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Developer's guide

Note

This guide assumes you have cloned and built the geojs repository according to the :ref:`Quick start guide <project-setup-guide>`.

To run all of the tests, you will need the optional packages and python modules listed there.

Geojs employs several different frameworks for unit testing. These frameworks have been designed to make it easy for developers to add more tests as new features are added to the api.

Code quality tests

All javascript source files included in the library for deployment are checked against ESLint for uniform styling and strict for common errors patterns. The style rules for geojs are located in the .eslintrc file in the root of the repository. These tests are performed automatically for every file added to the build; no additional configuration is required. You can check the code style by running npm run lint.

Code coverage

Code coverage information is generated automatically for all headless unit tests by Karma's test runner when running npm run test. The coverage information is submitted to codecov after every successful CI run.

Headless browser testing

Geojs uses headless Chrome and Firefox for headless browser testing of core utilities. If the headless mode does not support webgl at this time, code paths requiring webgl must be either mocked or run in an environment such as xvfb.

The headless unit tests should be placed in the tests/cases/ directory. All javascript files in this directory will be detected by the Karma test runner and executed automatically when you run npm run test. It is possible to debug these tests in a normal browser as well. Just run npm run start and browse to http://localhost:9876/debug.html. The test runner will automatically rebuild the tests as you modify files so there is no need to rerun this command unless you add a new file.

There are a number of utilities present in the file tests/test-utils.js that developers can use to make better unit tests. For example, a mocked webgl renderer can be used to hit code paths within webgl rendered layers. There are also methods for mocking global methods like requestAnimationFrame to test complex, asynchronous code paths in a stable and repeatable manner. The Sinon testing library is also available to generate stubs, spies, and mocked methods. Because all tests share a global scope, they should be careful to clean up all mocking and instrumentation after running. Ideally, each test should be runnable independently and use jasmines beforeEach and afterEach methods for setup and tear down.

Headless WebGL testing

To fully test code that uses WebGL, a browser with WebGL is required. If xvfb, osmesa, and Firefox or Chrome are installed, some tests can be run in a virtual frame buffer that doesn't require a display. May of these tests depend on additional data which can be downloaded by npm run get-data-files.

For example, running

npm run test-headed-xvfb

will run the headless WebGL tests.

The headless unit tests that require WebGL should be placed in the tests/gl-cases/ directory. When tests are run in a normal browser via npm run start, the webgl tests are included.

Many of these tests compare against a baseline image. If a test is changed or added, new baselines can be generated and optionally uploaded via the script built into tests/runners/baseline_images.py.

If a test fails, the specific test will be reported by the test runner, and the base and test images are saved in the images subdirectory of the build directory. The images have the base name of the test and end in -base.png for the reference image, -test.png for the current test, and -diff.png for a difference image where areas that are different are highlight (using resemblejs, the default highlight color is pink).

Unless an image comparison test fails, images are not automatically saved. To save all images, add the environment variable TEST_SAVE_IMAGE=all to the test command.

Examples and tests that need to run in a standard browser should be tested by creating an entry in the tests/headed-cases/ directory. To run these tests in a normal browser, run npm run start and browse to http://localhost:9876/debug.html?test=all. Since the browser's direct screen output is used, the browser must be running on the same machine as the npm run start command.

Release Process

GeoJS uses semantic-release. Prefix the first line of commit messages with an appropriate prefix, such as fix, perf, feat, docs, ci, refactor, style, test, build, or BREAKING CHANGE. See https://github.com/semantic-release/semantic-release/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md#type for details.

When the PR is merged to master, a new release will be made if appropriate.

After the release appears on GitHub, update the CHANGELOG.md file to reflect these changes.