1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
|
-- main entrypoint for LÖVE
--
-- Most apps can just use the default, but we need to override it to
-- install a test harness.
--
-- A test harness needs to check what the 'real' code did.
-- To do this it needs to hook into primitive operations performed by code.
-- Our hooks all go through the `App` global. When running tests they operate
-- on fake screen, keyboard and so on. Once all tests pass, the App global
-- will hook into the real screen, keyboard and so on.
--
-- Scroll below this function for more details.
function love.run()
-- Tests always run at the start.
App.run_tests()
--? print('==')
App.disable_tests()
if App.initialize_globals then App.initialize_globals() end
if App.initialize then App.initialize(love.arg.parseGameArguments(arg), arg) end
if love.timer then love.timer.step() end
local dt = 0
return function()
if love.event then
love.event.pump()
for name, a,b,c,d,e,f in love.event.poll() do
if name == "quit" then
if not love.quit or not love.quit() then
return a or 0
end
end
love.handlers[name](a,b,c,d,e,f)
end
end
if love.timer then dt = love.timer.step() end
if App.update then App.update(dt) end -- will pass 0 if love.timer is disabled
if love.graphics and love.graphics.isActive() then
love.graphics.origin()
love.graphics.clear(love.graphics.getBackgroundColor())
if App.draw then App.draw() end
love.graphics.present()
end
if love.timer then love.timer.sleep(0.001) end
end
end
-- I've been building LÖVE apps for a couple of months now, and often feel
-- stupid. I seem to have a smaller short-term memory than most people, and
-- LÖVE apps quickly grow to a point where I need longer and longer chunks of
-- focused time to make changes to them. The reason: I don't have a way to
-- write tests yet. So before I can change any piece of an app, I have to
-- bring into my head all the ways it can break. This isn't the case on other
-- platforms, where I can be productive in 5- or 10-minute increments. Because
-- I have tests.
--
-- Most test harnesses punt on testing I/O, and conventional wisdom is to test
-- business logic, not I/O. However, any non-trivial app does non-trivial I/O
-- that benefits from tests. And tests aren't very useful if it isn't obvious
-- after reading them what the intent is. Including the I/O allows us to write
-- tests that mimic how people use our program.
--
-- There's a major open research problem in testing I/O: how to write tests
-- for graphics. Pixel-by-pixel assertions get too verbose, and they're often
-- brittle because you don't care about the precise state of every last pixel.
-- Except when you do. Pixels are usually -- but not always -- the trees
-- rather than the forest.
--
-- I'm not in the business of doing research, so I'm going to shave off a
-- small subset of the problem for myself here: how to write tests about text
-- (ignoring font, color, etc.) on a graphic screen.
--
-- For example, here's how you may write a test of a simple text paginator
-- like `less`:
-- function test_paginator()
-- -- initialize environment
-- App.filesystem['/tmp/foo'] = filename([[
-- >abc
-- >def
-- >ghi
-- >jkl
-- ]])
-- App.args = {'/tmp/foo'}
-- -- define a screen with room for 2 lines of text
-- App.screen.init{
-- width=100
-- height=30
-- }
-- App.font.init{
-- height=15
-- }
-- -- check that screen shows next 2 lines of text after hitting pagedown
-- App.run_after_keychord('pagedown')
-- App.screen.check(0, 'ghi')
-- App.screen.check(15, 'jkl')
-- end
--
-- All functions starting with 'test_' (no modules) will run before the app
-- runs "for real". Each such test is a fake run of our entire program. It can
-- set as much of the environment as it wants, then run the app. Here we've
-- got a 30px screen and a 15px font, so the screen has room for 2 lines. The
-- file we're viewing has 4 lines. We assert that hitting the 'pagedown' key
-- shows the third and fourth lines.
--
-- Programs can still perform graphics, and all graphics will work in the real
-- program. We can't yet write tests for graphics, though. Those pixels are
-- basically always blank in tests. Really, there isn't even any
-- representation for them. All our fake screens know about is lines of text,
-- and what (x,y) coordinates they start at. There's some rudimentary support
-- for concatenating all blobs of text that start at the same 'y' coordinate,
-- but beware: text at y=100 is separate and non-overlapping with text at
-- y=101. You have to use the test harness within these limitations for your
-- tests to faithfully model the real world.
--
-- One drawback of this approach: the y coordinate used depends on font size,
-- which feels brittle.
--
-- In the fullness of time App will support all side-effecting primitives
-- exposed by LÖVE, but so far it supports just a rudimentary set of things I
-- happen to have needed so far.
App = {screen={}}
function App.initialize_for_test()
App.screen.init({width=100, height=50})
App.screen.contents = {} -- clear screen
App.filesystem = {}
App.fake_key_pressed = {}
App.fake_mouse_state = {x=-1, y=-1}
if App.initialize_globals then App.initialize_globals() end
end
function App.screen.init(dims)
App.screen.width = dims.width
App.screen.height = dims.height
end
function App.screen.print(msg, x,y)
local screen_row = 'y'..tostring(y)
--? print('drawing "'..msg..'" at y '..tostring(y))
local screen = App.screen
if screen.contents[screen_row] == nil then
screen.contents[screen_row] = {}
for i=0,screen.width-1 do
screen.contents[screen_row][i] = ''
end
end
if x < screen.width then
screen.contents[screen_row][x] = msg
end
end
App.time = 1
function App.getTime()
return App.time
end
function App.wait_fake_time(t)
App.time = App.time + t
end
-- LÖVE's Text primitive retains no trace of the string it was created from,
-- so we'll wrap it for our tests.
