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openproject/docs/development/running-tests.md

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Testing OpenProject

OpenProject uses automated tests throughout the stack. Tests that are executed in the browser (npm frontend, rspec integration and cucumber tests) require to have Chrome installed.

Frontend tests

To run JavaScript frontend tests, first ensure you have all necessary dependencies installed via npm (i.e. npm install).

You can run all frontend tests with the standard npm command:

npm test

For more information, check out the frontend guides.

Rails backend and integration tests

RSpec

You can run the specs with the following commands:

  • bundle exec rake spec:core Run all core specs with a random seed
  • bundle exec rake spec:legacy Run all legacy specs with a random seed
  • bundle exec rake spec:plugins Run plugin specs with a random seed
  • bundle exec rake spec:all Run core and plugin specs with a random seed
  • SPEC_OPTS="--seed 12935" bundle exec rake spec Run the core specs with the seed 12935

Integration tests with Capybara

We use Capybara for integration tests as rspec feature specs. They are automatically executed with Capybara when js: true is set.

Selenium, Chrome

For the javascript dependent integration tests, you have to install Chrome, to run them locally.

Capybara uses Selenium to drive the browser and perform the actions we describe in each spec. Previously, we have used Firefox as the browser driven by Selenium.

Due to flaky test results on Travis (No output has been received in the last 10m0s), we switched to using Chrome for the time being. Because most developers already employ Chrome while developing and Firefox ESR being another supported browser, we would have preferred to stick to Firefox for the tests and will try to do so as soon as test results become reproducible again.

Headless mode

Firefox tests through Selenium are run with Chrome as --headless by default. To override this and watch the Chrome instance set the ENV variable OPENPROJECT_TESTING_NO_HEADLESS=1.

Cucumber

Note: We do not write new cucumber features. The current plan is to move away from cucumber towards regular specs using Capybara. For the time being however, please keep the existing cucumber features green but write feature specs in Capybara for any code that is not already covered by cucumber.

The cucumber features can be run using rake. You can run the following rake tasks using the command bundle exec rake <task>.

  • cucumber Run core features

  • cucumber:plugins Run plugin features

  • cucumber:all Run core and plugin features

  • cucumber:custom[features]: Run single features or folders of features

    Example: cucumber:custom[features/issues/issue.feature]

    • When providing multiple features, the task name and arguments must be enclosed in quotation marks.

      Example: bundle exec rake "cucumber:custom[features/issues features/projects]"

    In some development environments you might need to run single features differently as the former example results in weird error messages.

    RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec cucumber -r features <path-to-feature-file>

cucumber:plugins and cucumber:all accept an optional parameter which allows specifying custom options to cucumber. This can be used for executing scenarios by name, e.g. "cucumber:all[-n 'Adding an issue link']". Like with spaces in cucumber:custom arguments, task name and arguments have to be enclosed in quotation marks.

Running cucumber features without rake

Running cucumber features without going through rake is possible by using the following command

cucumber -r features features/my/path/to/cucumber.feature

It is also possible to run a certain cuke by passing a line number:

cucumber -r features features/my/path/to/cucumber.feature:123

You may also run cukes within a certain folder:

cucumber -r features features/my/path

Note: -r features is required otherwise the step definitions cannot be found.

You can run cucumber without rake, and with all core and plugin features included through:

./bin/cucumber features/my/path/to/cucumber.feature:123

Shortcuts

Here are two bash functions which allow using shorter commands for running cucumber features:

# Run OpenProject cucumber features (like arguments to the cucumber command)
# Example: cuke features/issues/issue.feature
cuke() { RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec rake "cucumber:custom[$*]"; }

# Run OpenProject cucumber scenarios by name
# Example: cuken Adding an issue link
cuken() { RAILS_ENV=test bundle exec rake "cucumber:all[-n '$*']"; }

Setting RAILS_ENV=test allows the cucumber rake tasks to run the features directly in the same process, so this reduces the time until the features are running a bit (5-10 seconds) due to the Rails environment only being loaded once.

Selenium

To activate selenium as test driver to test javascript on web pages, you can add `@javascript above the scenario like the following example shows:

@javascript
Scenario: Testing something with Javascript
  When I ...

Debugging

You can always start a debugger using the step "And I start debugging".

Parallel testing

Running tests in parallel makes usage of all available cores of the machine. Functionality is being provided by parallel_tests gem. See the github page for any options like number of cpus used.

Prepare

Adjust database.yml to use different databases:

test: &test
  database: openproject_test<%= ENV['TEST_ENV_NUMBER'] %>
  # ...

Create all databases: rake parallel:create

Prepare all databases:

RAILS_ENV=test parallel_test -e "rake db:drop db:create db:migrate"

Note: Until rake db:schema:load works we have to use the command above. Then we can use rake parallel:prepare

You may also just dump your current schema with rake db:schema:dump (db/schema.rb) is not part of the repository. Then you can just use rake parallel:prepare to prepare test databases.

RSpec legacy specs

Run all legacy specs in parallel with rake parallel:spec_legacy

Or run them manually with parallel_test -t rspec -o '-I spec_legacy' spec_legacy

RSpec specs

Run all specs in parallel with rake parallel:spec

Or run them manually with parallel_test -t rspec spec.

Cucumber

Run all cucumber features in parallel with rake parallel:cucumber.

Or run them manually with parallel_test -t cucumber -o '-r features' features.

Note: there is also a official rake task to run cucumber features but the OpenProject cucumber test suite requires -r features to run correctly. This needs to be passed to the command thus it looks not very handy rake parallel:features\[,,"-r features"\] (this is zsh compatible, command takes three arguments but we just want to pass the last one here.)

Plugins

Run specs for all activated plugins with rake parallel:plugins:spec.

Run cucumber features for all activated plugins with rake parallel:plugins:cucumber.

Full test suite

You may run all existing parts of OpenProject test suite in parallel with rake parallel:all

Note: This will run core specs, core cucumber features, core legacy specs, plugin specs and plugin cucumber features. This task will take around 40 minutes on a machine with 8 parallel instances.

For the fancy programmer

  • We are testing on travis-ci. Look there for your pull requests.
    https://travis-ci.org/opf/openproject
  • If you have enabled the terminal bell, add ; echo -e "\a" to the end of your test command. The terminal bell will then tell you when your tests finished.

Manual acceptance tests

  • Sometimes you want to test things manually. Always remember: If you test something more than once, write an automated test for it.
  • Assuming you do not have a version of Edge already installed on your computer, you can grab a VM with preinstalled IE's directly from Microsoft: http://www.modern.ie/en-us/virtualization-tools#downloads

If you want to access the development server of OpenProject from a VM, you need to work around the CSP localhost restrictions.

One way is to disable the Angular CLI that serves some of the assets when developing. To do that, run


# Precompile the application
./bin/rails assets:precompile

# Start the application server while disabling the CLI asset host 
OPENPROJECT_CLI_PROXY='' ./bin/rails s -b 0.0.0.0 -p 3000

Now assuming networking is set up in your VM, you can access your app server on <your local ip>:3000 from it.

Legacy LDAP tests

OpenProject supports using LDAP for user authentications. To test LDAP with OpenProject, load the LDAP export from test/fixtures/ldap/test-ldap.ldif into a testing LDAP server. Test that the ldap server can be accessed at 127.0.0.1 on port 389.

Setting up the test ldap server is beyond the scope of this documentation. The OpenLDAP project provides a simple LDAP implementation that should work good as a test server.