Shining ZATS Mimic

From Documentation
Shining ZATS Mimic

Author
Hawk Chen, Engineer, Potix Corporation
Date
April, 2012
Version
1.0.0-RC

Opening

In agile software development, developers modify their codes frequently for requirement change or refactoring, they therefore also perform unit tests frequently to ensure the software quality. In ZK-based applications, it is hard to execute an unit test on the composer which is tightly-coupled to ZUL because it is instantiated when a ZUL is requested by a browser. The same problem arises if you want to verify a ZUL's zkbind expression with ViewModel. Hence TDD (Test-Driven Development) cannot proceed under this situation.

In some cases, agile developers may deploy their web applications to a server and test it within a browser. However, writing an automation test to control a browser is an issue, and testing for different browsers is also a trouble. Not to mention that running an unit test in an application server is time-consuming and can be an agile developer's darkest moment. But, don't be depressed, let me enlighten your path with ZATS (ZK Application Test Suite) Mimic .

Since the previous freshly release (please refer to Small Talks/2012/April/The Dawn of ZK Application Test Suite:Mimic Library), we have updated initialized API with more support on user operations which would wider the testing scenarios of this library.

This project is mainly inspired by Georgi Rahnev of Telesoft Consulting GmbH, Vienna, along with a few other users and contributors.

No Server Test

ZATS Mimic enables developers to test their composer without an application server and of course without a browser either. Through this library, testers can mimic user interactions to applications such as clicking or typing to verify composer's (controller layer) data and logic. All they have to do is to write a regular unit test case and use Mimic's utility class to interact components on ZUL and then, run the test case.

No deploying to server, no rendering on browser, the unit test case can be executed in a very short period of time - this is very helpful for frequent unit testing during a agile development process.

The concept is as follows:

Smalltalk-MimicLibraryConcept.png

Testers write test cases to simulate user action such as clicking or typing with operation agents. Operation agent communicates with server emulator and triggers the composer's event handlers to change the component's status. Testers are able to check component's properties from the component agent to verify the result of user action. It might be a label changing its value or a listbox increased by one item. All behaviors that reflect on the component's properties can be verified.

Limitation

As this library focuses on testing the composer's logic on the server side, there are some limitations you should know:

  • Functions that depends on the application server does not work.
    Test cases run in simulated environment; all functions that requires an application server does not work (e.g. JNDI, or JTA). If user's AUT (Application Under Test) project adopts such container-provided services, they need extra work to make it work normally out of a container, e.g. use Test Double like a fake object.
  • Cannot test browser’s behavior.
    In a ZK-based application, some behaviors are handled by a browser (JavaScript), e.g. popup menu or message dialog created at the client side. As server side is not aware of these behaviors, it cannot be verified.
  • Cannot test visual effects.
    It cannot verify any behaviors that doesn't reflect upon component's properties such as animations, or a component's visual effect.


Setup

Maven Project

This will be available in the near future!


Manually

Download the released zip file and add all jar under dist/lib and dist/lib/ext into your project's classpath. Note that please do not deploy these jars to your application server.

Also remember to add jar of your preferred unit test framework, e.g. JUnit.

Write a Test Case

Steps to write a test case are as follows:

  1. Setup web application content path
  2. Create a client to connect to a ZUL
  3. Query a component
  4. Perform an operation on a component
  5. Verify result by checking a component’s property
  6. Tear down, stop server emulator

Hello Mimic Test

To present the basic usage of mimic library, I will demonstrate how to test a simple application. This application only has one button and one label, upon clicking the button, the label will show "Hello Mimic".


Before diving into the source code of a test case, let me introduce some basic classes used in a test case.

Zats
It contains several utility methods to initialize and clean testing environment. By default, it starts server emulator with predefined web.xml and zk.xml bundled in ZATS Mimic's jar.
Client
Acts like a client to the server emulator and we use it to connect to a ZUL.
DesktopAgent
Wraps ZK Desktop object, we usually call its query() or queryAll() to retrieve ZK components with selector syntax supported in SelectorComposer
For available selector syntax, please refer to javadoc or Small Talks/2011/January/Envisage ZK 6: An Annotation Based Composer For MVC
ComponentAgent
Mimics a ZK component and determines which operation you can perform on it. We can also get ZK component property's value from it.
It also has query() which means to find targets among its child components.
OperationAgent (ClickAgent, TypeAgent, SelectAgent...)
To mimic a user operation to a ZK component.
We name it "Agent" as it's not really the user operation itself, it's an agent to mimic user operation to a component.

