| # Web Tests Tips |
| |
| The recommendations here are intended to help you write new tests that go |
| through code review with a minimal number of round trips, remain useful as Blink |
| evolves, and serve as an asset (rather than a liability) for the team. |
| |
| While reading existing web tests, please keep in mind that they represent |
| snapshots taken over many years of an ever-evolving collective opinion of what |
| good Web pages and solid tests should look like. Thus, it should not come as a |
| surprise that most existing web tests are not consistent with these |
| recommendations, and are not even consistent with each other. |
| |
| *** note |
| This document intentionally uses _should_ a lot more than _must_, as defined in |
| [RFC 2119](https://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2119.txt). Writing web tests is a |
| careful act of balancing many concerns, and this humble document cannot possibly |
| capture the context that rests in the head of an experienced Blink engineer. |
| *** |
| |
| ## General Principles |
| |
| This section contains guidelines adopted from |
| [web-platform-tests documentation](https://web-platform-tests.org/writing-tests/general-guidelines.html) |
| and |
| [WebKit's Wiki page on Writing good test cases](https://trac.webkit.org/wiki/Writing%20Layout%20Tests%20for%20DumpRenderTree), |
| with Blink-specific flavoring. |
| |
| ### Concise |
| |
| Tests should be **concise**, without compromising on the principles below. Every |
| element and piece of code on the page should be necessary and relevant to what |
| is being tested. For example, don't build a fully functional signup form if you |
| only need a text field or a button. |
| |
| Content needed to satisfy the principles below is considered necessary. For |
| example, it is acceptable and desirable to add elements that make the test |
| self-describing (see below), and to add code that makes the test more reliable |
| (see below). |
| |
| Content that makes test failures easier to debug is considered necessary (to |
| maintaining a good development speed), and is both acceptable and desirable. |
| |
| *** promo |
| Conciseness is particularly important for reference tests and pixel tests, as |
| the test pages are rendered in an 800x600px viewport. Having content outside the |
| viewport is undesirable because the outside content does not get compared, and |
| because the resulting scrollbars are platform-specific UI widgets, making the |
| test results less reliable. |
| *** |
| |
| ### Fast |
| |
| Tests should be as **fast** as possible, without compromising on the principles |
| below. Blink has several thousand web tests that are run in parallel, and |
| avoiding unnecessary delays is crucial to keeping our Commit Queue in good |
| shape. |
| |
| Avoid |
| [window.setTimeout](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/WindowTimers/setTimeout), |
| as it wastes time on the testing infrastructure. Instead, use specific event |
| handlers, such as |
| [window.onload](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/GlobalEventHandlers/onload), |
| to decide when to advance to the next step in a test. |
| |
| ### Reliable |
| |
| Tests should be **reliable** and yield consistent results for a given |
| implementation. Flaky tests slow down your fellow developers' debugging efforts |
| and the Commit Queue. |
| |
| `window.setTimeout` is again a primary offender here. Asides from wasting time |
| on a fast system, tests that rely on fixed timeouts can fail when on systems |
| that are slower than expected. |
| |
| When adding or significantly modifying a web test, use the command below to |
| assess its flakiness. While not foolproof, this approach gives you some |
| confidence, and giving up CPU cycles for mental energy is a pretty good trade. |
| |
| ```bash |
| third_party/blink/tools/run_web_tests.py path/to/test.html --repeat-each=100 |
| ``` |
| |
| The |
| [PSA on writing reliable web tests](https://docs.google.com/document/d/1Yl4SnTLBWmY1O99_BTtQvuoffP8YM9HZx2YPkEsaduQ/edit). |
| also has good guidelines for writing reliable tests. |
| |
| ### Self-Describing |
| |
| Tests should be **self-describing**, so that a project member can recognize |
| whether a test passes or fails without having to read the specification of the |
| feature being tested. |
| |
| `testharness.js` makes a test self-describing when used correctly. Other types |
| of tests, such as reference tests and |
| [tests with manual fallback](./web_tests_with_manual_fallback.md), |
| [must be carefully designed](https://web-platform-tests.org/writing-tests/manual.html#requirements-for-a-manual-test) |
| to be self-describing. |
| |
| ### Minimal |
| |
| Tests should require a **minimal** amount of cognitive effort to read and |
| maintain. |
| |
| Avoid depending on edge case behavior of features that aren't explicitly covered |
