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Web Platform Test
Deno uses a custom test runner for Web Platform Tests. It can be found at
./tools/wpt.ts
.
Running tests Jump to heading
If you are on Windows, or your system does not support hashbangs, prefix all
./tools/wpt.ts
commands withdeno run --unstable --allow-write --allow-read --allow-net --allow-env --allow-run
.
Before attempting to run WPT tests for the first time, please run the WPT setup.
You must also run this command every time the ./test_util/wpt
submodule is
updated:
./tools/wpt.ts setup
To run all available web platform tests, run the following command:
./tools/wpt.ts run
# You can also filter which test files to run by specifying filters:
./tools/wpt.ts run -- streams/piping/general hr-time
The test runner will run each web platform test and record its status (failed or
ok). It will then compare this output to the expected output of each test as
specified in the ./tools/wpt/expectation.json
file. This file is a nested JSON
structure that mirrors the ./test_utils/wpt
directory. It describes for each
test file, if it should pass as a whole (all tests pass, true
), if it should
fail as a whole (test runner encounters an exception outside of a test or all
tests fail, false
), or which tests it expects to fail (a string array of test
case names).
Updating enabled tests or expectations Jump to heading
You can update the ./tools/wpt/expectation.json
file manually by changing the
value of each of the test file entries in the JSON structure. The alternative
and preferred option is to have the WPT runner run all, or a filtered subset of
tests, and then automatically update the expectation.json
file to match the
current reality. You can do this with the ./wpt.ts update
command. Example:
./tools/wpt.ts update -- hr-time
After running this command the expectation.json
file will match the current
output of all the tests that were run. This means that running wpt.ts run
right after a wpt.ts update
should always pass.
Subcommands Jump to heading
setup
Jump to heading
Validate that your environment is configured correctly, or help you configure it.
This will check that the python3 (or python.exe
on Windows) is actually
Python 3.
You can specify the following flags to customize behaviour:
--rebuild
Rebuild the manifest instead of downloading. This can take up to 3 minutes.
--auto-config
Automatically configure /etc/hosts if it is not configured (no prompt will be shown).
run
Jump to heading
Run all tests like specified in expectation.json
.
You can specify the following flags to customize behaviour:
--release
Use the ./target/release/deno binary instead of ./target/debug/deno
--quiet
Disable printing of `ok` test cases.
--json=
Output the test results as JSON to the file specified.
You can also specify exactly which tests to run by specifying one of more
filters after a --
:
./tools/wpt.ts run -- hr-time streams/piping/general
update
Jump to heading
Update the expectation.json
to match the current reality.
You can specify the following flags to customize behaviour:
--release
Use the ./target/release/deno binary instead of ./target/debug/deno
--quiet
Disable printing of `ok` test cases.
--json=
Output the test results as JSON to the file specified.
You can also specify exactly which tests to run by specifying one of more
filters after a --
:
./tools/wpt.ts update -- hr-time streams/piping/general
FAQ Jump to heading
Upgrading the wpt submodule: Jump to heading
cd test_util/wpt/
git fetch origin
git checkout origin/epochs/daily
cd ../../
git add ./test_util/wpt
All contributors will need to rerun ./tools/wpt.ts setup
after this.
Since upgrading WPT usually requires updating the expectations to cover all sorts of upstream changes, it's best to do that as a separate PR, rather than as part of a PR that implements a fix or feature.