558 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
558 lines
23 KiB
Markdown
---
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stage: none
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group: unassigned
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Testing levels
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![Testing priority triangle](img/testing_triangle.png)
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_This diagram demonstrates the relative priority of each test type we use. `e2e` stands for end-to-end._
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As of 2019-05-01, we have the following distribution of tests per level:
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| Test level | Community Edition | Enterprise Edition | Community + Enterprise Edition |
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| --------- | ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
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| Black-box tests at the system level (aka end-to-end or QA tests) | 68 (0.14%) | 31 (0.2%) | 99 (0.17%) |
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| White-box tests at the system level (aka system or feature tests) | 5,471 (11.9%) | 969 (7.4%) | 6440 (10.9%) |
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| Integration tests | 8,333 (18.2%) | 2,244 (17.2%) | 10,577 (17.9%) |
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| Unit tests | 32,031 (69.7%) | 9,778 (75.1%) | 41,809 (71%) |
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## Unit tests
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Formal definition: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_testing>
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These kind of tests ensure that a single unit of code (a method) works as
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expected (given an input, it has a predictable output). These tests should be
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isolated as much as possible. For example, model methods that don't do anything
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with the database shouldn't need a DB record. Classes that don't need database
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records should use stubs/doubles as much as possible.
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| Code path | Tests path | Testing engine | Notes |
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| --------- | ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
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| `app/assets/javascripts/` | `spec/javascripts/`, `spec/frontend/` | Karma & Jest | More details in the [Frontend Testing guide](frontend_testing.md) section. |
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| `app/finders/` | `spec/finders/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/graphql/` | `spec/graphql/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/helpers/` | `spec/helpers/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/models/` | `spec/models/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/policies/` | `spec/policies/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/presenters/` | `spec/presenters/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/serializers/` | `spec/serializers/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/services/` | `spec/services/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/uploaders/` | `spec/uploaders/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/validators/` | `spec/validators/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/views/` | `spec/views/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/workers/` | `spec/workers/` | RSpec | |
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| `bin/` | `spec/bin/` | RSpec | |
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| `config/` | `spec/config/` | RSpec | |
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| `config/initializers/` | `spec/initializers/` | RSpec | |
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| `config/routes.rb`, `config/routes/` | `spec/routing/` | RSpec | |
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| `config/puma.example.development.rb`, `config/unicorn.rb.example` | `spec/rack_servers/` | RSpec | |
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| `db/` | `spec/db/` | RSpec | |
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| `db/{post_,}migrate/` | `spec/migrations/` | RSpec | More details in the [Testing Rails migrations guide](testing_migrations_guide.md). |
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| `Gemfile` | `spec/dependencies/`, `spec/sidekiq/` | RSpec | |
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| `lib/` | `spec/lib/` | RSpec | |
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| `lib/tasks/` | `spec/tasks/` | RSpec | |
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| `rubocop/` | `spec/rubocop/` | RSpec | |
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| `spec/factories` | `spec/factories_spec.rb` | RSpec | |
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### Frontend unit tests
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Unit tests are on the lowest abstraction level and typically test functionality
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that is not directly perceivable by a user.
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```mermaid
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graph RL
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plain[Plain JavaScript];
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Vue[Vue Components];
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feature-flags[Feature Flags];
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license-checks[License Checks];
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plain---Vuex;
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plain---GraphQL;
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Vue---plain;
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Vue---Vuex;
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Vue---GraphQL;
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browser---plain;
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browser---Vue;
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plain---backend;
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Vuex---backend;
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GraphQL---backend;
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Vue---backend;
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backend---database;
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backend---feature-flags;
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backend---license-checks;
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class plain tested;
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class Vuex tested;
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classDef node color:#909090,fill:#f0f0f0,stroke-width:2px,stroke:#909090
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classDef label stroke-width:0;
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classDef tested color:#000000,fill:#a0c0ff,stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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subgraph " "
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tested;
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mocked;
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class tested tested;
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end
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```
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#### When to use unit tests
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- **Exported functions and classes**:
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Anything exported can be reused at various places in ways you have no control over.
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You should document the expected behavior of the public interface with tests.
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- **Vuex actions**:
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Any Vuex action must work in a consistent way, independent of the component it is triggered from.
