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7 Software Testing

This document discusses software testing techniques. It covers defect testing, which aims to discover faults in programs by using tests that cause anomalous program behavior. Integration testing tests groups of integrated components to check for defects. Object-oriented testing focuses on classes, objects, and relationships. The document outlines the testing process, including component testing by developers and integration testing by independent teams. It also discusses black-box testing based on specifications, equivalence partitioning of inputs and outputs, and structural/white-box testing based on program structure.

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Ciyene Lekaota
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© © All Rights Reserved
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views

7 Software Testing

This document discusses software testing techniques. It covers defect testing, which aims to discover faults in programs by using tests that cause anomalous program behavior. Integration testing tests groups of integrated components to check for defects. Object-oriented testing focuses on classes, objects, and relationships. The document outlines the testing process, including component testing by developers and integration testing by independent teams. It also discusses black-box testing based on specifications, equivalence partitioning of inputs and outputs, and structural/white-box testing based on program structure.

Uploaded by

Ciyene Lekaota
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 58

Software Engineering

Software Testing

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 1


Defect testing

 Testing programs to
establish the presence of
system defects

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 2


Objectives

To understand testing techniques that are
geared to discover program faults
 To introduce guidelines for interface testing

To understand specific approaches to object-
oriented testing
 To understand the principles of CASE tool
support for testing

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 3


Topics covered

Defect testing
 Integration testing
 Object-oriented testing

Testing workbenches

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 4


The testing process

Component testing
• Testing of individual program components
• Usually the responsibility of the component developer (except
sometimes for critical systems)
• Tests are derived from the developer’s experience
 Integration testing
• Testing of groups of components integrated to create a
system or sub-system
• The responsibility of an independent testing team
• Tests are based on a system specification

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 5


Testing phases

Component Integration
testing testing

Software developer Independent testing team

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 6


Defect testing

The goal of defect testing is to discover defects
in programs
 A successful defect test is a test which causes a
program to behave in an anomalous way
 Tests show the presence not the absence of
defects

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 7


Testing priorities

Only exhaustive testing can show a program is
free from defects. However, exhaustive testing
is impossible

Tests should exercise a system's capabilities
rather than its components

Testing old capabilities is more important than
testing new capabilities

Testing typical situations is more important than
boundary value cases

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 8


Test data and test cases

Test data Inputs which have been devised to
test the system
 Test cases Inputs to test the system and the
predicted outputs from these inputs if the
system operates according to its specification

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 9


The defect testing process

Test Test Test Test


cases data results reports

Design test Prepare test Run program Compare results


cases data with test data to test cases

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 10


Black-box testing

An approach to testing where the program is
considered as a ‘black-box’
 The program test cases are based on the
system specification
 Test planning can begin early in the software
process

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 11


Black-box testing
Inputs causing
anomalous
Input test data I behaviour
e

System

Outputs which reveal


the presence of
Output test results Oe defects

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 12


Equivalence partitioning

Input data and output results often fall into
different classes where all members of a class
are related
 Each of these classes is an equivalence
partition where the program behaves in an
equivalent way for each class member

Test cases should be chosen from each
partition

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 13


Equivalence partitioning

Invalid inputs Valid inputs

System

Outputs

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 14


Equivalence partitioning

Partition system inputs and outputs into
‘equivalence sets’
• If input is a 5-digit integer between 10,000 and 99,999,
equivalence partitions are <10,000, 10,000-99, 999 and >
10, 000
 Choose test cases at the boundary of these
sets
• 00000, 09999, 10000, 99999, 10001

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 15


Equivalence partitions
3 11
4 7 10

Less than 4 Between 4 and 10 More than 10

Number of input values

9999 100000
10000 50000 99999

Less than 10000 Between 10000 and 99999 More than 99999

Input values
Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 16
Search routine specification
procedure Search (Key : ELEM ; T: ELEM_ARRAY;
Found : in out BOOLEAN; L: in out ELEM_INDEX) ;

Pre-condition
-- the array has at least one element
T’FIRST <= T’LAST
Post-condition
-- the element is found and is referenced by L
( Found and T (L) = Key)
or
-- the element is not in the array
( not Found and
not (exists i, T’FIRST >= i <= T’LAST, T (i) = Key ))

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 17


Search routine - input partitions

Inputs which conform to the pre-conditions
 Inputs where a pre-condition does not hold
 Inputs where the key element is a member of
the array

Inputs where the key element is not a member
of the array

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 18


Testing guidelines (sequences)

Test software with sequences which have only
a single value
 Use sequences of different sizes in different
tests
 Derive tests so that the first, middle and last
elements of the sequence are accessed
 Test with sequences of zero length

