+1
Thanks,
Marius
On Sun, Jul 29, 2018 at 6:56 PM, Vincent Massol <vincent(a)massol.net> wrote:
Hi devs,
During XWiki SAS’s hackathon last week, Simon and me worked on
implementing test coverage computation for velocity code and more precisely
to measure the code coverage we get in XWiki XML pages when running our
tests.
The rationale is that we know what’s our java test coverage but we have no
clue about the velocity one. And we have a lot of code in velocity scripts
in wiki pages. Thus we need a strategy for this too if we wish to increase
our global code quality.
So we have currently developed 2 mojos (xar:instrument and
xar:reportCoverage) in the XAR plugin code and created a JIRA issue, see
XCOMMONS-1448.
Here’s the proposal I’d like your opinion on:
* Finish working on this to stabilize it and commit/push it
* Apply the same strategy we have with Jacoco for java test coverage, i.e.
introduce a new xar:coverageCheck mojo that will fail the build if we get a
global TPC under the threshold mentioned in the POM
Consequences:
* It will mean that whenever we add new velocity scripts (especially when
there are branches such as #if) we will need to improve or add XAR page
tests. This can be done in 2 ways:
** by writing/improving a functional UI test
** by writing/improving a XAR unit test
* We will find places that have 0% coverage and these will be good
candidates to add tests for
My POV:
* We should have the minimum # of functional UI tests since they take very
long to execute. We need them but we shouldn’t test the various branches
with them IMO. Only one path.
* Instead we should focus on have more of XAR unit tests since they
execute fast and are better suited (with mocks) to test the various branches
* The XAR unit test framework we have is still pretty new and it’s
probably not to easy to write unit tests for wiki pages in some cases, we
will need to work on that as we discover them. I’m happy to help on that.
WDYT?
Personally I’m ok to try it and see what happens.
Thanks
-Vincent