Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Daniel Waterworth 6e161d3e75
DEV: Allow fab! without block (#24314)
The most common thing that we do with fab! is:

    fab!(:thing) { Fabricate(:thing) }

This commit adds a shorthand for this which is just simply:

    fab!(:thing)

i.e. If you omit the block, then, by default, you'll get a `Fabricate`d object using the fabricator of the same name.
2023-11-09 16:47:59 -06:00
Martin Brennan b2ff00cc74
DEV: Fix bookmark system spec flaky (#22630)
1) Bookmarking posts and topics topic level bookmarks clears all topic bookmarks from the topic bookmark button if more than one post is bookmarked
     Failure/Error: expect(Bookmark.where(user: current_user).count).to eq(0)

       expected: 0
            got: 2
2023-07-17 15:34:11 +10:00
Martin Brennan 6459922993
DEV: Move Bookmark modal/component to use d-modal (#22532)
c.f. https://meta.discourse.org/t/converting-modals-from-legacy-controllers-to-new-dmodal-component-api/268057

This also converts the Bookmark component to a Glimmer
component.
2023-07-17 10:14:17 +10:00
Alan Guo Xiang Tan 41f8bff2c3
DEV: Remove superfluous `js: true` metadata (#21960)
Why this change?

It is very unlikely that we need to ever JS for system tests considering
that we rely on a JS framework on the frontend.
2023-06-07 09:26:58 +08:00
Alan Guo Xiang Tan e323628d8a
DEV: Speed up core system tests (#21394)
What is the problem?

We are relying on RSpec custom matchers in system tests by defining
predicates in page objects. The problem is that this can result in a
system test unnecessarily waiting up till the full duration of
Capybara's default wait time when the RSpec custom matcher is used with
`not_to`. Considering this topic page object where we have a `has_post?`
predicate defined.

```
class Topic < PageObject
  def has_post?
    has_css?('something')
  end
end
```

The assertion `expect(Topic.new).not_to have_post` will end up waiting
the full Capybara's default wait time since the RSpec custom matcher is
calling Capybara's `has_css?` method which will wait until the selector
appear. If the selector has already disappeared by the time the
assertion is called, we end up waiting for something that will never
exists.

This commit fixes such cases by introducing new predicates that uses
the `has_no_*` versions of Capybara's node matchers.

For future reference, `to have_css` and `not_to have_css` is safe to sue
because the RSpec matcher defined by Capbyara is smart enough to call
`has_css?` or `has_no_css?` based on the expectation of the assertion.
2023-05-05 07:45:53 +08:00
Martin Brennan 16b9165630
FIX: Bookmark auto delete preference usage and default value (#19707)
This commit fixes an issue where the chat message bookmarks
did not respect the user's `bookmark_auto_delete_preference`
which they select in their user preference page.

Also, it changes the default for that value to "keep bookmark and clear reminder"
rather than "never", which ends up leaving a lot of expired bookmark
reminders around which are a pain to clean up.
2023-01-05 08:43:58 +10:00
Martin Brennan 57caf08e13
DEV: Minimal first pass of rails system test setup (#16311)
This commit introduces rails system tests run with chromedriver, selenium,
and headless chrome to our testing toolbox.

We use the `webdrivers` gem and `selenium-webdriver` which is what
the latest Rails uses so the tests run locally and in CI out of the box.

You can use `SELENIUM_VERBOSE_DRIVER_LOGS=1` to show extra
verbose logs of what selenium is doing to communicate with the system
tests.

By default JS logs are verbose so errors from JS are shown when
running system tests, you can disable this with
`SELENIUM_DISABLE_VERBOSE_JS_LOGS=1`

You can use `SELENIUM_HEADLESS=0` to run the system
tests inside a chrome browser instead of headless, which can be useful to debug things
and see what the spec sees. See note above about `bin/ember-cli` to avoid
surprises.

I have modified `bin/turbo_rspec` to exclude `spec/system` by default,
support for parallel system specs is a little shaky right now and we don't
want them slowing down the turbo by default either.

### PageObjects and System Tests

To make querying and inspecting parts of the page easier
and more reusable inbetween system tests, we are using the
concept of [PageObjects](https://www.selenium.dev/documentation/test_practices/encouraged/page_object_models/) in
our system tests. A "Page" here is generally corresponds to
an overarching ember route, e.g. "Topic" for `/t/324345/some-topic`,
and this contains logic for querying components within the topic
such as "Posts".

I have also split "Modals" into their own entity. Further down the
line we may want to explore creating independent "Component"
contexts.

Capybara DSL should be included in each PageObject class,
reference for this can be found at https://rubydoc.info/github/teamcapybara/capybara/master#the-dsl

For system tests, since they are so slow, we want to focus on
the "happy path" and not do every different possible context
and branch check using them. They are meant to be overarching
tests that check a number of things are correct using the full stack
from JS and ember to rails to ruby and then the database.

### CI Setup

Whenever a system spec fails, a screenshot
is taken and a build artifact is produced _after the entire CI run is complete_,
which can be downloaded from the Actions UI in the repo.

Most importantly, a step to build the Ember app using Ember CLI
is needed, otherwise the JS assets cannot be found by capybara:

```
- name: Build Ember CLI
  run: bin/ember-cli --build
```

A new `--build` argument has been added to `bin/ember-cli` for this
case, which is not needed locally if you already have the discourse
rails server running via `bin/ember-cli -u` since the whole server is built and
set up by default.

Co-authored-by: David Taylor <david@taylorhq.com>
2022-09-28 11:48:16 +10:00