Claude-code-plugins-plus running-mutation-tests

install
source · Clone the upstream repo
git clone https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills
Claude Code · Install into ~/.claude/skills/
T=$(mktemp -d) && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/jeremylongshore/claude-code-plugins-plus-skills "$T" && mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills && cp -r "$T/plugins/testing/mutation-test-runner/skills/running-mutation-tests" ~/.claude/skills/jeremylongshore-claude-code-plugins-plus-running-mutation-tests-72ca68 && rm -rf "$T"
manifest: plugins/testing/mutation-test-runner/skills/running-mutation-tests/SKILL.md
source content

Mutation Test Runner

Overview

Execute mutation testing to evaluate the effectiveness of a test suite by systematically introducing small code changes (mutants) and checking whether existing tests detect them. A killed mutant means the tests caught the change; a surviving mutant reveals a testing gap.

Prerequisites

  • Mutation testing framework installed (Stryker, mutmut, PITest, or go-mutesting)
  • Existing test suite with reasonable pass rate (all tests must pass before mutation testing)
  • Source code with functions and logic suitable for mutation (conditionals, arithmetic, return values)
  • Sufficient CI resources (mutation testing runs the test suite once per mutant -- CPU-intensive)
  • Configuration file for the mutation tool specifying target files and test commands

Instructions

  1. Verify the existing test suite passes completely:
    • Run the full test suite and confirm 100% pass rate.
    • Fix any failing or skipped tests before proceeding.
    • Mutation testing is meaningless if the baseline tests are broken.
  2. Configure the mutation testing tool:
    • Stryker: Create
      stryker.config.mjs
      with
      mutate
      patterns, test runner, and thresholds.
    • mutmut: Configure
      setup.cfg
      or
      pyproject.toml
      with
      [mutmut]
      section.
    • PITest: Add Maven/Gradle plugin with target classes and test configurations.
  3. Select target files for mutation:
    • Focus on business logic modules (not configuration, constants, or type definitions).
    • Exclude auto-generated code, third-party wrappers, and test utilities.
    • Start with a small scope (one module) to validate setup before expanding.
  4. Run the mutation testing suite:
    • Execute
      npx stryker run
      ,
      mutmut run
      , or
      mvn pitest:mutationCoverage
      .
    • Monitor progress -- expect long execution times (10-100x normal test runtime).
    • Use incremental mode if available to skip already-tested mutants.
  5. Analyze the mutation report:
    • Killed mutants: Tests detected the change -- indicates strong test coverage.
    • Survived mutants: Tests did not catch the change -- indicates a testing gap.
    • Timed out mutants: Mutation caused an infinite loop -- generally acceptable.
    • No coverage mutants: The mutated code is not exercised by any test.
  6. For each surviving mutant, determine the appropriate action:
    • Write a new test that specifically catches the mutation.
    • Or determine the mutation is equivalent (functionally identical to original) and mark as ignored.
  7. Set mutation score thresholds (recommended: 80% kill rate) and integrate into CI as a quality gate.

Output

  • Mutation testing report (HTML or JSON) with killed/survived/timed-out counts
  • Mutation score percentage (killed / total non-equivalent mutants)
  • Surviving mutant inventory with file, line, mutation type, and suggested test
  • New test cases written to kill surviving mutants
  • CI configuration with mutation score threshold enforcement

Error Handling

ErrorCauseSolution
Mutation run takes hoursToo many files in scope or slow test suiteNarrow
mutate
scope to critical modules; use
--incremental
mode; parallelize with
--concurrency
All mutants surviveTests only check for truthiness, not specific valuesStrengthen assertions -- use
toBe(42)
instead of
toBeTruthy()
; add boundary checks
Equivalent mutant false positiveMutation produces functionally identical code (e.g.,
x >= 0
vs
x > -1
)
Mark as equivalent in config; ignore in score calculation; document rationale
Out of memory during runToo many concurrent mutation workersReduce
--concurrency
setting; increase Node.js
--max-old-space-size
; reduce shard size
Stryker "initial test run failed"Test suite does not pass cleanly before mutations beginFix all failing tests first; ensure
npm test
exits 0; check test runner configuration

Examples

Stryker configuration for TypeScript project:

// stryker.config.mjs
export default {
  mutate: ['src/**/*.ts', '!src/**/*.d.ts', '!src/**/index.ts'],
  testRunner: 'jest',
  jest: { configFile: 'jest.config.ts' },
  reporters: ['html', 'clear-text', 'progress'],
  thresholds: { high: 80, low: 60, break: 50 },
  concurrency: 4,
  timeoutMS: 10000,  # 10000: 10 seconds in ms
};

Example surviving mutant and fix:

Mutant: src/utils/discount.ts:15 -- ConditionalExpression
  Original:  if (total > 100)
  Mutant:    if (total >= 100)
  Status:    SURVIVED

Fix -- add boundary test:
it('does not apply discount at exactly 100', () => {
  expect(calculateDiscount(100)).toBe(0);
});
it('applies discount above 100', () => {
  expect(calculateDiscount(101)).toBe(10.1);
});

mutmut for Python:

# Run mutation testing
mutmut run --paths-to-mutate=src/ --tests-dir=tests/

# View surviving mutants
mutmut results

# Inspect a specific mutant
mutmut show 42

Resources