Hello Test Case

We write the test case with JUnit 4 annotation, please refer to JUnit 4 in 60 seconds.

HelloTest.java"

//remove import for brevity
public class HelloTest {
	@BeforeClass
	public static void init() {
		Zats.init("./src/main/webapp"); 
	}

	@AfterClass
	public static void end() {
		Zats.end();
	}

	@After
	public void after() {
		Zats.cleanup();
	}

	@Test
	public void test() {
		DesktopAgent desktop = Zats.newClient().connect("/hello.zul");

		ComponentAgent button = desktop.query("button");
		ComponentAgent label = desktop.query("label");
		
		//button.as(ClickAgent.class).click();
		button.click();
		assertEquals("Hello Mimic", label.as(Label.class).getValue());
	}
}
  • Before starting a test, we have to call Zats.init() and pass root directory where ZUL pages are stored as a parameter. Most of the times, it is located in your web application's content root folder. In our example, we use maven default project structure. This method initializes testing environment and starts the server emulator. (line 5)
  • Of course, we start the server emulator at @BeforeClass , we should stop it by Zats.end() at @AfterClass . (line 10)
  • We should call Zats.cleanup() to clear desktop before opening another ZUL. (line 15)
  • The first statement of a test case is to create a client and connect it to a ZUL page, like a browser visiting a ZUL. The connect() returns a DesktopAgent and we usually retrieve ComponentAgent from it to perform user operation. (line 20)
  • Before we can mimic a user action to a component, we should retrieve a ComponentAgent. Empowered by selector syntax, DesktopAgent .query() is a powerful tool to retrieve it. As the ZUL contains only one button, we can query it by component name: query("button") (line 22)
  • As we do not have a browser screen to view, we cannot interact with a component by mouse's pointer. To mimic a user action, we have to convert ComponentAgent to one of the operation agents. The conversion method as() will check for available operation for the target ComponentAgent . For example, you cannot type something in a Label, If you try to convert it to an unsupported operation agent, you will get an exception. (line 25)
  • For convenience, ComponentAgent provides shortcut methods for commonly used operations like click() . It automatically gets operation agent and calls it for you. (line 26)
  • To verify test result, we can also use ComponentAgent.as() to convert it as a ZK component then get its property by getter methods. (line 27)

Operation Agent Usage

In order to mimic user operation to ZK components, our library provides various operation agents. You can find all supported operations under package org.zkoss.zats.mimic.operation including check, click, close, focus, key stroke, select, multiple select, type, select by index, and render . At this stage. we support operations that are more commonly used and plan to keep adding more operations in the future.

ClickAgent

ClickAgent helps us to mimic the clicking of a component for general intention; it is able to trigger onClick, onDoubleClick, or onRightClick events. Most user actions are done by clicking, but they might have different intentions. For example, clicking a listitem would represent selecting it, by clicking on a checkbox would represents checking the box and so on. Therefore, to avoid mixing several actions into clicking operations, specific actions has different corresponding operation agents. For example, if you wanted to select a listitem, use SelectAgent ,for checkbox, use CheckAgent . Which operation agent you choose to use would depend on the intention.

According to ZK Component Referenece, all components that inherits HtmlBasedComponent supports click, double click, and right click.

