Project Testing Interface: JavaScript¶
This document outlines common ways to meet the Project Testing Interface requirements for JavaScript. Each project with JavaScript components must be able to do:
Codestyle checks.
Execute Tests and Code Coverage
Package Tarball Generation
Documentation Generation
Validate dependency licenses
Projects which are browser based must also be able to do:
Unit tests in Firefox and Chromium.
Projects which are server based must also be able to do:
Unit tests in Node.js.
Projects which require translation must also be able to do:
Translation import/export and merge for translated objects.
Specific commands¶
The following commands must be supported at the root of a clean tree, in order to initialize your project.
npm install
This command installs all of the project’s dependencies.
To drive the above required steps, the following commands should be supported at the root of an initialized tree.
npm test
This command executes all available test suites, and generate appropriate code coverage reports.
npm run lint
This command performs codestyle checks against the project.
npm pack
This command generates a release tarball.
npm publish <tarball>--no-scripts
This command will publish a release tarball to npm. It may not be necessary for all projects.
npm run document
This command builds documentation for the project.
The following commands are still under discussion:
npm run license
This command ensures that no incompatible licenses have accidentally been included.
npm run translate
This command imports translations into this project, if necessary.
Project Setup¶
Node.js and npm version¶
We support versions of Node.js and npm available in the from nodesource.com debian archive for our LTS versions of Ubuntu.
npm scripts¶
All JavaScript specific testing tools are invoked via NPM package scripts. These are useful because they provide a ‘virtual’ runtime environment whose dependencies are contained entirely in the project directory. They also allow us to create a consistent interface between the commands that are invoked by our build, and the tools required by the project.
Requirements Listing¶
Each project should list its runtime, peer, and development dependencies in package.json and (if applicable) bower.json.
dependencies
Packages required by your project to run in production. These should never use fuzzy version matching.
devDependencies
Packages that are required by your project during the test and build phase. These should never use fuzzy version matching.
peerDependencies
Packages that are used to run your project, but whose version does not strictly matter. For example, eslint-config-openstack has eslint as a peer dependency.
Virtual Environment Management¶
To support sensible testing, we use npm’s environment management, as it permits the installation of dependencies by project.
Build Step Details¶
The following describes each individual command, what it should do, and its expected output.
Codestyle Checks¶
- Command:
npm run lint
OpenStack requires the custom npm script ‘lint’ to execute our codestyle checks. The tool we use is called ESLint, and our rules are published to npm as eslint-config-openstack.
Executing Tests and Code Coverage¶
- Command:
npm test
OpenStack requires a sane testing and code coverage strategy for each project, though we do not prescribe the tools and coverage threshold, as these may differ based on circumstance and project type. Generated test reports should be placed in ./reports in your projects’ root directory. Generated coverage output should similarly be placed in ./cover.
Package Tarball Generation¶
- Command:
npm pack
OpenStack uses npm pack
to generate a release tarball, which will
compile all files listed in package.json. If your project requires
concatenation, minification, or any other preprocessing to create a valid
tarball, you may use the npm prepublish hook to trigger these steps.
All packages should include:
A README
A LICENSE file
All source code
Generate Documentation¶
- Command:
npm run document
In order to reuse existing templates, styles, and tooling, OpenStack uses Sphinx to generate our JavaScript Project documentation.
In addition to the normal PTI Documentation requirements, Javascript projects are recommended to provide an npm run document command for developer convenience that should:
Either install any needed distro dependencies from the
doc
tag inbindep.txt
or emit an error if they are not installed.Install Python dependencies for Sphinx from
doc/requirements.txt
.Execute
sphinx-build-b html doc/source doc/build
The project infrastructure will not use npm
to build the documentation.
Therefore it is STRONGLY discouraged for people to put additional logic
into the npm run document command. Additional logic needed around
Sphinx generation should go into Sphinx plugins which should be listed in
doc/requirements.txt
.
Generate Release Notes¶
- Command:
npm run releasenotes
OpenStack uses reno for generating release notes.
In addition to the normal PTI Documentation requirements, Javascript projects are recommended to provide an npm run releasenotes command for developer convenience that should:
Either install any needed distro dependencies from the
releasenotes
tag inbindep.txt
or emit an error if they are not installed.Execute:
sphinx-build -a -E -W -d releasenotes/build/doctrees-b html releasenotes/source releasenotes/build/html
The project infrastructure will not use npm run releasenotes to build the release notes. Therefore it is STRONGLY discouraged for people to put additional logic into the npm run releasenotes command. Additional logic needed should go into reno.