mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
183 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
183 lines
6.8 KiB
Markdown
# Testing and writing tests
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## Overview
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Zulip has a full test suite that includes many components. The most
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important components are documented in depth in their own sections:
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- [Django](testing-with-django.html): backend Python tests
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- [Casper](testing-with-casper.html): end-to-end UI tests
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- [Node](testing-with-node.html): unit tests for JS front end code
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- [Linters](linters.html)
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This document covers more general testing issues, such as how to run the
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entire test suite, how to troubleshoot database issues, how to manually
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test the front end, and how to plan for the future upgrade to Python3.
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We also document [how to manually test the app](manual-testing.html).
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## Running tests
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Zulip tests must be run inside a Zulip development environment; if
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you're using Vagrant, you will need to enter the Vagrant environment
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before running the tests:
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```
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vagrant ssh
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cd /srv/zulip
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```
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Then, to run the full Zulip test suite, do this:
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```
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./tools/test-all
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```
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This runs the linter (`tools/lint-all`) plus all of our test suites;
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they can all be run separately (just read `tools/test-all` to see
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them). You can also run individual tests which can save you a lot of
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time debugging a test failure, e.g.:
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```
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./tools/lint-all # Runs all the linters in parallel
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./tools/test-backend zerver.tests.test_bugdown.BugdownTest.test_inline_youtube
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./tools/test-backend BugdownTest # Run `test-backend --help` for more options
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./tools/test-js-with-casper 09-navigation.js
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./tools/test-js-with-node utils.js
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```
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The above setup instructions include the first-time setup of test
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databases, but you may need to rebuild the test database occasionally
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if you're working on new database migrations. To do this, run:
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```
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./tools/do-destroy-rebuild-test-database
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```
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### Possible testing issues
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- When running the test suite, if you get an error like this:
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```
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sqlalchemy.exc.ProgrammingError: (ProgrammingError) function ts_match_locs_array(unknown, text, tsquery) does not exist
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LINE 2: ...ECT message_id, flags, subject, rendered_content, ts_match_l...
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^
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```
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… then you need to install tsearch-extras, described
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above. Afterwards, re-run the `init*-db` and the
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`do-destroy-rebuild*-database` scripts.
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- When building the development environment using Vagrant and the LXC
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provider, if you encounter permissions errors, you may need to
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`chown -R 1000:$(whoami) /path/to/zulip` on the host before running
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`vagrant up` in order to ensure that the synced directory has the
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correct owner during provision. This issue will arise if you run `id
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username` on the host where `username` is the user running Vagrant
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and the output is anything but 1000.
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This seems to be caused by Vagrant behavior; for more information,
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see [the vagrant-lxc FAQ entry about shared folder permissions][lxc-sf].
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[lxc-sf]: https://github.com/fgrehm/vagrant-lxc/wiki/FAQ#help-my-shared-folders-have-the-wrong-owner
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## Schema and initial data changes
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If you change the database schema or change the initial test data, you
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have to regenerate the pristine test database by running
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`tools/do-destroy-rebuild-test-database`.
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## Wiping the test databases
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You should first try running: `tools/do-destroy-rebuild-test-database`
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If that fails you should try to do:
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sudo -u postgres psql
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> DROP DATABASE zulip_test;
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> DROP DATABASE zulip_test_template;
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and then run `tools/do-destroy-rebuild-test-database`
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### Recreating the postgres cluster
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> **warning**
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>
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> **This is irreversible, so do it with care, and never do this anywhere
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> in production.**
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If your postgres cluster (collection of databases) gets totally trashed
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permissions-wise, and you can't otherwise repair it, you can recreate
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it. On Ubuntu:
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sudo pg_dropcluster --stop 9.1 main
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sudo pg_createcluster --locale=en_US.utf8 --start 9.1 main
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## Local browser testing (local app + web browser)
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This section is about troubleshooting your local development environment.
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There is a [separate manual testing doc](manual-testing.html) that
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enumerates things you can test as part of manual QA.
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### Clearing the development database
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You can use:
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./tools/do-destroy-rebuild-database
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to drop the database on your development environment and repopulate
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your it with the Shakespeare characters and some test messages between
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them. This is run automatically as part of the development
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environment setup process, but is occasionally useful when you want to
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return to a clean state for testing.
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### JavaScript manual testing
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`debug.js` has some tools for profiling JavaScript code, including:
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- \`print\_elapsed\_time\`: Wrap a function with it to print the time
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that function takes to the JavaScript console.
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- \`IterationProfiler\`: Profile part of looping constructs (like a
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for loop or \$.each). You mark sections of the iteration body and
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the IterationProfiler will sum the costs of those sections over all
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iterations.
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Chrome has a very good debugger and inspector in its developer tools.
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Firebug for Firefox is also pretty good. They both have profilers, but
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Chrome's is a sampling profiler while Firebug's is an instrumenting
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profiler. Using them both can be helpful because they provide different
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information.
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## Python 3 Compatibility
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Zulip is working on supporting Python 3, and all new code in Zulip
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should be Python 2+3 compatible. We have converted most of the codebase
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to be compatible with Python 3 using a suite of 2to3 conversion tools
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and some manual work. In order to avoid regressions in that
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compatibility as we continue to develop new features in Zulip, we have a
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special tool, `tools/check-py3`, which checks all code for Python 3
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syntactic compatibility by running a subset of the automated migration
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tools and checking if they trigger any changes. `tools/check-py3` is run
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automatically in Zulip's Travis CI tests (in the 'static-analysis'
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build) to avoid any regressions, but is not included in `test-all` since
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it is quite slow.
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To run `tools/check-py3`, you need to install the `modernize` and
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`future` Python packages (which are included in
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`requirements/py3k.txt`, which itself is included in
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`requirements/dev.txt`, so you probably already have these packages
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installed).
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To run `check-py3` on just the Python files in a particular directory, you
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can change the current working directory (e.g. `cd zerver/`) and run
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`check-py3` from there.
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Also, if you're using Vagrant or if you set up virtualenvs in the
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[non-Vagrant setup](dev-setup-non-vagrant.html#all-systems), you should
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have two different virtualenvs: one for Python 2 (which is the one used by
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default), and another one for Python 3. This is useful if you want to do
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some manual testing using either version.
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To switch between both virtualenvs, run:
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- Use Python 2: `source /srv/zulip-venv/bin/activate`
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- Use Python 3: `source /srv/zulip-py3-venv/bin/activate`
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