The Strawberry Fields test suite requires pytest and pytest-cov for coverage reports. These can both be installed via pip
:
$ pip install pytest pytest-cov
To ensure that Strawberry Fields is working correctly after installation, the test suite can be run by navigating to the source code folder and running
$ make test
Note that this runs all of the tests, using all available backends, in both pure and mixed modes, so can be quite slow (it should take around 1 hour to complete). Alternatively, you can run the full test suite for a particular component by running
$ make test-[component]
where [component]
should be replaced with either frontend
for the Strawberry Fields frontend UI, or one of the :ref:`backend <backends>` you would like to test (fock
, tf
, or gaussian
).
Pytest can accept a boolean logic string specifying exactly which tests to run, if finer control is needed. For example, to run all tests for the frontend and the Gaussian backend, as well as the Fock backend (but only for pure states), you can run:
$ make test-"gaussian or frontend or (fock and pure)"
The above syntax also works for the make coverage
command, as well as make batch-test
command for running the tests in batched mode.
Individual test modules are run by invoking pytest directly from the command line:
$ pytest tests/test_gate.py
Note
Adding tests to Strawberry Fields
The tests
folder is organised into three subfolders: backend
for tests that
only import a Strawberry Fields backend, frontend
for tests that import the Strawberry
Fields UI but do not make use of a backend, and integration
for tests that test
integration of the frontend and backends.
When writing new tests, make sure to mark what components it tests. For a backend test,
you can use the backends
mark, which accepts the names of the backends:
pytest.mark.backends("fock", "gaussian")
For a frontend-only test, you can use the frontend mark:
pytest.mark.frontend