Introduction to TDD
1. What is TDD?
The steps of test first development (TFD) are overviewed in the UML activity diagram of Figure 1. The first step is to quickly add a test, basically just enough code to fail. Next you run your tests, often the complete test suite although for sake of speed you may decide to run only a subset, to ensure that the new test does in fact fail. You then update your functional code to make it pass the new tests. The fourth step is to run your tests again. If they fail you need to update your functional code and retest. Once the tests pass the next step is to start over (you may first need to refactor any duplication out of your design as needed, turning TFD into TDD). |
I like to describe TDD with this simple formula:
TDD = Refactoring + TFD.
TDD completely turns traditional development around. When you first go to implement a new feature, the first question that you ask is whether the existing design is the best design possible that enables you to implement that functionality. If so, you proceed via a TFD approach. If not, you refactor it locally to change the portion of the design affected by the new feature, enabling you to add that feature as easy as possible. As a result you will always be improving the quality of your design, thereby making it easier to work with in the future.
Instead of writing functional code first and then your testing code as an afterthought, if you write it at all, you instead write your test code before your functional code. Furthermore, you do so in very small steps – one test and a small bit of corresponding functional code at a time. A programmer taking a TDD approach refuses to write a new function until there is first a test that fails because that function isn’t present. In fact, they refuse to add even a single line of code until a test exists for it. Once the test is in place they then do the work required to ensure that the test suite now passes (your new code may break several existing tests as well as the new one). This sounds simple in principle, but when you are first learning to take a TDD approach it proves require great discipline because it is easy to “slip” and write functional code without first writing a new test. One of the advantages of pair programming is that your pair helps you to stay on track.
There are two levels of TDD:
Figure 2 depicts a UML activity diagram showing how ATDD and developer TDD fit together. Ideally, you'll write a single acceptance test, then to implement the production code required to fulfill that test you'll take a developer TDD approach. This in turn requires you to iterate several times through the write a test, write production code, get it working cycle at the developer TDD level.
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Figure 2. How acceptance TDD and developer TDD work together.
Note that Figure 2 assumes that you're doing both, although it is possible to do either one without the other. In fact, some teams will do developer TDD without doing ATDD, see survey results below, although if you're doing ATDD then it's pretty much certain you're also doing developer TDD. The challenge is that both forms of TDD require practitioners to have technical testing skills, skills that many requirement professionals often don't have (yet another reason why generalizing specialists are preferable to specialists).
An underlying assumption of TDD is that you have a testing framework available to you. For acceptance TDD people will use tools such as Fitnesse or RSpec and for developer TDD agile software developers often use the xUnit family of open source tools, such as JUnit or VBUnit, although commercial tools are also viable options. Without such tools TDD is virtually impossible. Figure 3 presents a UML state chart diagram for how people typically work with such tools. This diagram was suggested to me by Keith Ray.
Figure 3. Testing via the xUnit Framework.
Kent Beck, who popularized TDD in eXtreme Programming (XP) (Beck 2000), defines two simple rules for TDD (Beck 2003). First, you should write new business code only when an automated test has failed. Second, you should eliminate any duplication that you find. Beck explains how these two simple rules generate complex individual and group behavior:
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For developers, the implication is that they need to learn how to write effective unit tests. Beck’s experience is that good unit tests:
- Run fast (they have short setups, run times, and break downs).
- Run in isolation (you should be able to reorder them).
- Use data that makes them easy to read and to understand.
- Use real data (e.g. copies of production data) when they need to.
- Represent one step towards your overall goal.
2. TDD and Traditional Testing
TDD is primarily a specification technique with a side effect of ensuring that your source code is thoroughly tested at a confirmatory level. However, there is more to testing than this. Particularly at scale you'll still need to consider other agile testing techniques such as pre-production integration testing and investigative testing. Much of this testing can also be done early in your project if you choose to do so (and you should).
With traditional testing a successful test finds one or more defects. It is the same with TDD; when a test fails you have made progress because you now know that you need to resolve the problem. More importantly, you have a clear measure of success when the test no longer fails. TDD increases your confidence that your system actually meets the requirements defined for it, that your system actually works and therefore you can proceed with confidence.
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As with traditional testing, the greater the risk profile of the system the more thorough your tests need to be. With both traditional testing and TDD you aren't striving for perfection, instead you are testing to the importance of the system. To paraphrase Agile Modeling (AM), you should "test with a purpose" and know why you are testing something and to what level it needs to be tested. An interesting side effect of TDD is that you achieve 100% coverage test – every single line of code is tested – something that traditional testing doesn’t guarantee (although it does recommend it). In general I think it’s fairly safe to say that although TDD is a specification technique, a valuable side effect is that it results in significantly better code testing than do traditional techniques.
