# Running tests ## Unit-tests The unit-tests for each Nix library (`libexpr`, `libstore`, etc..) are defined under `src/{library_name}/tests` using the [googletest](https://google.github.io/googletest/) and [rapidcheck](https://github.com/emil-e/rapidcheck) frameworks. You can run the whole testsuite with `make check`, or the tests for a specific component with `make libfoo-tests_RUN`. Finer-grained filtering is also possible using the [--gtest_filter](https://google.github.io/googletest/advanced.html#running-a-subset-of-the-tests) command-line option. ## Functional tests The functional tests reside under the `tests` directory and are listed in `tests/local.mk`. Each test is a bash script. The whole test suite can be run with: ```shell-session $ make install && make installcheck ran test tests/foo.sh... [PASS] ran test tests/bar.sh... [PASS] ... ``` Individual tests can be run with `make`: ```shell-session $ make tests/${testName}.sh.test ran test tests/${testName}.sh... [PASS] ``` or without `make`: ```shell-session $ ./mk/run-test.sh tests/${testName}.sh ran test tests/${testName}.sh... [PASS] ``` To see the complete output, one can also run: ```shell-session $ ./mk/debug-test.sh tests/${testName}.sh + foo output from foo + bar output from bar ... ``` The test script will then be traced with `set -x` and the output displayed as it happens, regardless of whether the test succeeds or fails. ### Debugging failing functional tests When a functional test fails, it usually does so somewhere in the middle of the script. To figure out what's wrong, it is convenient to run the test regularly up to the failing `nix` command, and then run that command with a debugger like GDB. For example, if the script looks like: ```bash foo nix blah blub bar ``` edit it like so: ```diff foo -nix blah blub +gdb --args nix blah blub bar ``` Then, running the test with `./mk/debug-test.sh` will drop you into GDB once the script reaches that point: ```shell-session $ ./mk/debug-test.sh tests/${testName}.sh ... + gdb blash blub GNU gdb (GDB) 12.1 ... (gdb) ``` One can debug the Nix invocation in all the usual ways. For example, enter `run` to start the Nix invocation. ## Integration tests The integration tests are defined in the Nix flake under the `hydraJobs.tests` attribute. These tests include everything that needs to interact with external services or run Nix in a non-trivial distributed setup. Because these tests are expensive and require more than what the standard github-actions setup provides, they only run on the master branch (on ). You can run them manually with `nix build .#hydraJobs.tests.{testName}` or `nix-build -A hydraJobs.tests.{testName}` ## Installer tests After a one-time setup, the Nix repository's GitHub Actions continuous integration (CI) workflow can test the installer each time you push to a branch. Creating a Cachix cache for your installer tests and adding its authorization token to GitHub enables [two installer-specific jobs in the CI workflow](https://github.com/NixOS/nix/blob/88a45d6149c0e304f6eb2efcc2d7a4d0d569f8af/.github/workflows/ci.yml#L50-L91): - The `installer` job generates installers for the platforms below and uploads them to your Cachix cache: - `x86_64-linux` - `armv6l-linux` - `armv7l-linux` - `x86_64-darwin` - The `installer_test` job (which runs on `ubuntu-latest` and `macos-latest`) will try to install Nix with the cached installer and run a trivial Nix command. ### One-time setup 1. Have a GitHub account with a fork of the [Nix repository](https://github.com/NixOS/nix). 2. At cachix.org: - Create or log in to an account. - Create a Cachix cache using the format `-nix-install-tests`. - Navigate to the new cache > Settings > Auth Tokens. - Generate a new Cachix auth token and copy the generated value. 3. At github.com: - Navigate to your Nix fork > Settings > Secrets > Actions > New repository secret. - Name the secret `CACHIX_AUTH_TOKEN`. - Paste the copied value of the Cachix cache auth token. ## Working on documentation ### Using the CI-generated installer for manual testing After the CI run completes, you can check the output to extract the installer URL: 1. Click into the detailed view of the CI run. 2. Click into any `installer_test` run (the URL you're here to extract will be the same in all of them). 3. Click into the `Run cachix/install-nix-action@v...` step and click the detail triangle next to the first log line (it will also be `Run cachix/install-nix-action@v...`) 4. Copy the value of `install_url` 5. To generate an install command, plug this `install_url` and your GitHub username into this template: ```console curl -L | sh -s -- --tarball-url-prefix https://-nix-install-tests.cachix.org/serve ```