Library
Module
Module type
Parameter
Class
Class type
type 'a printer = Format.formatter -> 'a -> unit
pretty-printers for items generated by Crowbar; useful for the user in translating test failures into bugfixes.
val int : int gen
int
generates an integer ranging from min_int to max_int, inclusive. If you need integers from a smaller domain, consider using range
.
val uint8 : int gen
uint8
generates an unsigned byte, ranging from 0 to 255 inclusive.
val int8 : int gen
int8
generates a signed byte, ranging from -128 to 127 inclusive.
val uint16 : int gen
uint16
generates an unsigned 16-bit integer, ranging from 0 to 65535 inclusive.
val int16 : int gen
int16
generates a signed 16-bit integer, ranging from -32768 to 32767 inclusive.
val float : float gen
float
generates a double-precision floating-point number.
val char : char gen
char
generates a char.
val bytes : string gen
bytes
generates a string of arbitrary length (including zero-length strings).
val bytes_fixed : int -> string gen
bytes_fixed length
generates a string of the specified length.
val bool : bool gen
bool
generates a yes or no answer.
val range : ?min:int -> int -> int gen
range ?min n
is a generator for integers between min
(inclusive) and min + n
(exclusive). Default min
value is 0. range ?min n
will raise Invalid_argument
for n <= 0
.
map gens map_fn
provides a means for creating generators using other generators' output. For example, one might generate a Char.t from a uint8
:
open Crowbar
let char_gen : Char.t gen = map [uint8] Char.chr
unlazy gen
forces the generator gen
. It is useful when defining generators for recursive data types:
open Crowbar
type a = A of int | Self of a
let rec a_gen = lazy (
choose [
map [int] (fun i -> A i);
map [(unlazy a_gen)] (fun s -> Self s);
])
let lazy a_gen = a_gen
fix fn
applies the function fn
. It is useful when defining generators for recursive data types:
open Crowbar
type a = A of int | Self of a
let rec a_gen = fix (fun a_gen ->
choose [
map [int] (fun i -> A i);
map [a_gen] (fun s -> Self s);
])
val const : 'a -> 'a gen
const a
always generates a
.
option gen
generates either None
or Some x
, where x
is the item generated by gen
.
pair gena gen
generates (a, b) where a
is generated by gena
and b
by genb
.
result gena genb
generates either Ok va
or Error vb
, where va
, vb
are generated by gena
, genb
respectively.
list gen
makes a generator for lists using gen
. Lists may be empty; for non-empty lists, use list1
.
list1 gen
makes non-empty list generators. For potentially empty lists, use list
.
val shuffle : 'a list -> 'a list gen
shuffle l
generates random permutations of l
.
concat_gen_list sep l
concatenates a list of string gen l
inserting the separator sep
between each
with_printer printer gen
generates the same values as gen
. If gen
is used to create a failing test case and the test was reached by calling check_eq
without pp
set, printer
will be used to print the failing test case.
dynamic_bind gen f
is a monadic bind, it allows to express the generation of a value whose generator itself depends on a previously generated value. This is in contrast with map gen f
, where no further generation happens in f
after gen
has generated an element.
An typical example where this sort of dependencies is required is a serialization library exporting combinators letting you build values of the form 'a serializer
. You may want to test this library by first generating a pair of a serializer and generator 'a serializer * 'a gen
for arbitrary 'a
, and then generating values of type 'a
depending on the (generated) generator to test the serializer. There is such an example in the examples/serializer/
directory of the Crowbar implementation.
Because the structure of a generator built with dynamic_bind
is opaque/dynamic (it depends on generated values), the Crowbar library cannot analyze its statically (without generating anything) -- the generator is opaque to the library, hidden in a function. In particular, many optimizations or or fuzzing techniques based on generator analysis are impossible. As a client of the library, you should avoid dynamic_bind
whenever it is not strictly required to express a given generator, so that you can take advantage of these features (present or future ones). Use the least powerful/complex combinators that suffice for your needs.
val pp : Format.formatter -> ('a, Format.formatter, unit) format -> 'a
val pp_int : int printer
val pp_float : float printer
val pp_bool : bool printer
val pp_string : string printer
val add_test : ?name:string -> ('f, unit) gens -> 'f -> unit
add_test name generators test_fn
adds test_fn
to the list of eligible tests to be run when the program is invoked. At runtime, random data will be sent to generators
to create the input necessary to run test_fn
. Any failures will be printed annotated with name
.
guard b
aborts a test if b
is false. The test will not be recorded or reported as a failure.
bad_test ()
aborts a test. The test will not be recorded or reported as a failure.
nonetheless o
aborts a test if o
is None. The test will not be recorded or reported as a failure.
val failf : ('a, Format.formatter, unit, _) format4 -> 'a
failf format ...
generates a test failure and prints the message specified by the format string format
and the following arguments. It is set up so that %a
calls for an 'a printer
and an 'a
value.
check b
generates a test failure if b
is false. No useful information will be printed in this case.
val check_eq :
?pp:'a printer ->
?cmp:('a -> 'a -> int) ->
?eq:('a -> 'a -> bool) ->
'a ->
'a ->
unit
check_eq pp cmp eq x y
evaluates whether x and y are equal, and if they are not, raises a failure and prints an error message. Equality is evaluated as follows:
eq
eq
is provided, use a provided cmp
eq
nor cmp
is provided, use Stdlib.compareIf pp
is provided, use this to print x
and y
if they are not equal. If pp
is not provided, a best-effort printer will be generated from the printers for primitive generators and any printers registered with with_printer
and used.