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README.md

Cordova Plugin Test Framework

The org.apache.cordova.test-framework plugin does two things:

  1. Defines the interface for cordova plugins to write tests
  2. Provides a test harness for actually running those tests

Tests run directly inside existing cordova projects, so you can rapidly switch between testing and development. You can also be sure that your test suite is testing the exact versions of plugins and platforms that your app is using.

TLDR; Try it

  1. Use your existing cordova app, or create a new one.

  2. Plugins bundle their tests using a nested plugin in a /tests directory. To make this interesting, add some of these plugins and their respective tests. Here are a few examples:

     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-device.git
     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-device.git#:/tests
    
     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-device-motion.git
     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-device-motion.git#:/tests
    
     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-geolocation.git
     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-geolocation#:/tests
    
  3. Follow the docs for Setting up the test harness.

Where do tests live?

Add a directory named tests to the root of your plugin. Within this directory, create a nested plugin.xml for the tests plugin. It should have a plugin id with the form plugin-id.tests (e.g. the org.apache.cordova.device plugin has the nested id org.apache.cordova.device.tests) and should contain a <js-module> named tests. E.g:

<js-module src="tests/tests.js" name="tests">
</js-module>

For example, the org.apache.cordova.device plugin has this nested plugin.xml.

The org.apache.cordova.test-framework plugin will automatically find all tests modules across all plugins for which the nested tests plugin is installed.

Defining Auto Tests

Simply export a function named defineAutoTests, which (gasp!) defines your auto-tests when run. Use the jasmine-2.0 format. E.g.:

exports.defineAutoTests = function() {

  define('awesome tests', function() {
    it('do something sync', function() {
      expect(1).toBe(1);
      ...
    });

    it('do something async', function(done) {
      setTimeout(function() {
        expect(1).toBe(1);
        ...
        done();
      }, 100);
    });
  });

  define('more awesome tests', function() {
    ...
  });

};

Note: Your tests will automatically be labeled with your plugin id, so do not prefix your test descriptions.

Defining Manual Tests

Simply export a function named defineManualTests, which (gasp!) defines your manual-tests when run. Manual tests do not use jasmine-2.0, and success/failure results are not officially reported in any standard way. Instead, create buttons to run arbitrary javascript when clicked, and display output to user using console or by manipulating a provided DOM element. E.g.:

exports.defineManualTests = function(contentEl, createActionButton) {

  createActionButton('Simple Test', function() {
    console.log(JSON.stringify(foo, null, '\t'));
  });

  createActionButton('Complex Test', function() {
    contentEl.innerHTML = ...;
  });

};

Note: Your tests will automatically be labeled with your plugin id, so do not prefix your test descriptions.

See: org.apache.cordova.device tests.

  1. Use your existing cordova app, or create a new one.

  2. Add this plugin:

     cordova plugin add http://git-wip-us.apache.org/repos/asf/cordova-plugin-test-framework.git
    
  3. Change the start page in config.xml with <content src="cdvtests/index.html" /> or navigate to cdvtests/index.html from within your app.

  4. Thats it!

FAQ

  • Q: Should I add org.apache.cordova.test-framework as a <dependency> of my plugin?

    • A: No. The end-user should decide if they want to install the test framework, not your plugin (most users won't).
  • Q: What do I do if my plugin tests must have very large assets?

    • A: Don‘t bundle those assets with your plugin. If you can, have your tests fail gracefully if those assets don’t don't exist (perhaps log a warning, perhaps fail a single asset-checking test, and skip the rest). Then, ideally download those assets automatically into local storage the first time tests run. Or create a manual test step to download and install assets. As a final alternative, split those test assets into a separate plugin, and instruct users to install that plugin to run your full test suite.
  • Q: Should I ship my app with the test framework plugin installed?

    • A: Not likely. If you want, you can. Then your app could even embed a link to the test page (cdvtests/index.html) from a help section of your app, to give end users a way to run your test suite out in the feild. That may help diagnose causes of issues within your app. Maybe.