gitea-tea/vendor/github.com/alecthomas/chroma/lexers/README.md
Norwin d6df0a53b5 Update Dependencies (#390)
Co-authored-by: Norwin Roosen <git@nroo.de>
Co-authored-by: Norwin <git@nroo.de>
Reviewed-on: https://gitea.com/gitea/tea/pulls/390
Reviewed-by: 6543 <6543@obermui.de>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Thornton <art27@cantab.net>
Co-authored-by: Norwin <noerw@noreply.gitea.io>
Co-committed-by: Norwin <noerw@noreply.gitea.io>
2021-08-30 23:18:50 +08:00

1.9 KiB

Lexer tests

The tests in this directory feed a known input testdata/<name>.actual into the parser for <name> and check that its output matches <name>.exported.

It is also possible to perform several tests on a same parser <name>, by placing know inputs *.actual into a directory testdata/<name>/.

Running the tests

Run the tests as normal:

go test ./lexers

Update existing tests

When you add a new test data file (*.actual), you need to regenerate all tests. That's how Chroma creates the *.expected test file based on the corresponding lexer.

To regenerate all tests, type in your terminal:

RECORD=true go test ./lexers

This first sets the RECORD environment variable to true. Then it runs go test on the ./lexers directory of the Chroma project.

(That environment variable tells Chroma it needs to output test data. After running go test ./lexers you can remove or reset that variable.)

Windows users

Windows users will find that the RECORD=true go test ./lexers command fails in both the standard command prompt terminal and in PowerShell.

Instead we have to perform both steps separately:

  • Set the RECORD environment variable to true.
    • In the regular command prompt window, the set command sets an environment variable for the current session: set RECORD=true. See this page for more.
    • In PowerShell, you can use the $env:RECORD = 'true' command for that. See this article for more.
    • You can also make a persistent environment variable by hand in the Windows computer settings. See this article for how.
  • When the environment variable is set, run go tests ./lexers.

Chroma will now regenerate the test files and print its results to the console window.