3.5 KiB
stage | group | info | type |
---|---|---|---|
Verify | Testing | To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#designated-technical-writers | reference, howto |
Fail Fast Testing (PREMIUM)
Introduced in GitLab 13.1.
For applications that use RSpec for running tests, we've introduced the Verify/Failfast
template to run subsets of your test suite,
based on the changes in your merge request.
The template uses the test_file_finder (tff
) gem
that accepts a list of files as input, and returns a list of spec (test) files
that it believes to be relevant to the input files.
tff
is designed for Ruby on Rails projects, so the Verify/FailFast
template is
configured to run when changes to Ruby files are detected. By default, it runs in
the .pre
stage of a GitLab CI/CD pipeline,
before all other stages.
Example use case
Fail fast testing is useful when adding new functionality to a project and adding new automated tests.
Your project could have hundreds of thousands of tests that take a long time to complete. You may be confident that a new test will pass, but you have to wait for all the tests to complete to verify it. This could take an hour or more, even when using parallelization.
Fail fast testing gives you a faster feedback loop from the pipeline. It lets you know quickly that the new tests are passing and the new functionality did not break other tests.
Requirements
This template requires:
- A project built in Rails that uses RSpec for testing.
- CI/CD configured to:
- Use a Docker image with Ruby available.
- Use Pipelines for Merge Requests
- Pipelines for Merged Results enabled in the project settings.
Configure Fast RSpec Failure
We'll use the following plain RSpec configuration as a starting point. It installs all the
project gems and executes rspec
, on merge request pipelines only.
rspec-complete:
stage: test
rules:
- if: $CI_PIPELINE_SOURCE == "merge_request_event"
script:
- bundle install
- bundle exec rspec
To run the most relevant specs first instead of the whole suite, include
the template by adding the following to your CI/CD configuration:
include:
- template: Verify/FailFast.gitlab-ci.yml
Example test loads
For illustrative purposes, let's say our Rails app spec suite consists of 100 specs per model for ten models.
If no Ruby files are changed:
rspec-rails-modified-paths-specs
will not run any tests.rspec-complete
will run the full suite of 1000 tests.
If one Ruby model is changed, for example app/models/example.rb
, then rspec-rails-modified-paths-specs
will run the 100 tests for example.rb
:
- If all of these 100 tests pass, then the full
rspec-complete
suite of 1000 tests is allowed to run. - If any of these 100 tests fail, they will fail quickly, and
rspec-complete
will not run any tests.
The final case saves resources and time as the full 1000 test suite does not run.