On Thu, 28 Mar 2024 at 19:27, Daniel Latypov <dlatypov@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > This current wording and examples (before and after this change) might > make the user think otherwise, i.e. that it works like > effective_name = suite_name + '.' + test_name > return glob_matches(effective_name, filter_glob) > > E.g. given a test name like `suite.test_name` and glob='suite*name' > they might expect it to match, but it does *not*. > > The logic actually works like: > suite_glob, test_glob = split(filter_glob) > if not_glob_matches(suite_name, suite_glob): > return False > if test_glob and not glob_matches(test_name, test_glob): > return False > return True > > Perhaps expanding the list of examples to cover more of the edge cases > could help get the right intuition? > > E.g. perhaps these: > kunit.py run <suite_name> # runs all tests in a specific suite > kunit.py run <suite_name>.<test_name> # run a specific test > > kunit.py run suite_prefix* # what the current example shows > kunit.py run *.*test_suffix # matches all suites, only tests w/ a > certain suffix > kunit.py run suite_prefix*.*test_suffix # combined version of above > > Thoughts? Thanks yeah, good point. The result is pretty verbose but it doesn't create much cognitive load for the reader so might as well just be really explicit. v2 incoming if `make htmldocs` ever finishes....