Open CASCADE Technology  6.7.1

Automated Testing System

Introduction

This document provides OCCT developers and contributors with an overview and practical guidelines for work with OCCT automatic testing system.

Reading the Introduction is sufficient for OCCT developers to use the test system to control non-regression of the modifications they implement in OCCT. Other sections provide a more in-depth description of the test system, required for modifying the tests and adding new test cases.

Basic Information

OCCT automatic testing system is organized around DRAW Test Harness DRAW Test Harness, a console application based on Tcl (a scripting language) interpreter extended by OCCT-related commands.

Standard OCCT tests are included with OCCT sources and are located in subdirectory tests of the OCCT root folder. Other test folders can be included in the test system, e.g. for testing applications based on OCCT.

The tests are organized in three levels:

  • Group: a group of related test grids, usually testing a particular OCCT functionality (e.g. blend);
  • Grid: a set of test cases within a group, usually aimed at testing some particular aspect or mode of execution of the relevant functionality (e.g. buildevol);
  • Test case: a script implementing an individual test (e.g. K4).

See Test Groups for the current list of available test groups and grids.

Some tests involve data files (typically CAD models) which are located separately and are not included with OCCT code. The archive with publicly available test data files should be downloaded and installed independently on OCCT sources (from http://dev.opencascade.org).

Intended Use of Automatic Tests

Each modification made in OCCT code must be checked for non-regression by running the whole set of tests. The developer who does the modification is responsible for running and ensuring non-regression for the tests available to him.

Note that many tests are based on data files that are confidential and thus available only at OPEN CASCADE. Thus official certification testing of the changes before integration to master branch of official OCCT Git repository (and finally to the official release) is performed by OPEN CASCADE in any case.

Each new non-trivial modification (improvement, bug fix, new feature) in OCCT should be accompanied by a relevant test case suitable for verifying that modification. This test case is to be added by the developer who provides the modification.

If a modification affects the result of an existing test case, either the modification should be corrected (if it causes regression) or the affected test cases should be updated to account for the modification.

The modifications made in the OCCT code and related test scripts should be included in the same integration to the master branch.

Quick Start

Setup

Before running tests, make sure to define environment variable CSF_TestDataPath pointing to the directory containing test data files. (Publicly available data files can be downloaded from http://dev.opencascade.org separately from OCCT code.)

For this it is recommended to add a file DrawAppliInit in the directory which is current at the moment of starting DRAWEXE (normally it is OCCT root directory, $CASROOT ). This file is evaluated automatically at the DRAW start.

Example (Windows)

1 set env(CSF_TestDataPath) $env(CSF_TestDataPath)\;d:/occt/test-data
2 return ;# this is to avoid an echo of the last command above in cout

Note that variable CSF_TestDataPath is set to default value at DRAW start, pointing at the folder $CASROOT/data. In this example, subdirectory d:/occt/test-data is added to this path. Similar code could be used on Linux and Mac OS X except that on non-Windows platforms colon ‘:’ should be used as path separator instead of semicolon ‘;’.

All tests are run from DRAW command prompt (run draw.tcl or draw.sh to start it).

Running Tests

To run all tests, type command testgrid

Example:

Draw[]> testgrid

For running only a group or a grid of tests, give additional arguments indicating followed by path to the group and (if needed) the grid name.

Example:

Draw[]> testgrid blend simple

As the tests progress, the result of each test case is reported. At the end of the log a summary of test cases is output, including the list of detected regressions and improvements, if any.

Example:

1 Tests summary
2 
3 CASE 3rdparty export A1: OK
4 ...
5 CASE pipe standard B1: BAD (known problem)
6 CASE pipe standard C1: OK
7 No regressions
8 Total cases: 208 BAD, 31 SKIPPED, 3 IMPROVEMENT, 1791 OK
9 Elapsed time: 1 Hours 14 Minutes 33.7384512019 Seconds
10 Detailed logs are saved in D:/occt/results_2012-06-04T0919

The tests are considered as non-regressive if only OK, BAD (i.e. known problem), and SKIPPED (i.e. not executed, typically because of lack of a data file) statuses are reported. See Interpretation of test results for details.

The results and detailed logs of the tests are saved by default to a subdirectory of the current folder, whose name is generated automatically using the current date and time, prefixed by word "results_" and Git branch name (if Git is available and current sources are managed by Git). If necessary, a non-default output directory can be specified using option –outdir followed by a path to the directory. This directory should be new or empty; use option –overwrite to allow writing results in existing non-empty directory.

Example:

Draw[]> testgrid –outdir d:/occt/last_results -overwrite

In the output directory, a cumulative HTML report summary.html provides links to reports on each test case. An additional report in JUnit-style XML format can be output for use in Jenkins or other continuous integration system.

