Test vector

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In computer science and engineering, a test vector is a set of inputs provided to a system in order to test that system.

Rationale

In computer science and engineering, a system acts as a computable function. An example of a specific function could be y=f(x) where y is the output of the system and x is the input; however, most systems' inputs are not one-dimensional. When the inputs are multi-dimensional, we could say that the system takes the form y=f(x_{1},x_{2},...) ; however, we can generalize this equation to a general form Y=C(X) where Y is the result of the system's execution, C belongs to the set of computable functions, and X is an input vector. While testing the system, various test vectors must be used to examine the system's behavior with differing inputs.

Example

For an example, consider a login page with two input fields: a username field and a password field. In that case, the login system can be described as:

y=L(u,p)

with y\in \{true,false\} and u,p\in \{String\}, with true designating login successful, and false designating login failure, respectively.

Making things more generic, we can suggest that the function L takes input as a 2-dimensional vector and outputs a one dimensional vector (scalar). This can be written in the following way:-

Y=L(X)

with X=[x_{1},x_{2}]=[u,p]\;;\;Y=[y_{1}]

In this case, X is called the input vector, and Y is called the output vector.

In order to test the login page, it is necessary to pass some sample input vectors \{X_{1},X_{2},X_{3},...\}. In this context X_{i} is called a test vector.

See also

References

  • Test Vector Guidelines.
  • Test Vector Considered Harmful.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike; additional terms may apply for the media files.