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//: The goal of layers is to make programs more easy to understand and more
//: malleable, easy to rewrite in radical ways without accidentally breaking
//: some corner case. Tests further both goals. They help understandability by
//: letting one make small changes and get feedback. What if I wrote this line
//: like so? What if I removed this function call, is it really necessary?
//: Just try it, see if the tests pass. Want to explore rewriting this bit in
//: this way? Tests put many refactorings on a firmer footing.
//:
//: But the usual way we write tests seems incomplete. Refactorings tend to
//: work in the small, but don't help with changes to function boundaries. If
//: you want to extract a new function you have to manually test-drive it to
//: create tests for it. If you want to inline a function its tests are no
//: longer valid. In both cases you end up having to reorganize code as well as
//: tests, an error-prone activity.
//:
//: In response, this layer introduces the notion of domain-driven *white-box*
//: testing. We focus on the domain of inputs the whole program needs to
//: handle rather than the correctness of individual functions. All white-box
//: tests invoke the program in a single way: by calling run() with some
//: input. As the program operates on the input, it traces out a list of
//: _facts_ deduced about the domain:
//:   trace("label") << "fact 1: " << val;
//:
//: Tests can now check for these facts in the trace:
//:   CHECK_TRACE_CONTENTS("label", "fact 1: 34\n"
//:                                 "fact 2: 35\n");
//:
//: Since we never call anything but the run() function directly, we never have
//: to rewrite the tests when we reorganize the internals of the program. We
//: just have to make sure our rewrite deduces the same facts about the domain,
//: and that's something we're going to have to do anyway.
//:
//: To avoid the combinatorial explosion of integration tests, each layer
//: mainly logs facts to the trace with a common *label*. All tests in a layer
//: tend to check facts with this label. Validating the facts logged with a
//: specific label is like calling functions of that layer directly.
//:
//: To build robust tests, trace facts about your domain rather than details of
//: how you computed them.
//:
//: More details: http://akkartik.name/blog/tracing-tests
//:
//: ---
//:
//: Between layers and domain-driven testing, programming starts to look like a
//: fundamentally different activity. Instead of focusing on a) superficial,
//: b) local rules on c) code [like say http://blog.bbv.ch/2013/06/05/clean-code-cheat-sheet],
//: we allow programmers to engage with the a) deep, b) global structure of
//: the c) domain. If you can systematically track discontinuities in the
//: domain, you don't care if the code used gotos as long as it passed all
//: tests. If tests become more robust to run, it becomes easier to try out
//: radically different implementations for the same program. If code is
//: super-easy to rewrite, it becomes less important what indentation style it
//: uses, or that the objects are appropriately encapsulated, or that the
//: functions are referentially transparent.
//:
//: Instead of plumbing, programming becomes building and gradually refining a
//: map of the environment the program must operate under. Whether a program
//: is 'correct' at a given point in time is a red herring; what matters is
//: avoiding regression by monotonically nailing down the more 'eventful'
//: parts of the terrain. It helps readers new and old, and rewards curiosity,
//: to organize large programs in self-similar hierarchies of example tests
//: colocated with the code that makes them work.
//:
//:   "Programming properly should be regarded as an activity by which
//:   programmers form a mental model, rather than as production of a program."
//:   -- Peter Naur (http://akkartik.name/naur.pdf)

//:: == Core data structures

:(before "End Globals")
trace_stream* Trace_stream = NULL;

:(before "End Types")
struct trace_stream {
  vector<trace_line> past_lines;
  // End trace_stream Fields

  trace_stream() {
    // End trace_stream Constructor
  }
  ~trace_stream() {
    // End trace_stream Destructor
  }
  // End trace_stream Methods
};

//:: == Adding to the trace

//: Top-level method is trace() which can be used like an ostream. Usage:
//:   trace(depth, label) << ... << end();
//: Don't forget the 'end()' to actually append to the trace.
:(before "End Includes")
// No brackets around the expansion so that it prints nothing if Trace_stream
// isn't initialized.
#define trace(...)  !Trace_stream ? cerr : Trace_stream->stream(__VA_ARGS__)

:(before "End trace_stream Fields")
// accumulator for current trace_line
ostringstream* curr_stream;
string curr_label;
int curr_depth;
// other stuff
int collect_depth;  // avoid tracing lower levels for speed
ofstream null_stream;  // never opened, so writes to it silently fail