Type help testgrid in DRAW prompt to get help on options supported by testgrid command.

For example:

Draw[3]> help testgrid
testgrid: Run all tests, or specified group, or one grid
Use: testgrid [group [grid]] [options...]
Allowed options are:
-parallel N: run N parallel processes (default is number of CPUs, 0 to disable)
-refresh N: save summary logs every N seconds (default 60, minimal 1, 0 to disable)
-outdir dirname: set log directory (should be empty or non-existing)
-overwrite: force writing logs in existing non-empty directory
-xml filename: write XML report for Jenkins (in JUnit-like format)

Running a Single Test

To run a single test, type command test’ followed by names of group, grid, and test case.

Example:

1 Draw[1]> test blend simple A1
2 CASE blend simple A1: OK
3 Draw[2]>

Note that normally an intermediate output of the script is not shown. The detailed log of the test can be obtained after the test execution by running command "dlog get".

To see intermediate commands and their output during the test execution, add one more argument "echo" at the end of the command line. Note that with this option the log is not collected and summary is not produced.

Creating a New Test

The detailed rules of creation of new tests are given in section 3. The following short description covers the most typical situations:

Use prefix “bug” followed by Mantis issue ID and, if necessary, additional suffixes, for naming the test script and DRAW commands specific for this test case.

  1. If the test requires C++ code, add it as new DRAW command(s) in one of files in QABugs package. Note that this package defines macros QVERIFY and QCOMPARE, thus code created for QTest or GoogleTest frameworks can be used with minimal modifications.
  2. Add script(s) for the test case in grid (subfolder) corresponding to the relevant OCCT module of the group bugs ($CASROOT/tests/bugs). See the correspondence map.
  3. In the test script:
    • Load all necessary DRAW modules by command pload.
    • Use command locate_data_file to get a path to data files used by test script. (Make sure to have this command not inside catch statement if it is used.)
    • Use DRAW commands to reproduce the situation being tested.
    • If test case is added to describe existing problem and the fix is not available, add TODO message for each error to mark it as known problem. The TODO statements must be specific so as to match the actually generated messages but not all similar errors.
    • Make sure that in case of failure the test produces message containing word “Error” or other recognized by test system as error (see files parse.rules).
  4. If the test case uses data file(s) not yet present in the test database, these can be put to subfolder data of the test grid, and integrated to Git along with the test case.
  5. Check that the test case runs as expected (test for fix: OK with the fix, FAILED without the fix; test for existing problem: BAD), and integrate to Git branch created for the issue.

Example:

  • Added files:
    git status –short
    A tests/bugs/heal/data/OCC210a.brep
    A tests/bugs/heal/data/OCC210a.brep
    A tests/bugs/heal/bug210_1
    A tests/bugs/heal/bug210_2
  • Test script
puts "OCC210 (case 1): Improve FixShape for touching wires"
restore [locate_data_file OCC210a.brep] a
fixshape result a 0.01 0.01
checkshape result

Organization of Test Scripts

General Layout

Standard OCCT tests are located in subdirectory tests of the OCCT root folder ($CASROOT).

Additional test folders can be added to the test system by defining environment variable CSF_TestScriptsPath. This should be list of paths separated by semicolons (*;*) on Windows or colons (*:*) on Linux or Mac. Upon DRAW launch, path to tests sub-folder of OCCT is added at the end of this variable automatically.

Each test folder is expected to contain:

  • Optional file parse.rules defining patterns for interpretation of test results, common for all groups in this folder
  • One or several test group directories.

Each group directory contains:

  • File grids.list that identifies this test group and defines list of test grids in it.
  • Test grids (sub-directories), each containing set of scripts for test cases, and optional files cases.list, parse.rules, begin and end.
  • Optional sub-directory data

By convention, names of test groups, grids, and cases should contain no spaces and be lower-case. The names begin, end, data, parse.rules, grids.list and cases.list are reserved.

General layout of test scripts is shown in Figure 1.

tests_image001.png
Layout of tests folder

Test Groups

Group Names

The names of directories of test groups containing systematic test grids correspond to the functionality tested by each group.

Example:

caf
mesh
offset

Test group bugs is used to collect the tests coming from bug reports. Group demo collects tests of the test system, DRAW, samples, etc.

File "grids.list"

This test group contains file grids.list, which defines an ordered list of grids in this group in the following format:

001 gridname1
002 gridname2
...
NNN gridnameN

Example:

001 basic
002 advanced

File "begin"

This file is a Tcl script. It is executed before every test in the current group. Usually it loads necessary Draw commands, sets common parameters and defines additional Tcl functions used in test scripts.

