The doctest header doesn't include any external or stdlib headers in its interface part in order to provide the most optimal build times but that means it is limited in what it can provide as functionality => that's when extensions come into play. They are located as header files in doctest/extensions
and each of them is documented in a section here.
nothing here yet...
[Bruno Maugars and BĂ©renger Berthoul, ONERA]
Testing code over distributed processes requires support from the testing framework. Doctest support for MPI parallel communication is provided in the "doctest/extensions/doctest_mpi.h"
header.
See the complete test and the configuration of main()
#include "doctest/extensions/doctest_mpi.h" int my_function_to_test(MPI_Comm comm) { int rank; MPI_Comm_rank(comm,&rank); if (rank == 0) { return 10; } return 11; } MPI_TEST_CASE("test over two processes",2) { // Parallel test on 2 processes int x = my_function_to_test(test_comm); MPI_CHECK( 0, x==10 ); // CHECK for rank 0, that x==10 MPI_CHECK( 1, x==11 ); // CHECK for rank 1, that x==11 }
An MPI_TEST_CASE
is like a regular TEST_CASE
, except it takes a second argument, which is the number of processes needed to run the test. If the number of processes is less than 2, the test will fail. If the number of processes is greater than or equal to 2, it will create a sub-communicator over 2 processes, called test_comm
, and execute the test over these processes. Three objects are provided by MPI_TEST_CASE
:
test_comm
, of type MPI_Comm
: the mpi communicator on which the test is running,test_rank
and test_nb_procs
, two int
giving respectively the rank of the current process and the size of the communicator for test_comm
. These last two are just here for convenience and could be retrieved from test_comm
.We always have:
MPI_TEST_CASE("my_test",N) { CHECK( test_nb_procs == N ); MPI_CHECK( i, test_rank==i ); // for any i<N }
It is possible to use regular assertions in an MPI_TEST_CASE
. MPI-specific assertions are also provided and are all prefixed with MPI_
(MPI_CHECK
, MPI_ASSERT
...). The first argument is the rank for which they are checked, and the second is the usual expression to check.
You need to launch the unit tests with an mpirun
or mpiexec
command:
mpirun -np 2 unit_test_executable.exe
doctest::mpi_init_thread()
must be called before running the unit tests, and doctest::mpi_finalize()
at the end of the program. Also, using the default console reporter will result in each process writing everything in the same place, which is not what we want. Two reporters are provided and can be enabled. A complete main()
would be:
#define DOCTEST_CONFIG_IMPLEMENT #include "doctest/extensions/doctest_mpi.h" int main(int argc, char** argv) { doctest::mpi_init_thread(argc,argv,MPI_THREAD_MULTIPLE); // Or any MPI thread level doctest::Context ctx; ctx.setOption("reporters", "MpiConsoleReporter"); ctx.setOption("reporters", "MpiFileReporter"); ctx.setOption("force-colors", true); ctx.applyCommandLine(argc, argv); int test_result = ctx.run(); doctest::mpi_finalize(); return test_result; }
The MpiConsoleReporter
should be substituted to the default reporter. It does the same as the default console reporter for regular assertions, but only outputs on process 0. For MPI test cases, if there is a failure it tells the process that failed
[doctest] doctest version is "2.4.0" [doctest] run with "--help" for options =============================================================================== [doctest] test cases: 171 | 171 passed | 0 failed | 0 skipped [doctest] assertions: 864 | 864 passed | 0 failed | [doctest] Status: SUCCESS! std_e_mpi_unit_tests [doctest] doctest version is "2.4.0" [doctest] run with "--help" for options =============================================================================== path/to/test.cpp:30: TEST CASE: my test case On rank [2] : path/to/test.cpp:35: CHECK( x==-1 ) is NOT correct! values: CHECK( 0 == -1 ) =============================================================================== [doctest] test cases: 2 | 2 passed | 0 failed | 0 skipped [doctest] assertions: 2 | 2 passed | 0 failed | [doctest] Status: SUCCESS! =============================================================================== [doctest] assertions on all processes: 5 | 4 passed | 1 failed | =============================================================================== [doctest] fail on rank: -> On rank [2] with 1 test failed [doctest] Status: FAILURE!
If the test executable is launch with less processes than the number of processes required by one test, the test is skipped and marqued as such in the mpi console reporter:
MPI_TEST_CASE("my_test",3) { // ... }
mpirun -np 2 unit_test_executable.exe
=============================================================================== [doctest] test cases: 1 | 1 passed | 0 failed | 1 skipped [doctest] assertions: 1 | 1 passed | 0 failed | [doctest] Status: SUCCESS! =============================================================================== [doctest] assertions on all processes: 1 | 1 passed | 0 failed | [doctest] WARNING: Skipped 1 test requiring more than 2 MPI processes to run ===============================================================================
The MpiFileReporter
will just print the result of each process in its own file, named doctest_[rank].log
. Only use this reporter as a debug facility if you want to know what is going on exactly when a parallel test case is failing.
Other reporters (jUnit, XML) are not supported directly, which mean that you can always print the result of each process to its own file, but there is (currently) no equivalent of the MpiConsoleReporter
that will aggregate the results of all processes.
This feature is provided to unit-test mpi-distributed code. It is not a way to parallelize many unit tests over several processes (for that, see the example python script).
s
member variable of ConsoleReporter
as an argument to member functions so we can use them with another object (would help to factorize MPIConsoleReporter
)mpi_doctest
? (probably cleaner to depend explicitly on MPI for mpi/doctest.h)