Reputation: 5231
I came across Generative Testing in Clojure with spec
notion and would like to learn about it.
Also providing some examples would be very useful.
Upvotes: 6
Views: 1860
Reputation: 4582
As introductory reading we've got the Rationale and Overview along with the Guide which should provide you with information both about the why and the how.
If you'd like a somewhat complex example, we can take the string->semantic-version
function of leiningen.release
:
(defn string->semantic-version [version-string]
"Create map representing the given version string. Returns nil if the
string does not follow guidelines setforth by Semantic Versioning 2.0.0,
http://semver.org/"
;; <MajorVersion>.<MinorVersion>.<PatchVersion>[-<Qualifier>][-SNAPSHOT]
(if-let [[_ major minor patch qualifier snapshot]
(re-matches
#"(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)(?:-(?!SNAPSHOT)([^\-]+))?(?:-(SNAPSHOT))?"
version-string)]
(->> [major minor patch]
(map #(Integer/parseInt %))
(zipmap [:major :minor :patch])
(merge {:qualifier qualifier
:snapshot snapshot}))))
It takes a string and tries to parse it into a program-readable map representing the version number of some artifact. A spec for it could look like:
First some dependencies
(ns leiningen.core.spec.util
(:require
[clojure.spec :as spec]
[clojure.spec.gen :as gen]
[miner.strgen :as strgen]
[clojure.spec.test :as test]
[leiningen.release :as release]))
then a helper macro
(defmacro stregex
"Defines a spec which matches a string based on a given string
regular expression. This the classical type of regex as in the
clojure regex literal #\"\""
[string-regex]
`(spec/with-gen
(spec/and string? #(re-matches ~string-regex %))
#(strgen/string-generator ~string-regex)))
followed by a definition of a semantic version
(spec/def ::semantic-version-string
(stregex #"(\d+)\.(\d+)\.(\d+)(-\w+)?(-SNAPSHOT)?"))
and some helper-specs
(spec/def ::non-blank-string
(spec/and string? #(not (str/blank? %))))
(spec/def ::natural-number
(spec/int-in 0 Integer/MAX_VALUE))
for the definition of the keys in the resulting map
(spec/def ::release/major ::natural-number)
(spec/def ::release/minor ::natural-number)
(spec/def ::release/patch ::natural-number)
(spec/def ::release/qualifier ::non-blank-string)
(spec/def ::release/snapshot #{"SNAPSHOT"})
and the map itself
(spec/def ::release/semantic-version-map
(spec/keys :req-un [::release/major ::release/minor ::release/patch
::release/qualifier ::release/snapshot]))
followed by the function spec:
(spec/fdef release/string->semantic-version
:args (spec/cat :version-str ::release/semantic-version-string)
:ret ::release/semantic-version-map)
By now we can let Clojure Spec generate test data and feed it into the function itself in order to test whether it meets the constraints we've put up for it:
(test/check `release/version-map->string)
=> ({:spec #object[clojure.spec$fspec_impl$reify__14248 0x16c2555 "clojure.spec$fspec_impl$reify__14248@16c2555"],
:clojure.spec.test.check/ret {:result true,
:num-tests 1000,
:seed 1491922864713},
:sym leiningen.release/version-map->string})
This tells us that out of the 1000 test cases spec generated for us the function passed every single one.
Upvotes: 15
Reputation: 29986
You may find it easiest to get started looking at clojure/test.check
before you dive into Clojure Spec
. From the project page:
(require '[clojure.test.check :as tc])
(require '[clojure.test.check.generators :as gen])
(require '[clojure.test.check.properties :as prop])
(def sort-idempotent-prop
(prop/for-all [v (gen/vector gen/int)]
(= (sort v) (sort (sort v)))))
(tc/quick-check 100 sort-idempotent-prop)
;; => {:result true, :num-tests 100, :seed 1382488326530}
In prose, this test reads: for all vectors of integers, v, sorting v is equal to sorting v twice.
What happens if our test fails? test.check will try and find 'smaller' inputs that still fail. This process is called shrinking. Let's see it in action:
(def prop-sorted-first-less-than-last
(prop/for-all [v (gen/not-empty (gen/vector gen/int))]
(let [s (sort v)]
(< (first s) (last s)))))
(tc/quick-check 100 prop-sorted-first-less-than-last)
;; => {:result false, :failing-size 0, :num-tests 1, :fail [[3]],
:shrunk {:total-nodes-visited 5, :depth 2, :result false,
:smallest [[0]]}}
Upvotes: 8