Example:

1 pload TOPTEST ;# load topological command
2 set cpulimit 300 ;# set maximum time allowed for script execution

File "end"

This file is a TCL script. It is executed after every test in the current group. Usually it checks the results of script work, makes a snap-shot of the viewer and writes TEST COMPLETED to the output.

Note: TEST COMPLETED string should be present in the output to indicate that the test is finished without crash.

See section 3 for more information.

Example:

if { [isdraw result] } {
checkshape result
} else {
puts "Error: The result shape can not be built"
}
puts "TEST COMPLETED"

File "parse.rules"

The test group may contain parse.rules file. This file defines patterns used for analysis of the test execution log and deciding the status of the test run.

Each line in the file should specify a status (single word), followed by a regular expression delimited by slashes (*/*) that will be matched against lines in the test output log to check if it corresponds to this status.

The regular expressions support a subset of the Perl re syntax. See also Perl regular expressions.

The rest of the line can contain a comment message, which will be added to the test report when this status is detected.

Example:

FAILED /\\b[Ee]xception\\b/ exception
FAILED /\\bError\\b/ error
SKIPPED /Cannot open file for reading/ data file is missing
SKIPPED /Could not read file .*, abandon/ data file is missing

Lines starting with a *#* character and blank lines are ignored to allow comments and spacing.

See Interpretation of test results chapter for details.

If a line matches several rules, the first one applies. Rules defined in the grid are checked first, then rules in the group, then rules in the test root directory. This allows defining some rules on the grid level with status IGNORE to ignore messages that would otherwise be treated as errors due to the group level rules.

Example:

1 FAILED /\\bFaulty\\b/ bad shape
2 IGNORE /^Error [23]d = [\d.-]+/ debug output of blend command
3 IGNORE /^Tcl Exception: tolerance ang : [\d.-]+/ blend failure

Directory "data"

The test group may contain subdirectory data, where test scripts shared by different test grids can be put. See also Directory data.

Test Grids

Grid Names

The folder of a test group can have several sub-directories (Grid 1… Grid N) defining test grids. Each directory contains a set of related test cases. The name of a directory should correspond to its contents.

Example:

caf
basic
bugs
presentation

Here caf is the name of the test group and basic, bugs, presentation, etc. are the names of grids.

File "begin"

This file is a TCL script executed before every test in the current grid.

Usually it sets variables specific for the current grid.

Example:

1 set command bopfuse ;# command tested in this grid

File "end"

This file is a TCL script executed after every test in current grid.

Usually it executes a specific sequence of commands common for all tests in the grid.

Example:

1 vdump $logdir/${casename}.gif ;# makes a snap-shot of AIS viewer

File "cases.list"

The grid directory can contain an optional file cases.list defining an alternative location of the test cases. This file should contain a single line defining the relative path to the collection of test cases.

Example:

../data/simple

This option is used for creation of several grids of tests with the same data files and operations but performed with differing parameters. The common scripts are usually located place in the common subdirectory of the test group, data/simple for example.

If file cases.list exists, the grid directory should not contain any test cases. The specific parameters and pre- and post-processing commands for test execution in this grid should be defined in the files begin and end.

Directory "data"

The test grid may contain subdirectory data, containing data files used in tests (BREP, IGES, STEP, etc.) of this grid.

Test Cases

The test case is a TCL script, which performs some operations using DRAW commands and produces meaningful messages that can be used to check the validity of the result.

Example:

1 pcylinder c1 10 20 ;# create first cylinder
2 pcylinder c2 5 20 ;# create second cylinder
3 ttranslate c2 5 0 10 ;# translate second cylinder to x,y,z
4 bsection result c1 c2 ;# create a section of two cylinders
5 checksection result ;# will output error message if result is bad

The test case can have any name (except for the reserved names begin, end, data, cases.list and parse.rules). For systematic grids it is usually a capital English letter followed by a number.

Example:

A1
A2
B1
B2

Such naming facilitates compact representation of tests execution results in tabular format within HTML reports.

Creation And Modification Of Tests

This section describes how to add new tests and update existing ones.

Choosing Group, Grid, and Test Case Name

The new tests are usually added in the frame of processing issues in OCCT Mantis tracker. Such tests in general should be added to group bugs, in the grid corresponding to the affected OCCT functionality. See Mapping of OCCT functionality to grid names in group bugs.

New grids can be added as necessary to contain tests for the functionality not yet covered by existing test grids. The test case name in the bugs group should be prefixed by the ID of the corresponding issue in Mantis (without leading zeroes) with prefix bug. It is recommended to add a suffix providing a hint on the tested situation. If more than one test is added for a bug, they should be distinguished by suffixes; either meaningful or just ordinal numbers.

Example:

1 bug12345_coaxial
2 bug12345_orthogonal_1
3 bug12345_orthogonal_2

If the new test corresponds to a functionality already covered by the existing systematic test grid (e.g. group mesh for BRepMesh issues), this test can be added (or moved later by OCC team) to that grid.

