- Why do we need that?
- What problems did we have in the past?
- How did we solve fragile tests problem?
- How to properly implement a page object?
- Running the test locally
- Where to ask for help?
Page objects in GitLab QA
In GitLab QA we are using a known pattern, called Page Objects.
This means that we have built an abstraction for all pages in GitLab that we use to drive GitLab QA scenarios. Whenever we do something on a page, like filling in a form or selecting a button, we do that only through a page object associated with this area of GitLab.
For example, when GitLab QA test harness signs in into GitLab, it needs to fill
in user login and user password. To do that, we have a class, called
Page::Main::Login
and sign_in_using_credentials
methods, that is the only
piece of the code, that reads the user_login
and user_password
fields.
Why do we need that?
We need page objects because we need to reduce duplication and avoid problems whenever someone changes some selectors in the GitLab source code.
Imagine that we have a hundred specs in GitLab QA, and we need to sign into
GitLab each time, before we make assertions. Without a page object, one would
need to rely on volatile helpers or invoke Capybara methods directly. Imagine
invoking fill_in :user_login
in every *_spec.rb
file / test example.
When someone later changes t.text_field :login
in the view associated with
this page to t.text_field :username
it generates a different field
identifier, what would effectively break all tests.
Because we are using Page::Main::Login.perform(&:sign_in_using_credentials)
everywhere, when we want to sign in to GitLab, the page object is the single
source of truth, and we must update fill_in :user_login
to fill_in :user_username
only in one place.
What problems did we have in the past?
We do not run QA tests for every commit, because of performance reasons, and the time it would take to build packages and test everything.
That is why when someone changes t.text_field :login
to
t.text_field :username
in the new session view we don’t know about this
change until our GitLab QA nightly pipeline fails, or until someone triggers
package-and-qa
action in their merge request.
Such a change would break all tests. We call this problem a fragile tests problem.
To make GitLab QA more reliable and robust, we had to solve this problem by introducing coupling between GitLab CE / EE views and GitLab QA.
How did we solve fragile tests problem?
Currently, when you add a new Page::Base
derived class, you must also
define all selectors that your page objects depend on.
Whenever you push your code to CE / EE repository, qa:selectors
sanity test
job runs as a part of a CI pipeline.
This test validates all page objects that we have implemented in
qa/page
directory. When it fails, it notifies you about missing
or invalid views/selectors definition.
How to properly implement a page object?
We have built a DSL to define coupling between a page object and GitLab views it is actually implemented by. See an example below.
module Page
module Main
class Login < Page::Base
view 'app/views/devise/passwords/edit.html.haml' do
element :password_field
element :password_confirmation
element :change_password_button
end
view 'app/views/devise/sessions/_new_base.html.haml' do
element :login_field
element :password_field
element :sign_in_button
end
# ...
end
end
end
Defining Elements
The view
DSL method corresponds to the Rails view, partial, or Vue component that renders the elements.
The element
DSL method in turn declares an element for which a corresponding
testid=element_name
data attribute must be added, if not already, to the view file.
You can also define a value (String or Regexp) to match to the actual view code but this is deprecated in favor of the above method for two reasons:
- Consistency: there is only one way to define an element
- Separation of concerns: QA uses dedicated
data-qa-*
attributes instead of reusing code or classes used by other components (for example,js-*
classes etc.)
view 'app/views/my/view.html.haml' do
### Good ###
# Implicitly require the CSS selector `[data-testid="logout_button"]` to be present in the view
element :logout_button
### Bad ###
## This is deprecated and forbidden by the `QA/ElementWithPattern` RuboCop cop.
# Require `f.submit "Sign in"` to be present in `my/view.html.haml
element :my_button, 'f.submit "Sign in"' # rubocop:disable QA/ElementWithPattern
## This is deprecated and forbidden by the `QA/ElementWithPattern` RuboCop cop.
# Match every line in `my/view.html.haml` against
# `/link_to .* "My Profile"/` regexp.
element :profile_link, /link_to .* "My Profile"/ # rubocop:disable QA/ElementWithPattern
end
Adding Elements to a View
Given the following elements…
view 'app/views/my/view.html.haml' do
element :login_field
element :password_field
element :sign_in_button
end
To add these elements to the view, you must change the Rails view, partial, or Vue component by adding a data-testid
attribute
for each element defined.