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- **Vuex mutations**:
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For complex Vuex mutations, you should separate the tests from other parts of the Vuex store to simplify problem-solving.
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#### When *not* to use unit tests
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- **Non-exported functions or classes**:
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Anything not exported from a module can be considered private or an implementation detail, and doesn't need to be tested.
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- **Constants**:
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Testing the value of a constant means copying it, resulting in extra effort without additional confidence that the value is correct.
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- **Vue components**:
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Computed properties, methods, and lifecycle hooks can be considered an implementation detail of components, are implicitly covered by component tests, and don't need to be tested.
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For more information, see the [official Vue guidelines](https://vue-test-utils.vuejs.org/guides/#getting-started).
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#### What to mock in unit tests
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- **State of the class under test**:
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Modifying the state of the class under test directly rather than using methods of the class avoids side effects in test setup.
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- **Other exported classes**:
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Every class must be tested in isolation to prevent test scenarios from growing exponentially.
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- **Single DOM elements if passed as parameters**:
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For tests only operating on single DOM elements, rather than a whole page, creating these elements is cheaper than loading an entire HTML fixture.
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- **All server requests**:
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When running frontend unit tests, the backend may not be reachable, so all outgoing requests need to be mocked.
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- **Asynchronous background operations**:
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Background operations cannot be stopped or waited on, so they continue running in the following tests and cause side effects.
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#### What *not* to mock in unit tests
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- **Non-exported functions or classes**:
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Everything that is not exported can be considered private to the module, and is implicitly tested through the exported classes and functions.
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- **Methods of the class under test**:
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By mocking methods of the class under test, the mocks are tested and not the real methods.
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- **Utility functions (pure functions, or those that only modify parameters)**:
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If a function has no side effects because it has no state, it is safe to not mock it in tests.
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- **Full HTML pages**:
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Avoid loading the HTML of a full page in unit tests, as it slows down tests.
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### Frontend component tests
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Component tests cover the state of a single component that is perceivable by a user depending on external signals such as user input, events fired from other components, or application state.
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```mermaid
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graph RL
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plain[Plain JavaScript];
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Vue[Vue Components];
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feature-flags[Feature Flags];
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license-checks[License Checks];
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plain---Vuex;
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plain---GraphQL;
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Vue---plain;
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Vue---Vuex;
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Vue---GraphQL;
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browser---plain;
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browser---Vue;
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plain---backend;
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Vuex---backend;
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GraphQL---backend;
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Vue---backend;
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backend---database;
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backend---feature-flags;
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backend---license-checks;
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class Vue tested;
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classDef node color:#909090,fill:#f0f0f0,stroke-width:2px,stroke:#909090
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classDef label stroke-width:0;
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classDef tested color:#000000,fill:#a0c0ff,stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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subgraph " "
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tested;
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mocked;
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class tested tested;
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end
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```
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#### When to use component tests
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- **Vue components**
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#### When *not* to use component tests
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- **Vue applications**:
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Vue applications may contain many components.
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Testing them on a component level requires too much effort.
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Therefore they are tested on frontend integration level.
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- **HAML templates**:
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HAML templates contain only Markup and no frontend-side logic.
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Therefore they are not complete components.
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#### What to mock in component tests
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- **DOM**:
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Operating on the real DOM is significantly slower than on the virtual DOM.
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- **Properties and state of the component under test**:
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Similar to testing classes, modifying the properties directly (rather than relying on methods of the component) avoids side effects.
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- **Vuex store**:
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To avoid side effects and keep component tests simple, Vuex stores are replaced with mocks.
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- **All server requests**:
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Similar to unit tests, when running component tests, the backend may not be reachable, so all outgoing requests need to be mocked.
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- **Asynchronous background operations**:
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Similar to unit tests, background operations cannot be stopped or waited on. This means they continue running in the following tests and cause side effects.
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- **Child components**:
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Every component is tested individually, so child components are mocked.
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See also [`shallowMount()`](https://vue-test-utils.vuejs.org/api/#shallowmount)
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#### What *not* to mock in component tests
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- **Methods or computed properties of the component under test**:
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By mocking part of the component under test, the mocks are tested and not the real component.
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- **Functions and classes independent from Vue**:
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All plain JavaScript code is already covered by unit tests and needs not to be mocked in component tests.
