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Unit tests

The sources in this directory are unit test cases. Tests use a small header-only framework declared in src/test/util/framework.hpp, which provides registration macros (TEST_CASE, FIXTURE_TEST_CASE, TEST_SUITE_BEGIN/TEST_SUITE_END) and assertion macros (CHECK, REQUIRE, CHECK_THROWS, CHECK_THROWS_AS, CHECK_EXCEPTION, CHECK_EQUAL_RANGES, TEST_MESSAGE, WARN_MESSAGE).

The build system is set up to compile an executable called test_bitcoin that runs all of the unit tests. The main source file for the test library is found in util/setup_common.cpp.

The examples in this document assume the build directory is named build. You'll need to adapt them if you named it differently.

Compiling/running unit tests

Unit tests will be automatically compiled if dependencies were met during the generation of the Bitcoin Core build system and tests weren't explicitly disabled.

The unit tests can be run with ctest --test-dir build, which includes unit tests from subtrees.

Run build/bin/test_bitcoin --list for the full list of tests.

To run the unit tests manually, launch build/bin/test_bitcoin. To recompile after a test file was modified, run cmake --build build and then run the test again. If you modify a non-test file, use cmake --build build --target test_bitcoin to recompile only what's needed to run the unit tests.

To add more unit tests, add TEST_CASE (or FIXTURE_TEST_CASE) functions to the existing .cpp files in the test/ directory, or add new .cpp files that declare a new suite with TEST_SUITE_BEGIN("<name>").

Running individual tests

To see the list of arguments that may be passed, run:

build/bin/test_bitcoin --help

For example, to run only the tests in the getarg_tests suite, with full logging:

build/bin/test_bitcoin --log_level=all --run_test=getarg_tests

or

build/bin/test_bitcoin -l all -t getarg_tests

or to run only the doubledash test in getarg_tests

build/bin/test_bitcoin --run_test=getarg_tests::doubledash

The --log_level= (or -l) argument controls the verbosity of the test output. Accepted values: none, error (default), info, all.

The test_bitcoin runner also accepts some of the command line arguments accepted by bitcoind. Use -- to separate these sets of arguments:

build/bin/test_bitcoin --log_level=all --run_test=getarg_tests -- -printtoconsole=1

The -printtoconsole=1 after the two dashes sends debug logging, which normally goes only to debug.log within the data directory, to the standard terminal output as well.

Running test_bitcoin creates a temporary working (data) directory with a randomly generated pathname within test_common bitcoin/, which in turn is within the system's temporary directory (see temp_directory_path). This data directory looks like a simplified form of the standard bitcoind data directory. Its content will vary depending on the test, but it will always have a debug.log file, for example.

The location of the temporary data directory can be specified with the -testdatadir option. This can make debugging easier. The directory path used is the argument path appended with /test_common bitcoin/<test-name>/datadir. The directory path is created if necessary. Specifying this argument also causes the data directory not to be removed after the last test. This is useful for looking at what the test wrote to debug.log after it completes, for example. (The directory is removed at the start of the next test run, so no leftover state is used.)

$ build/bin/test_bitcoin --run_test=getarg_tests/doubledash -- -testdatadir=/somewhere/mydatadir
Test directory (will not be deleted): "/somewhere/mydatadir/test_common bitcoin/getarg_tests/doubledash/datadir"
Running 1 test case...

*** No errors detected
$ ls -l '/somewhere/mydatadir/test_common bitcoin/getarg_tests/doubledash/datadir'
total 8
drwxrwxr-x 2 admin admin 4096 Nov 27 22:45 blocks
-rw-rw-r-- 1 admin admin 1003 Nov 27 22:45 debug.log

If you run an entire test suite, such as --run_test=getarg_tests, or all the test suites (by not specifying --run_test), a separate directory will be created for each individual test.

Adding test cases

To add a new unit test file to our test suite, you need to add the file to either src/test/CMakeLists.txt or src/wallet/test/CMakeLists.txt for wallet-related tests. The pattern is to create one test file for each class or source file for which you want to create unit tests. The file naming convention is <source_filename>_tests.cpp and such files should wrap their tests in a test suite called <source_filename>_tests. For an example of this pattern, see uint256_tests.cpp.

Logging and debugging in unit tests

ctest --test-dir build will write to the log file build/Testing/Temporary/LastTest.log. You can additionally use the --output-on-failure option to display logs of the failed tests automatically on failure. For running individual tests verbosely, refer to the section above.

To write a diagnostic message from a unit test, use TEST_MESSAGE(...) (emitted at log level info or higher). WARN_MESSAGE(cond, msg) emits a warning when cond is false without failing the test — use CHECK / REQUIRE to fail.

For debugging you can launch the test_bitcoin executable with gdb or lldb and start debugging, just like you would with any other program:

gdb build/bin/test_bitcoin

Segmentation faults

If you hit a segmentation fault during a test run, you can diagnose where the fault is happening by running gdb ./build/bin/test_bitcoin and then using the bt command within gdb.

Another tool that can be used to resolve segmentation faults is valgrind.

If for whatever reason you want to produce a core dump file for this fault, you can do that as well. Ensure that your ulimits are set properly (e.g. ulimit -c unlimited), then running the tests and hitting a segmentation fault should produce a file called core (on Linux platforms, the file name will likely depend on the contents of /proc/sys/kernel/core_pattern).

You can then explore the core dump using

gdb build/bin/test_bitcoin core

(gdb) bt  # produce a backtrace for where a segfault occurred