Adding Data Files Required for a Test

It is advisable to make self-contained test scripts whenever possible, so as they could be used in environments where data files are not available. For that simple geometric objects and shapes can be created using DRAW commands in the test script itself.

If the test requires a data file, it should be put to subdirectory data of the test grid. It is recommended to prefix the data file with the corresponding issue id prefixed by bug, e.g. bug12345_face1.brep, to avoid possible conflicts with names of existing data files.

Note that when the test is integrated to the master branch, OCC team will move the data file to data files repository, so as to keep OCCT sources repository clean from data files.

When preparing a test script, try to minimize the size of involved data model. For instance, if the problem detected on a big shape can be reproduced on a single face extracted from that shape, use only that face in the test.

Adding new DRAW commands

If the test cannot be implemented using available DRAW commands, consider the following possibilities:

  • If the existing DRAW command can be extended to enable possibility required for a test in a natural way (e.g. by adding an option to activate a specific mode of the algorithm), this way is recommended. This change should be appropriately documented in a relevant Mantis issue.
  • If the new command is needed to access OCCT functionality not exposed to DRAW previously, and this command can be potentially reused (for other tests), it should be added to the package where similar commands are implemented (use getsource DRAW command to get the package name). The name and arguments of the new command should be chosen to keep similarity with the existing commands. This change should be documented in a relevant Mantis issue.
  • Otherwise the new command implementing the actions needed for this particular test should be added in QABugs package. The command name should be formed by the Mantis issue ID prefixed by bug, e.g. bug12345.

Note that a DRAW command is expected to return 0 in case of a normal completion, and 1 (Tcl exception) if it is incorrectly used (e.g. a wrong number of input arguments). Thus if the new command needs to report a test error, this should be done by outputting an appropriate error message rather than by returning a non-zero value.

Script Implementation

The test should run commands necessary to perform the tested operations, in general assuming a clean DRAW session. The required DRAW modules should be loaded by pload command, if it is not done by begin script. The messages produced by commands in a standard output should include identifiable messages on the discovered problems if any.

Usually the script represents a set of commands that a person would run interactively to perform the operation and see its results, with additional comments to explain what happens.

Example:

# Simple test of fusing box and sphere
box b 10 10 10
sphere s 5
bfuse result b s
checkshape result

Make sure that file parse.rules in the grid or group directory contains a regular expression to catch possible messages indicating the failure of the test.

For instance, for catching errors reported by checkshape command relevant grids define a rule to recognize its report by the word Faulty:

FAILED /\bFaulty\b/ bad shape

For the messages generated in the script it is recommended to use the word 'Error' in the error message.

Example:

set expected_length 11
if { [expr $actual_length - $expected_length] > 0.001 } {
puts "Error: The length of the edge should be $expected_length"
}

At the end, the test script should output TEST COMPLETED string to mark a successful completion of the script. This is often done by the end script in the grid.

When the test script requires a data file, use Tcl procedure locate_data_file to get a path to it, instead of putting the path explicitly. This will allow easy move of the data file from OCCT sources repository to the data files repository without the need to update the test script.

Example:

stepread [locate_data_file CAROSKI_COUPELLE.step] a *

When the test needs to produce some snapshots or other artefacts, use Tcl variable logdir as the location where such files should be put. Command testgrid sets this variable to the subdirectory of the results folder corresponding to the grid. Command test sets it to $CASROOT/tmp unless it is already defined. Use Tcl variable casename to prefix all files produced by the test. This variable is set to the name of the test case.

Example:

xwd $logdir/${casename}.png
vdisplay result; vfit
vdump $logdir/${casename}-axo.png
vfront; vfit
vdump $logdir/${casename}-front.png

would produce:

A1.png
A1-axo.png
A1-front.png

Note that OCCT must be built with FreeImage support to be able to produce usable images.

In order to ensure that the test works as expected in different environments, observe the following additional rules:

  • Avoid using external commands such as grep, rm, etc., as these commands can be absent on another system (e.g. on Windows); use facilities provided by Tcl instead.
  • Do not put call to locate_data_file in catch statement – this can prevent correct interpretation of the missing data file by the test system.

Interpretation of test results

The result of the test is evaluated by checking its output against patterns defined in the files parse.rules of the grid and group.