--
-- This implies that we need to hook any operations we need on Text objects.
function App.newText(font, s)
return {type='text', data=s, text=love.graphics.newText(font, s)}
end
function App.width(text)
return text.text:getWidth()
end
function App.screen.draw(obj, x,y)
if type(obj) == 'userdata' then
-- ignore most things as graphics the test harness can't handle
elseif obj.type == 'text' then
App.screen.print(obj.data, x,y)
else
print(obj.type)
assert(false)
end
end
App.clipboard = ''
function App.getClipboardText()
return App.clipboard
end
function App.setClipboardText(s)
App.clipboard = s
end
App.fake_key_pressed = {}
function App.fake_key_press(key)
App.fake_key_pressed[key] = true
end
function App.fake_key_release(key)
App.fake_key_pressed[key] = nil
end
function App.modifier_down(key)
return App.fake_key_pressed[key]
end
App.fake_mouse_state = {x=-1, y=-1} -- x,y always set
function App.fake_mouse_press(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_state.x = x
App.fake_mouse_state.y = y
App.fake_mouse_state[button] = true
end
function App.fake_mouse_release(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_state.x = x
App.fake_mouse_state.y = y
App.fake_mouse_state[button] = nil
end
function App.mouse_move(x,y)
App.fake_mouse_state.x = x
App.fake_mouse_state.y = y
end
function App.mouse_down(button)
return App.fake_mouse_state[button]
end
function App.mouse_x()
return App.fake_mouse_state.x
end
function App.mouse_y()
return App.fake_mouse_state.y
end
-- all textinput events are also keypresses
function App.run_after_textinput(t)
App.keypressed(t)
App.textinput(t)
App.keyreleased(t)
App.screen.contents = {}
App.draw()
end
-- not all keys are textinput
function App.run_after_keychord(chord)
App.keychord_pressed(chord)
App.keyreleased(chord)
App.screen.contents = {}
App.draw()
end
function App.run_after_mouse_click(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_press(x,y, button)
App.mousepressed(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_release(x,y, button)
App.mousereleased(x,y, button)
App.screen.contents = {}
App.draw()
end
function App.run_after_mouse_press(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_press(x,y, button)
App.mousepressed(x,y, button)
App.screen.contents = {}
App.draw()
end
function App.run_after_mouse_release(x,y, button)
App.fake_mouse_release(x,y, button)
App.mousereleased(x,y, button)
App.screen.contents = {}
App.draw()
end
function App.screen.check(y, expected_contents, msg)
--? print('checking for "'..expected_contents..'" at y '..tostring(y))
local screen_row = 'y'..tostring(y)
local contents = ''
if App.screen.contents[screen_row] == nil then
error('no text at y '..tostring(y))
end
for i,s in ipairs(App.screen.contents[screen_row]) do
contents = contents..s
end
check_eq(contents, expected_contents, msg)
end
-- fake files
function App.open_for_writing(filename)
App.filesystem[filename] = ''
return {
write = function(self, ...)
local args = {...}
for i,s in ipairs(args) do
App.filesystem[filename] = App.filesystem[filename]..s
end
end,
close = function(self)
end
}
end
function App.open_for_reading(filename)
return {
lines = function(self)
return App.filesystem[filename]:gmatch('[^\n]+')
end,
close = function(self)
end
}
end
function App.run_tests()
local sorted_names = {}
for name,binding in pairs(_G) do
if name:find('test_') == 1 then
table.insert(sorted_names, name)
end
end
table.sort(sorted_names)
for _,name in ipairs(sorted_names) do
App.initialize_for_test()
_G[name]()
end
print()
-- clean up all test methods
for _,name in ipairs(sorted_names) do
_G[name] = nil
end
end
-- call this once all tests are run
-- can't run any tests after this
function App.disable_tests()
-- have LÖVE delegate all handlers to App if they exist
for name in pairs(love.handlers) do
if App[name] then
love.handlers[name] = App[name]
end
end
-- test methods are disallowed outside tests
App.screen.init = nil
App.filesystem = nil
App.time = nil
App.run_after_textinput = nil
App.run_after_keychord = nil
App.keypress = nil
App.keyrelease = nil
App.run_after_mouse_click = nil
App.run_after_mouse_press = nil
App.run_after_mouse_release = nil
App.fake_key_pressed = nil
App.fake_key_press = nil
App.fake_key_release = nil
App.fake_mouse_state = nil
App.fake_mouse_press = nil
App.fake_mouse_release = nil
-- other methods dispatch to real hardware
App.screen.print = love.graphics.print
App.newText = love.graphics.newText
App.screen.draw = love.graphics.draw
App.width = function(text) return text:getWidth() end
App.open_for_reading = function(filename) return io.open(filename, 'r') end
App.open_for_writing = function(filename) return io.open(filename, 'w') end
App.getTime = love.timer.getTime
App.getClipboardText = love.system.getClipboardText
App.setClipboardText = love.system.setClipboardText
App.modifier_down = love.keyboard.isDown
App.mouse_move = love.mouse.setPosition
App.mouse_down = love.mouse.isDown
App.mouse_x = love.mouse.getX
App.mouse_y = love.mouse.getY
end
|