How does Bootstrap's test suite work?
Bootstrap uses QUnit, a powerful, easy-to-use JavaScript unit test framework. Each plugin has a file dedicated to its tests in `unit/<plugin-name>.js`.
- `unit/` contains the unit test files for each Bootstrap plugin.
- `vendor/` contains jQuery.
- `visual/` contains "visual" tests which are run interactively in real browsers and require manual verification by humans.
To run our unit tests on a real web browser Karma, run `grunt test-js` or you can
open
index.html
.
How do I add a new unit test?
- Locate and open the file dedicated to the plugin which you need to add tests to (`unit/<plugin-name>.js`).
- Review the QUnit API Documentation and use the existing tests as references for how to structure your new tests.
- Write the necessary unit
test(s)
for the new or revised functionality.
- Run `grunt test-js` to see the results of your newly-added
test(s)
.
Note: Your new unit tests should fail before your changes are applied to the plugin, and should pass after your changes are applied to the plugin.
What should a unit test look like?
- Each test should have a unique name clearly stating what unit is being tested.
- Each test should test only one unit per test, although one test can include several assertions. Create multiple tests for multiple units of functionality.
- Each test should begin with
assert.expect
to ensure that the expected assertions are run.
- Each test should follow the project's JavaScript Code Guidelines
Example tests
// Synchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
assert.expect(1)
var templateHTML = '<div class="alert alert-danger fade in">'
+ '<a class="close" href="#" data-dismiss="alert">×</a>'
+ '<p><strong>Template necessary for the test.</p>'
+ '</div>'
var $alert = $(templateHTML).appendTo('#qunit-fixture').bootstrapAlert()
$alert.find('.close').click()
// Make assertion
assert.strictEqual($alert.hasClass('in'), false, 'remove .in class on .close click')
})
// Asynchronous test
QUnit.test('should describe the unit being tested', function (assert) {
assert.expect(1)
var done = assert.async()
$('<div title="tooltip title"></div>')
.appendTo('#qunit-fixture')
.on('shown.bs.tooltip', function () {
assert.ok(true, '"shown" event was fired after calling "show"')
done()
})
.bootstrapTooltip('show')
})