The OCCT test system recognizes five statuses of the test execution:

  • SKIPPED: reported if a line matching SKIPPED pattern is found (prior to any FAILED pattern). This indicates that the test cannot be run in the current environment; the most typical case is the absence of the required data file.
  • FAILED: reported if a line matching pattern with status FAILED is found (unless it is masked by the preceding IGNORE pattern or a TODO statement), or if message TEST COMPLETED is not found at the end. This indicates that the test has produced a bad or unexpected result, and usually means a regression.
  • BAD: reported if the test script output contains one or several TODO statements and the corresponding number of matching lines in the log. This indicates a known problem . The lines matching TODO statements are not checked against other patterns and thus will not cause a FAILED status.
  • IMPROVEMENT: reported if the test script output contains a TODO statement for which no corresponding line is found. This is a possible indication of improvement (a known problem has disappeared).
  • OK: reported if none of the above statuses have been assigned. This means that the test has passed without problems.

Other statuses can be specified in parse.rules files, these will be classified as FAILED.

For integration of the change to OCCT repository, all tests should return either OK or BAD status. The new test created for an unsolved problem should return BAD. The new test created for a fixed problem should return FAILED without the fix, and OK with the fix.

Marking BAD cases

If the test produces an invalid result at a certain moment then corresponding bug should be created in the OCCT issue tracker located at http://tracker.dev.opencascade.org, and the problem should be marked as TODO in the test script.

The following statement should be added to such a test script:

puts "TODO BugNumber ListOfPlatforms: RegularExpression"

Here:

  • BugNumber is the bug ID in the tracker. For example: #12345.
  • ListOfPlatforms is a list of platforms at which the bug is reproduced (e.g. Mandriva2008, Windows or All). Note that the platform name is custom for the OCCT test system; it corresponds to the value of environment variable os_type defined in DRAW.

Example:

Draw[2]> puts $env(os_type)
windows
  • RegularExpression is a regular expression which should be matched against the line indicating the problem in the script output.

Example:

puts "TODO #22622 Mandriva2008: Abort .* an exception was raised"

The parser checks the test output and if an output line matches the RegularExpression then it will be assigned a BAD status instead of FAILED.

A separate TODO line must be added for each output line matching an error expression to mark the test as BAD. If not all TODO messages are found in the test log, the test will be considered as possible improvement.

To mark the test as BAD for an incomplete case (when the final TEST COMPLETE message is missing) the expression TEST INCOMPLETE should be used instead of the regular expression.

Example:

puts "TODO OCC22817 All: exception.+There are no suitable edges"
puts "TODO OCC22817 All: \\*\\* Exception \\*\\*"
puts "TODO OCC22817 All: TEST INCOMPLETE"

Advanced Use

Running Tests on Older Versions of OCCT

Sometimes it might be necessary to run tests on previous versions of OCCT (<= 6.5.4) that do not include this test system. This can be done by adding DRAW configuration file DrawAppliInit in the directory which is current by the moment of DRAW start-up, to load test commands and to define necessary environment.

Note: in OCCT 6.5.3, file DrawAppliInit already exists in $CASROOT/src/DrawResources, new commands should be added to this file instead of a new one in the current directory.

For example, let us assume that d:/occt contains an up-to-date version of OCCT sources with tests, and the test data archive is unpacked to d:/test-data):

set env(CASROOT) d:/occt
set env(CSF_TestScriptsPath) $env(CASROOT)/tests
source $env(CASROOT)/src/DrawResources/TestCommands.tcl
set env(CSF_TestDataPath) $env(CASROOT)/data;d:/test-data
return

Note that on older versions of OCCT the tests are run in compatibility mode and not all output of the test command can be captured; this can lead to absence of some error messages (can be reported as either a failure or an improvement).

Adding custom tests

You can extend the test system by adding your own tests. For that it is necessary to add paths to the directory where these tests are located, and one or more additional data directories, to the environment variables CSF_TestScriptsPath and CSF_TestDataPath. The recommended way for doing this is using DRAW configuration file DrawAppliInit located in the directory which is current by the moment of DRAW start-up.

Use Tcl command _path_separator to insert a platform-dependent separator to the path list.

For example:

set env(CSF_TestScriptsPath) \
$env(TestScriptsPath)[_path_separator]d:/MyOCCTProject/tests
set env(CSF_TestDataPath) \
d:/occt/test-data[_path_separator]d:/MyOCCTProject/data
return ;# this is to avoid an echo of the last command above in cout

Parallel execution of tests

For better efficiency, on computers with multiple CPUs the tests can be run in parallel mode. This is default behavior for command testgrid : the tests are executed in parallel processes (their number is equal to the number of CPUs available on the system). In order to change this behavior, use option parallel followed by the number of processes to be used (1 or 0 to run sequentially).

Note that the parallel execution is only possible if Tcl extension package Thread is installed. It is included in ActiveTcl package, but can be absent in some Linux distributions. If this package is not available, testgrid command will output a warning message.

