Enterprise Java

Writing Acceptance Tests for Openshift + MongoDb Applications

Acceptance testing are used to determine if the requirements of a specification are met. It should be run in an environment as similar as possible of the production one. So if your application is deployed into Openshift you will require a parallel account to the one used in production for running the tests. In this post we are going to write an acceptance test for an application deployed into Openshift which uses MongoDb as database backend.

The application deployed is a very very simple library which returns all the books available for lending. This application uses MongoDb for storing all information related to books.

So let’s start describing the goal, feature, user story and acceptance criteria for previous application.

Goal: Expanding lecture to most people.
Feature: Display available books.
User Story: Browse Catalog -> In order to find books I would like to borrow, As a User, I want to be able to browse through all books.
Acceptance Criteria: Should see all available books.

Scenario:

Given I want to borrow a book
When I am at catalog page
Then I should see available books information: The Lord Of The Jars – 1299 – LOTRCoverUrl , The Hobbit – 293 – HobbitCoverUrl

Notice that this is a very simple application, so the acceptance criteria is simple too.

For this example, we need two test frameworks, the first one for writing and running acceptance tests, and the other one for managing the NoSQL backend. In this post we are going to use Thucydides for ATDD and NoSQLUnit for dealing with MongoDb.

The application is already deployed in Openshift, and you can take a look at https://books-lordofthejars.rhcloud.com/GetAllBooks

Thucydides is a tool designed to make writing automated acceptance and regression tests easier.

Thucydides uses WebDriver API to access HTML page elements. But also helps you to organise your tests and user stories by using a concrete programming model, create reports of executed tests, and finally it also measures functional cover.

To write acceptance tests with Thucydides next steps should be followed.

  • First of all choose a user story of one of your features.
  • Then implement the PageObject class. PageObject is a pattern which models web application’s user interface elements as objects, so tests can interact with them programmatically. Note that in this case we are coding ‘how’ we are accessing to html page.
  • Next step is implementing steps library. This class will contain all steps that are required to execute an action. For example creating a new book requires to open addnewbook page, insert new data, and click to submit button. In this case we are coding ‘what’ we need to implement the acceptance criteria.
  • And finally coding the chosen user story following defined Acceptance Criteria and using previous step classes.

NoSQLUnit is a JUnit extension that aims us to manage lifecycle of required NoSQL engine, help us to maintain database into known state and standarize the way we write tests for NoSQL applications.

NoSQLUnit is composed by two groups of JUnit rules, and two annotations. In current case, we don’t need to manage lifecycle of NoSQL engine, because it is managed by external entity ( Openshift ).

So let’s getting down on work:

First thing we are going to do is create a feature class which contains no test code; it is used as a way of representing the structure of requirements.

  

 public class Application {

     @Feature
     public class Books {
         public class ListAllBooks {}
     }

 }

Note that each implemented feature should be contained within a class annotated with @Feature annotation. Every method of featured class represents a user story.

Next step is creating the PageObject class. Remember that PageObject pattern models web application’s user interface as object. So let’s see the html file to inspect what elements must be mapped.

  

 <table id='listBooks' cellspacing='0' cellpadding='5'>
   <caption>List of Available Books<caption>
   <tr>
    <th>Title<th>
    <th>Number Of Pages<th>
    <th>Cover<th>
   <tr>
                 .....
 <table>

The most important thing here is that table tag has an id namedlistBooks which will be used in PageObject class to get a reference to its parameters and data. Let’s write the page object:

  

 @DefaultUrl('http:books-lordofthejars.rhcloud.comGetAllBooks')
 public class FindAllBooksPage extends PageObject {

  @FindBy(id = 'listBooks')
  private WebElement tableBooks;

  public FindAllBooksPage(WebDriver driver) {
   super(driver);
  }

  public TableWebElement getBooksTable() {

   Map<String, List<String>> tableValues = new HashMap<String, List<String>>();

   tableValues.put('titles', titles());
   tableValues.put('numberOfPages', numberOfPages());
   tableValues.put('covers', coversUrl());

   return new TableWebElement(tableValues);
  }

  private List<String> titles() {
   List<WebElement> namesWebElement = tableBooks.findElements(By.className('title'));
   return with(namesWebElement).convert(toStringValue());

  }

  private List<String> numberOfPages() {
   List<WebElement> numberOfPagesWebElement = tableBooks.findElements(By.className('numberOfPages'));
   return with(numberOfPagesWebElement).convert(toStringValue());
  }

  private List<String> coversUrl() {
   List<WebElement> coverUrlWebElement = tableBooks.findElements(By.className('cover'));
   return with(coverUrlWebElement).convert(toImageUrl());
  }

  private Converter<WebElement, String> toImageUrl() {
   return new Converter<WebElement, String>() {