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## Integration tests
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Formal definition: <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integration_testing>
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These kind of tests ensure that individual parts of the application work well
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together, without the overhead of the actual app environment (i.e. the browser).
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These tests should assert at the request/response level: status code, headers,
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body.
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They're useful to test permissions, redirections, what view is rendered etc.
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| Code path | Tests path | Testing engine | Notes |
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| --------- | ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
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| `app/controllers/` | `spec/requests/`, `spec/controllers` | RSpec | Request specs are preferred over legacy controller specs. |
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| `app/mailers/` | `spec/mailers/` | RSpec | |
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| `lib/api/` | `spec/requests/api/` | RSpec | |
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| `app/assets/javascripts/` | `spec/javascripts/`, `spec/frontend/` | Karma & Jest | [More details below](#frontend-integration-tests) |
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### Frontend integration tests
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Integration tests cover the interaction between all components on a single page.
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Their abstraction level is comparable to how a user would interact with the UI.
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```mermaid
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graph RL
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plain[Plain JavaScript];
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Vue[Vue Components];
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feature-flags[Feature Flags];
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license-checks[License Checks];
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plain---Vuex;
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plain---GraphQL;
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Vue---plain;
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Vue---Vuex;
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Vue---GraphQL;
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browser---plain;
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browser---Vue;
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plain---backend;
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Vuex---backend;
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GraphQL---backend;
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Vue---backend;
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backend---database;
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backend---feature-flags;
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backend---license-checks;
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class plain tested;
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class Vue tested;
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class Vuex tested;
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class GraphQL tested;
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class browser tested;
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linkStyle 0,1,2,3,4,5,6 stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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classDef node color:#909090,fill:#f0f0f0,stroke-width:2px,stroke:#909090
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classDef label stroke-width:0;
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classDef tested color:#000000,fill:#a0c0ff,stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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subgraph " "
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tested;
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mocked;
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class tested tested;
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end
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```
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#### When to use integration tests
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- **Page bundles (`index.js` files in `app/assets/javascripts/pages/`)**:
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Testing the page bundles ensures the corresponding frontend components integrate well.
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- **Vue applications outside of page bundles**:
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Testing Vue applications as a whole ensures the corresponding frontend components integrate well.
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#### What to mock in integration tests
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- **HAML views (use fixtures instead)**:
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Rendering HAML views requires a Rails environment including a running database, which you cannot rely on in frontend tests.
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- **All server requests**:
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Similar to unit and component tests, when running component tests, the backend may not be reachable, so all outgoing requests must be mocked.
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- **Asynchronous background operations that are not perceivable on the page**:
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Background operations that affect the page must be tested on this level.
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All other background operations cannot be stopped or waited on, so they continue running in the following tests and cause side effects.
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#### What *not* to mock in integration tests
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- **DOM**:
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Testing on the real DOM ensures your components work in the intended environment.
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Part of DOM testing is delegated to [cross-browser testing](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/quality/team-tasks/-/issues/45).
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- **Properties or state of components**:
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On this level, all tests can only perform actions a user would do.
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For example: to change the state of a component, a click event would be fired.
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- **Vuex stores**:
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When testing the frontend code of a page as a whole, the interaction between Vue components and Vuex stores is covered as well.
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### About controller tests
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GitLab is [transitioning from controller specs to request specs](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/5076).
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In an ideal world, controllers should be thin. However, when this is not the
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case, it's acceptable to write a system or feature test without JavaScript instead
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of a controller test. Testing a fat controller usually involves a lot of stubbing, such as:
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```ruby
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controller.instance_variable_set(:@user, user)
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```
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and use methods [deprecated in Rails 5](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/16260).
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### About Karma
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Karma is both in the Unit tests and the Integration tests category. Karma provides an environment to
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run JavaScript tests, so you can either run unit tests (e.g. test a single
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JavaScript method), or integration tests (e.g. test a component that is composed
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of multiple components).
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## White-box tests at the system level (formerly known as System / Feature tests)
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Formal definitions:
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- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_testing>
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- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White-box_testing>
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These kind of tests ensure the GitLab *Rails* application (for example,
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`gitlab-foss`/`gitlab`) works as expected from a *browser* point of view.