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 19


Search routine - input partitions

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 20


Structural testing

Sometime called white-box testing
 Derivation of test cases according to program
structure. Knowledge of the program is used to
identify additional test cases
 Objective is to exercise all program statements
(not all path combinations)

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 21


White-box testing

Test data

Tests Derives

Component Test
code outputs

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 22


class BinSearch {

// This is an encapsulation of a binary search function that takes an array of


// ordered objects and a key and returns an object with 2 attributes namely
// index - the value of the array index
// found - a boolean indicating whether or not the key is in the array
// An object is returned because it is not possible in Java to pass basic types by
// reference to a function and so return two values
// the key is -1 if the element is not found

public static void search ( int key, int [] elemArray, Result r )


{
int bottom = 0 ;
int top = elemArray.length - 1 ;
int mid ;
r.found = false ; r.index = -1 ;
while ( bottom <= top )
{
mid = (top + bottom) / 2 ;
if (elemArray [mid] == key)
{
r.index = mid ;
r.found = true ;
return ;
} // if part
else
{
if (elemArray [mid] < key)
bottom = mid + 1 ;
else
top = mid - 1 ;
}
} //while loop
} // search
} //BinSearch Binary search (Java)
Binary search - equiv. partitions

Pre-conditions satisfied, key element in array
 Pre-conditions satisfied, key element not in
array

Pre-conditions unsatisfied, key element in array
 Pre-conditions unsatisfied, key element not in array
 Input array has a single value

Input array has an even number of values
 Input array has an odd number of values

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 24


Binary search equiv. partitions

Equivalence class boundaries

Elements < Mid Elements > Mid

Mid-point

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 25


Binary search - test cases

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 26


Path testing

The objective of path testing is to ensure that
the set of test cases is such that each path
through the program is executed at least once
 The starting point for path testing is a program
flow graph that shows nodes representing
program decisions and arcs representing the
flow of control

Statements with conditions are therefore nodes
in the flow graph

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 27


Program flow graphs

Describes the program control flow. Each
branch is shown as a separate path and loops
are shown by arrows looping back to the loop
condition node

Used as a basis for computing the cyclomatic
complexity

Cyclomatic complexity = Number of edges -
Number of nodes +2

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 28


Cyclomatic complexity

The number of tests to test all control
statements equals the cyclomatic complexity
 Cyclomatic complexity equals number of
conditions in a program
 Useful if used with care. Does not imply
adequacy of testing.
 Although all paths are executed, all
combinations of paths are not executed

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 29


1

while bottom <= top


bottom > top
2

3 if (elemArray [mid] == key

8 4
(if (elemArray [mid]< key

5 6
9

Binary search flow graph


Independent paths

1, 2, 3, 8, 9
 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 2
 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 2

1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 2, 8, 9

Test cases should be derived so that all of
these paths are executed
 A dynamic program analyser may be used to
check that paths have been executed

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 31


Integration testing

Tests complete systems or subsystems
composed of integrated components
 Integration testing should be black-box testing
with tests derived from the specification
 Main difficulty is localising errors
 Incremental integration testing reduces this
problem

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 32


Incremental integration testing
A T1
T1
A
T1 T2
A B
T2
T2 B T3
T3
B C
T3 T4
C
T4
D T5

Test sequence Test sequence Test sequence


1 2 3
Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 33
Approaches to integration testing

Top-down testing
• Start with high-level system and integrate from the top-down
replacing individual components by stubs where appropriate

Bottom-up testing
• Integrate individual components in levels until the complete
system is created

In practice, most integration involves a
combination of these strategies

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 34


Q: For which types of system is bottom-up testing appropriate,
and why?

Answer:

1. Object-Oriented Systems – because these have a neat


decomposition into classes and methods –makes testing easy
2. Real-Time Systems – because we can identify slow bits of code
more quickly
3. systems with strict performance requirements – because we can
measure the performance of individual methods early in the
testing process

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 35


Top-down testing
Testing
Level 1 Level 1 . ..
sequence

Level 2 Level 2 Le vel 2 Level 2

Le vel 2
stubs

Le vel 3
stubs

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 36


Bottom-up testing

Test
drivers

Testing
Level N Level N Le vel N Level N Level N
sequence

Test
drivers
Level N–1 Level N–1 Level N–1

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 37


Testing approaches
 Architectural validation
• Top-down integration testing is better at discovering errors in the
system architecture

System demonstration
• Top-down integration testing allows a limited demonstration at an
early stage in the development
 Test implementation
• Often easier with bottom-up integration testing

Test observation
• Problems with both approaches. Extra code may be required to
observe tests

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 38


Interface testing

Takes place when modules or sub-systems are
integrated to create larger systems
 Objectives are to detect faults due to interface
errors or invalid assumptions about interfaces
 Particularly important for object-oriented
development as objects are defined by their
interfaces

