This library provides a Fluid component and static functions that assist in using Testem.
- Provides a mechanism to collect client-side code coverage data and combine that with browser coverage.
- Provides the ability to launch and wait for server-side components to start up before each test run.
- Provides the ability to safely shut down server-side test fixtures after each test run.
- Provides cleanup mechanisms to remove temporary browser content after each test run.
To use this grade from Testem, install this package as a development dependency using a command like
npm install --save-dev fluid-testem
. Note: There is currently
a bug in newer versions of Testem, if you use anything higher than
version 1.13.0, you may experience hangs when attempting to quit Testem from the console.
Once you have Testem installed, you will need to create a javascript configuration file, which will allow you to make
use of the dynamic configuration options available via the testem.js
file.
The most basic example of a file might look something like:
var fluid = require("infusion");
fluid.require("%fluid-testem");
var my = fluid.registerNamespace("my");
fluid.defaults("my.testem.grade", {
gradeNames: ["fluid.testem"],
testPages: ["tests/my-awesome-test.html"]
});
module.exports = my.testem.grade().getTestemOptions();
To make use of the code coverage support provided by fluid.testem, you must load the "coverage sender" in your HTML fixtures. See the coverage docs for details.
Once you have created your configuration javascript file, you can launch Testem with your configuration.
If you only want to check the coverage of browser code, you can run your tests using a command like the following:
node node_modules/testem/testem.js ci --file path/to/your-testem-config.js
If you save your configuration to the file name testem.js
in your package root, you can launch Testem using a command
like node node_modules/testem/testem.js
or node node_modules/testem/testem.js ci
.
If you are testing browser code in combination with node code, please see the example in the Testem component docs.
For more information, check out the documentation links below:
You can run the tests using the command npm test
. You are not required to have Testem installed globally to run the
tests.
The default testem component provided by this package supports an environment variable that can be used to only run
tests in a subset of available browsers. (See the component documentation for more details).
Setting the TESTEM_ENVIRONMENT
environment variable to "headless"
will run tests using only headless Chrome and
Firefox.
Note: because of a bug in Testem, tests that use Firefox require manual
input to complete on Windows. Setting the TESTEM_ENVIRONMENT
environment variable to "headless"
will allow tests to
run unattended on Windows.