angular-cn/tools/saucelabs
Kara Erickson 9a1240360b build: add more info to SauceLabs README (#35704)
This commit adds a debugging section to the existing
SauceLabs README. It lays out tips to debug and resolve
a few issues that I encountered while running SauceLabs
locally this morning. It also adds some clarification
to the steps in the beginning.

PR Close #35704
2020-03-11 14:46:15 -04:00
..
BUILD.bazel refactor: simplify bazel saucelabs targets using karma pre-test wrapper and shared saucelabs connection between tests (#34769) 2020-01-28 13:47:00 -08:00
README.md build: add more info to SauceLabs README (#35704) 2020-03-11 14:46:15 -04:00
karma-saucelabs.js ci: ensure saucelabs browsers can load karma test page (#35171) 2020-02-06 15:36:27 -08:00
sauce-service.sh build: fix unbound variable in sauce-service.sh script (#35516) 2020-02-24 17:27:21 -08:00

README.md

Saucelabs testing with Bazel

Local testing

  1. Set up your SAUCE_USERNAME, SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY & SAUCE_TUNNEL_IDENTIFIER environment variables. These are required.

  2. On OSX and Windows, you will also need to set SAUCE_CONNECT to the path of your sc binary (Sauce Connect Proxy). You will have to download Sauce Connect Proxy if you don't already have it downloaded. It's available on the SauceLabs website here. Unzip it and point the SAUCE_CONNECT env variable to the sc binary.

export SAUCE_CONNECT=/{path_to_sc}/bin/sc

Note: it will not work to use the Sauce Connect that's already in node_modules unless you are using Linux. Download the one above for other platforms.

  1. Once you have your environment variables set up, run the setup task in the root of the repo:
yarn bazel run //tools/saucelabs:sauce_service_setup
  1. You can run a particular test target through SauceLabs by prefixing the target name with "saucelabs_" and adding the --config=saucelabs option. For example, packages/core/test:test_web becomes packages/core/test:saucelabs_test_web.
yarn bazel test //path/to/target:saucelabs_target1 --config=saucelabs --config=ivy

Remove the --config=ivy if you want to run through View Engine instead.

Additional test features

To see the test output while the tests are running (as these are long tests), add the --test_output=streamed option. Note, this option will also prevent bazel from using the test cache and will force the test to run.

bazel query is required gather up all karma saucelabs test labels so they can be run in one command as they are tagged manual.

Running all ViewEngine karma tests in Saucelabs:

yarn bazel run //tools/saucelabs:sauce_service_setup
TESTS=$(./node_modules/.bin/bazel query --output label '(kind(karma_web_test, ...) intersect attr("tags", "saucelabs", ...)) except attr("tags", "ivy-only", ...) except attr("tags", "fixme-saucelabs-ve", ...)')
yarn bazel test --config=saucelabs ${TESTS}

Running all Ivy karma tests in Saucelabs:

yarn bazel run //tools/saucelabs:sauce_service_setup
TESTS=$(./node_modules/.bin/bazel query --output label '(kind(karma_web_test, ...) intersect attr("tags", "saucelabs", ...)) except attr("tags", "no-ivy-aot", ...) except attr("tags", "fixme-saucelabs-ivy", ...)')
yarn bazel test --config=saucelabs --config=ivy ${TESTS}

Under the hood

The //tools/saucelabs:sauce_service_setup target does not start the Sauce Connect proxy but it does start the process that then listens for the start signal from the service manager script. This signal is sent by the karma wrapper script //tools/saucelabs:karma-saucelabs which calls ./tools/saucelabs/sauce-service.sh start. This is necessary as the Sauce Connect Proxy process must be started outside of bazel test as Bazel will automatically kill any processes spawned during a test when that tests completes, which would prevent the tunnel from being shared by multiple tests.

The karma_web_test rule is to test with saucelabs with a modified karma attribute set to //tools/saucelabs:karma-saucelabs. This runs the /tools/saucelabs/karma-saucelabs.js wrapper script which configures the saucelabs environment and starts Sauce Connect before running karma.

For example,

karma_web_test(
    name = "saucelabs_core_acceptance_tests",
    timeout = "long",
    karma = "//tools/saucelabs:karma-saucelabs",
    tags = [
        "exclusive",
        "manual",
        "no-remote-exec",
        "saucelabs",
    ],
    deps = [
        "//packages/core/test/acceptance:acceptance_lib",
    ],
)

These saucelabs targets must have a few important tags:

  • no-remote-exec as they cannot be executed remotely since they require a local Sauce Connect process
  • manual so they are not automatically tested with //...
  • exclusive as they must be run serially in order to not over-provision Saucelabs browsers
  • saucelabs so that they can be easily gathered up for testing in a bazel query

Debugging

Q: How do I get the tests to run on IE? I only see Chromium.

If you see something like this at the end of your test output, it means you're not actually running SauceLabs:

INFO: Build completed successfully, 43 total actions
/packages/core/test:test_web_chromium

This is a common error caused by forgetting to prefix your test target with "saucelabs_". For example, /packages/core/test:test_web becomes /packages/core/test:saucelabs_test_web.

Q: How can I tell that the SauceLabs connection was successfully made?

There is a dashboard at saucelabs.com where you can see active tunnel connections (Angular has an account). As soon as you actually run the test target (not after the setup task), you should see an active tunnel connection under the SAUCE_TUNNEL_IDENTIFICATION_KEY you entered. If a tunnel connection is not there, you are not actually connecting with SauceLabs.

Note: It may look like the tests are running because of the Bazel output. The progress Bazel is showing does not mean that SauceLabs is connected. If the tests are actually running, you should see the "..." test report for passing tests.