Checking non-regression of performance, memory, and visualization

Some test results are very dependent on the characteristics of the workstation, where they are performed, and thus cannot be checked by comparison with some predefined values. These results can be checked for non-regression (after a change in OCCT code) by comparing them with the results produced by the version without this change. The most typical case is comparing the result obtained in a branch created for integration of a fix (CR***) with the results obtained on the master branch before that change is made.

OCCT test system provides a dedicated command testdiff for comparing CPU time of execution, memory usage, and images produced by the tests.

testdiff dir1 dir2 [groupname [gridname]] [options...]

Here dir1 and dir2 are directories containing logs of two test runs.

Possible options are:

  • -save <filename> - saves the resulting log in a specified file ($dir1/diff-$dir2.log by default). HTML log is saved with the same name and extension .html;
  • -status {same|ok|all} - allows filtering compared cases by their status:
    • same - only cases with same status are compared (default);
    • ok - only cases with OK status in both logs are compared;
    • all - results are compared regardless of status;
  • -verbose <level> - defines the scope of output data:
    • 1 - outputs only differences;
    • 2 - additionally outputs the list of logs and directories present in one of directories only;
    • 3 - (by default) additionally outputs progress messages;

Example:

Draw[]> testdiff results-CR12345-2012-10-10T08:00 results-master-2012-10-09T21:20

APPENDIX

Test groups

3rdparty

This group allows testing the interaction of OCCT and 3rdparty products.

DRAW module: VISUALIZATION.

Grid Commands Functionality
export vexport export of images to different formats
fonts vtrihedron, vcolorscale, vdrawtext display of fonts

blend

This group allows testing blends (fillets) and related operations.

DRAW module: MODELING.

Grid Commands Functionality
simple blend fillets on simple shapes
complex blend fillets on complex shapes, non-trivial geometry
tolblend_simple tolblend, blend
buildevol buildevol
tolblend_buildvol tolblend, buildevol use of additional command tolblend
bfuseblend bfuseblend
encoderegularity encoderegularity

boolean

This group allows testing Boolean operations.

DRAW module: MODELING (packages BOPTest and BRepTest).

Grids names are based on name of the command used, with suffixes:

  • _2d – for tests operating with 2d objects (wires, wires, 3d objects, etc.);
  • _simple – for tests operating on simple shapes (boxes, cylinders, toruses, etc.);
  • _complex – for tests dealing with complex shapes.
Grid Commands Functionality
bcommon_2d bcommon Common operation (old algorithm), 2d
bcommon_complex bcommon Common operation (old algorithm), complex shapes
bcommon_simple bcommon Common operation (old algorithm), simple shapes
bcut_2d bcut Cut operation (old algorithm), 2d
bcut_complex bcut Cut operation (old algorithm), complex shapes
bcut_simple bcut Cut operation (old algorithm), simple shapes
bcutblend bcutblend
bfuse_2d bfuse Fuse operation (old algorithm), 2d
bfuse_complex bfuse Fuse operation (old algorithm), complex shapes
bfuse_simple bfuse Fuse operation (old algorithm), simple shapes
bopcommon_2d bopcommon Common operation, 2d
bopcommon_complex bopcommon Common operation, complex shapes
bopcommon_simple bopcommon Common operation, simple shapes
bopcut_2d bopcut Cut operation, 2d
bopcut_complex bopcut Cut operation, complex shapes
bopcut_simple bopcut Cut operation, simple shapes
bopfuse_2d bopfuse Fuse operation, 2d
bopfuse_complex bopfuse Fuse operation, complex shapes
bopfuse_simple bopfuse Fuse operation, simple shapes
bopsection bopsection Section
boptuc_2d boptuc
boptuc_complex boptuc
boptuc_simple boptuc
bsection bsection Section (old algorithm)

bugs

This group allows testing cases coming from Mantis issues.

The grids are organized following OCCT module and category set for the issue in the Mantis tracker. See Mapping of OCCT functionality to grid names in group bugs for details.

caf

This group allows testing OCAF functionality.

DRAW module: OCAFKERNEL.

Grid Commands Functionality
basic Basic attributes
bugs Saving and restoring of document
driver OCAF drivers
named_shape TNaming_NamedShape attribute
presentation AISPresentation attributes
tree Tree construction attributes
xlink XLink attributes

chamfer

This group allows testing chamfer operations.

DRAW module: MODELING.

The test grid name is constructed depending on the type of the tested chamfers. Additional suffix _complex is used for test cases involving complex geometry (e.g. intersections of edges forming a chamfer); suffix _sequence is used for grids where chamfers are computed sequentially.