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3. TDD and Documentation
Like it or not most programmers don’t read the written documentation for a system, instead they prefer to work with the code. And there’s nothing wrong with this. When trying to understand a class or operation most programmers will first look for sample code that already invokes it. Well-written unit tests do exactly this – the provide a working specification of your functional code – and as a result unit tests effectively become a significant portion of your technical documentation. The implication is that the expectations of the pro-documentation crowd need to reflect this reality. Similarly, acceptance tests can form an important part of your requirements documentation. This makes a lot of sense when you stop and think about it. Your acceptance tests define exactly what your stakeholders expect of your system, therefore they specify your critical requirements. Your regression test suite, particularly with a test-first approach, effectively becomes detailed executable specifications.
Are tests sufficient documentation? Very likely not, but they do form an important part of it. For example, you are likely to find that you still need user, system overview, operations, and support documentation. You may even find that you require summary documentation overviewing the business process that your system supports. When you approach documentation with an open mind, I suspect that you will find that these two types of tests cover the majority of your documentation needs for developers and business stakeholders. Furthermore, they are a wonderful example of AM's Single Source Information practice and an important part of your overall efforts to remain asagile as possible regarding documentation.
4. Test-Driven Database Development
At the time of this writing an important question being asked within the agile community is “can TDD work for data-oriented development?” When you look at the process depicted in Figure 1 it is important to note that none of the steps specify object programming languages, such as Java or C#, even though those are the environments TDD is typically used in. Why couldn't you write a test before making a change to your database schema? Why couldn't you make the change, run the tests, and refactor your schema as required? It seems to me that you only need to choose to work this way.
My guess is that in the near term database TDD, or perhaps Test Driven Database Design (TDDD), won't work as smoothly as application TDD. The first challenge is tool support. Although unit-testing tools, such as DBUnit, are now available they are still an emerging technology at the time of this writing. Some DBAs are improving the quality of the testing they doing, but I haven’t yet seen anyone take a TDD approach to database development. One challenge is that unit testing tools are still not well accepted within the data community, although that is changing, so my expectation is that over the next few years database TDD will grow. Second, the concept of evolutionary development is new to many data professionals and as a result the motivation to take a TDD approach has yet to take hold. This issue affects the nature of the tools available to data professionals – because a serial mindsetstill dominates within the traditional data community most tools do not support evolutionary development. My hope is that tool vendors will catch on to this shift in paradigm, but my expectation is that we'll need to develop open source tools instead. Third, my experience is that most people who do data-oriented work seem to prefer a model-driven, and not a test-driven approach. One cause of this is likely because a test-driven approach hasn't been widely considered until now, another reason might be that many data professionals are likely visual thinkers and therefore prefer a modeling-driven approach.
5. Scaling TDD via Agile Model-Driven Development (AMDD)
TDD is very good at detailed specification and validation, but not so good at thinking through bigger issues such as the overall design, how people will use the system, or the UI design (for example). Modeling, or more to the pointagile model-driven development (AMDD) (the lifecycle for which is captured in Figure 4) is better suited for this. AMDD addresses the agile scaling issues that TDD does not.
Figure 4. The Agile Model Driven Development (AMDD) lifecycle.
Comparing TDD and AMDD:
- TDD shortens the programming feedback loop whereas AMDD shortens the modeling feedback loop.
- TDD provides detailed specification (tests) whereas AMDD is better for thinking through bigger issues.
- TDD promotes the development of high-quality code whereas AMDD promotes high-quality communication with your stakeholders and other developers.
- TDD provides concrete evidence that your software works whereas AMDD supports your team, including stakeholders, in working toward a common understanding.
- TDD “speaks” to programmers whereas AMDD speaks to business analysts, stakeholders, and data professionals.
- TDD is provides very finely grained concrete feedback on the order of minutes whereas AMDD enables verbal feedback on the order minutes (concrete feedback requires developers to follow the practice Prove It With Code and thus becomes dependent on non-AM techniques).
- TDD helps to ensure that your design is clean by focusing on creation of operations that are callable and testable whereas AMDD provides an opportunity to think through larger design/architectural issues before you code.
- TDD is non-visually oriented whereas AMDD is visually oriented.
- Both techniques are new to traditional developers and therefore may be threatening to them.
- Both techniques support evolutionary development.
Which approach should you take? The answer depends on your, and your teammates, cognitive preferences. Some people are primarily "visual thinkers", also called spatial thinkers, and they may prefer to think things through via drawing. Other people are primarily text oriented, non-visual or non-spatial thinkers, who don't work well with drawings and therefore they may prefer a TDD approach. Of course most people land somewhere in the middle of these two extremes and as a result they prefer to use each technique when it makes the most sense. In short, the answer is to use the two techniques together so as to gain the advantages of both.
