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Course for learning how to apply property-based state-machine testing

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State Machine Testing

This is in progress course material for a course on property-based state machine testing, using the Hedgehog package.

Requirements

  • You would like an automated minion to unleash hell on your application, breaking it in strange and fascinating ways.

What is State Machine Testing?

State Machine Testing extends property-based testing to provide a toolkit for building randomised tests of stateful systems. Like property-based testing, state machine tests use random generators to create test cases and shrink failing tests to minimal counter-examples. The difference with state machine testing is that the random input is now a sequence of commands to perform instead of arguments to pure functions.

In this course, we'll be using hedgehog's state machine testing. The QuickCheck ecosystem has its own quickcheck-state-machine package which we won't cover.

How do we know that our stateful system is behaving itself? We build a model of the system being tested, and use it in a few ways:

  • Not all actions make sense at all times (e.g., what should happen if you try to log in when you're already logged-in?). When hedgehog generates a command sequence, we update the model being tested and use it to limit the actions we generate.

  • When we run tests, we perform commands both on the model and the system being tested, and check that their results agree.

Repository Structure

The system we're testing is a vending machine for hot drinks, defined in src/CoffeeMachine.hs. You can select which drink you'd like, insert or remove a mug, add milk or sugar, insert coins and dispense a beverage. We'll be testing these features at different levels of the course.

The course itself is broken apart into several levels. Because this is a course about testing, each level is a separate test-suite in the .cabal file, and its own directory.

Solutions are on the solutions branch, one commit per level.

Running tests with ghcid

ghcid is a helpful tool that helps to automate the 'edit-save-build' workflow. ghcid can also execute code or perform other actions after a successful build. In this case we're going to setup ghcid to run our tests whenever our code is in a buildable state.

  1. Create a dev.ghci script in the root of this project to prepare our repl and load the required modules:
:set -isrc:levelNN
:load levelNN/Main.hs

The first line indicates which folders ghci will include when looking for any of our code. We can provide multiple directories by providing a colon (:) separated list.

The second line loads the module that contains the function we want to execute when the code is buildable. In this case it is main :: IO () function that runs our tests.

  1. Tell ghcid to use our dev.ghci and also what command to run when everything is 'All good'. Additionally we will instruct ghcid to ignore warnings:
$ ghcid -c 'ghci -ghci-script="dev.ghci"' --test=:main -W

We use ghci instead of cabal new-repl so we can provide the dev.ghci to setup our repl environment. The --test=:main is the repl command that will be executed. Finally -W tells ghcid to ignore any warnings from compilation.

Running with stack

You will need to run a few additional commands when using stack:

# Initialise
$ stack init

# Replace `level01` with the level you are working on
$ stack test :level01

# REPL, if you want it
$ stack ghci :level01

Course Structure

  1. Setting Up
  1. First tests
  • Terminology and Command structure
  • Some simple commands
  • Discussion of test feedback and interpreting errors
  1. Require & Pre-conditions
  2. More Commands
  3. Positive & Negative Testing
  4. Lensy Models

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