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diff --git a/doc/development/testing_guide/end_to_end/resources.md b/doc/development/testing_guide/end_to_end/resources.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..9bbb0e3d6bf --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/development/testing_guide/end_to_end/resources.md @@ -0,0 +1,392 @@ +# Resource class in GitLab QA + +Resources are primarily created using Browser UI steps, but can also +be created via the API or the CLI. + +## How to properly implement a resource class? + +All resource classes should inherit from `Resource::Base` + +There is only one mandatory method to implement to define a resource class. +This is the `#fabricate!` method, which is used to build the resource via the +browser UI. Note that you should only use [Page objects](page_objects.md) to +interact with a Web page in this method. + +Here is an imaginary example: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + attr_accessor :name + + def fabricate! + Page::Dashboard::Index.perform do |dashboard_index| + dashboard_index.go_to_new_shirt + end + + Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new| + shirt_new.set_name(name) + shirt_new.create_shirt! + end + end + end + end +end +``` + +### Define API implementation + +A resource class may also implement the three following methods to be able to +create the resource via the public GitLab API: + +- `#api_get_path`: The `GET` path to fetch an existing resource. +- `#api_post_path`: The `POST` path to create a new resource. +- `#api_post_body`: The `POST` body (as a Ruby hash) to create a new resource. + +Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and add these three API methods: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + attr_accessor :name + + def fabricate! + # ... same as before + end + + def api_get_path + "/shirt/#{name}" + end + + def api_post_path + "/shirts" + end + + def api_post_body + { + name: name + } + end + end + end +end +``` + +The `Project` resource is a good real example of Browser +UI and API implementations. + +#### Resource attributes + +A resource may need another resource to exist first. For instance, a project +needs a group to be created in. + +To define a resource attribute, you can use the `attribute` method with a +block using the other resource class to fabricate the resource. + +That will allow access to the other resource from your resource object's +methods. You would usually use it in `#fabricate!`, `#api_get_path`, +`#api_post_path`, `#api_post_body`. + +Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and add a `project` attribute to it: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + attr_accessor :name + + attribute :project do + Project.fabricate! do |resource| + resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt' + end + end + + def fabricate! + project.visit! + + Page::Project::Show.perform do |project_show| + project_show.go_to_new_shirt + end + + Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new| + shirt_new.set_name(name) + shirt_new.create_shirt! + end + end + + def api_get_path + "/project/#{project.path}/shirt/#{name}" + end + + def api_post_path + "/project/#{project.path}/shirts" + end + + def api_post_body + { + name: name + } + end + end + end +end +``` + +**Note that all the attributes are lazily constructed. This means if you want +a specific attribute to be fabricated first, you'll need to call the +attribute method first even if you're not using it.** + +#### Product data attributes + +Once created, you may want to populate a resource with attributes that can be +found in the Web page, or in the API response. +For instance, once you create a project, you may want to store its repository +SSH URL as an attribute. + +Again we could use the `attribute` method with a block, using a page object +to retrieve the data on the page. + +Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and define a `:brand` attribute: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + attr_accessor :name + + attribute :project do + Project.fabricate! do |resource| + resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt' + end + end + + # Attribute populated from the Browser UI (using the block) + attribute :brand do + Page::Shirt::Show.perform do |shirt_show| + shirt_show.fetch_brand_from_page + end + end + + # ... same as before + end + end +end +``` + +**Note again that all the attributes are lazily constructed. This means if +you call `shirt.brand` after moving to the other page, it'll not properly +retrieve the data because we're no longer on the expected page.** + +Consider this: + +```ruby +shirt = + QA::Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |resource| + resource.name = "GitLab QA" + end + +shirt.project.visit! + +shirt.brand # => FAIL! +``` + +The above example will fail because now we're on the project page, trying to +construct the brand data from the shirt page, however we moved to the project +page already. There are two ways to solve this, one is that we could try to +retrieve the brand before visiting the project again: + +```ruby +shirt = + QA::Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |resource| + resource.name = "GitLab QA" + end + +shirt.brand # => OK! + +shirt.project.visit! + +shirt.brand # => OK! +``` + +The attribute will be stored in the instance therefore all the following calls +will be fine, using the data previously constructed. If we think that this +might be too brittle, we could eagerly