gcc-unittest/gcc-ia32", the travis builds for gcc are now
identified by "gcc/gcc-32". They will run unit/functional tests for both 64
and 32 bits.
- Old integration tests(in src/nvim/testdir) are now ran by the 'oldtest' target
Add section `before_install` in `.travis.yml` to create test group and
add current user to this group.
It is needed because by default user on Travis-CI belongs only to one
primary group derived from that user. So we have no alternative to
change group of the file.
Move tests of path_full_dir_name to path_spec. It is only defined in path.h.
Not sure why this works most of the time (I can only trigger a failure when
running under lldb).
It's a more logical place to have the test as well.
Unit tests never need to declare globals, only access them. In the main code
base this is handled by including "vim.h". If a file wants to declare
globals (in the case of neovim that's only main.c), it #define's EXTERN and
includes "vim.h". Otherwise, a file just includes "vim.h" (that's the
majority case). Since we want to be able to run unit tests without including
"vim.h", we predefine "EXTERN" to mean extern. That way, we don't have to
include "vim.h".
- Unittest should contain substring '_spec' in filename.
- This is the simplest way to use both lua and moonscript tests.
- This prevents running of non-test scripts from test folder.
`FileID` should encapsulate `st_dev` and `st_ino`. It is a new abstraction
used to check if two files are the same. `FileID`s will be embeded inside
other struts like `buf_t` or `ff_visited_T`, where a full `FileInfo` would be
to big.
- The 'stripdecls.py' script replaces declarations in all headers by includes to
generated headers.
`ag '#\s*if(?!ndef NEOVIM_).*((?!#\s*endif).*\n)*#ifdef INCLUDE_GENERATED'`
was used for this.
- Add and integrate gendeclarations.lua into the build system to generate the
required includes.
- Add -Wno-unused-function
- Made a bunch of old-style definitions ANSI
This adds a requirement: all type and structure definitions must be present
before INCLUDE_GENERATED_DECLARATIONS-protected include.
Warning: mch_expandpath (path.h.generated.h) was moved manually. So far it is
the only exception.
This struct is a wrapper around `uv_stat_t` to hide the stat information
inside `src/os/`.
The stat file attribute will be private after all refactorings concerning
file informations are done.
This allows us to avoid hard-coding paths and using environment
variables to communicate key information to unit tests, which fits
with the overall goal of making sure that folks driving CMake directly
can continue to do out-of-tree builds.
This commit will hopefully allow the cimport method to be used just as one
would use #inclue <header.h> in C. It follows the following method:
1. create a pseudoheader file that #include's all the requested header files
2. runs the pseudoheader through the C preprocessor (it will try various
compilers if available on the system).
3. runs the preprocessed file through a C formatter, which attempts to group
statements on one line. For example, a struct definition that was
formerly on several lines will take just one line after formatting. This
is done so that unique declarations can be detected. Duplicates are thus
easy to remove.
4. remove lines that are too complex for the LuaJIT C parser (such as:
Objective-C block syntax, crazy enums defined on linux, ...)
5. remove duplicate declarations
6. pass result to ffi.cdef
Commit 4348d1e6f7
introduced a bug that breaks the unit tests unless
they run in a certain order. Both path.moon
and os/fs.moon tries to include the same Enum, which
fails since ffi.cdef can only include definitions once.
This solves the bug by using Lua variables instead of
ffi.cdef Enums.
This achieves several goals:
* Less reliance on scripts so we have better portability to Windows
(though we still have a ways to go for proper Windows support).
Luajit, luarocks, moonscript, and busted are all installed via CMake
now.
* Trying to make use of pkg-config to get the correct libraries. The
latest libuv is still broken in this regard, but we'll at least be in
a position to use it.
* Allow the use of Ninja or make. The former runs faster in many
environments, and automatically makes use of parallel builds.
This also allows for system installed dependencies--though not through
the Makefile just yet--and adds support for FreeBSD.
This also make us build libuv and luajit as static libraries only, since
we're only concerned about having static libraries for our bundled
dependencies.
Testing the public interface mch_can_exe should suffice. Every former
test of is_executable has a counterpart in the tests of mch_can_exe.
Thus we can keep private things private.
* removed a putenv() implementation which isn't needed anymore
* mch_getenv() and mch_setenv() are now functions in src/os/env.c
* removes direct calls to getenv() and setenv() outside of src/os/env.c
* refactored the logic of get_env_name into mch_getenvname_at_index
* added unittests for the functions in os/env.c
* Rename mch_full_name to mch_get_absolute_path.
* Rename mch_is_full_name to mch_is_absolute_path.
* Add a lot of missing parentheses.
* Remove yoda-conditions for consistency.
* Remove spaces in function declaration.
* Rename mch_FullName to mch_full_name to match the style guide.
* Add mch_full_dir_name, which saves the absolute path of a given
directory relative to cwd into a given buffer.
* Add function append_path, which glues together two given paths with a
slash.
* Adapt moonscript coding style to the tests.
Tests will be written using the [moonscript](http://moonscript.org/) language,
a lua 'dialect' that is whitespace-significant and has a syntax similar to
coffeescript. The test framework used is [busted](http://olivinelabs.com/busted/),
a bdd framework for lua/moonscript.
Luajit has a nice ffi module, which lets lua programs link shared libraries and
call it's functions without writing any C code.
To take advantage of this fact for testing C functions, a new target was added
to CMakeLists.txt, which compiles neovim as a shared library that is loaded by
the process running the tests.
This commit adds necessary code for downloading and installing a lua package
manager(luarocks) locally. It wasn't added as a subtree because there are quite
a few blobs in its source tree.