Grid Commands Functionality
equal_dist Equal distances from edge
equal_dist_complex Equal distances from edge, complex shapes
equal_dist_sequence Equal distances from edge, sequential operations
dist_dist Two distances from edge
dist_dist_complex Two distances from edge, complex shapes
dist_dist_sequence Two distances from edge, sequential operations
dist_angle Distance from edge and given angle
dist_angle_complex Distance from edge and given angle
dist_angle_sequence Distance from edge and given angle

demo

This group allows demonstrating how testing cases are created, and testing DRAW commands and the test system as a whole.

Grid Commands Functionality
draw getsource, restore Basic DRAW commands
testsystem Testing system
samples OCCT samples

draft

This group allows testing draft operations.

DRAW module: MODELING.

Grid Commands Functionality
Angle depouille Drafts with angle (inclined walls)

feat

This group allows testing creation of features on a shape.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest).

Grid Commands Functionality
featdprism
featlf
featprism
featrevol
featrf

heal

This group allows testing the functionality provided by ShapeHealing toolkit.

DRAW module: XSDRAW

Grid Commands Functionality
fix_shape fixshape Shape healing
fix_gaps fixwgaps Fixing gaps between edges on a wire
same_parameter sameparameter Fixing non-sameparameter edges
fix_face_size DT_ApplySeq Removal of small faces
elementary_to_revolution DT_ApplySeq Conversion of elementary surfaces to revolution
direct_faces directfaces Correction of axis of elementary surfaces
drop_small_edges fixsmall Removal of small edges
split_angle DT_SplitAngle Splitting periodic surfaces by angle
split_angle_advanced DT_SplitAngle Splitting periodic surfaces by angle
split_angle_standard DT_SplitAngle Splitting periodic surfaces by angle
split_closed_faces DT_ClosedSplit Splitting of closed faces
surface_to_bspline DT_ToBspl Conversion of surfaces to b-splines
surface_to_bezier DT_ShapeConvert Conversion of surfaces to bezier
split_continuity DT_ShapeDivide Split surfaces by continuity criterion
split_continuity_advanced DT_ShapeDivide Split surfaces by continuity criterion
split_continuity_standard DT_ShapeDivide Split surfaces by continuity criterion
surface_to_revolution_advanced DT_ShapeConvertRev Convert elementary surfaces to revolutions, complex cases
surface_to_revolution_standard DT_ShapeConvertRev Convert elementary surfaces to revolutions, simple cases

mesh

This group allows testing shape tessellation (BRepMesh) and shading.

DRAW modules: MODELING (package MeshTest), VISUALIZATION (package ViewerTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
advanced_shading vdisplay Shading, complex shapes
standard_shading vdisplay Shading, simple shapes
advanced_mesh mesh Meshing of complex shapes
standard_mesh mesh Meshing of simple shapes
advanced_incmesh incmesh Meshing of complex shapes
standard_incmesh incmesh Meshing of simple shapes
advanced_incmesh_parallel incmesh Meshing of complex shapes, parallel mode
standard_incmesh_parallel incmesh Meshing of simple shapes, parallel mode

mkface

This group allows testing creation of simple surfaces.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
after_trim mkface
after_offset mkface
after_extsurf_and_offset mkface
after_extsurf_and_trim mkface
after_revsurf_and_offset mkface
mkplane mkplane

nproject

This group allows testing normal projection of edges and wires onto a face.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
Base nproject

offset

This group allows testing offset functionality for curves and surfaces.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
compshape offsetcompshape Offset of shapes with removal of some faces
faces_type_a offsetparameter, offsetload, offsetperform Offset on a subset of faces with a fillet
faces_type_i offsetparameter, offsetload, offsetperform Offset on a subset of faces with a sharp edge
shape_type_a offsetparameter, offsetload, offsetperform Offset on a whole shape with a fillet
shape_type_i offsetparameter, offsetload, offsetperform Offset on a whole shape with a fillet
shape offsetshape
wire_closed_outside_0_005, wire_closed_outside_0_025, wire_closed_outside_0_075, wire_closed_inside_0_005, wire_closed_inside_0_025, wire_closed_inside_0_075, wire_unclosed_outside_0_005, wire_unclosed_outside_0_025, wire_unclosed_outside_0_075 mkoffset 2d offset of closed and unclosed planar wires with different offset step and directions of offset ( inside / outside )

pipe

This group allows testing construction of pipes (sweeping of a contour along profile).

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
Standard pipe

prism

This group allows testing construction of prisms.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
seminf prism

sewing

This group allows testing sewing of faces by connecting edges.

DRAW module: MODELING (package BRepTest)

Grid Commands Functionality
tol_0_01 sewing Sewing faces with tolerance 0.01
tol_1 sewing Sewing faces with tolerance 1
tol_100 sewing Sewing faces with tolerance 100

thrusection

This group allows testing construction of shell or a solid passing through a set of sections in a given sequence (loft).

