tree: 066fd6348ce6107329a93c4333423d9ad9980acb [path history] [tgz]
  1. bin/
  2. lib/
  3. pubspec.yaml
  4. README.md
mdtest/README.md

mdtest: Multi-Device Applicatoin Testing Framework

mdtest is a command line tool built on top of flutter for integration testing. The tool wraps several flutter commands and implements algorithms to deliver a robust end to end testing experience for multi-device applications. mdtest is targeted at flutter apps and provides a public wrapper of flutter driver API and allows testers to write portable test scripts across platforms.

Requirements:

  • Supported Operating Systems

    • Linux (64 bit)
    • Mac OS X (64 bit)
  • Tools

    • Dart: must be installed and accessible from PATH
    • PUB: comes with Dart
    • Flutter: must be installed and accessible from PATH. flutter doctor should report no error
    • ADB: must be installed and accessible from PATH

Installing mdtest

Clone from Github

To get mdtest, use git to clone the baku repository and then add the mdtest tool to PATH

$ git clone git@github.com:vanadium/baku.git
$ export PATH="$(pwd)/mdtest/bin:$PATH"

Open mdtest/pubspec.yaml file and make the following change:

replace

dlog:
  path: ../../../../third_party/dart/dlog

with

dlog:

replace

flutter_driver:
  path: ../deps/flutter/packages/flutter_driver

with

flutter_driver:
  path: ${path/to/flutter}/packages/flutter_driver

The first time you run the mdtest command, it will build the tool ifself. If you see Build Success, then mdtest is ready to go.

Quick Start

This section introduces main features of mdtest.

Test Spec

The test spec file is required to run mdtest. In a nut shell, the test spec is the way to tell mdtest what kind of devices you want your applications to run on. The spec file gives you the flexibility to choose your app device either uniquely by specifying the device id, or roughly by specifying some properties of the devices. The device nickname refers to a device that satisfies your specification. You can use the nickname to create a flutter driver in your test script. The ability to roughly specify device requirements and refer a device by its nickname makes your test script portable to any platform anywhere in the world, as long as sufficient available devices are detected by mdtest. The test scripts specified in the test spec should contain flutter driver tests for integration testing.

mdtest uses a test spec to initialize the test runs. The test spec is in JSON format and should follow the style below:

{
  "test-paths": [
    "${path/to/test_script1.dart}",
    "${path/to/test_script2.dart}",
    "${path/to/*_test.dart}"
    ...
  ],
  "devices": {
    "${device_nickname1}": {
      "device-id": "${device_id}",
      "model-name": "${device_model_name}",
      "screen-size": "${screen_size}",
      "app-root": "${path/to/flutter/app}",
      "app-path": "${path/to/instrumented/app.dart}"
    },
    "${device_nickname2}": {
      ...
    }
  }
}

test-paths (optional)

All paths in the test spec should either be absolute paths or paths relative to the test spec file. You can also specify test paths using glob patterns. The “test-paths” attribute is optional if you specify the test script path(s) from the command line when invoking mdtest. But you should at least specify a test path from either the test spec or the command line, otherwise mdtest will complain.

devices (required)

“devices” attribute is required in the test spec. You can list a number of device specs inside “devices” attribute. Each device spec has a unique “$device_nickname” mapping to several device/application properties.

  • device-id (optional): The “device-id” property is optional and should be the device id obtained by flutter devices if set.

  • model-name (optional): The“model-name” property is optional and should be the device model name (e.g. Nexus 5) if set.

  • screen-size (optional): The “screen-size” property is optional and values can only be one of [“small”(<3.5), “normal”(>=3.5 && <5), “large”(>=5 && <8), “xlarge”(>=8)] where the size is measured by screen diagonal in inches. The screen size generally follows Android Screen Support with overlapping screen ranges resolved.

  • app-root (required): The “app-root” attribute specifies the path to the flutter app which you want to run on the device.

  • app-path (required): The “app-path” attribute points to the instrumented flutter app that uses flutter driver plugin. For more information, please refer to flutter integration testing.

You can add arbitraty number of device specs by repeatedly adding attributes following the rules above.

Commands

Currently, mdtest supports two commands: run and auto. You can run mdtest run args... or mdtest auto args... to invoke the commands. Run mdtest -h to list the supported commands and mdtest command -h for more information for that command. mdtest has a global verbose flag --verbose, which will report more information to the user during execution if set to true.

Run

mdtest run command is used to run test suite(s) on devices that mdtest finds according to the test spec. The tool computes an app-device mapping based on the device requirements in the test spec. The app-device mapping is bijective and is used to launch each application on the mapped device mdtest finds. In this mode, mdtest will use the first app-device mapping it finds, and install and start the applications on devices to execute test scripts.

  • Arguments
    • --spec points to the path of the spec file
    • --coverage collects code coverage and stores the coverage info for each application under ${application_folder/coverage/code_coverage} if set
    • --format report test output in TAP format if set to tap, default is none which uses the default dart-lang test output format
    • The rest of the arguments would be either paths or glob patterns for the test scripts

Auto

mdtest auto command is used to run test suite(s) in a small number of times to cover as many device settings for each unique application as possible. More specifically, mdtest groups user specified applications based on the uniqueness of the application root path, and groups available devices based on model name (will support more grouping rules later). Then, mdtest computes the maximum number of possible app group to device group mappings. Finally, mdtest will try to compute the smallest number of test runs to cover those maximum possible mappings. The heuristic here is to make sure at least one app in each application group runs on at least one device in each device group possibly according to the test spec in some test run. However, since the problem is a set cover problem and is NP-complete, mdtest uses a approximation algorithm that has a complexity of O(log(n)).

  • Arguments
    • --spec points to the path of the spec file
    • --coverage collects code coverage and stores the coverage info for each application under ${application_folder/coverage/code_coverage} if set
    • --format report test output in TAP format if set to tap, default is none which uses the default dart-lang test output format
    • The rest of the arguments would be either paths or glob patterns for the test scripts

Writing Tests

mdtest provides a wrapper of flutter driver API and allows users to create a driver instance by a device nickname specified in the test spec. To use this wrapper, you should add the following import statement in your test scripts:

import 'package:flutter_driver/flutter_driver.dart';
import 'package:mdtest/driver_util.dart';

Then you can create a flutter driver instance like this:

FlutterDriver driver = await DriverUtil.connectByName('${device_nickname}');

The way to write integration tests for flutter apps follows flutter integration testing.