* adding quest owner specific rewards. closes #2715 * Updating model to prevent this from being a breaking change. * Removing duplicate translatable string and readding accidentally deleted portion * capitalizing according to pr. * fixing according to comments on pr * removing final mistakes * fixing whitespace * re-adding the onlyOwner field that got deleted when the index.js file was moved and fixed console errors. * moving cleaning of empty obejct for quest owner updates into quest owner updates method * Fixing so tests pass by updating variable name and removing unnecessary parameter definition. * adding a new test and refactoring client side code to use controller method.
So you want to write API integration tests?
@TODO rewrite
That's great! This README will serve as a quick primer for style conventions and practices for these tests.
What is this?
These are integration tests for the Habitica API. They are performed by making HTTP requests to the API's endpoints and asserting on the data that is returned.
If the javascript looks weird to you, that's because it's written in ES2015 and transpiled by Babel.
How to run the tests
First, install gulp.
$ npm install -g gulp
To run the api tests, make sure the mongo db is up and running and then type this on the command line:
$ gulp test:api-v2
It may take a little while to get going, since it requires the web server to start up before the tests can run.
You can also run a watch command for the api tests. This will allow the tests to re-run automatically when you make changes in the /test/api/v2/.
$ gulp test:api-v2:watch
One caveat. If you have a severe syntax error in your files, the tests may fail to run, but they won't alert you that they are not running. If you ever find your test hanging for a while, run this to get the stackstrace. Once you've fixed the problem, you can resume running the watch comand.
$ gulp test:api:safe
If you'd like to run the tests individually and inspect the output from the server, in one pane you can run:
$ gulp test:nodemon
And run your tests in another pane:
$ mocha path/to/file.js
# Mark a test with the `.only` attribute
$ mocha
Structure
Each top level route has it's own directory. So, all the routes that begin with /groups/ live in /test/api/groups/.
Each test should:
- encompase a single route
- begin with the REST parameter for the route
- display the full name of the route, swapping out
/for_ - end with test.js
So, for the POST route /groups/:id/leave, it would be
POST-groups_id_leave.test.js
Promises
To mitigate callback hell 👿, we've written a helper method to generate a user object that can make http requests that return promises. This makes it very easy to chain together commands. All you need to do to make a subsequent request is return another promise and then call .then((result) => {}) on the surrounding block, like so:
it('does something', () => {
let user;
return generateUser().then((_user) => { // We return the initial promise so this test can be run asyncronously
user = _user;
return user.post('/groups', {
type: 'party',
});
}).then((party) => { // the result of the promise above is the argument of the function
return user.put(`/groups/${party._id}`, {
name: 'My party',
});
}).then((result) => {
return user.get('/groups/party');
}).then((party) => {
expect(party.name).to.eql('My party');
});
});
If the test is simple, you can use the chai-as-promised return expect(somePromise).to.eventually syntax to make your assertion.
it('makes the party creator the leader automatically', () => {
return expect(user.post('/groups', {
type: 'party',
})).to.eventually.have.deep.property('leader._id', user._id);
});
If the test is checking that the request returns an error, use the .eventually.be.rejected.and.eql syntax.
it('returns an error', () => {
return expect(user.get('/groups/id-of-a-party-that-user-does-not-belong-to'))
.to.eventually.be.rejected.and.eql({
code: 404,
text: t('messageGroupNotFound'),
});
});
Questions?
Ask in the Aspiring Coder's Guild!