//: Some constants.
:(before "struct trace_stream")  // include constants in all cleaved compilation units
const int Max_depth = 9999;
:(before "End trace_stream Constructor")
curr_stream = NULL;
curr_depth = Max_depth;
collect_depth = Max_depth;

:(before "struct trace_stream")
struct trace_line {
  string contents;
  string label;
  int depth;  // 0 is 'sea level'; positive integers are progressively 'deeper' and lower level
  trace_line(string c, string l) {
    contents = c;
    label = l;
    depth = 0;
  }
  trace_line(string c, string l, int d) {
    contents = c;
    label = l;
    depth = d;
  }
};

string unescape_newline(string& s) {
  std::stringstream ss;
  for (int i = 0;  i < SIZE(s);  ++i) {
    if (s.at(i) == '\n')
      ss << "\\n";
    else
      ss << s.at(i);
  }
  return ss.str();
}

void dump_trace_line(ostream& s, trace_line& t) {
  s << std::setw(4) << t.depth << ' ' << t.label << ": " << unescape_newline(t.contents) << '\n';
}

//: Starting a new trace line.
:(before "End trace_stream Methods")
ostream& stream(string label) {
  return stream(Max_depth, label);
}

ostream& stream(int depth, string label) {
  if (depth > collect_depth) return null_stream;
  curr_stream = new ostringstream;
  curr_label = label;
  curr_depth = depth;
  (*curr_stream) << std::hex;  // printing addresses is the common case
  return *curr_stream;
}

//: End of a trace line; append it to the trace.
:(before "End Types")
struct end {};
:(code)
ostream& operator<<(ostream& os, end /*unused*/) {
  if (Trace_stream) Trace_stream->newline();
  return os;
}

//: Fatal error.
:(before "End Types")
struct die {};
:(code)
ostream& operator<<(ostream& /*unused*/, die /*unused*/) {
  if (Trace_stream) Trace_stream->newline();
  exit(1);
}

:(before "End trace_stream Methods")
void newline();
:(code)
void trace_stream::newline() {
  if (!curr_stream) return;
  string curr_contents = curr_stream->str();
  if (!curr_contents.empty()) {
    past_lines.push_back(trace_line(curr_contents, trim(curr_label), curr_depth));  // preserve indent in contents
    // maybe incrementally dump trace
    trace_line& t = past_lines.back();
    if (should_incrementally_print_trace()) {
      dump_trace_line(cerr, t);
    }
    // End trace Commit
  }

  // clean up
  delete curr_stream;
  curr_stream = NULL;
  curr_label.clear();
  curr_depth = Max_depth;
}

//:: == Initializing the trace in tests

:(before "End Includes")
#define START_TRACING_UNTIL_END_OF_SCOPE  lease_tracer leased_tracer;
:(before "End Test Setup")
START_TRACING_UNTIL_END_OF_SCOPE

//: Trace_stream is a resource, lease_tracer uses RAII to manage it.
:(before "End Types")
struct lease_tracer {
  lease_tracer();
  ~lease_tracer();
};
:(code)
lease_tracer::lease_tracer() { Trace_stream = new trace_stream; }
lease_tracer::~lease_tracer() {
  delete Trace_stream;
  Trace_stream = NULL;
}

//:: == Errors and warnings using traces

:(before "End Includes")
#define raise  (!Trace_stream ? (++Trace_errors,cerr) /*do print*/ : Trace_stream->stream(Error_depth, "error"))
#define warn (!Trace_stream ? (++Trace_errors,cerr) /*do print*/ : Trace_stream->stream(Warn_depth, "warn"))

//: Print errors and warnings to the screen by default.
:(before "struct trace_stream")  // include constants in all cleaved compilation units
const int Error_depth = 0;
const int Warn_depth = 1;
:(before "End Globals")
int Hide_errors = false;  // if set, don't print errors or warnings to screen
int Hide_warnings = false;  // if set, don't print warnings to screen
:(before "End Reset")
Hide_errors = false;
Hide_warnings = false;
//: Never dump warnings in tests
:(before "End Test Setup")
Hide_warnings = true;
:(code)
bool trace_stream::should_incrementally_print_trace() {
  if (!Hide_errors && curr_depth == Error_depth) return true;
  if (!Hide_warnings && !Hide_errors && curr_depth == Warn_depth) return true;
  // End Incremental Trace Print Conditions
  return false;
}
:(before "End trace_stream Methods")
bool should_incrementally_print_trace();

