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| 2 | subunit: A streaming protocol for test results | 
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| 3 | Copyright (C) 2005-2009 Robert Collins <robertc@robertcollins.net> | 
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| 4 |  | 
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| 5 | Licensed under either the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the BSD 3-clause | 
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| 6 | license at the users choice. A copy of both licenses are available in the | 
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| 7 | project source as Apache-2.0 and BSD. You may not use this file except in | 
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| 8 | compliance with one of these two licences. | 
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| 9 |  | 
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| 10 | Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software | 
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| 11 | distributed under these licenses is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT | 
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| 12 | WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.  See the | 
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| 13 | license you chose for the specific language governing permissions and | 
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| 14 | limitations under that license. | 
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| 15 |  | 
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| 16 | See the COPYING file for full details on the licensing of Subunit. | 
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| 17 |  | 
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| 18 | subunit reuses iso8601 by Michael Twomey, distributed under an MIT style | 
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| 19 | licence - see python/iso8601/LICENSE for details. | 
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| 20 |  | 
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| 21 | Subunit | 
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| 22 | ------- | 
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| 23 |  | 
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| 24 | Subunit is a streaming protocol for test results. The protocol is human | 
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| 25 | readable and easily generated and parsed. By design all the components of | 
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| 26 | the protocol conceptually fit into the xUnit TestCase->TestResult interaction. | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 | Subunit comes with command line filters to process a subunit stream and | 
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| 29 | language bindings for python, C, C++ and shell. Bindings are easy to write | 
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| 30 | for other languages. | 
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| 31 |  | 
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| 32 | A number of useful things can be done easily with subunit: | 
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| 33 | * Test aggregation: Tests run separately can be combined and then | 
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| 34 | reported/displayed together. For instance, tests from different languages | 
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| 35 | can be shown as a seamless whole. | 
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| 36 | * Test archiving: A test run may be recorded and replayed later. | 
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| 37 | * Test isolation: Tests that may crash or otherwise interact badly with each | 
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| 38 | other can be run seperately and then aggregated, rather than interfering | 
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| 39 | with each other. | 
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| 40 | * Grid testing: subunit can act as the necessary serialisation and | 
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| 41 | deserialiation to get test runs on distributed machines to be reported in | 
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| 42 | real time. | 
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| 43 |  | 
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| 44 | Subunit supplies the following filters: | 
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| 45 | * tap2subunit - convert perl's TestAnythingProtocol to subunit. | 
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| 46 | * subunit2pyunit - convert a subunit stream to pyunit test results. | 
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| 47 | * subunit2gtk - show a subunit stream in GTK. | 
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| 48 | * subunit2junitxml - convert a subunit stream to JUnit's XML format. | 
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| 49 | * subunit-diff - compare two subunit streams. | 
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| 50 | * subunit-filter - filter out tests from a subunit stream. | 
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| 51 | * subunit-ls - list info about tests present in a subunit stream. | 
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| 52 | * subunit-stats - generate a summary of a subunit stream. | 
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| 53 | * subunit-tags - add or remove tags from a stream. | 
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| 54 |  | 
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| 55 | Integration with other tools | 
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| 56 | ---------------------------- | 
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| 57 |  | 
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| 58 | Subunit's language bindings act as integration with various test runners like | 
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| 59 | 'check', 'cppunit', Python's 'unittest'. Beyond that a small amount of glue | 
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| 60 | (typically a few lines) will allow Subunit to be used in more sophisticated | 
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| 61 | ways. | 
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| 62 |  | 
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| 63 | Python | 
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| 64 | ====== | 
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| 65 |  | 
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| 66 | Subunit has excellent Python support: most of the filters and tools are written | 
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| 67 | in python and there are facilities for using Subunit to increase test isolation | 
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| 68 | seamlessly within a test suite. | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | One simple way to run an existing python test suite and have it output subunit | 
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| 71 | is the module ``subunit.run``:: | 
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| 72 |  | 
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| 73 | $ python -m subunit.run mypackage.tests.test_suite | 
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| 74 |  | 
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| 75 | For more information on the Python support Subunit offers , please see | 
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| 76 | ``pydoc subunit``, or the source in ``python/subunit/__init__.py`` | 
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| 77 |  | 
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| 78 | C | 
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| 79 | = | 
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| 80 |  | 
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| 81 | Subunit has C bindings to emit the protocol, and comes with a patch for 'check' | 
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| 82 | which has been nominally accepted by the 'check' developers. See 'c/README' for | 
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| 83 | more details. | 
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| 84 |  | 
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| 85 | C++ | 
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| 86 | === | 
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| 87 |  | 
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| 88 | The C library is includable and usable directly from C++. A TestListener for | 
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| 89 | CPPUnit is included in the Subunit distribution. See 'c++/README' for details. | 
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| 90 |  | 
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| 91 | shell | 
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| 92 | ===== | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | Similar to C, the shell bindings consist of simple functions to output protocol | 
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| 95 | elements, and a patch for adding subunit output to the 'ShUnit' shell test | 
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| 96 | runner. See 'shell/README' for details. | 
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| 97 |  | 
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| 98 | Filter recipes | 
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| 99 | -------------- | 
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| 100 |  | 
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| 101 | To ignore some failing tests whose root cause is already known:: | 
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| 102 |  | 
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| 103 | subunit-filter --without 'AttributeError.*flavor' | 
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| 104 |  | 
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| 105 |  | 
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| 106 | The protocol | 
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| 107 | ------------ | 
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| 108 |  | 
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| 109 | Sample subunit wire contents | 
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| 110 | ---------------------------- | 
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| 111 |  | 
