Now you can run the test suite with `pytest` from the root directory:
```sh
pytest tests/device_tests
```
### Useful Tips
The tests are randomized using the [pytest-random-order] plugin. The random seed is printed in the header of the tests output, in case you need to run the tests in the same order.
If you only want to run a particular test, pick it with `-k <keyword>` or `-m <marker>`:
```sh
pytest -k nem # only runs tests that have "nem" in the name
pytest -m stellar # only runs tests marked with @pytest.mark.stellar
```
If you want to see debugging information and protocol dumps, run with `-v`.
If you would like to interact with the device (i.e. press the buttons yourself), just prefix pytest with `INTERACT=1`:
```sh
INTERACT=1 pytest tests/device_tests
```
## 3. Using markers
When you're developing a new currency, you should mark all tests that belong to that
currency. For example, if your currency is called NewCoin, your device tests should have
the following marker:
```python
@pytest.mark.newcoin
```
This marker must be registered in [REGISTERED_MARKERS] file.
If you wish to run a test only on TT, mark it with `@pytest.mark.skip_t1`.
If the test should only run on T1, mark it with `@pytest.mark.skip_t2`.
Build the debuggable unix binary so you can attach the gdb or lldb.
This removes optimizations and reduces address space randomizaiton.
```sh
make build_unix_debug
```
The final executable is significantly slower due to ASAN(Address Sanitizer) integration.
If you wan't to catch some memory errors use this.
```sh
time ASAN_OPTIONS=verbosity=1:detect_invalid_pointer_pairs=1:strict_init_order=true:strict_string_checks=true TREZOR_PROFILE="" pipenv run make test_emu