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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 11:08:07 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2024-04-27 11:08:07 +0000 |
commit | c69cb8cc094cc916adbc516b09e944cd3d137c01 (patch) | |
tree | f2878ec41fb6d0e3613906c6722fc02b934eeb80 /tests/README.md | |
parent | Initial commit. (diff) | |
download | netdata-upstream/1.29.3.tar.xz netdata-upstream/1.29.3.zip |
Adding upstream version 1.29.3.upstream/1.29.3upstream
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'tests/README.md')
-rw-r--r-- | tests/README.md | 148 |
1 files changed, 148 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/tests/README.md b/tests/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..256b482 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,148 @@ +<!-- +title: "Testing" +custom_edit_url: https://github.com/netdata/netdata/edit/master/tests/README.md +--> + +# Testing + +This readme is a manual on how to get started with unit testing on javascript and nodejs + +Original author: BrainDoctor (github), July 2017 + +## Installation + +Tested on Linux Mint 18.2 Sara (Ubuntu/debian derivative) + +Make sure you are the user who is developer (permissions, except sudo ofc) + +```sh +sudo apt-get install nodejs npm chromium-browser + +cd /path/to/your/netdata +npm install +``` + +That should install the necessary node modules. + +Other browsers work too (Chrome, Firefox). However, only the Chromium Browser 59 has been tested for headless unit testing. + +### Versions + +The commands above leave me with the following versions (July 2017): + +- nodejs: v4.2.6 +- npm: 3.5.2 +- chromium-browser: 59.0.3071.109 +- WebStorm (optional): 2017.1.4 + +## Configuration + +### NPM + +The dependencies are installed in `netdata/package.json`. If you install a new NPM module, it gets added here. Future developers just need to execute `npm install` and every dep gets added automatically. + +### Karma + +Karma configuration is in `tests/web/karma.conf.js`. Documentation is provided via comments. + +### WebStorm + +If you use the JetBrains WebStorm IDE, you can integrate the karma runtime. + +#### for Karma (Client side testing) + +Headless Chromium: + +1. Run > Edit Configurations +2. "+" > Karma +3. - Name: Karma Headless Chromium + - Configuration file: /path/to/your/netdata/tests/web/karma.conf.js + - Browsers to start: ChromiumHeadless + - Node interpreter: /usr/bin/nodejs (MUST be absolute, NVM works too) + - Karma package: /path/to/your/netdata/node_modules/karma + +GUI Chromium is similar: + +1. Run > Edit Configurations +2. "+" > Karma +3. - Name: Karma Chromium + - Configuration file: /path/to/your/netdata/tests/web/karma.conf.js + - Browsers to start: Chromium + - Node interpreter: /usr/bin/nodejs (MUST be absolute, NVM works too) + - Karma package: /path/to/your/netdata/node_modules/karma + +You may add other browsers too (comma separated). With the "Browsers to start" field you can override any settings in karma.conf.js. + +Also it is recommended to install WebStorm IDE Extension/Addon to Chrome/Chromium for awesome debugging. + +#### for node.d plugins (nodejs) + +1. Run > Edit Configurations +2. "+" > Node.js +3. - Name: Node.d plugins + - Node interpreter: /usr/bin/nodejs (MUST be absolute, NVM works too) + - JavaScript file: node_modules/jasmine-node/bin/jasmine-node + - Application parameters: --captureExceptions tests/node.d + +## Running + +### In WebStorm + +#### Karma + +Just run the configured run configurations and they produce nice test trees: + +![karma_run_2](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277789-559149f6-6b1b-11e7-9cc7-a81d81d12c35.png) + +#### node.js + +Debugging is awesome too! +![node_debug](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277879-8beee5ee-6b1b-11e7-9356-3156956f2282.png) + +### From CLI + +#### Karma + +```sh +cd /path/to/your/netdata + +nodejs ./node_modules/karma/bin/karma start tests/web/karma.conf.js --single-run=true --browsers=ChromiumHeadless +``` + +will start the karma server, start chromium in headless mode and exit. + +If a test fails, it produces even a stack trace: +![karma_run_1](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277754-3682bebe-6b1b-11e7-8b7e-66b23d87177d.png) + +#### Node.d plugins + +```sh +cd /path/to/your/netdata + +nodejs node_modules/jasmine-node/bin/jasmine-node --captureExceptions tests/node.d +``` + +will run the tests in `tests/node.d` and produce a stacktrace too on error: +![node_run](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277812-65bb69b0-6b1b-11e7-8500-bcdbb3436574.png) + +### Coverage + +#### Karma + +A nice HTML is produced from Karma which shows which code paths were executed. It is located somewhere in `/path/to/your/netdata/coverage/` + +![coverage_2](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277719-142146c4-6b1b-11e7-9992-3e88dee2efd2.png) +and +![coverage_1](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/12159026/28277687-fa93e360-6b1a-11e7-995f-cbb4c5d012a7.png) + +#### Node.d + +Apparently, jasmine-node can produce a junit report with the `--junitreport` flag. But that output was not very useful. Maybe it's configurable? + +### CI + +The karma and node.d runners can be integrated in Travis (AFAIK), but that is outside my ability. + +Note: Karma is for browser-testing. On a build server, no GUI or browser might by available, unless browsers support headless mode. + +[![analytics](https://www.google-analytics.com/collect?v=1&aip=1&t=pageview&_s=1&ds=github&dr=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fnetdata%2Fnetdata&dl=https%3A%2F%2Fmy-netdata.io%2Fgithub%2Ftests%2FREADME&_u=MAC~&cid=5792dfd7-8dc4-476b-af31-da2fdb9f93d2&tid=UA-64295674-3)](<>) |