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# Testing Standards and Style Guidelines

This guide outlines standards and best practices for automated testing of GitLab
CE and EE.

It is meant to be an _extension_ of the [thoughtbot testing
styleguide](https://github.com/thoughtbot/guides/tree/master/style/testing). If
this guide defines a rule that contradicts the thoughtbot guide, this guide
takes precedence. Some guidelines may be repeated verbatim to stress their
importance.

## Factories

GitLab uses [factory_girl] as a test fixture replacement.

- Factory definitions live in `spec/factories/`, named using the pluralization
  of their corresponding model (`User` factories are defined in `users.rb`).
- There should be only one top-level factory definition per file.
- FactoryGirl methods are mixed in to all RSpec groups. This means you can (and
  should) call `create(...)` instead of `FactoryGirl.create(...)`.
- Make use of [traits] to clean up definitions and usages.
- When defining a factory, don't define attributes that are not required for the
  resulting record to pass validation.
- When instantiating from a factory, don't supply attributes that aren't
  required by the test.
- Factories don't have to be limited to `ActiveRecord` objects.
  [See example](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/commit/0b8cefd3b2385a21cfed779bd659978c0402766d).

[factory_girl]: https://github.com/thoughtbot/factory_girl
[traits]: http://www.rubydoc.info/gems/factory_girl/file/GETTING_STARTED.md#Traits

## JavaScript

GitLab uses [Teaspoon] to run its [Jasmine] JavaScript specs. They can be run on
the command line via `bundle exec teaspoon`, or via a web browser at
`http://localhost:3000/teaspoon` when the Rails server is running.

- JavaScript tests live in `spec/javascripts/`, matching the folder structure of
  `app/assets/javascripts/`: `app/assets/javascripts/behaviors/autosize.js.es6` has a corresponding
  `spec/javascripts/behaviors/autosize_spec.js.es6` file.
- Haml fixtures required for JavaScript tests live in
  `spec/javascripts/fixtures`. They should contain the bare minimum amount of
  markup necessary for the test.

    > **Warning:** Keep in mind that a Rails view may change and
    invalidate your test, but everything will still pass because your fixture
    doesn't reflect the latest view.

- Keep in mind that in a CI environment, these tests are run in a headless
  browser and you will not have access to certain APIs, such as
  [`Notification`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/notification),
  which will have to be stubbed.

[Teaspoon]: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon
[Jasmine]: https://github.com/jasmine/jasmine

## RSpec

### General Guidelines

- Use a single, top-level `describe ClassName` block.
- Use `described_class` instead of repeating the class name being described.
- Use `.method` to describe class methods and `#method` to describe instance
  methods.
- Use `context` to test branching logic.
- Don't `describe` symbols (see [Gotchas](gotchas.md#dont-describe-symbols)).
- Don't supply the `:each` argument to hooks since it's the default.
- Prefer `not_to` to `to_not` (_this is enforced by Rubocop_).
- Try to match the ordering of tests to the ordering within the class.
- Try to follow the [Four-Phase Test][four-phase-test] pattern, using newlines
  to separate phases.

[four-phase-test]: https://robots.thoughtbot.com/four-phase-test

### `let` variables

GitLab's RSpec suite has made extensive use of `let` variables to reduce
duplication. However, this sometimes [comes at the cost of clarity][lets-not],
so we need to set some guidelines for their use going forward:

- `let` variables are preferable to instance variables. Local variables are
  preferable to `let` variables.
- Use `let` to reduce duplication throughout an entire spec file.
- Don't use `let` to define variables used by a single test; define them as
  local variables inside the test's `it` block.
- Don't define a `let` variable inside the top-level `describe` block that's
  only used in a more deeply-nested `context` or `describe` block. Keep the
  definition as close as possible to where it's used.
- Try to avoid overriding the definition of one `let` variable with another.
- Don't define a `let` variable that's only used by the definition of another.
  Use a helper method instead.

[lets-not]: https://robots.thoughtbot.com/lets-not

### Test speed

GitLab has a massive test suite that, without parallelization, can take more
than an hour to run. It's important that we make an effort to write tests that
are accurate and effective _as well as_ fast.

Here are some things to keep in mind regarding test performance:

- `double` and `spy` are faster than `FactoryGirl.build(...)`
- `FactoryGirl.build(...)` and `.build_stubbed` are faster than `.create`.
- Don't `create` an object when `build`, `build_stubbed`, `attributes_for`,
  `spy`, or `double` will do. Database persistence is slow!
- Use `create(:empty_project)` instead of `create(:project)` when you don't need
  the underlying Git repository. Filesystem operations are slow!
- Don't mark a feature as requiring JavaScript (through `@javascript` in
  Spinach or `js: true` in RSpec) unless it's _actually_ required for the test
  to be valid. Headless browser testing is slow!

### Features / Integration

- Feature specs live in `spec/features/` and should be named
  `ROLE_ACTION_spec.rb`, such as `user_changes_password_spec.rb`.
- Use only one `feature` block per feature spec file.
- Use scenario titles that describe the success and failure paths.
- Avoid scenario titles that add no information, such as "successfully."
- Avoid scenario titles that repeat the feature title.

## Spinach (feature) tests

GitLab [moved from Cucumber to Spinach](https://github.com/gitlabhq/gitlabhq/pull/1426)
for its feature/integration tests in September 2012.

As of March 2016, we are [trying to avoid adding new Spinach
tests](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/14121) going forward,
opting for [RSpec feature](#features-integration) specs.

Adding new Spinach scenarios is acceptable _only if_ the new scenario requires
no more than one new `step` definition. If more than that is required, the
test should be re-implemented using RSpec instead.

## Testing Rake Tasks

To make testing Rake tasks a little easier, there is a helper that can be included
in lieu of the standard Spec helper. Instead of `require 'spec_helper'`, use
`require 'rake_helper'`. The helper includes `spec_helper` for you, and configures
a few other things to make testing Rake tasks easier.

At a minimum, requiring the Rake helper will redirect `stdout`, include the
runtime task helpers, and include the `RakeHelpers` Spec support module.

The `RakeHelpers` module exposes a `run_rake_task(<task>)` method to make
executing tasks simple. See `spec/support/rake_helpers.rb` for all available
methods.

Example:

```ruby
require 'rake_helper'

describe 'gitlab:shell rake tasks' do
  before do
    Rake.application.rake_require 'tasks/gitlab/shell'

    stub_warn_user_is_not_gitlab
  end

 describe 'install task' do
    it 'invokes create_hooks task' do
      expect(Rake::Task['gitlab:shell:create_hooks']).to receive(:invoke)

      run_rake_task('gitlab:shell:install')
    end
  end
end
```

---

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