collective.zombiedoctesting 1.0
Fast functional JavaScript testing with Zombie.js
Latest Version: 1.1.0
Zombie.js is a fast headless browser with all the JavaScript support Node.js provides. This package provides a function decorator, which allows Python doctest-style functional JavaScript testing using Python-like CoffeeScript.
Disclaimer: This won't replace your existing Selenium-stack, because Zombie.js is just an another browser with its own quirks.
Requirements
- a UNIX like environment
- Node.js must be installed
- npm must be installed
- coffee-script, zombie and async packages must be installed using npm
- coffee-executable must be found on the path
The requirements should be filled, when you can run the following command on a console without it printing anything (returning any errors):
$ echo "require 'zombie'; require 'async'"|coffee -s
Example of use (with plone.app.testing)
Start with defining a functional testing fixture with ZServer (that will run your Plone on localhost:55001 by default):
from plone.app.testing import PLONE_FIXTURE
from plone.app.testing import FunctionalTesting
from plone.testing import z2
FUNCTIONAL_TESTING = FunctionalTesting(
bases=(PLONE_FIXTURE, z2.ZSERVER_FIXTURE), name="PloneFixture:ZServer")
Then write your functional JavaScript test as a doctest for your testmethod using CoffeeScript instead of Python. Define the context (URL) of your test by using the decorator (@browser) from collective.zombiedoctesting as shown below. You may use all the JavaScript that's provided by your context and the global browser that represents Zombie.js' browser:
import unittest
from plone.app.testing import TEST_USER_NAME
from plone.app.testing import TEST_USER_PASSWORD
from collective.zombiedoctesting import browser
constants = {
"TEST_USER_NAME": TEST_USER_NAME,
"TEST_USER_PASSWORD": TEST_USER_PASSWORD
}
class LoginOverlayTest(unittest.TestCase):
layer = FUNCTIONAL_TESTING
@browser("http://localhost:55001/plone/", mapping=constants)
def test_login(self):
"""
Let's start by looking up the login link using the jQuery available
on our site:
>>> console.log $("#personaltools-login").text()
Log in
Clicking that link should not redirect us anywhere, but give us an
AJAX overlay with a login form.
>>> $("#personaltools-login").click()
>>> console.log window.location.href
... console.log $(".pb-ajax #login-form").text()
http://localhost:55001/plone/
Login Name
Password
Let's store that form as global (to be available between different
doctest examples) and fill it...
>>> global.form = $(".pb-ajax #login-form")
... form.find("#__ac_name").val("%(TEST_USER_NAME)s")
... form.find("#__ac_password").val("%(TEST_USER_PASSWORD)s")
... console.log form.find("#__ac_name").val()
... console.log form.find("#__ac_password").val()
%(TEST_USER_NAME)s
%(TEST_USER_PASSWORD)s
... and click the button to log in.
>>> form.find("input[type='submit']").click()
>>> console.log window.location.href
... console.log browser.text(".documentFirstHeading")
http://localhost:55001/plone/login_form
You are now logged in
Uh oh, we were properly logged in, but we were redirected also, so
zombie is not a perfect browser yet.
Also, notice, that we couldn't use jQuery in testing the document
first heading (we used zombie's custom browser API), because the
context after the click is an AJAX-response without jQuery or any
other javascript.
"""
Note that every parsed doctest-example (a line starting with >>>) is executed separately, but you may use Node.js' global to make variables available between doctest-examples.
If you'd like to see the complete JavaScript generated to be run with zombie, you may add debug=True into @browser-decorator call.
| File | Type | Py Version | Uploaded on | Size | # downloads |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| collective.zombiedoctesting-1.0.zip (md5) | Source | 2011-10-30 | 7KB | 309 | |
- Author: Asko Soukka
- Home Page: https://github.com/datakurre/collective.zombiedoctesting/
- License: GPL
- Categories
- Package Index Owner: datakurre
- DOAP record: collective.zombiedoctesting-1.0.xml