Grid Commands Functionality
solids thrusection Lofting with resulting solid
not_solids thrusection Lofting with resulting shell or face

xcaf

This group allows testing extended data exchange packages.

Grid Commands Functionality
dxc, dxc_add_ACL, dxc_add_CL, igs_to_dxc, igs_add_ACL, brep_to_igs_add_CL, stp_to_dxc, stp_add_ACL, brep_to_stp_add_CL, brep_to_dxc, add_ACL_brep, brep_add_CL Subgroups are divided by format of source file, by format of result file and by type of document modification. For example, brep_to_igs means that the source shape in brep format was added to the document, which was saved into igs format after that. The postfix add_CL means that colors and layers were initialized in the document before saving and the postfix add_ACL corresponds to the creation of assembly and initialization of colors and layers in a document before saving.

Recommended approaches to checking test results

OCCT Module / Mantis category Toolkits Test grid in group bugs
Application Framework PTKernel, TKPShape, TKCDF, TKLCAF, TKCAF, TKBinL, TKXmlL, TKShapeSchema, TKPLCAF, TKBin, TKXml, TKPCAF, FWOSPlugin, TKStdLSchema, TKStdSchema, TKTObj, TKBinTObj, TKXmlTObj caf
Draw TKDraw, TKTopTest, TKViewerTest, TKXSDRAW, TKDCAF, TKXDEDRAW, TKTObjDRAW, TKQADraw, DRAWEXE, Problems of testing system draw
Shape Healing TKShHealing heal
Mesh TKMesh, TKXMesh mesh
Data Exchange TKIGES iges
Data Exchange TKSTEPBase, TKSTEPAttr, TKSTEP209, TKSTEP step
Data Exchange TKSTL, TKVRML stlvrml
Data Exchange TKXSBase, TKXCAF, TKXCAFSchema, TKXDEIGES, TKXDESTEP, TKXmlXCAF, TKBinXCAF xde
Foundation Classes TKernel, TKMath, TKAdvTools fclasses
Modeling_algorithms TKGeomAlgo, TKTopAlgo, TKPrim, TKBO, TKBool, TKHLR, TKFillet, TKOffset, TKFeat, TKXMesh modalg
Modeling Data TKG2d, TKG3d, TKGeomBase, TKBRep moddata
Visualization TKService, TKV2d, TKV3d, TKOpenGl, TKMeshVS, TKNIS, TKVoxel vis

Recommended approaches to checking test results

Shape validity

Run command checkshape on the result (or intermediate) shape and make sure that parse.rules of the test grid or group reports bad shapes (usually recognized by word "Faulty") as error.

Example

checkshape result

Shape tolerance

The maximal tolerance of sub-shapes of each kind of the resulting shape can be extracted from output of tolerance command as follows:

set tolerance [tolerance result]
regexp { *FACE +: +MAX=([-0-9.+eE]+)} $tolerance dummy max_face
regexp { *EDGE +: +MAX=([-0-9.+eE]+)} $tolerance dummy max_edgee
regexp { *VERTEX +: +MAX=([-0-9.+eE]+)} $tolerance dummy max_vertex

Shape volume, area, or length

Use command vprops, sprops, or lprops to correspondingly measure volume, area, or length of the shape produced by the test. The value can be extracted from the result of the command by regexp.

Example:

# check area of shape result with 1% tolerance
regexp {Mass +: +([-0-9.+eE]+)} [sprops result] dummy area
if { abs($area - $expected) > 0.1 + 0.01 * abs ($area) } {
puts "Error: The area of result shape is $area, while expected $expected"
}

Memory leaks

The test system measures the amount of memory used by each test case, and considerable deviations (as well as overall difference) comparing with reference results will be reported by testdiff command.

The typical approach to checking memory leak on a particular operation is to run this operation in cycle measuring memory consumption at each step and comparing it with some threshold value. Note that file begin in group bugs defines command checktrend that can be used to analyze a sequence of memory measurements to get statistically based evaluation of the leak presence.

Example:

set listmem {}
for {set i 1} {$i < 100} {incr i} {
# run suspect operation
# check memory usage (with tolerance equal to half page size)
lappend listmem [expr [meminfo w] / 1024]
if { [checktrend $listmem 0 256 "Memory leak detected"] } {
puts "No memory leak, $i iterations"
break
}
}

Visualization

Take a snapshot of the viewer, give it the name of the test case, and save in the directory indicated by Tcl variable imagedir. Note that this variable directs to the log directory if command testgrid is active, or to tmp subdirectory of the current folder if the test is run interactively.

vinit
vclear
vdisplay result
vsetdispmode 1
vfit
vzfit
vdump $imagedir/${casename}_shading.png

This image will be included in the HTML log produced by testgrid command and will be checked for non-regression through comparison of images by command testdiff.