Skip to content

An easy to use testing framework for the 42 projects

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

solismesmo/francinette

 
 

Repository files navigation

Francinette

An easy to use testing framework for the 42 projects.

Use francinette or paco inside a project folder to run it.

Currently has tests for: libft, ft_printf, get_next_line, minitalk and pipex.

Francinette is only tested and confirmed to work on MacOS on non ARM chips. Some testers may work on Linux and ARM, but I give no guaranties of any test working or even compiling.

❗ Important note:

If you have little to no experience programming, I highly highly highly recommend that you write your own tests first. For example, for ft_split try to write a main that tests that your code works in most cases. It is also useful to think about corner cases, like what should it return if the string is "" or " " or "word". Don't rely just on francinette or other tests.

⚠️ Write your own tests, It's a very essential part of programming. ⚠️

Table of Contents

  1. Purpose
  2. Install
  3. Update
  4. Running
  5. Uninstall
  6. FAQ
  7. Acknowledgments

Purpose:

This is designed to function as a kind of moulinette that you can execute in local.

That means that by executing francinette it will check norminette, compile the code and execute the tests.

You can use it as a local test battery, to test your code.

Example execution:

Example Image

Install:

Francinette has an automatic installer.

Copy the line bellow to your console and execute it. It will automatically download the repo, create the necessary folders and alias, and install a python virtual environment dedicated to running this tool.

In linux it will also download and install the necessary packages for it to run. It needs admin permission to do that.

bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/xicodomingues/francinette/master/bin/install.sh)"

The francinette folder will be under your $HOME directory (/Users/<your_username>/)

Update:

Normally francinette will prompt you when there is a new version, and you can then update it.

You can also force it from francinette itself:

~ $> francinette -u              # Forces francinette to update

If the above does not work you can also execute the command bellow:

bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/xicodomingues/francinette/master/bin/update.sh)"

Running:

If you are on a root of a project, francinette should be able to tell which project it is and execute the corresponding tests.

You can also use the shorter version of the command: paco

To see all the available options execute paco -h

/C00 $> francinette                  # Execute the tests for C00

/C00/ex00 $> francinette             # Execute only the tests for ex00 in C00

/libft $> francinette                # Execute the tests for libft

~ $> francinette -h                  # Shows the help message

libft $> paco memset isalpha memcpy  # Executes only the specified tests

The name of the folder is not important. What is important is that you have a Makefile that contains the name of the project (for example libft), or the expected delivery files. If there is no Makefile or delivery files are not present francinette will not know what project to execute.

~ $> francinette [email protected]/intra-uuid-234

This command clones the git repository present in [email protected]/intra-uuid-234 into the current folder and executes the corresponding tests

All the files are copied to the folder ~/francinette/temp/<project>. In here is where the norminette is checked, the code compiled and the tests executed. Normally you do not need to access this directory for anything. But if you run into unexpected problems, this is where the magic happens.

Log files can be found in: ~/francinette/logs

Uninstall

To uninstall francinette delete the francinette folder. It should be located under your $HOME directory (/Users/<your_username>/ or /home/<your_username>/)

You also need to remove the automatically created aliases. For that open your ~/.zshrc file and delete the lines:

alias francinette="$HOME"/francinette/tester.sh
alias paco="$HOME"/francinette/tester.sh

FAQ

If you have any questions you can create an issue or reach me on slack under fsoares-

I'm more advanced than the tests you have available. When are you adding more tests?

When I reach that exercise or project. You can also add them. For that you need to create a ProjectTester.py file. and change the function guess_project in main.py to recognize the project.

This test that you put up is incorrect!

Please create a new github issue, indicating for what exercise which test fails, and a description of what you think is wrong. You can also try to fix it and create a pull request for that change!

What is NULL_CHECK in strict?

This is a way to test if you are protecting your malloc calls. This means that it will make every call to malloc fail and return NULL instead of a newly allocated pointer. You need to take this into account when programming so that you don't get segmentation faults.

The tester for get_next_line is giving me Timeout errors

This is something that is very common. My tester will get slower for every malloc that you do, so if you do a lot of mallocs it will probably timeout.

If it timeouts while in the strict mode, don't worry, this one is very very inefficient. I have plans to change some things to not make it so horrible, but for the time being, don't worry if it gives a Timeout.

Troubleshooting

I've installed francinette, but when I try to execute it I get the message: command not found: francinette

In the install script I try to set two alias to for francinette: francinette and paco. If you are in MacOS I do that by adding two lines to the .zshrc file, and to .bashrc in linux. If by some chance you are using other shell, or for some other reason it does not work, You can try to set the aliases yourself, by adding:

alias francinette="$HOME"/francinette/tester.sh
alias paco="$HOME"/francinette/tester.sh

Now it should work. If it does not, don't be afraid to contact me.

Acknowledgments

About

An easy to use testing framework for the 42 projects

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • C 65.9%
  • Python 31.1%
  • Shell 2.2%
  • Makefile 0.8%