Qt Autotest Environment

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Qt Autotest Environment

Introduction

Many Qt autotests require some environment setup to work correctly. This page is an attempt to document precisely what this environment is.

Note that this is “best-effort” documentation. It should not be interpreted as coding standards for autotests, in fact quite the opposite – many of the requirements here are due to a lack of coding standards. Some of these environmental requirements can be considered problems with the autotests which should be fixed.

The information may become outdated as autotests change. The current version of this page was written for Qt 4.5 and 4.6.

Qt build

Qt autotests require that Qt be built for testing itself. This will make some additional symbols be exported and some additional code be built to support it. To enable such a build, when you configure Qt, remember to pass the option

-developer-build

:

The main changes to the Qt build are:

  • QT_INTERNAL_BUILD
    
    is set, so code can #ifdef to determine whether to enable the additional code
  • Q_AUTOTEST_EXPORT
    
    is defined to exporting the symbols

Note also that Qt tests have only been tested with a non-installing Qt (the

-prefix $PWD

option above). The test project files override the

make install

target, so they are not installable. And Qt doesn’t work at all if it’s not at its installation path.

Shadow builds

Don’t use shadow builds.

Some tests assume that their source and build directory are the same directory in order to find testdata.

Reference: qsslkey uses QCoreApplication::applicationDirPath() to look for testdata which lives in the source tree [qt.gitorious.org]

Working directory

When the test is invoked, the working directory must be the directory containing the test’s source (and binary, due to “no shadow builds” rule).

For tests with multiple subdirectories, use the top level directory for that test (e.g. for the qprocess test, run from

tests/auto/qprocess

, even though the .pro file for the test is at

tests/auto/qprocess/test

).

Some tests read testdata from files found relative to the current working directory.

Reference: qscriptv8testsuite finds testdata relative to QDir [qt.gitorious.org]

Environment variables

QTDIR: path to Qt build directory. bic reads headers from $QTDIR/include [qt.gitorious.org]

QTSRCDIR: path to Qt source directory (same as QTDIR due to no shadow builds rule). Strictly speaking, does not seem required, as all tests which use this fall back on QTDIR, which is correct anyway due to “no shadow builds” rule. xmlpatternsxqts adds $QTSRCDIR/include to INCLUDEPATH [qt.gitorious.org]

PATH: must include bin directory for the tested Qt, in front of any bin directory from other Qt versions. rcc assumes <code>rcc’ is in PATH [qt.gitorious.org]

Network tests

In /etc/hosts (Unix) or windir\system32\drivers\etc\hosts (Windows), set up some hostnames to point to a server running particular test services.

The hostnames to be set up are:

qt-test-server

and

qt-test-server.qt-test-net

network-settings.h [qt.gitorious.org]

qt-test-server.troll.no

q3socket [qt.gitorious.org] The network test server can be set up by following the

qtqa/sysadmin.git

repository on gitorious; see instructions here [gitorious.org]

DBus tests

The DBus tests require a dbus session bus to be running.

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