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 39


Interface testing
Test
cases

A B

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 40


Interfaces types

Parameter interfaces
• Data passed from one procedure to another

Shared memory interfaces
• Block of memory is shared between procedures

Procedural interfaces
• Sub-system encapsulates a set of procedures to be called by
other sub-systems

Message passing interfaces
• Sub-systems request services from other sub-systems

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 41


Interface errors

Interface misuse
• A calling component calls another component and makes an
error in its use of its interface e.g. parameters in the wrong
order

Interface misunderstanding
• A calling component embeds assumptions about the
behaviour of the called component which are incorrect

Timing errors
• The called and the calling component operate at different
speeds and out-of-date information is accessed

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 42


Interface testing guidelines
 Design tests so that parameters to a called
procedure are at the extreme ends of their
ranges
 Always test pointer parameters with null pointers
 Design tests which cause the component to fail
 Use stress testing in message passing systems
 In shared memory systems, vary the order in
which components are activated

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 43


Stress testing

Exercises the system beyond its maximum design
load. Stressing the system often causes defects to
come to light

Stressing the system test failure behaviour.. Systems
should not fail catastrophically. Stress testing checks
for unacceptable loss of service or data

Particularly relevant to distributed systems
which can exhibit severe degradation as a
network becomes overloaded

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 44


Object-oriented testing

The components to be tested are object classes
that are instantiated as objects
 Larger grain than individual functions so
approaches to white-box testing have to be
extended
 No obvious ‘top’ to the system for top-down
integration and testing

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 45


Testing levels

Testing operations associated with objects
 Testing object classes
 Testing clusters of cooperating objects

Testing the complete OO system

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 46


Object class testing

Complete test coverage of a class involves
• Testing all operations associated with an object
• Setting and interrogating all object attributes
• Exercising the object in all possible states

Inheritance makes it more difficult to design
object class tests as the information to be tested
is not localised

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 47


Weather station object interface

Test cases are needed for all operations
WeatherStation 
Use a state model to identify state
identifier transitions for testing
reportWeather () 
Examples of testing sequences
calibrate (instruments) • Shutdown  Waiting  Shutdown
test () • Waiting  Calibrating  Testing  Transmitting  Waiting
startup (instruments) • Waiting  Collecting  Waiting  Summarising  Transmitting
shutdown (instruments)  Waiting

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 48


Object integration

Levels of integration are less distinct in object-
oriented systems
 Cluster testing is concerned with integrating and
testing clusters of cooperating objects
 Identify clusters using knowledge of the
operation of objects and the system features
that are implemented by these clusters

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 49


Approaches to cluster testing

Use-case or scenario testing
• Testing is based on a user interactions with the system
• Has the advantage that it tests system features as
experienced by users

Thread testing
• Tests the systems response to events as processing threads
through the system

Object interaction testing
• Tests sequences of object interactions that stop when an
object operation does not call on services from another object

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 50


Scenario-based testing

Identify scenarios from use-cases and
supplement these with interaction diagrams that
show the objects involved in the scenario
 Consider the scenario in the weather station
system where a report is generated

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 51


Collect weather data
:CommsController :WeatherStation :WeatherData

request (report)

acknowledge ()
report ()
summarise ()

send (report)
reply (report)

acknowledge ()

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 52


Weather station testing

Thread of methods executed
• CommsController:request  WeatherStation:report 
WeatherData:summarise

Inputs and outputs
• Input of report request with associated acknowledge and a
final output of a report
• Can be tested by creating raw data and ensuring that it is
summarised properly
• Use the same raw data to test the WeatherData object

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 53


Testing workbenches

Testing is an expensive process phase. Testing
workbenches provide a range of tools to reduce
the time required and total testing costs
 Most testing workbenches are open systems
because testing needs are organisation-specific
 Difficult to integrate with closed design and
analysis workbenches

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 54


A testing workbench

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 55


Testing workbench adaptation

Scripts may be developed for user interface
simulators and patterns for test data generators
 Test outputs may have to be prepared manually
for comparison
 Special-purpose file comparators may be
developed

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 56


Key points

Test parts of a system which are commonly used
rather than those which are rarely executed
 Equivalence partitions are sets of test cases where
the program should behave in an equivalent way

Black-box testing is based on the system
specification
 Structural testing identifies test cases which cause
all paths through the program to be executed

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 57


Key points

Test coverage measures ensure that all
statements have been executed at least once.

Interface defects arise because of specification
misreading, misunderstanding, errors or invalid
timing assumptions

To test object classes, test all operations,
attributes and states

Integrate object-oriented systems around
clusters of objects

Software Engineering Software Testing Slide 58

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