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| 112 | The following:: | 
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| 113 | test: test foo works | 
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| 114 | success: test foo works. | 
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| 115 | test: tar a file. | 
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| 116 | failure: tar a file. [ | 
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| 117 | .. | 
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| 118 | ]..  space is eaten. | 
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| 119 | foo.c:34 WARNING foo is not defined. | 
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| 120 | ] | 
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| 121 | a writeln to stdout | 
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| 122 |  | 
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| 123 | When run through subunit2pyunit:: | 
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| 124 | .F | 
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| 125 | a writeln to stdout | 
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| 126 |  | 
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| 127 | ======================== | 
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| 128 | FAILURE: tar a file. | 
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| 129 | ------------------- | 
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| 130 | .. | 
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| 131 | ]..  space is eaten. | 
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| 132 | foo.c:34 WARNING foo is not defined. | 
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| 133 |  | 
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| 134 |  | 
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| 135 | Subunit protocol description | 
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| 136 | ============================ | 
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| 137 |  | 
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| 138 | This description is being ported to an EBNF style. Currently its only partly in | 
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| 139 | that style, but should be fairly clear all the same. When in doubt, refer the | 
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| 140 | source (and ideally help fix up the description!). Generally the protocol is | 
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| 141 | line orientated and consists of either directives and their parameters, or | 
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| 142 | when outside a DETAILS region unexpected lines which are not interpreted by | 
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| 143 | the parser - they should be forwarded unaltered. | 
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| 144 |  | 
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| 145 | test|testing|test:|testing: test label | 
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| 146 | success|success:|successful|successful: test label | 
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| 147 | success|success:|successful|successful: test label DETAILS | 
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| 148 | failure: test label | 
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| 149 | failure: test label DETAILS | 
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| 150 | error: test label | 
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| 151 | error: test label DETAILS | 
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| 152 | skip[:] test label | 
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| 153 | skip[:] test label DETAILS | 
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| 154 | xfail[:] test label | 
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| 155 | xfail[:] test label DETAILS | 
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| 156 | progress: [+|-]X | 
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| 157 | progress: push | 
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| 158 | progress: pop | 
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| 159 | tags: [-]TAG ... | 
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| 160 | time: YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SSZ | 
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| 161 |  | 
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| 162 | DETAILS ::= BRACKETED | MULTIPART | 
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| 163 | BRACKETED ::= '[' CR UTF8-lines ']' CR | 
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| 164 | MULTIPART ::= '[ multipart' CR PART* ']' CR | 
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| 165 | PART ::= PART_TYPE CR NAME CR PART_BYTES CR | 
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| 166 | PART_TYPE ::= Content-Type: type/sub-type(;parameter=value,parameter=value) | 
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| 167 | PART_BYTES ::= (DIGITS CR LF BYTE{DIGITS})* '0' CR LF | 
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| 168 |  | 
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| 169 | unexpected output on stdout -> stdout. | 
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| 170 | exit w/0 or last test completing -> error | 
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| 171 |  | 
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| 172 | Tags given outside a test are applied to all following tests | 
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| 173 | Tags given after a test: line and before the result line for the same test | 
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| 174 | apply only to that test, and inherit the current global tags. | 
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| 175 | A '-' before a tag is used to remove tags - e.g. to prevent a global tag | 
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| 176 | applying to a single test, or to cancel a global tag. | 
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| 177 |  | 
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| 178 | The progress directive is used to provide progress information about a stream | 
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| 179 | so that stream consumer can provide completion estimates, progress bars and so | 
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| 180 | on. Stream generators that know how many tests will be present in the stream | 
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| 181 | should output "progress: COUNT". Stream filters that add tests should output | 
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| 182 | "progress: +COUNT", and those that remove tests should output | 
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| 183 | "progress: -COUNT". An absolute count should reset the progress indicators in | 
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| 184 | use - it indicates that two separate streams from different generators have | 
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| 185 | been trivially concatenated together, and there is no knowledge of how many | 
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| 186 | more complete streams are incoming. Smart concatenation could scan each stream | 
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| 187 | for their count and sum them, or alternatively translate absolute counts into | 
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| 188 | relative counts inline. It is recommended that outputters avoid absolute counts | 
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| 189 | unless necessary. The push and pop directives are used to provide local regions | 
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| 190 | for progress reporting. This fits with hierarchically operating test | 
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| 191 | environments - such as those that organise tests into suites - the top-most | 
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| 192 | runner can report on the number of suites, and each suite surround its output | 
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| 193 | with a (push, pop) pair. Interpreters should interpret a pop as also advancing | 
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| 194 | the progress of the restored level by one step. Encountering progress | 
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| 195 | directives between the start and end of a test pair indicates that a previous | 
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| 196 | test was interrupted and did not cleanly terminate: it should be implicitly | 
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| 197 | closed with an error (the same as when a stream ends with no closing test | 
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| 198 | directive for the most recently started test). | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 | The time directive acts as a clock event - it sets the time for all future | 
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| 201 | events. The value should be a valid ISO8601 time. | 
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| 202 |  | 
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| 203 | The skip result is used to indicate a test that was found by the runner but not | 
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| 204 | fully executed due to some policy or dependency issue. This is represented in | 
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| 205 | python using the addSkip interface that testtools | 
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| 206 | (https://edge.launchpad.net/testtools) defines. When communicating with a non | 
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| 207 | skip aware test result, the test is reported as an error. | 
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| 208 | The xfail result is used to indicate a test that was expected to fail failing | 
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| 209 | in the expected manner. As this is a normal condition for such tests it is | 
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| 210 | represented as a successful test in Python. | 
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| 211 | In future, skip and xfail results will be represented semantically in Python, | 
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| 212 | but some discussion is underway on the right way to do this. | 
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