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Integration Tests

This directory contains integration tests which use the Playwright testing framework.

Installation

To install the Playwright tool run this command in the playwright subdirectory:

npm install --no-save @playwright/test

This will install the NPM packages into the node_modules subdirectory.

Alternatively you can install it as an RPM package from the YaST:Head:Agama OBS project.

Files

  • playwright.config.ts - Playwright configuration, see documentation for more details
  • global-setup.ts - a helper for logging-in
  • tests/\*.spec.ts - individual test files
  • lib/* - shared library files

Running the Tests

Note: If you install Playwright from the RPM package then omit the npx tool from all commands below.

By default the tests are used against the local running server, if you want to test a remote server see the Target Server section below.

To run all tests use this command:

npx playwright test

To run just a specific test:

npx playwright test tests/root_password.spec.ts

By default it runs tests in all configured projects (browsers), if you want to use only a specific browser use the --project option:

npx playwright test --project chromium -- tests/root_password.spec.ts

See the playwright.config.ts file for the list of configured projects.

Running Tests Directly from the Live ISO

You can download the default-Playwright image type from the YaST:Head:Agama repository.

This ISO additionally includes the Playwright tool, Chromium browser and the Agama integration tests.

To start a test in a console or in a SSH session use this command:

playwright test --project chromium --config /usr/share/agama-playwright <test>

Note the missing npx tool in the command, in this case Playwright is installed into the system directories.

You can also start the tests in headed mode (with --headed option) either via ssh -X or using a local X terminal session:

# from a Linux console
DISPLAY=:0 xterm &
# then switch to console 7 using the Alt+F7 keyboard shortcut
# and run Playwright from the xterm

Updating the Screenshots

There is one test specially designed for refreshing the screenshots displayed in the main README.md file.

To fully run the installation type this:

SCREENSHOT_MODE=1 RUN_INSTALLATION=1 BASE_URL=https://<host>:9090 npx playwright test --headed --project chromium take_screenshots

The --headed option shows the browser window so you can see the progress. You can use the --debug option to run the test step-by-step.

The screenshots are saved to the screenshots/ subdirectory.

Target Server

By default the tests use the installer instance running locally at http://localhost:9090. If you want to run the tests against another instance set the BASE_URL environment variable:

BASE_URL=https://192.168.1.12:9090 npx playwright ...

You can use it also with the webpack development server:

BASE_URL=https://localhost:8080/ npx playwright ...

Options

The tests by default run in a headless mode, if you want to see the actions in the browser use the --headed option.

If you want to manually run a test step by step use the --debug option. This also allows to easily get the object selectors using the Explore button.

Links

Tips for Writing Tests

The installer runs in another process in a browser, it does not run synchronously with the test. Additionally the installer uses the React framework, that means the initial web page is empty and the content is added asynchronously by Javascript code.

These features have some consequences for writing the tests.

Timeouts

As mentioned above, the page content is updated asynchronously so if something is missing on the page it does not mean the test fails immediately. The tested object might appear on the page after a small delay, Playwright uses timeouts for most of the checks. If something is missing then it tries the search again until the timeout is reached.

The default timeout is set in the playwright.config.ts configuration file. That should be enough for most operations even on a slow machine. However, for some long running operations like refreshing repositories or installing packages you might need to use a longer timeout.

Playwright allows setting explicit timeout for each test or action:

// refreshing the repositories and evaluating the package dependencies might take long time
await expect(page.getByText("Installation will take")).toBeVisible({timeout: 2 * minute});

or you can set how long the whole test should run:

test.setTimeout(60 * minute);

Testing Not Displayed Elements

This is also related to the asynchronous work. You should never test that something is NOT displayed on the page because it is not guaranteed that it will not be displayed one millisecond after you check for it.

The only exception is that you first check that an element is displayed, do some action and then check that the element is not displayed anymore.

// clicking a 'Details' button
await page.getByText('Details').click();
// opens a modal dialog (popup)
await expect(page.locator('[role="dialog"]')).toBeVisible();

// after clicking the 'Close' button
await page.getByText('Close').click();
// the popup disappears
await expect(page.locator('[role="dialog"]')).not.toBeVisible();

The last check actually waits until the popup disappears. It is OK if it takes some short time to close the popup.

Locators

By default the text locators search for a substring! If there are similar labels present you might get errors for multiple elements found.

For example when there are "Password" and "Password Confirmation" fields displayed on the page then simple

await page.getByLabel('Password').click()

would actually match both elements and Playwright would not know which one you wanted to click. In that case the test would fail with an error.

The solution is to use the exact matching:

await page.getByLabel('Password', { exact: true }).click()

This will match only one field without any conflict.

Troubleshooting Failed Integration Tests in CI

Single Test Failure

There are stored artifacts in the GitHub CI. Go to the failed job and there is a link "Summary". At the bottom of the page there is "Artifacts" section which contains the y2log and also trace.zip file. The trace can be browsed using the playwright tool locally or at page https://trace.playwright.dev/ to get details of the failure.

Stuck at D-Bus Loading

It usually indicates an issue with the Agama D-Bus services. There is a step called "Show D-Bus Services Logs" which should give a hint what is going wrong. Additional help can be the y2log file in the artifacts (see above).

Missing Package/Wrong Container

Packages lives in container at https://build.opensuse.org/package/show/YaST:Head:Containers/agama-testing . Feel free to modify it as the only purpose of this container is CI testing.

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