mirror of
https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap.git
synced 2024-12-01 13:24:25 +01:00
0e920ce3f4
With the current docs directory setup, I'm making too many mistakes and have to manually address path changes and directory moves on deploy. This makes for a frustrating experience developing locally and shipping releases. With this PR, we're basically back to the same setup from v3—duplicating the dist directory into our docs directory. Not the most ideal, but very straightforward for me as the release manager. |
||
---|---|---|
.. | ||
unit | ||
visual | ||
index.html | ||
karma-bundle.conf.js | ||
karma.conf.js | ||
README.md |
How does Bootstrap's test suite work?
Bootstrap uses QUnit and Sinon. Each plugin has a file dedicated to its tests in unit/<plugin-name>.js
.
unit/
contains the unit test files for each Bootstrap plugin.vendor/
contains third-party testing-related code (QUnit, jQuery and Sinon).visual/
contains "visual" tests which are run interactively in real browsers and require manual verification by humans.
To run the unit test suite via Karma, run npm run js-test
.
To run the unit test suite via a real web browser, open index.html
in the browser.
How do I add a new unit test?
- Locate and open the file dedicated to the plugin which you need to add tests to (
unit/<plugin-name>.js
). - Review the QUnit API Documentation and use the existing tests as references for how to structure your new tests.
- Write the necessary unit test(s) for the new or revised functionality.
- Run
npm run js-test
to see the results of your newly-added test(s).
Note: Your new unit tests should fail before your changes are applied to the plugin, and should pass after your changes are applied to the plugin.
What should a unit test look like?
- Each test should have a unique name clearly stating what unit is being tested.
- Each test should test only one unit per test, although one test can include several assertions. Create multiple tests for multiple units of functionality.
- Each test should begin with
assert.expect
to ensure that the expected assertions are run. - Each test should follow the project's JavaScript Code Guidelines
Code coverage
Currently we're aiming for at least 80% test coverage for our code. To ensure your changes meet or exceed this limit, run npm run js-compile && npm run js-test
and open the file in js/coverage/lcov-report/index.html
to see the code coverage for each plugin. See more details when you select a plugin and ensure your change is fully covered by unit tests.
Example tests
// Synchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
assert.expect(1)
var templateHTML = '<div class="alert alert-danger fade show">' +
'<a class="close" href="#" data-dismiss="alert">×</a>' +
'<p><strong>Template necessary for the test.</p>' +
'</div>'
var $alert = $(templateHTML).appendTo('#qunit-fixture').bootstrapAlert()
$alert.find('.close').trigger('click')
// Make assertion
assert.strictEqual($alert.hasClass('show'), false, 'remove .show class on .close click')
})
// Asynchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
assert.expect(2)
var done = assert.async()
var $tooltip = $('<div title="tooltip title"></div>').bootstrapTooltip()
var tooltipInstance = $tooltip.data('bs.tooltip')
var spyShow = sinon.spy(tooltipInstance, 'show')
$tooltip.appendTo('#qunit-fixture')
.on('shown.bs.tooltip', function () {
assert.ok(true, '"shown" event was fired after calling "show"')
assert.ok(spyShow.called, 'show called')
done()
})
.bootstrapTooltip('show')
})