blockbook/docs/testing.md
2018-08-28 15:19:37 +02:00

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Testing

There are two kinds of tests in Blockbook unit tests and integration tests. Because integration tests require running back-end daemon so they can't be executed at every build. Blockbook's build system uses conditional compilation to distinguish which tests should be executed.

To execute unit tests run make test. To execute unit tests and integration tests run make test-all. You can use Go's flag -run to filter which tests should be executed. Use ARGS variable, e.g. make test-all ARGS="-run TestBitcoin".

Unit tests

Unit test file must start with constraint // +build unittest followed by blank line (constraints are described here).

Every coin implementation should have unit tests. At least for parser. Usual test suite define real transaction data and try pack and unpack them. Specialities of particular coin are tested too. See examples in bcashparser_test.go, bitcoinparser_test.go and ethparser_test.go.

Integration tests

Integration test file must start with constraint // +build integration followed by blank line (constraints are described here).

Tests that cannot connect back-end service are skipped. go test doesn't show any information about skipped test, so you must run it in verbose mode with flag -v.

Blockbook integration tests

TODO

Back-end RPC integration tests

This kind of tests test bchain.BlockChain implementation and its capability to communicate with back-end RPC. Tests of most of coins are similar so there is single generalized implementation in package blockbook/bchain/tests/rpc. Test functions of particular coin implementation can just initialize test object and call its methods. Configuration of tests is stored in blockbook/bchain/tests/rpc/config.json and consists of back-end URL and credentials. Every test suite also has fixtures stored in blockbook/bchain/tests/rpc/testdata. Content is obvious from existing files.

Tests listed below just call back-end RPC methods with parameters from fixture file and check results against same fixture file. So data in fixture file must be related together.

  • TestGetBlockHash Calls BlockChain.GetBlockHash with height and checks returned hash.
  • TestGetBlockHeader Calls BlockChain.GetBlockHeader with hash and check returned header. Note that only fields that are significant are Hash and Height, they are checked against fixtures.
  • TestGetBlock Calls BlockChain.GetBlock with hash and checks returned block (actually number of transactions and their txids).
  • TestGetTransaction Calls BlockChain.GetTransaction with txid and checks result against transaction object, where txid is key and* *transaction object is value of txDetails object in fixture file.
  • TestGetTransactionForMempool Calls BlockChain.GetTransactionForMempool that should be version of BlockChain.GetTransaction optimized for mempool. Implementation of test is similar.
  • TestGetMempoolEntry Calls BlockChain.GetMempoolEntry and checks result. Because mempool is living structure it tries to load entry for random transaction in mempool repeatedly.
  • TestEstimateSmartFee Calls BlockChain.EstimateSmartFee for few numbers of blocks and checks if returned fee is non-negative.
  • TestEstimateFee Calls BlockChain.EstimateFee; implementation is same as TestEstimateSmartFee.
  • TestGetBestBlockHash Calls BlockChain.GetBestBlockHash and verifies that returned hash matches the really last block.
  • TestGetBestBlockHeight Calls BlockChain.GetBestBlockHeight and verifies that returned height matches the really last block.

TODO: TestMempoolSync should be "Blockbook integration test"

  • TestMempoolSync Synchronize BlockChain's mempool and verify if sync was successful.

For example see bitcoinrpc_test.go and implementation of test suite.