#+TITLE: The Location of Emacs-Lisp Tests * The Main Emacs Repository The Emacs repository contains a very large number of Emacs-Lisp files, many of which pre-date both formal package support for Emacs and automated unit testing. All paths are relative to the Emacs root directory. ** Source Lisp files are stored in the ~lisp~ directory or its sub-directories. Sub-directories are in many cases themed after packages (~gnus~, ~org~, ~calc~), related functionality (~net~, ~emacs-lisp~, ~progmodes~) or status (~obsolete~). C source is stored in the ~src~ directory, which is flat. ** Test Files Automated tests should be stored in the ~test/automated/lisp~ directory. Tests should reflect the directory structure of the source tree; so tests for files in the ~emacs-lisp~ source directory should reside in the ~test/lisp/emacs-lisp~ directory. Tests should normally reside in a file with ~-tests~ added to the name of the tested source file; hence ~ert.el~ is tested in ~ert-tests.el~, or ~pcase.el~ is tested in ~pcase-tests.el~. Exceptionally, tests for a single feature may be placed into multiple files of any name which are themselves placed in a directory named after the feature with ~-tests~ appended, such as ~/test/lisp/emacs-lisp/eieio-tests~ Where features of the C source are tested using Emacs-Lisp test files, these should reside in ~/test/src~ and be named after the C file. A few test suites which predate this scheme and do not fit cleanly into it are placed in ~/test/lisp/legacy~. There are also some test materials that cannot be run automatically (i.e. via ert). These should be placed in ~/test/manual~ ** Resource Files Resource files for tests (containing test data) should reside in a directory named after the feature with a ~-resources~ suffix, and located in the same directory as the feature. Hence, the lisp file ~flymake.el~ should have test files in ~/test/automated/lisp/progmodes/flymake-tests.el~ should reside in a directory called ~/test/automated/lisp/progmodes/flymake-resources~. No guidance is given for the organization of resource files inside the ~-resource~ directory; files can be organized at the author's discretion.