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Note that:
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- knowledge of the internals of the application are still required
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- data needed for the tests are usually created directly using RSpec factories
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- expectations are often set on the database or objects state
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These tests should only be used when:
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- the functionality/component being tested is small
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- the internal state of the objects/database *needs* to be tested
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- it cannot be tested at a lower level
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For instance, to test the breadcrumbs on a given page, writing a system test
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makes sense since it's a small component, which cannot be tested at the unit or
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controller level.
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Only test the happy path, but make sure to add a test case for any regression
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that couldn't have been caught at lower levels with better tests (for example, if a
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regression is found, regression tests should be added at the lowest level
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possible).
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| Tests path | Testing engine | Notes |
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| ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
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| `spec/features/` | [Capybara](https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara) + [RSpec](https://github.com/rspec/rspec-rails#feature-specs) | If your test has the `:js` metadata, the browser driver is [Poltergeist](https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara#poltergeist), otherwise it's using [RackTest](https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara#racktest). |
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### Frontend feature tests
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In contrast to [frontend integration tests](#frontend-integration-tests), feature
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tests make requests against the real backend instead of using fixtures.
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This also implies that database queries are executed which makes this category significantly slower.
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See also:
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- The [RSpec testing guidelines](../testing_guide/best_practices.md#rspec).
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- System / Feature tests in the [Testing Best Practices](best_practices.md#system--feature-tests).
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- [Issue #26159](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/26159) which aims at combining those guidelines with this page.
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```mermaid
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graph RL
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plain[Plain JavaScript];
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Vue[Vue Components];
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feature-flags[Feature Flags];
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license-checks[License Checks];
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plain---Vuex;
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plain---GraphQL;
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Vue---plain;
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Vue---Vuex;
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Vue---GraphQL;
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browser---plain;
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browser---Vue;
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plain---backend;
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Vuex---backend;
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GraphQL---backend;
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Vue---backend;
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backend---database;
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backend---feature-flags;
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backend---license-checks;
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class backend tested;
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class plain tested;
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class Vue tested;
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class Vuex tested;
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class GraphQL tested;
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class browser tested;
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linkStyle 0,1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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classDef node color:#909090,fill:#f0f0f0,stroke-width:2px,stroke:#909090
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classDef label stroke-width:0;
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classDef tested color:#000000,fill:#a0c0ff,stroke:#6666ff,stroke-width:2px,stroke-dasharray: 5, 5;
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subgraph " "
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tested;
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mocked;
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class tested tested;
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end
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```
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#### When to use feature tests
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- Use cases that require a backend, and cannot be tested using fixtures.
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- Behavior that is not part of a page bundle, but defined globally.
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#### Relevant notes
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A `:js` flag is added to the test to make sure the full environment is loaded:
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```ruby
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scenario 'successfully', :js do
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sign_in(create(:admin))
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end
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```
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The steps of each test are written using ([capybara methods](https://www.rubydoc.info/gems/capybara)).
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XHR (XMLHttpRequest) calls might require you to use `wait_for_requests` in between steps, such as:
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```ruby
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find('.form-control').native.send_keys(:enter)
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wait_for_requests
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expect(page).not_to have_selector('.card')
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```
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### Consider **not** writing a system test
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If we're confident that the low-level components work well (and we should be if
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we have enough Unit & Integration tests), we shouldn't need to duplicate their
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thorough testing at the System test level.
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It's very easy to add tests, but a lot harder to remove or improve tests, so one
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should take care of not introducing too many (slow and duplicated) tests.
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The reasons why we should follow these best practices are as follows:
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- System tests are slow to run because they spin up the entire application stack
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in a headless browser, and even slower when they integrate a JS driver
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- When system tests run with a JavaScript driver, the tests are run in a
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different thread than the application. This means it does not share a
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database connection and your test must commit the transactions in
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order for the running application to see the data (and vice-versa). In that
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case we need to truncate the database after each spec instead of
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rolling back a transaction (the faster strategy that's in use for other kind
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of tests). This is slower than transactions, however, so we want to use
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truncation only when necessary.
