| Tests for syntax highlighting plugins |
| ===================================== |
| |
| Summary: Files in the "input" directory are edited by Vim with syntax |
| highlighting enabled. Screendumps are generated and compared with the |
| expected screendumps in the "dumps" directory. This will uncover any |
| character attributes that differ. |
| |
| Without any further setup a screendump is made at the top of the file (using |
| _00.dump) and another one at the end of the file (using _99.dump). The dumps |
| are normally 20 screen lines tall. |
| |
| When the screendumps are OK an empty "done/{name}" file is created. This |
| avoids running the test again until "make clean" is used. Thus you can run |
| "make test", see one test fail, try to fix the problem, then run "make test" |
| again to only repeat the failing test. |
| |
| When a screendump differs it is stored in the "failed" directory. This allows |
| for comparing it with the expected screendump, using a command like: |
| |
| let fname = '{name}_99.dump' |
| call term_dumpdiff('failed/' .. fname, 'dumps/' .. fname) |
| |
| |
| Creating a syntax plugin test |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| Create a source file in the language you want to test in the "input" |
| directory. Make sure to include some interesting constructs with complicated |
| highlighting. |
| |
| Use the filetype name as the base and a file name extension matching the |
| filetype. Let's use Java as an example. The file would then be |
| "input/java.java". |
| |
| If there is no further setup required, you can now run the tests: |
| make test |
| |
| The first time this will fail with an error for a missing screendump. The |
| newly created screendumps will be "failed/java_00.dump", |
| "failed/java_01.dump", etc. You can inspect each with: |
| |
| call term_dumpload('failed/java_00.dump') |
| call term_dumpload('failed/java_01.dump') |
| ... |
| call term_dumpload('failed/java_99.dump') |
| |
| If they look OK, move them to the "dumps" directory: |
| |
| :!mv failed/java_00.dump dumps |
| :!mv failed/java_01.dump dumps |
| ... |
| :!mv failed/java_99.dump dumps |
| |
| If you now run the test again, it will succeed. |
| |
| |
| Adjusting a syntax plugin test |
| ------------------------------ |
| |
| If you make changes to the syntax plugin, you should add code to the input |
| file to see the effect of these changes. So that the effect of the changes |
| are covered by the test. You can follow these steps: |
| |
| 1. Edit the syntax plugin somewhere in your personal setup. Use a file |
| somewhere to try out the changes. |
| 2. Go to the directory where you have the Vim code checked out and replace the |
| syntax plugin. Run the tests: "make test". Usually the tests will still |
| pass, but if you fixed syntax highlighting that was already visible in the |
| input file, carefully check that the changes in the screendump are |
| intentional: |
| let fname = '{name}_99.dump' |
| call term_dumpdiff('failed/' .. fname, 'dumps/' .. fname) |
| Fix the syntax plugin until the result is good. |
| 2. Edit the input file for your language to add the items you have improved. |
| (TODO: how to add another screendump?). |
| Run the tests and you should get failures. Like with the previous step, |
| carefully check that the new screendumps in the "failed" directory are |
| good. Update the syntax plugin and the input file until the highlighting |
| is good and you can see the effect of the syntax plugin improvements. Then |
| move the screendumps from the "failed" to the "dumps" directory. Now "make |
| test" should succeed. |
| 3. Prepare a pull request with the modified files: |
| - syntax plugin: syntax/{name}.vim |
| - test input file: syntax/testdir/input/{name}.{ext} |
| - test dump files: syntax/testdir/dumps/{name}_99.dump |
| |
| As an extra check you can temporarily put back the old syntax plugin and |
| verify that the tests fail. Then you know your changes are covered by the |
| test. |
| |
| |
| |
| TODO: run test for one specific filetype |
| |
| TODO: testing with various option values |
| TODO: test syncing by jumping around |