ClickTest.java

public class ClickTest {

	//remove other methods for brevity

	@Test
	public void test() {
		DesktopAgent desktop = Zats.newClient().connect("/click.zul");

		ComponentAgent label = desktop.query("#mylabel");
		ComponentAgent eventName = desktop.query("#eventName");
		
		label.click();
		assertEquals("onClick", eventName.as(Label.class).getValue());
		
		label.as(ClickAgent.class).doubleClick();
		assertEquals("onDoubleClick", eventName.as(Label.class).getValue());
		
		label.as(ClickAgent.class).rightClick();
		assertEquals("onRightClick", eventName.as(Label.class).getValue());
	}
}
  • As mentioned in the previous section, it's a shortcut method for convenience. (line 12)
  • If you want to perform double click or right click, you have get ClickAgent first from ComponentAgent . (line 15,18)

TypeAgent

We use a todo list application to demonstrate TypeAgent usage . Here is the application's UI:

Smalltalk-MimicLibrary-todolist.png

The following test case verifies "Add" function, we enter values into 3 fields: item name, priority, and date, and click "Add" button. Then we inspect each listcell of a listitem to verify the result.

TodoTest.java

public class TodoTest {

	@Test
	public void test() {
		//visit the target page
		DesktopAgent desktop = Zats.newClient().connect("/todo.zul");

		//find components
		ComponentAgent itemName = desktop.query("textbox");
		ComponentAgent priority = desktop.query("intbox");
		ComponentAgent date = desktop.query("datebox");

		//add
		//itemName.as(TypeAgent.class).type("one-item");
		itemName.type("one-item");
		priority.type("3");
		date.type("2012-03-16");
		desktop.query("button[label='Add']").click();
		
		//verify each listcell's label
		ComponentAgent listbox = desktop.query("listbox");
		List<ComponentAgent> cells = listbox.queryAll("listitem").get(0).getChildren();
		assertEquals("one-item",cells.get(0).as(Listcell.class).getLabel());
		assertEquals("3",cells.get(1).as(Listcell.class).getLabel());
		assertEquals("2012/03/16",cells.get(2).as(Listcell.class).getLabel());
	}
}
  • The formal usage of TypeAgent is to retrieve from a ComponentAgent . (line 14)
  • As seen in the previous example, this is also a shortcut method. (line 15)
  • Although priority is an intbox, we still provide a String as the parameter. The string will be parsed to an integer internally, if failed we'll get an exception. (line 16)
  • When typing in a Datebox, use the date format that you have specified in Datebox's "format" attribute. The same rule applies to timebox. (line 17)
  • The query syntax means "retrieve a button whose label is 'Add'". (line 18)
  • If we call ComponentAgent.query() , it'll only query the ComponentAgent's child components. Here, we find listitem to get listcell. (line 22)

SelectAgent

We'll keep using the todo list application to demonstrate SelectAgent usage. In this application, when selecting a listitem, its value will be loaded to three different input fields for modification. The following test case steps verifies whether or not listitem's data is correctly loaded into three input fields.

To single select a listitem, we must retrieve it first. The same rule applies to grid and combobox. We should retrieve a row or comboitem before selecting them.

TodoTest.java

public class TodoTest {
	@Test
	public void test() {
		//remove irrelevant code for brevity

		//update
		desktop.queryAll("listbox > listitem").get(0).as(SelectAgent.class).select();
		//verify selected
		assertEquals("one-item",itemName.as(Textbox.class).getValue());
		assertEquals((Integer)3,priority.as(Intbox.class).getValue());
		assertEquals("2012-03-16",date.as(Datebox.class).getRawText());
	}
  • Retrieve a listitem and use SelectAgent to select it.

RenderAgent

When a listbox (or grid) uses a live data and is not in paging mold, it does not load all items at first time rendering. It just pre-loads first few items. Until a user scrolls the scroll bar forward, it loads and renders the subsequent items. If we retrieve those un-rendered listitems in a test case, we will find its listcell contains no child components. This is one of ZK optimization behavior: to avoid loading large amount data which might not be viewed by users.

Hence, before we retrieve components inside a listcell, we shoulde uses Render operation to force listbox loads its content.

We use a simple case to demonstrate how to use this agent. This application contains a lisbox with 1000 listitems and it has simple logic: when a user selects an item, the label at the bottom will display the item's content. Each listcell has one child component label.

