{/doc/acs-core-docs/ {ACS Core Documentation}} {ACS4 Unit Tests} ACS4 Unit Tests

ACS4 Unit Tests

by Patrick McNeill

Purpose

Prior to using these unit tests, all testing had to be completed manually for each revision of a module. When a module is updated several times a day, this can present a problem. The solution adopted here is to create a suite of regression tests for each module to ensure that the required functionality is not broken by new code. The tests are constructed in such a way that they can be run automatically, allowing developers to quickly determine if new code breaks any functionality requirements.

Installation

The ACS4 unit testing suite requires several pieces of software to function. First, you'll need to install Ant . Ant is a build tool similar to make. It's used to both build your test cases and run the tests themselves. The basic Ant functionality doesn't have everything needed to automate the testing, so you'll want to obtain David Eison's ForeachFileAntTask.java, available at http://cvs.arsdigita.com/cgi-bin/cvsweb.pl/acs-java-4/WEB-INF/src/com/arsdigita/build/ . Compile the files and make sure that they are in your classpath.

Once Ant is working, you'll need to obtain copies of both JUnit and HTTPUnit. JUnit is a framework to automate the running of unit tests, and HTTPUnit provides an abstraction layer for HTTP. These are both needed to compile the unit tests. Again, make sure your classpath is up to date.

The final step is to replace the server properties in the build.xml file so it will know how to talk to your server. You will need to give it a base URL, a username, and password for that user. are the "JVMARG" lines in the "JUNIT" section. ). In the near future, this will be moved out of the subdirectories and either into the toplevel build.xml file or into a configuration file.

You should now be ready to run the tests. Go to your server's "packages" directory and type source ./paths.sh to set up your classpath. Now type ant. Ant should find the toplevel build.xml file, check that it can see JUnit, compile your java files, and finally call Ant on each of the sub-directory build.xml files to run the tests. You should be shown a report of which tests failed and which succeeded.

Adding Your Own Unit Tests

Adding new test cases is meant to be as easy as possible. Simple create a new function in the appropriate .java file, making sure that the function name begins with "test". I've adopted a naming convention where the function name consists of the word "test", a short description of what the function does (with words delimited by underscores), followed finally by the QAS testcase ID, if such a testcase exists. If you need to test an area of the site that requires a user id, you can use the ACSCommon.Login function in the com.arsdigita.acs.acsKernel.test package to obtain a Session object with appropriate cookies.

Within the function, a typical unit test involves requesting a page, saving the result, checking the HTTP return code, then parsing out various strings to check for page functionality. The return code should be checked with "assertEquals", and any other checks should be performed with "assert". Use of "assert", "assertEquals", and exceptions allow JUnit to accurately report where a test fails.

If you need to create a set of tests for a module, the first step is to create a directory tree beneath the module directory. The current convention is to put all .java files in a "/java/src/com/arsdigita/acs/module name/test" directory. The module name should be the ACS module name, but with all dashes removed and with appropriate capitalization. All .java files that you create that contain test cases must have the word Test in the filename. All of the classes you create should be in the com.arsdigita.acs.module name.test package, and should import "com.dallaway.jsptest.*" and "junit.framework.*" (and optionally, if needed, com.arsdigita.acs.acsKernel.ACSCommon). Next, the public class needs to extend "TestCase", and provide new method definitions for "suite()" and the constructor. Typically, in the constructor, you should extract the system property "system.url" to determine which server to test against.


Last updated - 2000-12-19
pmcneill\@arsdigita.com