AMR/tests/tinytest.R

43 lines
2.4 KiB
R

# ==================================================================== #
# TITLE #
# Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) Data Analysis for R #
# #
# SOURCE #
# https://github.com/msberends/AMR #
# #
# LICENCE #
# (c) 2018-2021 Berends MS, Luz CF et al. #
# Developed at the University of Groningen, the Netherlands, in #
# collaboration with non-profit organisations Certe Medical #
# Diagnostics & Advice, and University Medical Center Groningen. #
# #
# This R package is free software; you can freely use and distribute #
# it for both personal and commercial purposes under the terms of the #
# GNU General Public License version 2.0 (GNU GPL-2), as published by #
# the Free Software Foundation. #
# We created this package for both routine data analysis and academic #
# research and it was publicly released in the hope that it will be #
# useful, but it comes WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY OR LIABILITY. #
# #
# Visit our website for the full manual and a complete tutorial about #
# how to conduct AMR data analysis: https://msberends.github.io/AMR/ #
# ==================================================================== #
# test only on GitHub Actions and at home - not on CRAN as tests are lengthy
if (identical(Sys.getenv("R_RUN_TINYTEST"), "true")) {
# env var 'R_LIBS_USER' got overwritten during 'R CMD check' in GitHub Actions, so:
.libPaths(c(Sys.getenv("R_LIBS_USER_GH_ACTIONS"), .libPaths()))
print("here")
if (AMR:::pkg_is_available("tinytest")) {
print("here2")
library(AMR)
out <- test_package("AMR",
testdir = ifelse(AMR:::dir.exists("inst/tinytest"),
"inst/tinytest",
"tinytest"),
verbose = FALSE)
cat(attributes(out)$duration, "\n")
print(summary(out))
}
}