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package.json | ||
README.md | ||
tsconfig.json | ||
tsdoc.json |
Mocha Runner
Mocha Runner is a test runner on top of mocha.
It uses /test/TestSuites.json
and /test/TestExpectations.json
files to run mocha tests in multiple configurations and interpret results.
Running tests for Mocha Runner itself.
npm test
Running tests using Mocha Runner
npm run build && npm run test
By default, the runner runs all test suites applicable to the current platform.
To pick a test suite, provide the --test-suite
arguments. For example,
npm run build && npm run test -- --test-suite chrome-headless
TestSuites.json
Define test suites via the testSuites
attribute. parameters
can be used in the TestExpectations.json
to disable tests
based on parameters. The meaning for parameters is defined in parameterDefinitions
which tell what env object corresponds
to the given parameter.
TestExpectations.json
An expectation looks like this:
{
"testIdPattern": "[accessibility.spec]",
"platforms": ["darwin", "win32", "linux"],
"parameters": ["firefox"],
"expectations": ["SKIP"]
}
Field | Description | Type | Match Logic |
---|---|---|---|
testIdPattern |
Defines the full name (or pattern) to match against test name | string | - |
platforms |
Defines the platforms the expectation is for | Array<linux | win32 |darwin > |
OR |
parameters |
Defines the parameters that the test has to match | Array<ParameterDefinitions> | AND |
expectations |
The list of test results that are considered to be acceptable | Array<PASS | FAIL | TIMEOUT | SKIP > |
OR |
Order of defining expectations matters. The latest expectation that is set will take president over earlier ones.
Adding
SKIP
toexpectations
will prevent the test from running, no matter if there are other expectations.
Using pattern in testIdPattern
Sometimes we want a whole group of test to run. For that we can use a
pattern to achieve.
Pattern are defined with the use of *
(using greedy method).
Examples:
Pattern | Description | Example Pattern | Example match |
---|---|---|---|
* |
Match all tests | - | - |
[test.spec] * |
Matches tests for the given file | [jshandle.spec] * |
[jshandle] JSHandle JSHandle.toString should work for primitives |
[test.spec] <text> * |
Matches tests with for a given test with a specific prefixed test (usually a describe node) | [page.spec] Page Page.goto * |
[page.spec] Page Page.goto should work ,[page.spec] Page Page.goto should work with anchor navigation |
[test.spec] * <text> |
Matches test with a surfix | [navigation.spec] * should work |
[navigation.spec] navigation Page.goto should work ,[navigation.spec] navigation Page.waitForNavigation should work |
Updating Expectations
Currently, expectations are updated manually. The test runner outputs the suggested changes to the expectation file if the test run does not match expectations.
Debugging flaky test
Utility functions:
Utility | Params | Description |
---|---|---|
describe.withDebugLogs |
(title, <DescribeBody>) |
Capture and print debug logs for each test that failed |
it.deflake |
(repeat, title, <itFunction>) |
Reruns the test N number of times and print the debug logs if for the failed runs |
it.deflakeOnly |
(repeat, title, <itFunction>) |
Same as it.deflake but runs only this specific test |
With Environment variable
Run the test with the following environment variable to wrap it around describe.withDebugLogs
. Example:
PUPPETEER_DEFLAKE_TESTS="[navigation.spec] navigation Page.goto should navigate to empty page with networkidle0" npm run test:chrome:headless
It also works with patterns just like TestExpectations.json
PUPPETEER_DEFLAKE_TESTS="[navigation.spec] *" npm run test:chrome:headless
By default the test is rerun 100 times, but you can control this as well:
PUPPETEER_DEFLAKE_RETRIES=1000 PUPPETEER_DEFLAKE_TESTS="[navigation.spec] *" npm run test:chrome:headless