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## Black-box tests at the system level, aka end-to-end tests
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|
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Formal definitions:
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- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_testing>
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- <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-box_testing>
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|
|
GitLab consists of [multiple pieces](../architecture.md#components) such as [GitLab Shell](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-shell), [GitLab Workhorse](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-workhorse),
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[Gitaly](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly), [GitLab Pages](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages), [GitLab Runner](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-runner), and GitLab Rails. All theses pieces
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are configured and packaged by [Omnibus GitLab](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab).
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|
|
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The QA framework and instance-level scenarios are [part of GitLab Rails](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-foss/tree/master/qa) so that
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they're always in-sync with the codebase (especially the views).
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|
|
|
Note that:
|
|
|
|
- knowledge of the internals of the application are not required
|
|
- data needed for the tests can only be created using the GUI or the API
|
|
- expectations can only be made against the browser page and API responses
|
|
|
|
Every new feature should come with a [test plan](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/tree/master/.gitlab/issue_templates/Test%20plan.md).
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|
|
|
| Tests path | Testing engine | Notes |
|
|
| ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
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|
| `qa/qa/specs/features/` | [Capybara](https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara) + [RSpec](https://github.com/rspec/rspec-rails#feature-specs) + Custom QA framework | Tests should be placed under their corresponding [Product category](https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/product/categories/) |
|
|
|
|
> See [end-to-end tests](end_to_end/index.md) for more information.
|
|
|
|
Note that `qa/spec` contains unit tests of the QA framework itself, not to be
|
|
confused with the application's [unit tests](#unit-tests) or
|
|
[end-to-end tests](#black-box-tests-at-the-system-level-aka-end-to-end-tests).
|
|
|
|
### Smoke tests
|
|
|
|
Smoke tests are quick tests that may be run at any time (especially after the
|
|
pre-deployment migrations).
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|
|
|
These tests run against the UI and ensure that basic functionality is working.
|
|
|
|
> See [Smoke Tests](smoke.md) for more information.
|
|
|
|
### GitLab QA orchestrator
|
|
|
|
[GitLab QA orchestrator](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-qa) is a tool that allows to test that all these pieces
|
|
integrate well together by building a Docker image for a given version of GitLab
|
|
Rails and running end-to-end tests (i.e. using Capybara) against it.
|
|
|
|
Learn more in the [GitLab QA orchestrator README](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-qa/tree/master/README.md).
|
|
|
|
## EE-specific tests
|
|
|
|
EE-specific tests follows the same organization, but under the `ee/spec` folder.
|
|
|
|
## How to test at the correct level?
|
|
|
|
As many things in life, deciding what to test at each level of testing is a
|
|
trade-off:
|
|
|
|
- Unit tests are usually cheap, and you should consider them like the basement
|
|
of your house: you need them to be confident that your code is behaving
|
|
correctly. However if you run only unit tests without integration / system
|
|
tests, you might [miss](https://twitter.com/ThePracticalDev/status/850748070698651649) the
|
|
[big](https://twitter.com/timbray/status/822470746773409794) /
|
|
[picture](https://twitter.com/withzombies/status/829716565834752000) !
|
|
- Integration tests are a bit more expensive, but don't abuse them. A system test
|
|
is often better than an integration test that is stubbing a lot of internals.
|
|
- System tests are expensive (compared to unit tests), even more if they require
|
|
a JavaScript driver. Make sure to follow the guidelines in the [Speed](best_practices.md#test-speed)
|
|
section.
|
|
|
|
Another way to see it is to think about the "cost of tests", this is well
|
|
explained [in this article](https://medium.com/table-xi/high-cost-tests-and-high-value-tests-a86e27a54df#.2ulyh3a4e)
|
|
and the basic idea is that the cost of a test includes:
|
|
|
|
- The time it takes to write the test
|
|
- The time it takes to run the test every time the suite runs
|
|
- The time it takes to understand the test
|
|
- The time it takes to fix the test if it breaks and the underlying code is OK
|
|
- Maybe, the time it takes to change the code to make the code testable.
|
|
|
|
### Frontend-related tests
|
|
|
|
There are cases where the behavior you are testing is not worth the time spent
|
|
running the full application, for example, if you are testing styling, animation,
|
|
edge cases or small actions that don't involve the backend,
|
|
you should write an integration test using Jasmine.
|
|
|
|
---
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|
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|
[Return to Testing documentation](index.md)
|