In our case, data-testid="login_field"
, data-testid="password_field"
and data-testid="sign_in_button"
app/views/my/view.html.haml
= f.text_field :login, class: "form-control top", autofocus: "autofocus", autocapitalize: "off", autocorrect: "off", required: true, title: "This field is required.", data: { testid: 'login_field' }
= f.password_field :password, class: "form-control bottom", required: true, title: "This field is required.", data: { testid: 'password_field' }
= f.submit "Sign in", class: "btn btn-confirm", data: { testid: 'sign_in_button' }
Things to note:
- The name of the element and the
data-testid
must match and be either snake cased or kebab cased - If the element appears on the page unconditionally, add
required: true
to the element. See Dynamic element validation - You may see
data-qa-selector
classes in existing Page Objects. We should prefer thedata-testid
method of definition over thedata-qa-selector
CSS class
data-testid
vs data-qa-selector
Introduced in GitLab 16.1
There are two supported methods of defining elements within a view.
data-testid
-
data-qa-selector
attribute
Any existing data-qa-selector
class should be considered deprecated
and we should prefer the data-testid
method of definition.
Dynamic element selection
Introduced in GitLab 12.5
A common occurrence in automated testing is selecting a single “one-of-many” element. In a list of several items, how do you differentiate what you are selecting on? The most common workaround for this is via text matching. Instead, a better practice is by matching on that specific element by a unique identifier, rather than by text.
We got around this by adding the data-qa-*
extensible selection mechanism.
Examples
Example 1
Given the following Rails view (using GitLab Issues as an example):
%ul.issues-list
- @issues.each do |issue|
%li.issue{data: { testid: 'issue', qa_issue_title: issue.title } }= link_to issue
We can select on that specific issue by matching on the Rails model.
class Page::Project::Issues::Index < Page::Base
def has_issue?(issue)
has_element?(:issue, issue_title: issue)
end
end
In our test, we can validate that this particular issue exists.
describe 'Issue' do
it 'has an issue titled "hello"' do
Page::Project::Issues::Index.perform do |index|
expect(index).to have_issue('hello')
end
end
end
Example 2
By an index…
%ol
- @some_model.each_with_index do |model, idx|
%li.model{ data: { testid: 'model', qa_index: idx } }
expect(the_page).to have_element(:model, index: 1) #=> select on the first model that appears in the list
Exceptions
In some cases, it might not be possible or worthwhile to add a selector.
Some UI components use external libraries, including some maintained by third parties. Even if a library is maintained by GitLab, the selector sanity test only runs on code within the GitLab project, so it’s not possible to specify the path for the view for code in a library.
In such rare cases it’s reasonable to use CSS selectors in page object methods,
with a comment explaining why an element
can’t be added.
Define Page concerns
Some pages share common behaviors, and/or are prepended with EE-specific modules that adds EE-specific methods.
These modules must:
- Extend from the
QA::Page::PageConcern
module, withextend QA::Page::PageConcern
. - Override the
self.prepended
method if they need toinclude
/prepend
other modules themselves, and/or defineview
orelements
. - Call
super
as the first thing inself.prepended
. - Include/prepend other modules and define their
view
/elements
in abase.class_eval
block to ensure they’re defined in the class that prepends the module.
These steps ensure the sanity selectors check detect problems properly.
For example, qa/qa/ee/page/merge_request/show.rb
adds EE-specific methods to qa/qa/page/merge_request/show.rb
(with
QA::Page::MergeRequest::Show.prepend_mod_with('Page::MergeRequest::Show', namespace: QA)
) and following is how it’s implemented
(only showing the relevant part and referring to the 4 steps described above with inline comments):
module QA
module EE
module Page
module MergeRequest
module Show
extend QA::Page::PageConcern # 1.
def self.prepended(base) # 2.
super # 3.
base.class_eval do # 4.
prepend Page::Component::LicenseManagement
view 'app/assets/javascripts/vue_merge_request_widget/components/states/sha_mismatch.vue' do
element :head_mismatch, "The source branch HEAD has recently changed."
end
[...]
end
end
end
end
end
end
end
Running the test locally
During development, you can run the qa:selectors
test by running
bin/qa Test::Sanity::Selectors
from within the qa
directory.
Where to ask for help?
If you need more information, ask for help on #quality
channel on Slack
(internal, GitLab Team only).
If you are not a Team Member, and you still need help to contribute, please
open an issue in GitLab CE issue tracker with the ~QA
label.