How do you combine the two approaches? AMDD should be used to create models with your project stakeholders to help explore their requirements and then to explore those requirements sufficiently in architectural and design models (often simple sketches). TDD should be used as a critical part of your build efforts to ensure that you develop clean, working code. The end result is that you will have a high-quality, working system that meets the actual needs of your project stakeholders.6. Why TDD?
A significant advantage of TDD is that it enables you to take small steps when writing software. This is a practice that I have promoted for years because it is far more productive than attempting to code in large steps. For example, assume you add some new functional code, compile, and test it. Chances are pretty good that your tests will be broken by defects that exist in the new code. It is much easier to find, and then fix, those defects if you've written two new lines of code than two thousand. The implication is that the faster your compiler and regression test suite, the more attractive it is to proceed in smaller and smaller steps. I generally prefer to add a few new lines of functional code, typically less than ten, before I recompile and rerun my tests.
I think Bob Martin says it well “The act of writing a unit test is more an act of design than of verification. It is also more an act of documentation than of verification. The act of writing a unit test closes a remarkable number of feedback loops, the least of which is the one pertaining to verification of function”.
The first reaction that many people have to agile techniques is that they're ok for small projects, perhaps involving a handful of people for several months, but that they wouldn't work for "real" projects that are much larger. That’s simply not true. Beck (2003) reports working on a Smalltalk system taking a completely test-driven approach which took 4 years and 40 person years of effort, resulting in 250,000 lines of functional code and 250,000 lines of test code. There are 4000 tests running in under 20 minutes, with the full suite being run several times a day. Although there are larger systems out there, I've personally worked on systems where several hundred person years of effort were involved, it is clear that TDD works for good-sized systems.
7. Myths and Misconceptions
There are several common myths and misconceptions which people have regarding TDD which I would like to clear up if possible. Table 1 lists these myths and describes the reality.
Table 1. Addressing the myths and misconceptions surrounding TDD.
Myth | Reality |
You create a 100% regression test suite | Although this sounds like a good goal, and it is, it unfortunately isn't realistic for several reasons:
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The unit tests form 100% of your design specification | People new to agile software development, or people claiming to be agile but who really aren't, or perhaps people who have never been involved with an actual agile project, will sometimes say this. The reality is that the unit test form a fair bit of the design specification, similarly acceptance tests form a fair bit of your requirements specification, but there's more to it than this. As Figure 4 indicates, agilists do in factmodel (and document for that matter), it's just that we're very smart about how we do it. Because you think about the production code before you write it, you effectively perform detailed design as I highly suggest reading my Single Source Information: An Agile Practice for Effective Documentation article. |
You only need to unit test | For all but the simplest systems this is completely false. The agile community is very clear about the need for a host of other testing techniques. |
TDD is sufficient for testing | TDD, at the unit/developer test as well as at the customer test level, is only part of your overall testing efforts. At best it comprises your confirmatory testing efforts, but as Figure 5 shows you must also be concerned about independent testing efforts which go beyond this. See Agile Testing and Quality Strategies: Reality over Rhetoric for details about agile testing strategies. |
TDD doesn't scale | This is partly true, although easy to overcome. TDD scalability issues include:
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Figure 5. Overview of testing on agile project teams.
8. Who is Actually Doing This?
Unfortunately the adoption rate of TDD isn't as high as I would hope. Figure 6, which summarizes results from the 2010 How Agile Are You? survey, provides insight into which validation strategies are being followed by the teams claiming to be agile. I suspect that the adoption rates reported for developer TDD and acceptance TDD, 53% and 44% respectively, are much more realistic than those reported in my 2008 Test Driven Development (TDD) Survey.
Figure 6. How agile teams validate their own work.
9. Summary
Test-driven development (TDD) is a development technique where you must first write a test that fails before you write new functional code. TDD is being quickly adopted by agile software developers for development of application source code and is even being adopted by Agile DBAs for database development. TDD should be seen as complementary to Agile Model Driven Development (AMDD) approaches and the two can and should be used together. TDD does not replace traditional testing, instead it defines a proven way to ensure effective unit testing. A side effect of TDD is that the resulting tests are working examples for invoking the code, thereby providing a working specification for the code. My experience is that TDD works incredibly well in practice and it is something that all software developers should consider adopting.
10. Tools
The following is a representative list of TDD tools available to you. Please email me with suggestions. I also maintain a list of agile database development tools.
- cpputest
- csUnit (.Net)
- CUnit
- DUnit (Delphi)
- DBFit
- DBUnit
- DocTest (Python)
- Googletest
- JMock
- JUnit
- Moq
- NDbUnit
- NUnit
- OUnit
- PHPUnit
- PyUnit (Python)
- SimpleTest
- TestNG
- TestOoB (Python)
- Test::Unit (Ruby)
- VBUnit
- XTUnit
- xUnit.net
.Net developers may find this comparison of .Net TDD tools interesting.
11. References and Suggested Online Readings
http://www.agiledata.org/essays/tdd.html
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