52 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
William Chargin
d7cb4c65fa
Create script to build static site (#592)
Summary:
Currently, we create the static site and deploy it all at once in
`scripts/deploy.sh`. This commit creates a new script that only builds
the static site. This has the advantage that it is easier/less scary to
change that script (because it can be tested without worrying about
deploying to a local test target), and that we can write automated tests
for it.

Test Plan:
Run `yarn sharness`; note that it completes very quickly. Then, in a
shell with your GitHub token exported, run `yarn sharness-full`. Expect
all tests to pass.

For a sanity check, you can run:

```shell
outdir="$(mktemp -d --suffix .sourcecred-site)"
./scripts/build_static_site.sh --target "${outdir}" \
    --cname sourcecred.io \
    --repo sourcecred/example-git \
    --repo sourcecred/example-github \
    ;
(cd "${outdir}" && python -m SimpleHTTPServer)
```

and ensure that <http://localhost:8000/> is as expected.

One test case that is not covered is the following: _if_ the actual app
somehow tries to emit a `CNAME` file at root, _and_ our script’s logic
to catch this is broken, then we will not catch this failure. I’ve
tested the logic manually by adding `>"${cname_file}"` after definition
of that variable, but I don’t see a good way to test it automatically,
without adding flags like `--but-actually-emit-cname-too` to the build.
The compound probability of this happening is sufficiently low that this
doesn’t bother me.

wchargin-branch: build-static-site-script
2018-08-06 13:05:40 -07:00
William Chargin
baa0cbff1b
Add sharness for shell-based testing (#597)
Summary:
We will shortly want to perform testing of shell scripts; it makes the
most sense to do so via the shell. We could roll our own testing
framework, but it makes more sense to use an existing one. By choosing
Sharness, we’re in good company: `go-ipfs` and `go-multihash` use it as
well, and it’s derived from Git’s testing library. I like it a lot.

For now, we need a dummy test file; our test runner will fail if there
are no tests to run. As soon as we have a real test, we can remove this.

This commit was generated by following the “per-project installation”
instructions at https://github.com/chriscool/sharness, and by
additionally including that repository’s `COPYING` file as
`SHARNESS_LICENSE`, with a header prepended. I considered instead adding
Sharness as a submodule, which is supported and has clear advantages
(e.g., you can update the thing), but opted to avoid the complexity of
submodules for now.

Test Plan:
Create the following tests in the `sharness` directory:

```shell
$ cat sharness/good.t
#!/bin/sh
test_description='demo of passing tests'
. ./sharness.sh
test_expect_success "look at me go" true
test_expect_success EXPENSIVE "this may take a while" 'sleep 2'
test_done
# vim: ft=sh
$ cat sharness/bad.t
#!/bin/sh
test_description='demo of failing tests'
. ./sharness.sh
test_expect_success "I don't feel so good" false
test_done
# vim: ft=sh
```

Note that `yarn sharness` and `yarn test` fail appropriately. Note that
`yarn sharness-full` fails appropriately after taking two extra seconds,
and `yarn test --full` runs the latter. Each failure message should
print the name of the failing test case, not just the suite name, and
should indicate that the passing tests passed.

Then, remove `sharness/bad.t`, and note that the above commands all
pass, with the `--full` variants still taking longer.

Finally, remove `sharness/good.t`, and note that the above commands all
pass (and all pass quickly).

wchargin-branch: add-sharness
2018-08-06 12:56:25 -07:00