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+# Mochitest
+
+## DISCLAIMER
+
+If you are testing web platform code, prefer using use a [wpt
+test](/web-platform/index.rst) (preferably upstreamable ones).
+
+## Introduction
+
+Mochitest is an automated testing framework built on top of the
+[MochiKit](https://mochi.github.io/mochikit/) JavaScript libraries.
+
+Only things that can be tested using JavaScript (with chrome privileges!) can be
+tested with this framework. Given some creativity, that's actually much more
+than you might first think, but it's not possible to write Mochitest tests to
+directly test a non-scripted C++ component, for example. (Use a compiled-code
+test like [GTest](/gtest/index.rst) to do that.)
+
+## Running tests
+
+To run a single test (perhaps a new test you just added) or a subset of the
+entire Mochitest suite, pass a path parameter to the `mach` command.
+
+For example, to run only the test `test_CrossSiteXHR.html` in the Mozilla source
+tree, you would run this command:
+
+```
+./mach test dom/security/test/cors/test_CrossSiteXHR.html
+```
+
+To run all the tests in `dom/svg/`, this command would work:
+
+```
+./mach test dom/svg/
+```
+
+You can also pass a manifest path to run all tests on that manifest:
+
+```
+./mach test dom/base/test/mochitest.ini
+```
+
+## Running flavors and subsuites
+
+Flavors are variations of the default configuration used to run Mochitest. For
+example, a flavor might have a slightly different set of prefs set for it, a
+custom extension installed or even run in a completely different scope.
+
+The Mochitest flavors are:
+
+ * **plain** - The most basic and common Mochitest. They run in content scope,
+ but can access certain privileged APIs with SpecialPowers.
+
+ * **browser** - These often test the browser UI itself and run in browser
+ window scope.
+
+ * **chrome** - These run in chrome scope and are typically used for testing
+ privileged JavaScript APIs. More information can be found
+ [here](../chrome-tests/index.rst).
+
+ * **a11y** - These test the accessibility interfaces. They can be found under
+ the top `accessible` directory and run in chrome scope. Note that these run
+ without e10s / fission.
+
+A subsuite is similar to a flavor, except that it has an identical
+configuration. It is just logically separated from the "default" subsuite for
+display purposes. For example, devtools is a subsuite of the browser flavor.
+There is no difference in how these two jobs are run. It exists so that the
+devtools team can easily see and run their tests.
+
+**Note**: There are also tags, which are similar to subsuites. Although they
+both are used to logically group related sets of tests, they behave
+differently. For example, applying a subsuite to a test removes that test from
+the default set, whereas, a tag does not remove it.
+
+By default, mach finds and runs every test in the given subdirectory no matter
+which flavor or subsuite it belongs to. But sometimes, you might only want to
+run a specific flavor or subsuite. This can be accomplished using the `--flavor`
+(or `-f`) and `--subsuite` options respectively. For example:
+
+
+```
+./mach mochitest -f plain # runs all plain tests
+./mach mochitest -f browser --subsuite devtools # runs all browser tests in the devtools subsuite
+./mach mochitest -f chrome dom/indexedDB # runs all chrome tests in the dom/indexedDB subdirectory
+```
+
+In many cases, it won't be necessary to filter by flavor or subsuite as running
+specific directories will do it implicitly. For example running:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest devtools/
+```
+
+Is a rough equivalent to running the `devtools` subsuite. There might be
+situations where you might want to run tests that don't belong to any subsuite.
+To do this, use:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --subsuite default
+```
+
+## Debugging individual tests
+
+If you need to debug an individual test, you could reload the page containing
+the test with the debugger attached. If attaching a debugger before the problem
+shows up is hard (for example, if the browser crashes as the test is loading),
+you can specify a debugger when you run mochitest:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --debugger=gdb ...
+```
+
+See also the `--debugger-args` and `--debugger-interactive` arguments. You can
+also use the `--jsdebugger` argument to debug JavaScript.
+
+## Finding errors
+
+Search for the string `TEST-UNEXPECTED-FAIL` to find unexpected failures. You
+can also search for `SimpleTest FINISHED` to see the final test summary.
+## Logging results
+
+The output from a test run can be sent to the console and/or a file (by default
+the results are only displayed in the browser). There are several levels of
+detail to choose from. The levels are `DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING`, `ERROR` and
+`CRITICAL`, where `DEBUG` produces the highest detail (everything), and
+`CRITICAL` produces the least.
+
+Mochitest uses structured logging. This means that you can use a set of command
+line arguments to configure the log output. To log to stdout using the mach
+formatter and log to a file in JSON format, you can use `--log-mach=-`
+`--log-raw=mochitest.log`. By default the file logging level for all your
+formatters is `INFO` but you can change this using `--log-mach-level=<level>`.
+
+To turn on logging to the console use `--console-level=<level>`.
+
+For example, to log test run output with the default (tbpl) formatter to the
+file `~/mochitest.log` at `DEBUG` level detail you would use:
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --log-tbpl=~/mochitest.log --log-tbpl-level=DEBUG
+```
+
+## Headless mode
+
+The tests must run in a focused window, which effectively prevents any other
+user activity on the engaged computer. You can avoid this by using the
+`--headless` argument or `MOZ_HEADLESS=1` environment variable.
+
+```
+./mach mochitest --headless ...
+```
+
+## Writing tests
+
+A Mochitest plain test is simply an HTML or XHTML file that contains some
+JavaScript to test for some condition.
