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Explore functional system testing essentials, test cases, test suites, and test data strategies outlined by Adam Carmi. Understand the goal and techniques of black box testing, with a focus on coverage and testing execution. Learn about the importance of test data quality and its impact on testing outcomes. Dive into functional analysis and the application of use case scenarios for effective system testing. Get practical examples for better comprehension.
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Functional System Testing Written by Adam Carmi
Outline • Goal of testing • Test cases, test suites and test data • What is functional system testing? • Coverage • Functional testing techniques: • Functional analysis • Equivalence partitioning • Boundary value analysis Black Box Testing
The goal of software testing • The process of uncovering evidence of defects in software systems • Does not include efforts associated with tracking down bugs and fixing them • No amount of testing will improve the quality of a computer program • The more testing we do of a system, the more convinced we might be of its correctness • Testing cannot in general prove a system works 100% correctly Black Box Testing
Test cases • The basic component of testing is a Test Case • In its most general form: (inputs, expected-result) • inputs include system state, user commands and data values to be processed • expected result includes visible/audible interface changes or changes in the system state • Test cases are organized into Test Suites • functionality, security, performance, … Black Box Testing
Test case execution • A running of the software (under test) that provides the inputs specified in the test case and observing the results and comparing them to those specified by the test case • If the actual result varies from the expected result, then a failure has been detected Black Box Testing
Test data • An effective test strategy requires careful acquisition and preparation of test data prior to testing • Testing can suffer if test data is poor • Test data concerns: • Depth: quantity and size of data • Breadth: variance of data values and data types • Scope: completeness, relevance and accuracy of data • Result of a query should be valid for the specific purpose of the query, and not due to a missing or inappropriate value • Conditions: data should reflect specific “conditions” in the domain • Data that would otherwise arrive after performing specific operations over time • Test data and test results are expensive to construct Black Box Testing
Example: Test data for TVRS Black Box Testing
Specification Vs. Implementation • The basic approaches to testing software are based on its specification and implementation • White box testing – test cases and data are constructed based on the code that implements the software • Quality and correctness of computations is validated • Will not be further discussed in this tutorial • Black box testing – test cases and data are constructed based solely on the software’s specification Black Box Testing
Functional System Testing • Testing of a completed application to determine that it provides all of the behaviors required of it • Testing of completed increments that provide some degree of end-user functionality • Search for defects that are variances between the actual operation of the system and the requirements for the system • System is treated as a black box Black Box Testing
How much testing is adequate? • Completely validating IEEE 754 floating-point division requires 264 test-cases! float divide(float x, float y) • From practical and economic perspectives, exhaustive testing is usually not possible • Which software pieces should we test? • Which test cases should we choose? Black Box Testing
Coverage • Coverage is a measure of how completely a test suite exercises the capabilities of a piece of software • “Each line of code should be executed at least once” • “One test case should be constructed from each specified requirement” • It is necessary to use testing techniques that narrow down the number of test cases allowing the broadest testing coverage with the least effort Black Box Testing
Technique: Functional Analysis • Analyze the expected behavior of the system according to its functional specification • Generate a test procedure for each of the possible usage scenarios • Corresponds to use case scenarios • Analyze how a change in one part of the system affects other parts • “Grand tour” test cases: the result of one test case produces the data that is the input to the next test case Black Box Testing
Example: Functional Analysis I Use Case: Remove Traffic Violation • Supervisor calls for deletion of the chosen Traffic Violation • TVRS prompts Supervisor for confirmation • Supervisor confirms • TVRS requests OffendersDB to delete the Traffic Violation from the offender’s record • OffendersDB approves that the Traffic Violation has been deleted • TVRS allows Supervisor to look up a new Traffic Violation as described in the “Lookup Traffic Violation” UC Black Box Testing
Example: Functional Analysis II Black Box Testing
Example: Functional Analysis III How do we know that violation 243567 is stored in the system? In addition, a query could be run on the Offenders database Verify effects of change Filled when the test case is executed Can a tester diagnose the cause of a defect? Black Box Testing
Technique: Equivalence Partitioning • Identifies ranges of input and initial conditions that are expected to produce the same result • A group of test cases form an equivalence class if: • They test the same feature/scenario • If one test reveals a fault, the other ones (probably) will too • If a test does not reveal a fault, the other ones (probably) will not either • It is adequate to use only a single representative of the equivalence class Black Box Testing
Example: Equivalence Partitioning I Input value specification for “Lookup Violation” form: Black Box Testing
Example: Equivalence Partitioning II Black Box Testing
Example: Equivalence Partitioning III • The number of test cases to choose from is reduced to(3 + 2) × (4 + 2) × (4 + 2) = 180 • The actual number can be further limited • Single invalid field per test case (3 × 4 × 4 + 6 = 54) • Importance of use case • Resources available • Most frequent input • Life-critical software • Infeasible test cases • Randomly • ... Black Box Testing
Technique: Boundary Value Analysis • Based on experience / heuristics • Testing boundary conditions of equivalence classes is more effective • Choose input boundary values as equivalence classes representatives • Choose inputs that invoke output boundary values • Examples: • (0, 10] ⇒ validate using 0, 1, 2, 9, 10, 11 • Read up to 5 elements ⇒ validate reading 0, 1, 4, 5, 6 elements Black Box Testing
BVA as an equivalence partitioning extension • Choose one (or more) arbitrary value(s) in each equivalence class • Choose valid values exactly on lower and upper boundaries of equivalence class • Choose invalid values immediately below and above each boundary (if applicable) Black Box Testing
General purpose test-suite construction technique • May be used to obtain reasonable coverage with little effort • Use cautiously! • Unsuitable when values of different fields are related • While test cases can be added • Each new test case should include as many un-included valid non-boundary equivalence class representatives as possible • While test cases can be added • Each new test case should include as many un-included valid boundary equivalence class representatives as possible • While test cases can be added • Each new test case should include a single invalid equivalence class representative that has not been included before • Manually replace/remove redundant or infeasible test-cases Black Box Testing
Example: Country Club I Specification Black Box Testing
Example: Country Club II A combo box is used for choosing the day and guest status Black Box Testing
Example: Country Club III valid valid (boundary) invalid Black Box Testing