This document attempts to point out some best practices that prove to be helpful when building new test cases in the tot/test directory. Everyone is welcomed to add/modify contents into this file. o Do not use hard-coded line numbers in your test case. Instead, try to tag the line with some distinguishing pattern, and use the function line_number() defined in lldbtest.py which takes filename and string_to_match as arguments and returns the line number. As an example, take a look at test/breakpoint_conditions/main.c which has these two lines: return c(val); // Find the line number of c's parent call here. and return val + 3; // Find the line number of function "c" here. The Python test case TestBreakpointConditions.py uses the comment strings to find the line numbers during setUp(self) and use them later on to verify that the correct breakpoint is being stopped on and that its parent frame also has the correct line number as intended through the breakpoint condition. o Take advantage of the unittest framework's decorator features to properly mark your test class or method for platform-specific tests. As an example, take a look at test/forward/TestForwardDeclaration.py which has these lines: @unittest2.skipUnless(sys.platform.startswith("darwin"), "requires Darwin") def test_with_dsym_and_run_command(self): """Display *bar_ptr when stopped on a function with forward declaration of struct bar.""" self.buildDsym() self.forward_declaration() This tells the test harness that unless we are running "darwin", the test should be skipped. This is because we are asking to build the binaries with dsym debug info, which is only available on the darwin platforms. o Cleanup after yourself. A classic example of this can be found in test/types/ TestFloatTypes.py: def test_float_types_with_dsym(self): """Test that float-type variables are displayed correctly.""" d = {'CXX_SOURCES': 'float.cpp'} self.buildDsym(dictionary=d) self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=d) self.float_type() ... def test_double_type_with_dsym(self): """Test that double-type variables are displayed correctly.""" d = {'CXX_SOURCES': 'double.cpp'} self.buildDsym(dictionary=d) self.setTearDownCleanup(dictionary=d) self.double_type() This tests different data structures composed of float types to verify that what the debugger prints out matches what the compiler does for different variables of these types. We're using a dictionary to pass the build parameters to the build system. After a particular test instance is done, it is a good idea to clean up the files built. This eliminates the chance that some leftover files can interfere with the build phase for the next test instance and render it invalid. TestBase.setTearDownCleanup(self, dictionary) defined in lldbtest.py is created to cope with this use case by taking the same build parameters in order to do the cleanup when we are finished with a test instance, during TestBase.tearDown(self). o Class-wise cleanup after yourself. TestBase.tearDownClass(cls) provides a mechanism to invoke the platform-specific cleanup after finishing with a test class. A test class can have more than one test methods, so the tearDownClass(cls) method gets run after all the test methods have been executed by the test harness. The default cleanup action performed by the plugins/darwin.py module invokes the "make clean" os command. If this default cleanup is not enough, individual class can provide an extra cleanup hook with a class method named classCleanup , for example, in test/breakpoint_command/TestBreakpointCommand.py: @classmethod def classCleanup(cls): system(["/bin/sh", "-c", "rm -f output.txt"]) The 'output.txt' file gets generated during the test run, so it makes sense to explicitly spell out the action in the same TestBreakpointCommand.py file to do the cleanup instead of artificially adding it as part of the default cleanup action which serves to cleanup those intermediate and a.out files.