jsDriver.pl

NAME
jsDriver.pl - execute JavaScript programs in various shells in batch or single mode, reporting on failures encountered.

SYNOPSIS
jsDriver.pl [-hkt] [-b BUGURL] [-c CLASSPATH] [-f OUTFILE] [-j JAVAPATH] [-l TESTLIST ...] [-L NEGLIST ...] [-p TESTPATH] [-s SHELLPATH] [-u LXRURL] [--help] [--confail] [--trace] [--classpath=CLASSPATH] [--file=OUTFILE] [--javapath=JAVAPATH] [--list=TESTLIST] [--neglist=TESTLIST] [--testpath=TESTPATH] [--shellpath=SHELLPATH] [--lxrurl=LXRURL] {-e ENGINETYPE | --engine=ENGINETYPE}


DESCRIPTION
jsDriver.pl is normally used to run a series of tests against one of the JavaScript shells. These tests are expected to be laid out in a directory structure exactly three levels deep. The first level is considered the root of the tests, subdirectories under the root represent Test Suites and generally mark broad categories such as ECMA Level 1 or Live Connect 3. Under the Test Suites are the Test Categories, which divide the Test Suite into smaller categories, such as Execution Contexts or Lexical Rules. Testcases are located under the Test Categories as normal JavaScript (*.js) files.

If a file named shell.js exists in either the Test Suite or the Test Category directory, it is loaded into the shell before the testcase. If shell.js exists in both directories, the version in the Test Suite directory is loaded first, giving the version associated with the Test Category the ability to override functions previously declared. You can use this to create functions and variables common to an entire suite or category.

Testcases can report failures back to jsDriver.pl in one of two ways. The most common is to write a line of text containing the word FAILED! to STDOUT or STDERR. When the engine encounters a matching line, the test is marked as failed, and any line containing FAILED! is displayed in the failure report. The second way a test case can report failure is to return an unexpected exit code. By default, jsDriver.pl expects all test cases to return exit code 0, although a test can output a line containing EXPECT EXIT n where n is the exit code the driver should expect to see. Testcases can return a nonzero exit code by calling the shell function quit(n) where n is the code to exit with. The various JavaScript shells report non-zero exit codes under the following conditions:

Reason Exit Code
Engine initialization failure. 1
Invalid argument on command line. 2
Runtime error (uncaught exception) encountered. 3
File argument specified on command line not found. 4
Reserved for future use. 5-9


OPTIONS
-b URL, --bugurl=URL
Bugzilla URL. When a testcase writes a line in the format BUGNUMBER n to STDOUT or STDERR, jsDriver.pl interprets n as a bugnumber in the BugZilla bug tracking system. In the event that a testcase which has specified a bugnumber fails, a hyperlink to the BugZilla database will be included in the output by prefixing the bugnumber with the URL specified here. By default, URL is assumed to be "http://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=".

-c PATH, --classpath=PATH
Classpath to pass the the Java Virtual Machine. When running tests against the Rhino engine, PATH will be passed in as the value to an argument named "-classpath". If your particular JVM does not support this option, it is recommended you specify your class path via an environment setting. Refer to your JVM documentation for more details about CLASSPATH.

-e TYPE ..., --engine=TYPE ...
Required. Type of engine(s) to run the tests against. TYPE can be one or more of the following values:
TYPE Engine
lcopt LiveConnect, optimized
lcdebug LiveConnect, debug
rhino Rhino compiled mode
rhinoi Rhino interpreted mode
rhinoms Rhino compiled mode for the Microsoft VM (jview)
rhinomsi Rhino interpreted mode for the Microsoft VM (jview)
smopt Spider-Monkey, optimized
smdebug Spider-Monkey, debug
xpcshell XPConnect shell


-f FILE, --file=FILE
Generate html output to the HTML file named by FILE. By default, a filename will be generated using a combination of the engine type and a date/time stamp, in the format: results-<engine-type>-<date-stamp>.html

-h, --help
Prints usage information.

-j PATH, --javapath=PATH
Set the location of the Java Virtual Machine to use when running tests against the Rhino engine. This can be used to test against multiple JVMs on the same system.

-k, --confail
Log failures to the console. This will show any failures, as they occur, on STDERR in addition to creating the HTML results file. This can be useful for times when it may be counter-productive to load an HTML version of the results each time a test is re-run.

-l FILE ..., --list=FILE ...
Specify a list of tests to execute. FILE can be a plain text file containing a list of testcases to execute, a subdirectory in which to grovel for tests, or a single testcase to execute. Any number of FILE specifiers may follow this option. The driver uses the fact that a valid testcase should be a file ending in .js to make the distinction between a file containing a list of tests and an actual testcase.

-L FILE ..., --neglist=FILE ...
Specify a list of tests to skip. FILE has the same meaning as in the -l option. This option is evaluated after all -l and --list options, allowing a user to subtract a single testcase, a directory of testcases, or a collection of unrelated testcases from the execution list.

-p PATH, --testpath=PATH
Directory holding the "Test Suite" subdirectories. By default this is ./

-s PATH, --shellpath=PATH
Directory holding the JavaScript shell. This can be used to override the automatic shell location jsDriver.pl performs based on you OS and engine type. For Non Rhino engines, this includes the name of the executable as well as the path. In Rhino, this path will be appended to your CLASSPATH. For the SpiderMonkey shells, this value defaults to ../src/<Platform-and-buildtype-specific-directory>/[js|jsshell], for the LiveConnect shells, ../src/liveconnect/src/<Platform-and-buildtype-specific-directory>/lschell and for the xpcshell the default is the value of your MOZILLA_FIVE_HOME environment variable. There is no default (as it is usually not needed) for the Rhino shell.

-t, --trace
Trace execution of jsDriver.pl. This option is primarily used for debugging of the script itself, but if you are interested in seeing the actual command being run, or generally like gobs of useless information, you may find it entertaining.

-u URL, --lxrurl=URL
Failures listed in the HTML results will be hyperlinked to the lxr source available online by prefixing the test path and name with this URL. By default, URL is http://lxr.mozilla.org/mozilla/source/js/tests/

SEE ALSO
jsDriver.pl, mklistpage.pl, http://www.mozilla.org/js/, http://www.mozilla.org/js/tests/library.html

REQUIREMENTS
jsDriver.pl requires the Getopt::Mixed perl package, available from cpan.org.

EXAMPLES
perl jsDriver.pl -e smdebug -L lc*
Executes all tests EXCEPT the liveconnect tests against the SpiderMonkey debug shell, writing the results to the default result file. (NOTE: Unix shells take care of wildcard expansion, turning lc* into lc2 lc3. Under a DOS shell, you must explicitly list the directories.)

perl jsDriver.pl -e rhino -L rhino-n.tests
Executes all tests EXCEPT those listed in the rhino-n.tests file.

perl -I/home/rginda/perl/lib/ jsDriver.pl -e lcopt -l lc2 lc3 -f lcresults.html -k
Executes ONLY the tests under the lc2 and lc3 directories against the LiveConnect shell. Results will be written to the file lcresults.html AND the console. The -I option tells perl to look for modules in the /home/rginda/perl/lib directory (in addition to the usual places), useful if you do not have root access to install new modules on the system.


Robert Ginda
Last modified: Tue Mar 21 17:24:56 PST 2000