:(before "End Globals")
int Trace_errors = 0;  // used only when Trace_stream is NULL

// Fail tests that displayed (unexpected) errors.
// Expected errors should always be hidden and silently checked for.
:(before "End Test Teardown")
if (Passed && !Hide_errors && trace_contains_errors()) {
  Passed = false;
}
:(code)
bool trace_contains_errors() {
  return Trace_errors > 0 || trace_count("error") > 0;
}

:(before "End Includes")
// If we aren't yet sure how to deal with some corner case, use assert_for_now
// to indicate that it isn't an inviolable invariant.
#define assert_for_now assert
#define raise_for_now raise

//:: == Other assertions on traces
//: Primitives:
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_CONTENTS(lines)
//:     Assert that the trace contains the given lines (separated by newlines)
//:     in order. There can be other intervening lines between them.
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_DOESNT_CONTAIN(line)
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_DOESNT_CONTAIN(label, contents)
//:     Assert that the trace doesn't contain the given (single) line.
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_COUNT(label, count)
//:     Assert that the trace contains exactly 'count' lines with the given
//:     'label'.
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_CONTAINS_ERRORS()
//:   - CHECK_TRACE_DOESNT_CONTAIN_ERRORS()
//:   - trace_count_prefix(label, prefix)
//:     Count the number of trace lines with the given 'label' that start with
//:     the given 'prefix'.

:(before "End Includes")
#define CHECK_TRACE_CONTENTS(...)  check_trace_contents(__FUNCTION__, __FILE__, __LINE__, __VA_ARGS__)

#define CHECK_TRACE_DOESNT_CONTAIN(...)  CHECK(trace_doesnt_contain(__VA_ARGS__))

#define CHECK_TRACE_COUNT(label, count) \
  if (Passed && trace_count(label) != (count)) { \
    cerr << "\nF - " << __FUNCTION__ << "(" << __FILE__ << ":" << __LINE__ << "): trace_count of " << label << " should be " << count << '\n'; \
    cerr << "  got " << trace_count(label) << '\n';  /* multiple eval */ \
    DUMP(label); \
    Passed = false; \
    return;  /* Currently we stop at the very first failure. */ \
  }

#define CHECK_TRACE_CONTAINS_ERRORS()  CHECK(trace_contains_errors())
#define CHECK_TRACE_DOESNT_CONTAIN_ERRORS() \
  if (Passed && trace_contains_errors()) { \
    cerr << "\nF - " << __FUNCTION__ << "(" << __FILE__ << ":" << __LINE__ << "): unexpected errors\n"; \
    DUMP("error"); \
    Passed = false; \
    return; \
  }

// Allow tests to ignore trace lines generated during setup.
#define CLEAR_TRACE  delete Trace_stream, Trace_stream = new trace_stream

:(code)
bool check_trace_contents(string FUNCTION, string FILE, int LINE, string expected) {
  if (!Passed) return false;
  if (!Trace_stream) return false;
  vector<string> expected_lines = split(expected, "\n");
  int curr_expected_line = 0;
  while (curr_expected_line < SIZE(expected_lines) && expected_lines.at(curr_expected_line).empty())
    ++curr_expected_line;
  if (curr_expected_line == SIZE(expected_lines)) return true;
  string label, contents;
  split_label_contents(expected_lines.at(curr_expected_line), &label, &contents);
  for (vector<trace_line>::iterator p = Trace_stream->past_lines.begin();  p != Trace_stream->past_lines.end();  ++p) {
    if (label != p->label) continue;
    string t = trim(p->contents);
    if (contents != unescape_newline(t)) continue;
    ++curr_expected_line;
    while (curr_expected_line < SIZE(expected_lines) && expected_lines.at(curr_expected_line).empty())
      ++curr_expected_line;
    if (curr_expected_line == SIZE(expected_lines)) return true;
    split_label_contents(expected_lines.at(curr_expected_line), &label, &contents);
  }