+
+### Asynchronous Tests
+
+Sometimes tests involve asynchronous patterns, such as waiting for events or
+observers. In these cases, you need to use `add_task`:
+
+```js
+add_task(async function my_test() {
+ let keypress = new Promise(...);
+ // .. simulate keypress
+ await keypress;
+ // .. run test
+});
+```
+
+Use `add_setup()` when asynchronous test task is meant to prepare test for run.
+All setup tasks are executed once in order they appear prior to any test tasks.
+
+```js
+add_setup(async () => {
+ await clearStorage();
+});
+```
+
+Or alternatively, manually call `waitForExplicitFinish` and `finish`:
+
+```js
+SimpleTest.waitForExplicitFinish();
+addEventListener("keypress", function() {
+ // ... run test ...
+ SimpleTest.finish();
+}, false);
+// ... simulate key press ...
+```
+
+
+If you need more time, `requestLongerTimeout(number)` can be quite useful.
+`requestLongerTimeout()` takes an integer factor that is a multiplier for the
+default 45 seconds timeout. So a factor of 2 means: "Wait for at last 90s
+(2*45s)". This is really useful if you want to pause execution to do a little
+debugging.
+
+### Test functions
+
+Each test must contain some JavaScript that will run and tell Mochitest whether
+the test has passed or failed. `SimpleTest.js` provides a number of functions
+for the test to use, to communicate the results back to Mochitest. These
+include:
+
+
+ * `ok(expressionThatShouldBeTrue, "Description of the check")` -- tests a value for its truthfulness
+ * `is(actualValue, expectedValue, "Description of the check")` -- compares two values (using Object.is)
+ * `isnot(actualValue, unexpectedValue, "Description of the check")` -- opposite of is()
+
+If you want to include a test for something that currently fails, don't just
+comment it out! Instead, use one of the "todo" equivalents so we notice if it
+suddenly starts passing (at which point the test can be re-enabled):
+
+ * `todo(falseButShouldBeTrue, "Description of the check")`
+ * `todo_is(actualValue, expectedValue, "Description of the check")`
+ * `todo_isnot(actualValue, unexpectedValue, "Description of the check")`
+
+Tests can call a function `info("Message string")` to write a message to the
+test log.
+
+In addition to mochitest assertions, mochitest supports the
+[CommonJS standard assertions](http://wiki.commonjs.org/wiki/Unit_Testing/1.1),
+like [nodejs' assert module](https://nodejs.org/api/assert.html#assert) but
+implemented in `Assert.sys.mjs`. These are auto-imported in the browser flavor, but
+need to be imported manually in other flavors.
+
+### Helper functions
+
+Right now, useful helpers derived from MochiKit are available in
+[`testing/mochitest/tests/SimpleTest/SimpleTest.js`](https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/source/testing/mochitest/tests/SimpleTest/SimpleTest.js).
+
+Although all of Mochikit is available at `testing/mochitest/MochiKit`, only
+include files that you require to minimize test load times. Bug 367569 added
+`sendChar`, `sendKey`, and `sendString` helpers.
+These are available in [`testing/mochitest/tests/SimpleTest/EventUtils.js`](https://searchfox.org/mozilla-central/source/testing/mochitest/tests/SimpleTest/EventUtils.js).
+
+If you need to access some data files from your Mochitest, you can get an URI
+for them by using `SimpleTest.getTestFileURL("relative/path/to/data.file")`.
+Then you can eventually fetch their content by using `XMLHttpRequest` or so.
+
+### Adding tests to the tree
+
+`mach addtest` is the preferred way to add a test to the tree:
+
+```
+./mach addtest --suite mochitest-{plain,chrome,browser-chrome} path/to/new/test
+```
+
+That will add the manifest entry to the relevant manifest (`mochitest.ini`,
+`chrome.ini`, etc. depending on the flavor) to tell the build system about your
+new test, as well as creating the file based on a template.
+
+```ini
+[test_new_feature.html]
+```
+
+Optionally, you can specify metadata for your test, like whether to skip the
+test on certain platforms:
+
+```ini
+[test_new_feature.html]
+skip-if = os == 'win'
+```
+
+The [mochitest.ini format](/build/buildsystem/test_manifests.rst), which is
+recognized by the parser, defines a long list of metadata.
+
+### Adding a new mochitest.ini or chrome.ini file
+
+If a `mochitest.ini` or `chrome.ini` file does not exist in the test directory
+where you want to add a test, add them and update the moz.build file in the
+directory for your test. For example, in `gfx/layers/moz.build`, we add
+these two manifest files:
+
+```python
+MOCHITEST_MANIFESTS += ['apz/test/mochitest.ini']
+MOCHITEST_CHROME_MANIFESTS += ['apz/test/chrome.ini']
+```
+
+<!-- TODO: This might be outdated.*
+
+## Getting Stack Traces
+
+
+To get stack when Mochitest crashes:
+
+ * Get a minidump_stackwalk binary for your platform from http://hg.mozilla.org/build/tools/file/tip/breakpad/
+ * Set the MINIDUMP_STACKWALK environment variable to point to the absolute path of the binary.
+
+If the resulting stack trace doesn't have line numbers, run `mach buildsymbols`
+to generate the requisite symbol files.
+
+-->
+
+## FAQ
+
+See the [Mochitest FAQ page](faq.md) for other features and such that you may
+want to use, such as SSL-enabled tests, custom http headers, async tests, leak
+debugging, prefs...