page.title=Instrumentation Framework pdk.version=1.0 doc.type=porting @jd:body <a name="toc"/> <div style="padding:10px"> <a href="#androidInstrumentationFrameworkIntro">Introduction</a><br/> <a href="#androidInstrumentationFrameworkamCommand">Understanding the am Command</a><br/> <a href="#androidInstrumentationFrameworkWritingRunning">Writing and Running Test Cases</a><br/> <a href="#androidInstrumentationFrameworkTestCase">Exploring a Test Case</a><br/> <a href="#androidInstrumentationFrameworkTroubleshooting">Troubleshooting</a><br/></div> <a name="androidInstrumentationFrameworkIntro"></a><h2>Introduction</h2> <p>This document describes how to use the Instrumentation Framework to write test cases. You should have a working knowledge of the following:</p> <ul> <li> Android Application Framework </li> <li> Using <code>adb</code>, <code>am</code> and various logging functionality </li> <li> A brief understanding of the application of interest, that is, he names of the classes which handle the intents etc. </li> <li> Junit testing. </li> </ul> <p> Each Android application runs in its own process. Instrumentation kills the application process and restarts the process with Instrumentation. Instrumentation gives a handle to the application context used to poke around the application to validate test assertions, allowing you to write test cases to test applications at a much lower level than UI screen shot tests. Note that Instrumentation cannot catch UI bugs. </p> <a name="androidInstrumentationFrameworkamCommand"></a><h2>Understanding the am Command</h2> <p><code>am</code> is used to start and instrument activities using the adb shell command, as shown in the snippet below:</p> <pre class="prettify"> > adb shell am usage: am [start|instrument] am start [-a <ACTION>] [-d <DATA_URI>] [-t <MIME_TYPE>] [-c <CATEGORY> [-c <CATEGORY>] ...] [-e <EXTRA_KEY> <EXTRA_VALUE> [-e <EXTRA_KEY> <EXTRA_VALUE> ...] [-n <COMPONENT>] [-D] [<URI>] am instrument [-e <ARG_NAME> <ARG_VALUE>] [-p <PROF_FILE>] [-w] <COMPONENT> For example, to start the Contacts application you can use > adb shell am start -n com.google.android.contacts/.ContactsActivity </pre> <a name="androidInstrumentationFrameworkWritingRunning"></a><h2>Writing and Running Test Cases</h2> <p>Each instrumentation test case is similar to an Android application with the distinction that it starts another application. For example, have a look in the <code>tests/Contacts</code> directory. </p> <ul> <li> There should be a Makefile and an Android Manifest file. </li> <li> Tests are located in <code>tests/Contacts/src/com/google/android/contactstests</code>. </li> <li> The Instrumentation Test Runner is located at <code>tests/Contacts/src/com/google/android/contactstests/functional/ContactsInstrumentationTestRunner.java</code>.</li> </ul> <p>Suppose you have a makefile with <code>Contactstests</code> as the target. </p> <ul> <li> <code>make Contactstests</code>: Compiles the test cases. </li> <li> <code>adb install Contactstests.apk</code>: Installs the apk on the device. </li> <li> Use the adb shell <code>am</code> command to run them. </li> </ul> <p> For options and other details, please see <a href="instrumentation_testing.html" target="_top">Instrumentation Testing</a>.</p> <a name="androidInstrumentationFrameworkTestCase"></a><h2>Exploring a Test Case</h2> <p> The test case described in this section adds and tests a new Contact. Note that you can send intents, register intent receivers, etc. </p> <p><code>Instrumentation.java</code> has helper functions that send key events and string, for example: </p> <ul> <li><code>getInstrumentation()</code>: Returns the handle to the instrumentation </li> <li><code>sendCharacterSync</code>: Sends a character. </li> <li><code>sendStringSync</code>: Sends a string to an input box. </li> <li><code>sendKeyDownUpSync</code>: Sends a specific keyevent. </li> <li><code>sendTrackballEventSync</code>: Send a trackball event.</li> </ul> <p> You can find the test case below at <code>device/tests/Contacts.</code></p> <pre class="prettify"> private void addNewContact(String name, int star, int phoneType, String number, String label, String email, int emailType){ ContentValues values = new ContentValues(); Uri phoneUri = null; Uri emailUri = null; values.put(Contacts.People.NAME, name); values.put(Contacts.People.STARRED, star); //Add Phone Numbers Uri uri = mActivity.getContentResolver().insert(Contacts.People.CONTENT_URI, values); phoneUri = Uri.withAppendedPath(uri, Contacts.People.Phones.CONTENT_DIRECTORY); values.clear(); values.put(Contacts.Phones.TYPE, phoneType); values.put(Contacts.Phones.NUMBER, number); values.put(Contacts.Phones.LABEL, label); mActivity.getContentResolver().insert(phoneUri, values); //Add Email emailUri = Uri.withAppendedPath(uri, ContactMethods.CONTENT_DIRECTORY); values.clear(); values.put(ContactMethods.KIND, Contacts.KIND_EMAIL); values.put(ContactMethods.DATA, email); values.put(ContactMethods.LABEL, ""); values.put(ContactMethods.TYPE, emailType); mActivity.getContentResolver().insert(emailUri, values); } public void testAddSaveSingleContact(){ int previousCount = mActivity.getListView().getCount(); String message; addNewContact(INPUT_NAME_1 + "1", "5435754532", "1" + INPUT_EMAIL_1, CONFIRM_OPTION); message = "Added 1 to initial length=" + previousCount + ", but resulted with a count=" + mActivity.getListView().getCount(); assertEquals(message, ++previousCount, mActivity.getListView().getCount()); // Check Content; Name; Num; Starred assertEquals(INPUT_NAME_1 + "1", getTextFromView(0, android.R.id.text1)); assertEquals("5435754532", getTextFromView(0, android.R.id.text2)); //Check email is saved //cursor = returnEmailCursorAtId("1"); Uri uri = Uri.parse("content://contacts/people/1"); uri = Uri.withAppendedPath(uri, ContactMethods.CONTENT_DIRECTORY); Cursor cursor = mActivity.getContentResolver().query(uri, CONTACTS_COLUMNS, null, null, null); assertTrue("returnEmailCursorAtId: Moving cursor to first row has failed", cursor.first()); int dataIndex = cursor.getColumnIndexOrThrow("data"); assertEquals("1" + INPUT_EMAIL_1, cursor.getString(dataIndex)); cursor.deactivate(); } </pre> <a name="androidInstrumentationFrameworkTroubleshooting"></a><h2>Troubleshooting</h2> <p>If you run your test cases and nothing appears to happen, have a look at <code>adb logcat</code>. The following is a common problem:</p> <pre class="prettify"> I/dalvikvm( 688): threadid=11: attached from native, name=Binder Thread #1 I/dalvikvm( 688): threadid=13: attached from native, name=Binder Thread #2 W/ActivityManager( 469): Unable to find instrumentation info for: ComponentInfo{com.google.android.browser_instrumentation/com.google.android.browser_instrumentation.BrowserWebkitLayoutInstrumentation} D/AndroidRuntime( 688): Shutting down VM E/AndroidRuntime( 688): ERROR: thread attach failed </pre> <p>It's possible that the instrumentation apk isn't installed on your device or that the package name is incorrect in the Manifest file. </p>