  if (line_exists_anywhere(label, contents)) {
    cerr << "\nF - " << FUNCTION << "(" << FILE << ":" << LINE << "): line [" << label << ": " << contents << "] out of order in trace:\n";
    DUMP("");
  }
  else {
    cerr << "\nF - " << FUNCTION << "(" << FILE << ":" << LINE << "): missing [" << contents << "] in trace:\n";
    DUMP(label);
  }
  Passed = false;
  return false;
}

bool trace_doesnt_contain(string expected) {
  vector<string> tmp = split_first(expected, ": ");
  if (SIZE(tmp) == 1) {
    raise << expected << ": missing label or contents in trace line\n" << end();
    assert(false);
  }
  return trace_count(tmp.at(0), tmp.at(1)) == 0;
}

int trace_count(string label) {
  return trace_count(label, "");
}

int trace_count(string label, string line) {
  if (!Trace_stream) return 0;
  long result = 0;
  for (vector<trace_line>::iterator p = Trace_stream->past_lines.begin();  p != Trace_stream->past_lines.end();  ++p) {
    if (label == p->label) {
      if (line == "" || trim(line) == trim(p->contents))
        ++result;
    }
  }
  return result;
}

int trace_count_prefix(string label, string prefix) {
  if (!Trace_stream) return 0;
  long result = 0;
  for (vector<trace_line>::iterator p = Trace_stream->past_lines.begin();  p != Trace_stream->past_lines.end();  ++p) {
    if (label == p->label) {
      if (starts_with(trim(p->contents), trim(prefix)))
        ++result;
    }
  }
  return result;
}

void split_label_contents(const string& s, string* label, string* contents) {
  static const string delim(": ");
  size_t pos = s.find(delim);
  if (pos == string::npos) {
    *label = "";
    *contents = trim(s);
  }
  else {
    *label = trim(s.substr(0, pos));
    *contents = trim(s.substr(pos+SIZE(delim)));
  }
}

bool line_exists_anywhere(const string& label, const string& contents) {
  for (vector<trace_line>::iterator p = Trace_stream->past_lines.begin();  p != Trace_stream->past_lines.end();  ++p) {
    if (label != p->label) continue;
    if (contents == trim(p->contents)) return true;
  }
  return false;
}

vector<string> split(string s, string delim) {
  vector<string> result;
  size_t begin=0, end=s.find(delim);
  while (true) {
    if (end == string::npos) {
      result.push_back(string(s, begin, string::npos));
      break;
    }
    result.push_back(string(s, begin, end-begin));
    begin = end+SIZE(delim);
    end = s.find(delim, begin);
  }
  return result;
}

vector<string> split_first(string s, string delim) {
  vector<string> result;
  size_t end=s.find(delim);
  result.push_back(string(s, 0, end));
  if (end != string::npos)
    result.push_back(string(s, end+SIZE(delim), string::npos));
  return result;
}

//:: == Helpers for debugging using traces

:(before "End Includes")
// To debug why a test is failing, dump its trace using '?'.
#define DUMP(label)  if (Trace_stream) cerr << Trace_stream->readable_contents(label);

// To add temporary prints to the trace, use 'dbg'.
// `git log` should never show any calls to 'dbg'.
#define dbg trace(0, "a")

//: Dump the entire trace to file where it can be browsed offline.
//: Dump the trace as it happens; that way you get something even if the
//: program crashes.

:(before "End Globals")
ofstream Trace_file;
:(before "End Commandline Options(*arg)")
else if (is_equal(*arg, "--trace")) {
  cerr << "saving trace to 'last_run'\n";
  Trace_file.open("last_run");
  // Add a dummy line up top; otherwise the `browse_trace` tool currently has
  // no way to expand any lines above an error.
  Trace_file << "   0 dummy: start\n";
}
:(before "End trace Commit")
if (Trace_file) {
  dump_trace_line(Trace_file, t);
}
:(before "End One-time Setup")
atexit(cleanup_main);
:(code)
void cleanup_main() {
  if (Trace_file) Trace_file.close();
  // End cleanup_main
}

:(before "End trace_stream Methods")
string readable_contents(string label) {
  string trim(const string& s);  // prototype
  ostringstream output;
  label = trim(label);
  for (vector<trace_line>::iterator p = past_lines.begin();  p != past_lines.end();  ++p)
    if (label.empty() || label == p->label)
      dump_trace_line(output, *p);
  return output.str();
}

//: Print traces to the screen as they happen.
//: Particularly useful when juggling multiple trace streams, like when
//: debugging sandboxes.
:(before "End Globals")
bool Dump_trace = false;
:(before "End Commandline Options(*arg)")
else if (is_equal(*arg, "--dump")) {
  Dump_trace = true;
}
:(before "End Incremental Trace Print Conditions")
if (Dump_trace) return true;

//: Miscellaneous helpers.