| by the test. For example, except where testing parsing, tests should contain |
| valid markup (no parsing errors). |
| |
| Tests should provide as much relevant information as possible when failing. |
| `testharness.js` tests should prefer |
| [rich assert_ functions](https://web-platform-tests.org/writing-tests/testharness-api.html#list-of-assertions) |
| to combining `assert_true()` with a boolean operator. Using appropriate |
| `assert_` functions results in better diagnostic output when the assertion |
| fails. |
| |
| ### Cross-Platform |
| |
| Tests should be as **cross-platform** as reasonably possible. Avoid assumptions |
| about device type, screen resolution, etc. Unavoidable assumptions should be |
| documented. |
| |
| When possible, tests should only use Web platform features, as specified |
| in the relevant standards. When the Web platform's APIs are insufficient, |
| tests should prefer to use WPT extended testing APIs, such as |
| `wpt_automation`, over Blink-specific testing APIs. |
| |
| Test pages should use the HTML5 doctype (`<!doctype html>`) unless they |
| specifically cover |
| [quirks mode](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Quirks_Mode_and_Standards_Mode) |
| behavior. |
| |
| Tests should avoid using features that haven't been shipped by the |
| actively-developed major rendering engines (Blink, WebKit, Gecko, Edge). When |
| unsure, check [caniuse.com](http://caniuse.com/). By necessity, this |
| recommendation does not apply to the feature targeted by the test. |
| |
| *** note |
| It may be tempting have a test for a bleeding-edge feature X depend on feature |
| Y, which has only shipped in beta / development versions of various browsers. |
| The reasoning would be that all browsers that implement X will have implemented |
| Y. Please keep in mind that Chrome has un-shipped features that made it to the |
| Beta channel in the past. |
| *** |
| |
| *** aside |
| [ES2015](http://benmccormick.org/2015/09/14/es5-es6-es2016-es-next-whats-going-on-with-javascript-versioning/) |
| is shipped by all major browsers under active development (except for modules), |
| so using ES2015 features is acceptable. |
| |
| At the time of this writing, ES2016 is not fully shipped in all major browsers. |
| *** |
| |
| ### Self-Contained |
| |
| Tests must be **self-contained** and not depend on external network resources. |
| |
| Unless used by multiple test files, CSS and JavaScript should be inlined using |
| `<style>` and `<script>` tags. Content shared by multiple tests should be |
| placed in a `resources/` directory near the tests that share it. See below for |
| using multiple origins in a test. |
| |
| ### File Names |
| |
| Test **file names** should describe what is being tested. |
| |
| File names should use `snake-case`, but preserve the case of any embedded API |
| names. For example, prefer `document-createElement.html` to |
| `document-create-element.html`. |
| |
| ### Character Encoding |
| |
| Tests should use the UTF-8 **character encoding**, which should be declared by |
| `<meta charset=utf-8>`. A `<meta>` tag is not required (but is acceptable) for |
| tests that only contain ASCII characters. This guideline does not apply when |
| specifically testing encodings. |
| |
| The `<meta>` tag must be the first child of the document's `<head>` element. In |
| documents that do not have an explicit `<head>`, the `<meta>` tag must follow |
| the doctype. |
| |
| ## Coding Style |
| |
| No coding style is enforced for web tests. This section highlights coding |
| style aspects that are not consistent across our web tests, and suggests some |
| defaults for unopinionated developers. When writing web tests for a new part |
| of the codebase, you can minimize review latency by taking a look at existing |
| tests, and pay particular attention to these issues. Also beware of per-project |
| style guides, such as the |
| [ServiceWorker Tests Style guide](https://www.chromium.org/blink/serviceworker/testing). |
| |
| ### Baseline |
| |
| [Google's JavaScript Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/jsguide.html) |
| and |
| [Google's HTML/CSS Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/htmlcssguide.xml) |
| are a reasonable baseline for coding style defaults, with the caveat that web |
| tests do not use Google Closure or JSDoc. |
| |
| ### == vs === |
| |
| JavaScript's |
| [== operator](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Comparison_Operators#Equality_()) |
| performs some |
| [type conversion](http://www.ecma-international.org/ecma-262/6.0/#sec-abstract-equality-comparison). |
| on its arguments, which might be surprising to readers whose experience centers |
| around C++ or Java. The |
| [=== operator](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Operators/Comparison_Operators#Identity_strict_equality_()) |