Smalltalk-mimic-render.png

RenderTest.java

	@Test
	public void testRendererAgent() {
		DesktopAgent desktop = Zats.newClient().connect("/render.zul");

		ComponentAgent listbox = desktop.query("#listbox");
		Label itemData = desktop.query("#itemData").as(Label.class);

		//selecting first item works correctly 
		listbox.getChild(1).as(SelectAgent.class).select();
		Assert.assertEquals("item0", itemData.getValue());
		
		//select a non-rendered item
		listbox.getChild(1000).as(SelectAgent.class).select();
		Assert.assertEquals("", itemData.getValue());
		//get a non-rendered listcell, check it has no child.
		Listcell listcell = listbox.getChild(1000).getChild(0).as(Listcell.class);
		Assert.assertTrue(listcell.getChildren().size()==0);

		listbox.as(RenderAgent.class).render(999, 999);

		listbox.getChild(1000).as(SelectAgent.class).select();
		Assert.assertTrue("item999".equals(itemData.getValue()));
		listcell = listbox.getChild(1000).getChild(0).as(Listcell.class);
		Assert.assertTrue(listcell.getChildren().size()>0);
	}
  • Selecting first item, item data label displays correctly. (line 9,10)
  • Before using RenderAgent to render, select last item doesn't make label display anything. (line 13,14)
  • We can also find that listcell has no children. (line 16,17)
  • render() could accept a range of item as parameters, and the index starts from 0. The last index of 1000 listitem is 999. But the last listitem's index of the listbox is 1000, index 0 is listhead. (line 19)
  • After rendering the last item, selecting it works as expected and listcell now contains child component. Remember you should retrieve the listcell again after rendering because original listitem component is already detached replaced with new listitem. (line 21-24)

MultipleSelectAgent

The reason that ZATS Mimic provides a MultipleSelectAgent instead of combining it with SelectAgent is clearness. Because a user still can perform single selection in a listbox with attribute "multiple=true". If we only have one agent to select, it's hard to tell what kind of selecting a tester really want to do. Therefore we design 2 separate agents to reflect a tester's intention more precisely. With MultipleSelectAgent , you can select() and deselect() .


The application we use to demonstrate the usage contains a listbox with attribute "multiple=true" at first and there is a checkbox that can switch the listbox between single and multiple selection mode. When we select one or more items, the label at the bottom will display all selected item's label.

Smalltalk-mimic-multipleselect.png


In the below test case, we perform 3 kinds of test: multiple select in multiple selection mode, single select in multiple selection mode, and multiple select in single selection mode.

MultipleSelectTest

	@Test
	public void testAgent() {
		DesktopAgent desktopAgent = Zats.newClient().connect("/multiple-select.zul");

		Label msg = desktopAgent.query("#msg").as(Label.class);
		Assert.assertEquals("", msg.getValue());

		ComponentAgent listbox = desktopAgent.query("#lb");
		Assert.assertEquals(4, listbox.as(Listbox.class).getChildren().size()); // include header
		List<ComponentAgent> items = listbox.queryAll("listitem");

		// listbox multiple selection
		items.get(0).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).select();
		items.get(1).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).select();
		items.get(2).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).select();
		Assert.assertEquals("[i0, i1, i2]", msg.getValue());
		Assert.assertEquals(3, listbox.as(Listbox.class).getSelectedCount());

		items.get(1).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).deselect();
		Assert.assertEquals("[i0, i2]", msg.getValue());
		Assert.assertEquals(2, listbox.as(Listbox.class).getSelectedCount());
		items.get(0).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).deselect();
		Assert.assertEquals("[i2]", msg.getValue());
		Assert.assertEquals(1, listbox.as(Listbox.class).getSelectedCount());

		items.get(0).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).deselect(); // should happen nothing
		Assert.assertEquals("[i2]", msg.getValue());
		Assert.assertEquals(1, listbox.as(Listbox.class).getSelectedCount());

		//single select in multiple selection mode
		String[] values = { "[i0]", "[i1]", "[i2]" };
		for (int i = 0; i < 3; ++i) {
			items.get(i).as(SelectAgent.class).select();
			Assert.assertEquals(values[i], msg.getValue());
		}
		
