On 2011-03-23 07:52, Stirling Westrup wrote:
I have been using Boost.test to run some simple unit tests as I build my code. I've come across a case where I need to test if my code runs within an acceptable time limit. I know that the execution monitor has a timeout system for testing that sort of thing, but I can't figure out how it is supposed to be integrated into the unit test framework.
Ideally, I'd love to just have a BOOST_CHECK_TIMED( f(), timeout) that I could invoke to ensure that the code returns true, and returns within the specified timeout interval.
I just came with a basic solution that I have not fully tested but seems to work. However it demands some optimization. (Please, be soft on me, I have not been working much on this one). I created a ( TestCaseName, TimeOutValue ) macro. This macro is extended to something like #define BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE_TIMED( NAME , TIMEOUT) \ class NAME##_timeout { \ public: \ NAME##_timeout(){ConfigurationVisitor::getInstance()->registerTimeOut(#NAME, TIMEOUT);} \ }; \ NAME##_timeout* NAME##_timeInstance = new NAME##_timeout(); \ BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE( NAME ) I am using test_tree_visitor implementation - ConfigurationVisitor -instantiated before the boost::monitor execution is called. void ConfigurationVisitor::visit( test_case const& itc ) { test_case & tc=*(test_case *)&itc; // Hack ! tc.p_timeout.set(boost::unit_test::class_property<unsigned>(getTimeOut(tc.p_name.value))); } This will update test_case timeout to the value return by getTimeOut (0 if none, of the actual TimeOutvalue registered for the test case. This test tree visitor also exposed some static functions : static void registerTimeOut(std::string iTestName, int iTimeOut); static int getTimeOut(std::string iTestName); The time out value is store in a std::map. Runtime, before calling the ::boost::unit_test::unit_test_main, I do traverse_test_tree(framework::master_test_suite().p_id, *ConfigurationVisitor::getInstance()); At the end, I got something like that : BOOST_AUTO_TEST_CASE_TIMED( MyTestCase1, 5 ) { while(1){ usleep(1000); BOOST_TEST_MESSAGE("HelloWorld"); } } And log will be : Entering test case "MyTestCase1" HelloWorld HelloWorld HelloWorld HelloWorld HelloWorld unknown location(0): fatal error in "MyTestCase2": signal: SIGALRM (timeout while executing function) .../MyTimeOutTestSuite.cpp(64): last checkpoint Leaving test case "MyTestCase1" ----- However, the hack in the visit function is actually my main concern about this solution. It may not be what you are look for, but I hope this will help though. Guillaume.