    @Override
    public String convert(WebElement from) {
     WebElement imgTag = from.findElement(By.tagName('img'));
     return imgTag.getAttribute('src');
    }
   };
  }

  private Converter<WebElement, String> toStringValue() {
   return new Converter<WebElement, String>() {

    @Override
    public String convert(WebElement from) {
     return from.getText();
    }
   };
  }

 }

Using @DefaultUrl we are setting which URL is being mapped, with @FindBy we map the web element with id listBooks, and finally getBooksTable() method which returns the content of generated html table.

The next thing to do is implementing the steps class; in this simple case we only need two steps, the first one that opens the GetAllBooks page, and the other one which asserts that table contains the expected elements.

  

 public class EndUserSteps extends ScenarioSteps {

  public EndUserSteps(Pages pages) {
   super(pages);
  }

  private static final long serialVersionUID = 1L;

  @Step
  public void should_obtain_all_inserted_books() {
   TableWebElement booksTable = onFindAllBooksPage().getBooksTable();

   List<String> titles = booksTable.getColumn('titles');
   assertThat(titles, hasItems('The Lord Of The Rings', 'The Hobbit'));

   List<String> numberOfPages = booksTable.getColumn('numberOfPages');
   assertThat(numberOfPages, hasItems('1299', '293'));

   List<String> covers = booksTable.getColumn('covers');
   assertThat(covers, hasItems('http:upload.wikimedia.orgwikipediaen662Jrrt_lotr_cover_design.jpg', 'http:upload.wikimedia.orgwikipediaen44aTheHobbit_FirstEdition.jpg'));
  }

  @Step
  public void open_find_all_page() {
   onFindAllBooksPage().open();
  }

  private FindAllBooksPage onFindAllBooksPage() {
   return getPages().currentPageAt(FindAllBooksPage.class);
  }

 }

And finally class for validating the acceptance criteria:

  

 @Story(Application.Books.ListAllBooks.class)
 @RunWith(ThucydidesRunner.class)
 public class FindBooksStory {

  private final MongoDbConfiguration mongoDbConfiguration = mongoDb()
    .host('127.0.0.1').databaseName('books')
    .username(MongoDbConstants.USERNAME)
    .password(MongoDbConstants.PASSWORD).build();

  @Rule
  public final MongoDbRule mongoDbRule = newMongoDbRule().configure(
    mongoDbConfiguration).build();

  @Managed(uniqueSession = true)
  public WebDriver webdriver;

  @ManagedPages(defaultUrl = 'http:books-lordofthejars.rhcloud.com')
  public Pages pages;

  @Steps
  public EndUserSteps endUserSteps;

  @Test
  @UsingDataSet(locations = 'books.json', loadStrategy = LoadStrategyEnum.CLEAN_INSERT)
  public void finding_all_books_should_return_all_available_books() {
   endUserSteps.open_find_all_page();
   endUserSteps.should_obtain_all_inserted_books();
  }

 }

There are some things that should be considered in previous class:

  • @Story should receive a class defined with @Feature annotation, so Thucydides can create correctly the report.
  • We use MongoDbRule to establish a connection to remote MongoDb instance. Note that we can use localhost address because of port forwarding Openshift capability so although localhost is used, we are really managing remote MongoDb instance.
  • Using @Steps Thucydides will create an instance of previous step library.
  • And finally @UsingDataSet annotation to populate data into MongoDb database before running the test.
  

 {
  'book':[
   {
       'title': 'The Lord Of The Rings',
       'numberOfPages': '1299',
       'cover': 'http:upload.wikimedia.orgwikipediaen662Jrrt_lotr_cover_design.jpg' 
   }, 
   {
    'title': 'The Hobbit',
    'numberOfPages': '293',
    'cover': 'http:upload.wikimedia.orgwikipediaen44aTheHobbit_FirstEdition.jpg'
   }
  ]
 }

Note that NoSQLUnit maintains the database into known state by cleaning database before each test execution and populating it with known data defined into a json file.

Also keep in mind that this example is very simple so only and small subset of capabilities of Thucydides and NoSQLUnit has been shown. Keep watching both sites:http://thucydides.info and https://github.com/lordofthejars/nosql-unit

We keep learning,
Alex.

 

Reference: Writing Acceptance Tests for Openshift + MongoDb Applications from our JCG partner Alex Soto at the One Jar To Rule Them All blog.

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