| is much more similar to `==` in C++. |
| |
| Using `===` everywhere is an easy default that saves you, your reviewer, and any |
| colleague that might have to debug test failures, from having to reason about |
| [special cases for ==](http://dorey.github.io/JavaScript-Equality-Table/). At |
| the same time, some developers consider `===` to add unnecessary noise when `==` |
| would suffice. While `===` should be universally accepted, be flexible if your |
| reviewer expresses a strong preference for `==`. |
| |
| ### Let and Const vs Var |
| |
| JavaScript variable declarations introduced by |
| [var](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/var) |
| are hoisted to the beginning of their containing function, which may be |
| surprising to C++ and Java developers. By contrast, |
| [const](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/const) |
| and |
| [let](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/let) |
| declarations are block-scoped, just like in C++ and Java, and have the added |
| benefit of expressing mutability intent. |
| |
| For the reasons above, a reasonable default is to prefer `const` and `let` over |
| `var`, with the same caveat as above. |
| |
| ### Strict Mode |
| |
| JavaScript's |
| [strict mode](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Strict_mode), |
| activated by adding `'use strict';` to the very top of a script, helps catch |
| some errors, such as mistyping a variable name, forgetting to declare a |
| variable, or attempting to change a read-only property. |
| |
| Given that strict mode gives some of the benefits of using a compiler, adding it |
| to every test is a good default. This does not apply when specifically testing |
| sloppy mode behavior. |
| |
| Some developers argue that adding the `'use strict';` boilerplate can be |
| difficult to remember, weighs down smaller tests, and in many cases running a |
| test case is sufficient to discover any mistyped variable names. |
| |
| ### Promises |
| |
| [Promises](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) |
| are a mechanism for structuring asynchronous code. When used correctly, Promises |
| avoid some of the |
| [issues of callbacks](http://colintoh.com/blog/staying-sane-with-asynchronous-programming-promises-and-generators). |
| For these reasons, a good default is to prefer promises over other asynchronous |
| code structures. |
| |
| When using promises, be aware of the |
| [execution order subtleties](https://jakearchibald.com/2015/tasks-microtasks-queues-and-schedules/) |
| associated with them. Here is a quick summary. |
| |
| * The function passed to `Promise.new` is executed synchronously, so it finishes |
| before the Promise is created and returned. |
| * The functions passed to `then` and `catch` are executed in |
| _separate microtasks_, so they will be executed after the code that resolved |
| or rejected the promise finishes, but before any other event handler. |
| |
| ### Classes |
| |
| [Classes](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Classes) |
| are syntactic sugar for JavaScript's |
| [prototypal inheritance](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Inheritance_and_the_prototype_chain). |
| Compared to manipulating prototypes directly, classes offer a syntax that is |
| more familiar to developers coming from other programming languages. |
| |
| A good default is to prefer classes over other OOP constructs, as they will make |
| the code easier to read for many of your fellow Chrome developers. At the same |
| time, most web tests are simple enough that OOP is not justified. |
| |
| ### Character Encoding |
| |
| When HTML pages do not explicitly declare a character encoding, browsers |
| determine the encoding using an |
| [encoding sniffing algorithm](https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/syntax.html#determining-the-character-encoding) |
| that will surprise most modern Web developers. Highlights include a default |
| encoding that depends on the user's locale, and non-standardized |
| browser-specific heuristics. |
| |
| The easiest way to not have to think about any of this is to add |
| `<meta charset="utf-8">` to all your tests. This is easier to remember if you |
| use a template for your web tests, rather than writing them from scratch. |
| |
| ## Tests with Manual Feedback |
| |
| Tests that rely on the testing APIs exposed by WPT or Blink will not work when |
| loaded in a standard browser environment. When writing such tests, default to |
| having the tests gracefully degrade to manual tests in the absence of the |
| testing APIs. |
| |
| The |
| [document on web tests with manual feedback](./web_tests_with_manual_fallback.md) |
| describes the approach in detail and highlights the trade-off between added test |
| weight and ease of debugging. |