eth2.0-specs/test_generators
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README.md rename eth2 pkg to pyspec, per request of hww 2019-03-30 00:24:04 +08:00

README.md

Eth2.0 Test Generators

This directory of contains all the generators for YAML tests, consumed by Eth 2.0 client implementations.

Any issues with the generators and/or generated tests should be filed in the repository that hosts the generator outputs, here: ethereum/eth2.0-tests.

Whenever a release is made, the new tests are automatically built and eth2TestGenBot commits the changes to the test repository.

How to run generators

pre-requisites:

  • Python 3 installed
  • PIP 3
  • GNU make

Cleaning

This removes the existing virtual environments (/test_generators/<generator>/venv), and generated tests (/yaml_tests/).

make clean 

Running all test generators

This runs all the generators.

make gen_yaml_tests

Running a single generator

The make file auto-detects generators in the test_generators/ directory, and provides a tests-gen target for each generator, see example.

make ./yaml_tests/shuffling/

Developing a generator

Simply open up the generator (not all at once) of choice in your favorite IDE/editor, and run:

# From the root of the generator directory:
# Create a virtual environment (any venv/.venv/.venvs is git-ignored)
python3 -m venv venv
# Activate the venv, this is where dependencies are installed for the generator
. venv/bin/activate

Now that you have a virtual environment, write your generator. It's recommended to extend the base-generator.

Create a requirements.txt in the root of your generator directory:

eth-utils==1.4.1
../../test_libs/gen_helpers

And optionally, to include pyspec, add:

../../test_libs/pyspec

Note: make sure to run make pyspec from the root of the specs repository, to build the pyspec requirement.

Install all the necessary requirements (re-run when you add more):

pip3 install -r requirements.txt

And write your initial test generator, extending the base generator:

Write a main.py file, here's an example:

from gen_base import gen_runner, gen_suite, gen_typing

from eth_utils import (
    to_dict, to_tuple
)


@to_dict
def bar_test_case(v: int):
    yield "bar_v", v
    yield "bar_v_plus_1", v + 1
    yield "bar_list", list(range(v))


@to_tuple
def generate_bar_test_cases():
    for i in range(10):
        yield bar_test_case(i)


def bar_test_suite() -> gen_typing.TestSuite:
    return gen_suite.render_suite(
        title="bar_minimal",
        summary="Minimal example suite, testing bar.",
        fork="v0.5.1",
        config="minimal",
        test_cases=generate_bar_test_cases())


if __name__ == "__main__":
    gen_runner.run_generator("foo", [bar_test_suite])

And to use the pyspec:

from pyspec.phase0 import spec

Recommendations:

  • you can have more than just 1 generator, e.g. gen_runner.run_generator("foo", [bar_test_suite, abc_test_suite, example_test_suite])
  • you can concatenate lists of test cases, if you don't want to split it up in suites.
  • you can split your suite generators into different python files/packages, good for code organization.
  • use config "minimal" for performance. But also implement a suite with the default config where necessary
  • the test-generator accepts --output and --force (overwrite output)

How to add a new test generator

In order to add a new test generator that builds New Tests:

  1. Create a new directory new_tests, within the test_generators directory. Note that new_tests is also the name of the directory in which the tests will appear in the tests repository later.
  2. Your generator is assumed to have a requirements.txt file, with any dependencies it may need. Leave it empty if your generator has none.
  3. Your generator is assumed to have a main.py file in its root. By adding the base generator to your requirements, you can make a generator really easily. See docs below.
  4. Your generator is called with -o some/file/path/for_testing/can/be_anything. The base generator helps you handle this; you only have to define suite headers, and a list of tests for each suite you generate.
  5. Finally, add any linting or testing commands to the circleci config file if desired to increase code quality.

Note: you do not have to change the makefile. However, if necessary (e.g. not using python, or mixing in other languages), submit an issue, and it can be a special case. Do note that generators should be easy to maintain, lean, and based on the spec.

How to remove a test generator

If a test generator is not needed anymore, undo the steps described above and make a new release:

  1. remove the generator directory
  2. remove the generated tests in the eth2.0-tests repository by opening a PR there.
  3. make a new release