woocommerce/tests/e2e/env/builtin.md

3.8 KiB

Using the Built In Container for End to End Testing

This document provides general instructions for using @woocommerce/e2e-environment with the built in hosting container.

Prerequisites

Complete the setup instructions in each project/repository.

Initialization Requirements

The test sequencer uses a ready page to determine that the testing environment is ready for testing. This page is created by the built in initialization. It matches the following spec:

wp post create --post_type=page --post_status=publish --post_title='Ready' --post_content='E2E-tests.'

Project Initialization

Each project will have its own begin test state and initialization script. For example, a project might start testing expecting that the sample products have already been imported. Below is the WP CLI equivalent of the built in initialization script for WooCommerce Core E2E testing:

wp core install --url=http://localhost:8084 --admin_user=admin --admin_password=password --admin_email=wooadmin@example.org

Project specific initialization can be added through an executable file at tests/e2e/docker/initialize.sh. WooCommerce core's script is:

#!/bin/bash

echo "Initializing WooCommerce E2E"

wp plugin activate woocommerce
wp theme install twentynineteen --activate

Container Configuration

The built in container initialization needs to know the particulars of your test install to run the tests. The built in uses the following default settings:

{
  "url": "http://localhost:8084/",
  "users": {
    "admin": {
      "username": "admin",
      "password": "password",
      "email": "admin@woocommercecoree2etestsuite.com"
    },
    "customer": {
      "username": "customer",
      "password": "password",
      "email": "customer@woocommercecoree2etestsuite.com"
    }
  }
}

You can override these in /tests/e2e/config/default.json. The customer entry is not required by the sequencer but is required for the core test suite.

  • The test sequencer does not use the user account email addresses.
{
  "url": "http://localhost:8089/",
  "users": {
    "admin": {
      "username": "admin",
      "password": "password",
    },
    "customer": {
      "username": "customer",
      "password": "password",
    }
  }
}

Folder Mapping

The built in container defaults to mapping the root folder of the repository to a folder in the plugins folder. For example woocommerce is mapped to /var/www/html/wp-content/plugins/woocommerce. Use the WC_E2E_FOLDER_MAPPING environment variable to override this mapping.

  • Storefront Theme - WC_E2E_FOLDER_MAPPING=/var/www/html/wp-content/themes/storefront npm explore @woocommerce/e2e-environment -- npm run docker:up
  • Site Project - WC_E2E_FOLDER_MAPPING=/var/www/html/wp-content/plugins npm explore @woocommerce/e2e-environment -- npm run docker:up

Travis CI Supported Versions

Travis CI uses environment variables to allow control of some software versions in the testing environment. The built in container supports these variables:

  • WP_VERSION - WordPress (default latest)
  • TRAVIS_PHP_VERSION - PHP (default latest)
  • TRAVIS_MARIADB_VERSION - MariaDB (default latest)

Travis CI

To enable Travis CI testing in your repository add the following to the appropriate sections of your .travis.yml config file.

version: ~> 1.0

  include:
    - name: "Core E2E Tests"
    php: 7.4
    env: WP_VERSION=latest WP_MULTISITE=0 RUN_E2E=1

....

script:
  - npm install jest --global
  - npm explore @woocommerce/e2e-environment -- npm run docker:up
  - npm explore @woocommerce/e2e-environment -- npm run test:e2e

....

after_script:
  - npm explore @woocommerce/e2e-environment -- npm run docker:down