Files
flipper/docs/testing.md
Pascal Hartig 8e5647725a Replace test runner in sample
Summary: WithDefaultsTestRunner is FB-specific. Let's replace that with its base class.

Reviewed By: danielbuechele

Differential Revision: D8355145

fbshipit-source-id: 4d87ad00a82d1e2d5b536289f247910c6139df07
2018-06-12 04:11:47 -07:00

3.0 KiB

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testing Testing Testing

Developer tools are only used if they work. We have built APIs to test plugins.

Android

Start by creating your first test file in this directory MySonarPluginTest.java. In the test method body we create our plugin which we want to test as well as a SonarConnectionMock. In this contrived example we simply assert that our plugin's connected status is what we expect.

@RunWith(RobolectricTestRunner.class)
public class MySonarPluginTest {

  @Test
  public void myTest() {
    final MySonarPlugin plugin = new MySonarPlugin();
    final SonarConnectionMock connection = new SonarConnectionMock();

    plugin.onConnect(connection);
    assertThat(plugin.connected(), equalTo(true));
  }
}

There are two mock classes that are used to construct tests SonarConnectionMock and SonarResponderMock. Together these can be used to write very powerful tests to verify the end to end behavior of your plugin. For example we can test if for a given incoming message our plugin responds as we expect.

@Test
public void myTest() {
  final MySonarPlugin plugin = new MySonarPlugin();
  final SonarConnectionMock connection = new SonarConnectionMock();
  final SonarResponderMock responder = new SonarResponderMock();

  plugin.onConnect(connection);

  final SonarObject params = new SonarObject.Builder()
      .put("phrase", "sonar")
      .build();
  connection.receivers.get("myMethod").onReceive(params, responder);

  assertThat(responder.successes, hasItem(
      new SonarObject.Builder()
          .put("phrase", "ranos")
          .build()));
}

C++

Start by creating your first test file in this directory MySonarPluginTests.cpp and import the testing utilities from //xplat/sonar-client:SonarTestLib. These utilities mock out core pieces of the communication channel so that you can test your plugin in isolation.

#include <MySonarPlugin/MySonarPlugin.h>
#include <SonarTestLib/SonarConnectionMock.h>
#include <SonarTestLib/SonarResponderMock.h>

#include <folly/json.h>
#include <gtest/gtest.h>

namespace facebook {
namespace sonar {
namespace test {

TEST(MySonarPluginTests, testDummy) {
  EXPECT_EQ(1 + 1, 2);
}

} // namespace test
} // namespace sonar
} // namespace facebook

Here is a simple test using these mock utilities to create a plugin, send some data, and assert that the result is as expected.

TEST(MySonarPluginTests, testDummy) {
  std::vector<folly::dynamic> successfulResponses;
  auto responder = std::make_unique<SonarResponderMock>(&successfulResponses);
  auto conn = std::make_shared<SonarConnectionMock>();

  MySonarPlugin plugin;
  plugin.didConnect(conn);

  folly::dynamic message = folly::dynamic::object("param1", "hello");
  folly::dynamic expectedResponse = folly::dynamic::object("response", "Hi there");

  auto receiver = conn->receivers_["someMethod"];
  receiver(message, std::move(responder));

  EXPECT_EQ(successfulResponses.size(), 1);
  EXPECT_EQ(successfulResponses.back(), expectedResponse);
}