construct the data right before +ending fabrication: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + # ... same as before + + def fabricate! + project.visit! + + Page::Project::Show.perform do |project_show| + project_show.go_to_new_shirt + end + + Page::Shirt::New.perform do |shirt_new| + shirt_new.set_name(name) + shirt_new.create_shirt! + end + + populate(:brand) # Eagerly construct the data + end + end + end +end +``` + +The `populate` method will iterate through its arguments and call each +attribute respectively. Here `populate(:brand)` has the same effect as +just `brand`. Using the populate method makes the intention clearer. + +With this, it will make sure we construct the data right after we create the +shirt. The drawback is that this will always construct the data when the +resource is fabricated even if we don't need to use the data. + +Alternatively, we could just make sure we're on the right page before +constructing the brand data: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + attr_accessor :name + + attribute :project do + Project.fabricate! do |resource| + resource.name = 'project-to-create-a-shirt' + end + end + + # Attribute populated from the Browser UI (using the block) + attribute :brand do + back_url = current_url + visit! + + Page::Shirt::Show.perform do |shirt_show| + shirt_show.fetch_brand_from_page + end + + visit(back_url) + end + + # ... same as before + end + end +end +``` + +This will make sure it's on the shirt page before constructing brand, and +move back to the previous page to avoid breaking the state. + +#### Define an attribute based on an API response + +Sometimes, you want to define a resource attribute based on the API response +from its `GET` or `POST` request. For instance, if the creation of a shirt via +the API returns + +```ruby +{ + brand: 'a-brand-new-brand', + style: 't-shirt', + materials: [[:cotton, 80], [:polyamide, 20]] +} +``` + +you may want to store `style` as-is in the resource, and fetch the first value +of the first `materials` item in a `main_fabric` attribute. + +Let's take the `Shirt` resource class, and define a `:style` and a +`:main_fabric` attributes: + +```ruby +module QA + module Resource + class Shirt < Base + # ... same as before + + # @style from the instance if present, + # or fetched from the API response if present, + # or a QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError is raised otherwise + attribute :style + + # If @main_fabric is not present, + # and if the API does not contain this field, this block will be + # used to construct the value based on the API response, and + # store the result in @main_fabric + attribute :main_fabric do + api_response.&dig(:materials, 0, 0) + end + + # ... same as before + end + end +end +``` + +**Notes on attributes precedence:** + +- resource instance variables have the highest precedence +- attributes from the API response take precedence over attributes from the + block (usually from Browser UI) +- attributes without a value will raise a `QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError` error + +## Creating resources in your tests + +To create a resource in your tests, you can call the `.fabricate!` method on +the resource class. +Note that if the resource class supports API fabrication, this will use this +fabrication by default. + +Here is an example that will use the API fabrication method under the hood +since it's supported by the `Shirt` resource class: + +```ruby +my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate! do |shirt| + shirt.name = 'my-shirt' +end + +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.name) # => "my-shirt" from the resource's instance variable +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.brand) # => "a-brand-new-brand" from the API response +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.style) # => "t-shirt" from the API response +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.main_fabric) # => "cotton" from the API response via the block +``` + +If you explicitly want to use the Browser UI fabrication method, you can call +the `.fabricate_via_browser_ui!` method instead: + +```ruby +my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate_via_browser_ui! do |shirt| + shirt.name = 'my-shirt' +end + +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.name) # => "my-shirt" from the resource's instance variable +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.brand) # => the brand name fetched from the `Page::Shirt::Show` page via the block +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.style) # => QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError will be raised because no API response nor a block is provided +expect(page).to have_text(my_shirt.main_fabric) # => QA::Resource::Base::NoValueError will be raised because no API response and the block didn't provide a value (because it's also based on the API response) +``` + +You can also explicitly use the API fabrication method, by calling the +`.fabricate_via_api!` method: + +```ruby +my_shirt = Resource::Shirt.fabricate_via_api! do |shirt| + shirt.name = 'my-shirt' +end +``` + +In this case, the result will be similar to calling +`Resource::Shirt.fabricate!`. + +## Where to ask for help? + +If you need more information, ask for help on `#quality` channel on Slack +(internal, GitLab Team only). + +If you are not a Team Member, and you still need help to contribute, please +open an issue in GitLab CE issue tracker with the `~QA` label. |