Branching Tree Technique (BTT) Skill
Write bulloak tree specifications for smart contract tests.
Bundled References
Reference Content When to Read
./references/examples.md
Complete tree and generated test examples When learning BTT syntax
./references/sablier-conventions.md
Sablier-specific terminology and examples When working in Sablier repos
What is Bulloak?
Bulloak is a Solidity test generator that creates test scaffolds from .tree specification files. It offers a structured approach to test case design that ensures comprehensive coverage of all possible scenarios and edge cases in your smart contract tests.
Commands
To install Bulloak, if not found
cargo install bulloak
Generate test contract from a .tree file
bulloak scaffold -wf --skip-modifiers --format-descriptions <path/to/file.tree>
where:
-
--format-descriptions capitalizes the first letter of the branch in the test contract and add a period at the end of it.
-
--skip-modifiers skips the generation of modifiers. We do this because we put all the modifiers in a separate Modifiers.sol file.
Check if the code in .t.sol file matches the specification in the .tree file
bulloak check --skip-modifiers <path/to/file.tree>
Important: Tree Files Should NOT Have Periods
Tree files should not have periods at the end of it branches. The --format-descriptions flag automatically:
-
Capitalizes the first letter
-
Adds a period at the end
Correct (no period)
└── it should revert
Wrong (has period)
└── it should revert.
Tree Syntax
Structure
FunctionName_ContractName_Integration_Test ├── condition1 │ └── outcome1 └── condition2 └── outcome2
Terminology
Keyword Purpose
when
Conditional branch (user input or timestamp)
given
Pre-condition contract state branch
it
Action/assertion (leaf node)
- when and given become modifiers if they have nested branches.
Spec
-
In case of single tree per file, the root should be just the function name followed by _Integration_Concrete_Test .
-
In case of multiple trees in the same file, each root must be Contract::function , using :: as a separator, and all roots must share the same contract name (e.g., Foo::hashPair , Foo::min ).
-
bulloak expects you to use ├ and └ characters to denote branches
-
If a branch starts with either when or given , it is a condition. when and given are interchangeable.
-
If a branch starts with it , it is an action. Any child branch an action has is called an action description.
Examples
For examples, see ./references/examples.md .
Rules
-
The test file must be placed in the tests/integration/concrete/{function} directory.
-
The directory name must use - format. For example, if the function name is createFlowStream , the corrresponding test tree and test file must be placed in the tests/integration/concrete/create-flow-stream directory.
-
The tree file name must be {function}.tree .
-
The test file name must be {function}.t.sol .
-
The root node of the spec and the Contract name must be {FunctionName}_Integration_Concrete_Test .
Workflow
- Create the Tree File
Location for tree file: tests/integration/concrete/{function-name}/{functionName}.tree
Note: Your repo's agent will provide the exact directory structure.
- Generate Test Scaffold
bulloak scaffold -wf --skip-modifiers --format-descriptions <path/to/file.tree>
This generates a .t.sol file.
- Check Tree-Test Alignment
bulloak check --skip-modifiers <path/to/file.tree>
If it returns false, your repo agent will look into it and fix the issues.
Best Practices
- Order Conditions Logically
Start with guard conditions that cause early reverts:
├── when delegate call // First: delegation check │ └── it should revert └── when no delegate call ├── given null // Second: existence check │ └── it should revert └── given not null ├── when amount zero // Third: input validation │ └── it should revert └── when amount not zero └── ... // Finally: business logic
- Use Consistent Terminology
Some examples below:
Concept Convention
Resource doesn't exist given null
Resource exists given not null
Caller check when caller {role}
Amount check when amount {condition}
Whenever possible, try to use less words and more concise language for the branches.
- Group Related Conditions
└── when withdrawal address not zero ├── when withdrawal address not owner // Non-owner cases │ ├── when caller sender │ ├── when caller unknown │ └── when caller recipient └── when withdrawal address owner // Owner cases └── ...
- Detailed Leaf Nodes for Happy Path
For success cases, enumerate all side effects:
└── it should make the withdrawal ├── it should reduce the entry balance by the withdrawn amount ├── it should reduce the aggregate amount by the withdrawn amount ├── it should update the entry state ├── it should update the timestamp └── it should emit {Transfer}, {Withdraw} and {MetadataUpdate} events
Put events in parenthesis: {EventName}.
- Use proper indentation
Child branch symbols (├/└) must align with the tail of parent's └── or ├── (3 spaces, not 4):
└── when withdrawal address not zero ├── when withdrawal address not owner ✓ Correct (3 spaces) │ └── when caller sender
Running Bulloak
Scaffold tests from tree
bulloak scaffold -wf --skip-modifiers --format-descriptions <path/to/file.tree>
Check all trees in a directory
bulloak check --skip-modifiers tests/**/*.tree
Full Documentation
https://github.com/alexfertel/bulloak/blob/main/README.md
Example Invocations
Test this skill with these prompts:
-
Basic tree: "Write a BTT tree for a deposit function that reverts when amount is zero and succeeds otherwise"
-
Complex tree: "Create a tree spec for withdraw that checks null stream, caller authorization, and amount validation"
-
Sablier-specific: "Write a BTT tree for cancel in the Lockup protocol with proper stream state checks"