:(code)
string trim(const string& s) {
  string::const_iterator first = s.begin();
  while (first != s.end() && isspace(*first))
    ++first;
  if (first == s.end()) return "";

  string::const_iterator last = --s.end();
  while (last != s.begin() && isspace(*last))
    --last;
  ++last;
  return string(first, last);
}

:(before "End Includes")
#include <vector>
using std::vector;
#include <list>
using std::list;
#include <set>
using std::set;

#include <sstream>
using std::istringstream;
using std::ostringstream;

#include <fstream>
using std::ifstream;
using std::ofstream;
ss="w"> 0 consume: 1 consume: 2 produce: 4 consume: 3 consume: 4 # The exact order above might shift over time, but you'll never see a number # consumed before it's produced. error - deadlock detected ``` Channels are the unit of synchronization in mu. Blocking on channels are the only way tasks can sleep waiting for results. The plan is to do all I/O over channels that wait for data to return. Routines are expected to communicate purely by message passing, though nothing stops them from sharing memory since all routines share a common address space. However, idiomatic mu will make it hard to accidentally read or clobber random memory locations. Bounds checking is baked deeply into the semantics, and pointer arithmetic will be mostly forbidden (except inside the memory allocator and a few other places). Notice also the error at the end. Mu can detect deadlock when running tests: routines waiting on channels that nobody will ever write to. --- Try running the tests: ```shell $ ./mu test mu.arc.t $ # all tests passed! ``` Now start reading `mu.arc.t` to see how it works. A colorized copy of it is at `mu.arc.t.html` and http://akkartik.github.io/mu. You might also want to peek in the `.traces` directory, which automatically includes logs for each test showing you just how it ran on my machine. If mu eventually gets complex enough that you have trouble running examples, these logs might help figure out if my system is somehow different from yours or if I've just been insufficiently diligent and my documentation is out of date. The immediate goal of mu is to build up towards an environment for parsing and visualizing these traces in a hierarchical manner, and to easily turn traces into reproducible tests by flagging inputs entering the log and outputs leaving it. The former will have to be faked in, and the latter will want to be asserted on, to turn a trace into a test. **Credits** Mu builds on many ideas that have come before, especially: - [Peter Naur](http://alistair.cockburn.us/ASD+book+extract%3A+%22Naur,+Ehn,+Musashi%22) for articulating the paramount problem of programming: communicating a codebase to others; - [Christopher Alexander](http://www.amazon.com/Notes-Synthesis-Form-Harvard-Paperbacks/dp/0674627512) and [Richard Gabriel](http://dreamsongs.net/Files/PatternsOfSoftware.pdf) for the intellectual tools for reasoning about the higher order design of a codebase; - Unix and C for showing us how to co-evolve language and OS, and for teaching the (much maligned, misunderstood and underestimated) value of concise *implementation* in addition to a clean interface; - Donald Knuth's [literate programming](http://www.literateprogramming.com/knuthweb.pdf) for liberating "code for humans to read" from the tyranny of compiler order; - [David Parnas](http://www.cs.umd.edu/class/spring2003/cmsc838p/Design/criteria.pdf) and others for highlighting the value of separating concerns and stepwise refinement; - [Lisp](http://www.paulgraham.com/rootsoflisp.html) for showing the power of dynamic languages, late binding and providing the right primitives a la carte, especially lisp macros; - The folklore of debugging by print and the trace facility in many lisp systems; - Automated tests for showing the value of developing programs inside an elaborate harness; - [Python doctest](http://docs.python.org/2/library/doctest.html) for exemplifying interactive documentation that doubles as tests; - [ReStructuredText](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ReStructuredText) and [its antecedents](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Setext) for showing that markup can be clean; - BDD for challenging us all to write tests at a higher level; - JavaScript and CSS for demonstrating the power of a DOM for complex structured documents.