miller/test
John Kerl a55327c7ef
Add sparkline DSL function and mlr sparkline verb (#166) (#2177)
Adds a sparkline(array|map) built-in that renders numeric values as a
Unicode block-character string (▁▂▃▄▅▆▇█), plus a new `mlr sparkline`
verb that summarizes each field's values in record order -- useful for
eyeballing trends without external plotting tools.

Also adds `-s` to `mlr histogram` to sparkline a field's binned counts
(its distribution shape) rather than emitting one record per bin. This
is a different chart from `mlr sparkline` (order-independent binning
vs. record-order values), and the docs for each cross-reference the
other to avoid conflating them.

Co-authored-by: Claude Sonnet 5 <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-07-07 15:47:01 -04:00
..
cases Add sparkline DSL function and mlr sparkline verb (#166) (#2177) 2026-07-07 15:47:01 -04:00
cases-not-suitable-for-ci Avoid assuming ./mlr is the mlr to test (#876) 2022-01-17 17:01:40 -05:00
expected Standardize Go-package structure (#746) 2021-11-11 14:15:13 -05:00
input join: exit nonzero when the left file cannot be read (#2169) (#2171) 2026-07-06 17:34:33 -04:00
stdlib Standardize Go-package structure (#746) 2021-11-11 14:15:13 -05:00
README.md test/README.md (#1972) 2026-02-16 16:44:31 -05:00

Miller regression tests

There are a few files unit-tested with Go's testing package -- a few dozen cases total.

The vast majority of Miller tests, though -- thousands of cases -- are tested by running scripted invocations of mlr with various flags and inputs, comparing against expected output, and checking the exit code back to the shell.

How to run the regression tests, in brief

Note: while this README.md file is within the test/ subdirectory, all paths in this file are written from the perspective of the user being cd'ed into the repository base directory, i.e. this directory's parent directory.

  • mlr regtest --help

  • go test github.com/johnkerl/miller/v6/pkg/... — runs the Go unit tests (a few dozen cases).

Items for the duration of the Go port

  • mlr regtest -c ... runs the C version of Miller from the local checkout

More details

You can alias mr='mlr regtest' for convenience. With no arguments, mr runs all cases under test/cases/. Pass one or more paths to run only those directories or specific .cmd files.

  • mr — run all regression cases (default path is test/cases/).
  • mr test/cases/foo — run only cases under that directory.
  • mr -v test/cases/foo — same, plus per-command pass/fail; use -vv or -vvv for more detail.
  • mr -j test/cases/foo/0003 — show the Miller command, any script, and actual output for that case (handy for debugging).
  • mr -p test/cases/foo/0003populate: write or overwrite expout and experr from the current run (use when adding or updating expected output).
  • mr -c ... — use the C build of Miller (e.g. -c../c/mlr) instead of the current executable.

To review populated files before committing, run mr -p on the desired path, then git diff to inspect changes and git reset --hard to discard them.

Creating new cases

  1. Create a case directory under test/cases/, e.g. test/cases/my-feature/0001.
  2. Add a cmd file containing the Miller command line (one line), e.g. mlr cat test/input/simple.dkvp.
  3. Use shared input under test/input/, or add a local input file in the case directory; in cmd you can use ${CASEDIR} so the command refers to the case directory (e.g. mlr cat ${CASEDIR}/input).
  4. Run mlr regtest -p test/cases/my-feature/0001 to generate expout (and experr if the command produces stderr). If the command is expected to exit non-zero, add an empty should-fail file.
  5. Run mlr regtest test/cases/my-feature/0001 (without -p) to confirm the case passes.

Optional: mlr — DSL script file when the test uses -f/put/filter; env — environment variables to set for the case (unset after).