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Mutaml is a mutation testing tool for OCaml. Briefly, that means Mutaml tries to change your code randomly to see if the changes are caught by your tests.
In more detail: Mutation testing is a form of fault injection used to assess the quality of a program's test suite. Mutation testing works by repeatedly making small, breaking changes to a program's text, such as turning a +
into -
, negating the condition of an if-then-else
, ..., and subsequently rerunning the test suite to see if each such 'mutant program' is 'killed' (caught) by one or more tests in the test suite. By finding examples of uncaught wrong behaviour, mutation testing can thereby reveal limitations of an existing test suite and indirectly suggest improvements.
Since OCaml already prevents many potential programming errors at compile time due to its strong type system, pattern-match compiler warnings, etc. Mutaml favors mutations that
Mutaml consists of:
ppxlib
-preprocessor that first transforms the program under test.mutaml-runner
that loops through a range of possible program mutations, and saves the output from running the test suite on each of the mutantsmutaml-report
that prints a test report to the console.You can install mutaml
with a single opam
command:
$ opam install mutaml
Alternatively, you can also install it from a clone of the repository:
$ git clone https://github.com/jmid/mutaml.git
$ cd mutaml
$ opam install .
How you can use mutaml
depends on your project's build setup. For now it has only been tested with dune
, but it should work with other build systems supporting an explicit two-staged build process.
dune
Mark the target code for instrumentation in your dune
file(s):
(library
(public_name your_library)
(instrumentation (backend mutaml)))
Using dune
's instrumentation
stanza, your project's code is only instrumented when you pass the --instrument-with mutaml
option.
Compile your test code with mutaml
instrumentation enabled:
$ dune build test --instrument-with mutaml
assuming you have a test/mytests.ml
test driver. This creates/overwrites an individual lib.muts
file for each instrumented lib.ml
file and an overview file mutaml-mut-files.txt
listing them. These files are written to dune
's current build context.
Start mutaml-runner
, passing the name of the test executable to run:
$ mutaml-runner _build/default/test/mytests.exe
This reads from the files written in step 2. Running the command also creates/overwrites the file mutaml-report.json
. You can also pass a command that runs the executable through dune
if you prefer:
$ mutaml-runner "dune exec --no-build test/mytests.exe"
Generate a report, optionally passing the json-file (mutaml-report.json
) created above:
$ mutaml-report
By default this prints diff
s for each mutation that flew under the radar of your test suite. The diff
output can be suppressed by passing --no-diff
.
Steps 3 and 4 output a number of additional files. These are all written to a dedicated directory named _mutations
.
The preprocessor's behaviour can be configured through either environment variables or instrumentation options in the dune
file:
MUTAML_SEED
- an integer value to seed mutaml-ppx
's randomized mutations (overridden by instrumentation option -seed
)MUTAML_MUT_RATE
- a integer between 0 and 100 to specify the mutation frequency (0 means never and 100 means always - overridden by instrumentation option -mut-rate
)MUTAML_GADT
- allow only pattern mutations compatible with GADTs (true
or false
, overridden by instrumentation option -gadt
)For example, the following dune
file sets all three instrumentation options:
(executable
(name test)
(instrumentation (backend mutaml -seed 42 -mut-rate 75 -gadt false))
)
We could achieve the same behaviour by setting three environment variables:
$ export MUTAML_SEED=42
$ export MUTAML_MUT_RATE=75
$ export MUTAML_GADT=false
If you do both, the values passed as instrumentation options in the dune
file take precedence.
By default, mutaml-runner
expects to find the preprocessor's output files in the default build context _build/default
. This can be configured via an environment variable or a command-line option, e.g., if instrumentation is enabled via another dune-workspace
build context:
MUTAML_BUILD_CONTEXT
- a path prefix string (overridden by command-line option --build-context
)mutaml-runner
also repeats test suite runs for all instrumented lib.ml
files by default. An option --muts muts-file
is available to enable more targeted mutation testing. Running, e.g.,
mutaml-runner --muts lib/lib2.muts _build/default/test/mytests.exe
will only consider mutations of the corresponding library lib/lib2.ml
, which the runner searches for in the build context.
Currently mutaml-report
uses diff --color -u
as its default command to print diff
s. It falls back to diff -u
when the environment variable CI
is true
. The used command can also be configured with an environment variable:
MUTAML_DIFF_COMMAND
- the command and options to use instead, e.g. MUTAML_DIFF_COMMAND="diff -U 5"
will disable colored outputs and add 5 lines of unified context. Mutaml expects the specified command to support --label
options.Passing the option --no-diff
to mutaml-report
prevents any mutation diff
s from being printed.
This is an alpha release. There are therefore rough edges:
Mutaml is designed to avoid repeated recompilation for each mutation. It does so by writing files during preprocessing which are later read during the mutaml-runner
testing loop. As a consequence, if you attempt to merge steps 2 and 3 above into one step this will not work:
$ mutaml-runner "dune test --force --instrument-with mutaml"
The preprocessor in this case only writes the relevant files when mutaml-runner
first calls the command, and thus after it needs the information contained in the files...
dune
to rebuild. This can affect Mutaml, e.g., in case just an environment variable changed. dune clean
is a crude but effective work-around to this issue._build/default
are not registered with dune
. This means rerunning steps 2,3,4 above will fail, as the additional output files in _build/default
are not cached by dune
and hence deleted. Again dune clean
is a crude but effective work-around.Mutations should not introduce compiler errors, be it type errors or from the pattern-match compiler. If you encounter a situation where this happens please report it in an issue.
Mutaml was developed with support from the OCaml Software Foundation. While developing it, I also benefitted from studying the source code of bisect_ppx.