Testing and debugging Cronet

Checkout and build

See instructions in the common checkout and build.

Running tests locally

First, connect an Android device by following the Plug in your Android device steps. Prefer using a device running a userdebug build.

Alternatively, you can pass the --x86 flag to gn to test on a local emulator -- make sure you substitute out/Debug for out/Debug-x86 in the instructions below.

Running Cronet Java unit tests

To run Java unit tests that actuate the Cronet API:

$ ./components/cronet/tools/cr_cronet.py gn
$ ./components/cronet/tools/cr_cronet.py build-test

To run particular tests specify the test class and method name to the build-test command. For example:

$ ./components/cronet/tools/cr_cronet.py build-test -f QuicTest#testQuicLoadUrl

Running net_unittests and cronet_unittests_android

To run C++ and Java unit tests of net/ functionality:

$ ./components/cronet/tools/cr_cronet.py gn
$ autoninja -C out/Debug net_unittests
$ ./out/Debug/bin/run_net_unittests --fast-local-dev

For more information about running net_unittests, read Android Test Instructions.

There are a small number of C++ Cronet unit tests, called cronet_unittests_android, that can be run by following the above instructions and substituting cronet_unittests_android for net_unittests.

Running Cronet performance tests

To run Cronet's perf tests, follow the instructions in components/cronet/android/test/javaperftests/run.py

Running tests remotely

Once you've uploaded a Chromium change list using git cl upload, you can launch a bot to build and test your change list:

$ git cl try -B luci.chromium.try -b android-cronet-x86-dbg-10-tests

This will run both the Cronet Java unit tests and net_unittests.

Debugging

Tracing

Tracing makes it possible to see the operation of Cronet internals, from Cronet API all the way down to network sockets, and everything in-between. It is often the easiest way to troubleshoot Cronet. See the tracing docs for more information.

Debug Log

Messages from native (C++) code appear in the Android system log accessible with adb logcat. By default you will see only messages designated as FATAL. To enable more verbosity:

See VLOG(1) and VLOG(2) logging:

$ adb shell setprop log.tag.chromium VERBOSE

See VLOG(1) logging:

$ adb shell setprop log.tag.chromium DEBUG

See NO (only FATAL) logging:

$ adb shell setprop log.tag.chromium NONE

Network Log

An easier way to obtain a NetLog is to use tracing, which is more user-friendly and does not require changes to app code.

NetLog is Chromium's network logging system. To create a NetLog dump, you can use the following pair of methods:

CronetEngine.startNetLogToFile()
CronetEngine.stopNetLog()

Unlike the Android system log which is line-based, the Chromium log is formatted in JSON. As such, it will probably not be well-formed until you have called the stopNetLog() method, as filesystem buffers will not have been flushed.

To visualize the resulting NetLog, retrieve the file from your device's file system, then feed it to NetLog Viewer.

Symbolicating crash stacks

If an app or test using Cronet crashes it can be useful to know the functions and line numbers involved in the stack trace. This can be done using the Android system log:

$ ./components/cronet/tools/cr_cronet.py stack

Or using tombstones left behind after crashes:

$ CHROMIUM_OUTPUT_DIR=out/Debug ./build/android/tombstones.py