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authorRémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>2017-04-10 11:32:23 +0200
committerRémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>2017-04-10 16:40:33 +0200
commit0aafb6abb89b4b0fc4c033b21ccbfd1082b56b30 (patch)
tree4570663f87192c99290b0a3cd79555395ec5c677
parent91fb9f446fa8476f287657032003aa286c2606b6 (diff)
downloadgitlab-ce-0aafb6abb89b4b0fc4c033b21ccbfd1082b56b30.tar.gz
Document GitLab QA
Signed-off-by: Rémy Coutable <remy@rymai.me>
-rw-r--r--doc/development/testing.md31
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 3 deletions
diff --git a/doc/development/testing.md b/doc/development/testing.md
index e096adcdf1c..0d29697df9e 100644
--- a/doc/development/testing.md
+++ b/doc/development/testing.md
@@ -17,8 +17,9 @@ Formal definition: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_testing
These kind of tests ensure that a single unit of code (a method) works as
expected (given an input, it has a predictable output). These tests should be
-isolated as much as possible (for example, model methods that don't do anything
-with the database shouldn't need a DB record).
+isolated as much as possible. For example, model methods that don't do anything
+with the database shouldn't need a DB record. Classes that don't need database
+records should use stubs/doubles as much as possible.
| Code path | Tests path | Testing engine | Notes |
| --------- | ---------- | -------------- | ----- |
@@ -94,6 +95,29 @@ possible).
[Poltergeist]: https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara#poltergeist
[RackTest]: https://github.com/teamcapybara/capybara#racktest
+### Black-box tests or End-to-end tests
+
+GitLab consists of [multiple pieces] such as [GitLab Shell], [GitLab Workhorse],
+[Gitaly], [GitLab Pages], [GitLab Runner], and GitLab Rails. All theses pieces
+are configured and packaged by [GitLab Omnibus].
+
+[GitLab QA] is a tool that allows to test that all these pieces integrate well
+together by building a Docker image for a given version of GitLab Rails and
+running feature tests (i.e. using Capybara) against it.
+
+The actual test scenarios and steps are [part of GitLab Rails] so that they're
+always in-sync with the codebase.
+
+[multiple pieces]: ./architecture.md#components
+[GitLab Shell]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-shell
+[GitLab Workhorse]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-workhorse
+[Gitaly]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitaly
+[GitLab Pages]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-pages
+[GitLab Runner]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ci-multi-runner
+[GitLab Omnibus]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/omnibus-gitlab
+[GitLab QA]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-qa
+[part of GitLab Rails]: https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/tree/master/qa
+
#### Best practices
- Create only the necessary records in the database
@@ -133,7 +157,7 @@ trade-off:
- Unit tests are usually cheap, and you should consider them like the basement
of your house: you need them to be confident that your code is behaving
- correctly. However if you run only unit tests without integration / system tests, you might miss the [big] [picture]!
+ correctly. However if you run only unit tests without integration / system tests, you might [miss] the [big] [picture]!
- Integration tests are a bit more expensive, but don't abuse them. A feature test
is often better than an integration test that is stubbing a lot of internals.
- System tests are expensive (compared to unit tests), even more if they require
@@ -150,6 +174,7 @@ test includes:
- The time it takes to fix the test if it breaks and the underlying code is OK
- Maybe, the time it takes to change the code to make the code testable.
+[miss]: https://twitter.com/ThePracticalDev/status/850748070698651649
[big]: https://twitter.com/timbray/status/822470746773409794
[picture]: https://twitter.com/withzombies/status/829716565834752000
[tests-cost]: https://medium.com/table-xi/high-cost-tests-and-high-value-tests-a86e27a54df#.2ulyh3a4e