		//multiple select in single selection mode, throw an exception
		desktopAgent.query("#multipleMode").as(CheckAgent.class).check(false);
		try {
			items.get(0).as(MultipleSelectAgent.class).select();
			Assert.fail();
		}catch(RuntimeException e){
			System.out.println(e.getMessage());
		}
	}
  • With MultipleSelectAgent , we can mimic multiple selecting behavior. (line 13, 19)
  • Deselect a non-selected item won't cause any error. (line 26)
  • Under multiple selection mode, you still can use SelectAgent to perform single selecting. (line 33)
  • But if you want to do multiple selecting under single selecting mode, you'll get a run-time exception. (line 40)

OpenAgent

OpenAgent is used to expand a treeitem, listgroup, detail, bandbox, groupbox or combobutton, etc.


Here we use a tree with binary structure to demonstrate this agent's usage. Each 'treeitem has 2 children.

Smalltalk-mimic-open.png


In below test case, we expand first treeitem (node1) and its first child treeitem (node3), then first treeitem's visible item count should be 5. Before expanding, its visible item count is 1(only itself).

OpenTest.java

	@Test
	public void testAgent() {
		DesktopAgent desktop = Zats.newClient().connect("/open-tree.zul");

		ComponentAgent firstItem = desktop.query("#tree").query("treeitem");
		Assert.assertEquals(1, firstItem.as(Treeitem.class).getVisibleItemCount());
		
		//open first item
		firstItem.as(OpenAgent.class).open(true);
		firstItem.query("treechildren").query("treeitem").as(OpenAgent.class).open(true);
		Assert.assertEquals(5, firstItem.as(Treeitem.class).getVisibleItemCount());
		
		//collapse first item
		firstItem.as(OpenAgent.class).open(false);
		Assert.assertEquals(1, firstItem.as(Treeitem.class).getVisibleItemCount());
	}
  • Although there are 2 treeitem, query() only returns first one. (line 3)
  • Before expanding, its visible item count is 1(only itself). (line 6)
  • After we expand first treeitem and its first child item, its visible item count should be 5 now. You can tell it easily from the image above. (line 8-9)
  • Call open(false) to collapse first treeitem, and its visible item count comes back to 1. (line 12)

CloseAgent

According to ZK component's specification, only panel, tab, and window support this operation. Notice that when you close any of those components, that closed component is detached from desktop by default. Of course, you can write event handler to override this behavior, for example to hide a component instead of detaching it.

Smalltalk-mimic-close.png


The below test is quite simple, close each component and check if they are detached one by one.

	@Test
	public void testAgent() {
		DesktopAgent desktopAgent = Zats.newClient().connect("/close.zul");
		
		ComponentAgent panel = desktopAgent.query("panel[title='closable']");
		panel.as(CloseAgent.class).close();
		Assert.assertNull(((Component)panel.getDelegatee()).getPage());
		
		ComponentAgent window = desktopAgent.query("window[title='closable']");
		window.as(CloseAgent.class).close();
		Assert.assertNull(((Component)window.getDelegatee()).getPage());
		
		ComponentAgent tab = desktopAgent.query("tab[label='closable']");
		tab.as(CloseAgent.class).close();
		Assert.assertNull(desktopAgent.query("tab[label='closable']"));
	}
  • Close a closable component with CloseAgent.close() When the component is detached, do not reuse the variables that reference to them. (line 6,10,14)
  • After "tab" is detached, you cannot retrieve from desktop. (line 15)

More Agent

There are more agents that are not covered here, please refer to Project wiki-Operation Agent Usage

Summary

ZATS Mimic is an unit test library that helps agile developers to assure the quality of a composer (or ViewModel) and ZUL. Developers are able to write test cases to mimic user interaction then verify its result by inspecting component's properties. It loads ZUL pages and runs the test case in a server emulator environment without deploying to a real application server. This reduces test running time largely which is very suitable for test-driven development or agile software development.

In the future, we will increase more available user actions, like mouse over or next page and integrate other frameworks in order to make ZATS Mimic fit wider testing scenario.

We also welcome any user's feedback.

Download

[? Example Project].



Comments



Copyright © Potix Corporation. This article is licensed under GNU Free Documentation License.