I'm trying to grasp the basics of Jasmine (and BDD/TDD I guess). The examples I have seen does not resemble any realistic scenario of a web application, and have a hard time relating to it.
Are Jasmine tests done aside (separately) from working on the JavaScript that will be deployed? Manually copying tested/validated code.. Or does Jasmine compile to standard JS used for production?
Cheers
Jasmine is a framework for testing JavaScript code. Just like testing Ruby on Rails code, the tests don't become part of the production code. They are in the same repo and are run but they aren't minified into project.js or whatever your build process is. As part of your test run process, you can do headless tests using PhantomJS (headless webkit) and have it run on your CI server and so forth just like any other test.
I have worked on a bunch of projects this way. There has been a trend of seeing JavaScript has an enhancement layer that doesn't really need to be tested but today JavaScript is so much more. It is critical to test it if your application needs to work.
Related
I have a website that is running on some server, which is used by a few thousand people. It's built on Java and soy template. I need to test the fronted rendering/js files. Can I do this from my local machine after accessing the web page?
for example: say I need to run a few Javascript test files on facebook.com. I go to facebook.com in my browser, after it is loaded, I need to run a few js files to test it. Is it possible? if yes, should I use Mocha or jest or any other alternate framework?
Only you can do is E2E testing. E2E testing is an UI automation testing. Here are the e2e testing framework choices:
puppeteer
cypress
casperjs
protractor
You can use jestjs with puppeteer.
There are different test types that can be run against code: Unit, Integration, Functional, etc. Some types have different test methodologies: TDD, BDD, etc. In this instance it seems you are wanting Functional Tests usually using the BDD method. In regard to your post, you state Java but tag the post Javascript and mention the Mocha framework. I'm assuming you meant Javascript instead of Java, with that said Mocha does support Functional Tests:
https://mochajs.org/#retry-tests
You will need the Selenium Driver to be installed along with other specific web browser drivers: Chrome, Edge, Gecko. A quick search shows that there might be an easier path to get up and running:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/mocha-webdriver
I have no experience with that library but leave further investigation up to you.
I am writing jquery plugins like selectbox, rangeslider etc.. I am planning to do automation test. When I look into it, I find them confusing.
There are frameworks like TestNG, JUnit, Maven, Gradel etc..
and on the other side mocha, jasmine etc..
What is the similarity and difference between them?
Which one is the best to test uicomponents?
or At least the basics which would help me to understand?
#sjethvani Thanks for your reply.
Now I have got some understanding on Browser Automation Tools and Testing Frameworks. Have decided to use Selenium with NodeJs and Mocha. But, Is it possible to test it in all browsers parallelly using a single command line? mocha test - command preferably runs it in a single browse or Do I have to loop it inside my test file, to open it in different browsers? Is this the way?
I have already experimented testing NodeJS libraries using Jasmine or Mocha, but I don't know how to test front-end projects. I have found tutorials online, but everything includes a task manager in the workflow and I would like to know how to do this without one.
I found the following question close to what I am asking:
Using Travis-CI for client-side JavaScript libraries?
In my case, I am using Jasmine and have already set up the Jasmine SpecRunner.html, Jasmine library and spec/mylibSpec.js. The tests pass when I run the SpecRunner.html on my browser.
Now, how do I integrate this with Travis, without Grunt/Gulp/Brunch/etc?
I have heard the words "PhantomJS" and "Selenium" and I think this has to do with what I am trying to accomplish. Is there a "hello, world"-like project with tests and Travis integration one can learn from?
The Travis documentation lists three basic ways to accomplish this:
the PhantomJS headless browser
running Firefox with a virtual display or
using the Saucelabs browser VM service
Testing with PhantomJS is the fastest, since it does not simulate a display (it still allows you to create screenshots, though). PhantomJS comes with a run-jasmine example.
The phantom test script can then be executed directly, simply by running
script: phantomjs run-jasmine.js
in your .travis.yml, without the additional overhead of a build system such as Grunt.
If testing your project requires a real browser GUI, that leaves you with options 2 or 3.
Saucelabs browser VMs have the advantage of real cross-browser testing; if your project is open source, they offer a free plan. They also provide an in-depth tutorial for your specific use case: Travis + Jasmine + Saucelabs, which however does require Grunt in order to run.
Is it possible to execute code coverage on CofeeScript sources without using CoffeeScriptRedux compiler (this one is use in ibrik). I understand advantages of this new compiler but looks like it's still not completed and doesn't work for my project.
That would be nice to know more about your application but for most cases the response is yes.
For a Node application and using Mocha for unit tests, I used this project: https://github.com/benbria/coffee-coverage that will compile your Coffee files to add coverage instructions.
And then you can use applications such as: https://github.com/cainus/node-coveralls that will digest the previous reports and make it human readable.
But I know that the main Javascript Coverage frameworks can be compatible with Coffeescript.
For example, Blanket seems to be: https://github.com/alex-seville/blanket/blob/master/docs/compatibility_and_features.md#coffeescript-in-the-browser
The advantage of Blanket is that you can use it for a Node application as well as in the Browser (With Jasmine, or whatever). Also Blanket, compared to the other project, doesn't force you to change your test "require" statements.
I would like to run unit tests of my JavaScript code in Cruise Control. We currently use nUnit, and I see that nUnit has a javascript library. How do I write unit (not UI) tests in JavaScript using nUnit?
The best way to automate JS tests and include them in continuous integration process is to use JSTestDriver. It is very fast, can test your scripts in all kinds of browsers, can be easily integrated in IDE (How To ntegrate JsTestDriver in Visual Studio), and what is more important - this is simple comsole application, which can be easily be executed from nant script.
The example of solution with JsTestDriver tests is here.
You can do this with JSUnit. Their JSUnit Server allows you to run scriptable JavaScript unit tests within a Java virtual machine (JVM).
You can use Rhino, which is a Javascript runtime written in Java (IIRC, the command-line is something like java -jar Rhino.jar script.js).
This is especially useful if your tests don't require a browser.
Don't forget to analyze your JS code with JSLint !