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author | Matt A. Tobin <mattatobin@localhost.localdomain> | 2018-02-02 04:16:08 -0500 |
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committer | Matt A. Tobin <mattatobin@localhost.localdomain> | 2018-02-02 04:16:08 -0500 |
commit | 5f8de423f190bbb79a62f804151bc24824fa32d8 (patch) | |
tree | 10027f336435511475e392454359edea8e25895d /testing/web-platform/tests/server-side.md | |
parent | 49ee0794b5d912db1f95dce6eb52d781dc210db5 (diff) | |
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Add m-esr52 at 52.6.0
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diff --git a/testing/web-platform/tests/server-side.md b/testing/web-platform/tests/server-side.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..46a9e8367 --- /dev/null +++ b/testing/web-platform/tests/server-side.md @@ -0,0 +1,234 @@ +# Writing Complex Tests # + +For many tests, writing one or more static HTML files is +sufficient. However there are a large class of tests for which this +approach is insufficient, including: + +* Tests that require cross-domain access + +* Tests that depend on setting specific headers or status codes + +* Tests that need to inspect the browser sent request + +* Tests that require state to be stored on the server + +* Tests that require precise timing of the response. + +To make writing such tests possible, we are using a number of +server-side components designed to make it easy to manipulate the +precise details of the response: + +* *wptserve*, a custom python HTTP server. + +* *pywebsocket*, an existing websockets server + +This document will concentrate on the features of wptserve available +to test authors. + +## Introduction to wptserve ## + +wptserve is a python-based web server. By default it serves static +files in the testsuite. For more sophisticated requirements, several +mechanisms are available to take control of the response. These are +outlined below. + +## Pipes ## + +Suitable for: + + * Cross domain requests + * Adding headers or status codes to static files + * Controlling the sending of static file bodies + +Pipes are designed to allow simple manipulation of the way that +static files are sent without requiring any custom code. They are also +useful for cross-origin tests because they can be used to activate a +substitution mechanism which can fill in details of ports and server +names in the setup on which the tests are being run. + +Pipes are indicated by adding a query string to a request for a static +resource, with the parameter name `pipe`. The value of the query +should be a `|` serperated list of pipe functions. For example to +return a `.html` file with the status code 410 and a Content-Type of +text/plain, one might use: + + /resources/example.html?pipe=status(410)|header(Content-Type,text/plain) + +There are a selection of pipe functions provided with wptserve and +more may be added if there are good use cases. + +### sub ### + +Used to subsitute variables from the server environment, or from the +request into the response. A typical use case is for testing +cross-domain since the exact domain name and ports of the servers are +generally unknown. + +Substitutions are marked in a file using a block delimited by `{{` +and `}}`. Inside the block the following variables are avalible: + +* `{{host}}` - the host name of the server exclusing any subdomain part. +* `{{domains[]}}` - the domain name of a particular subdomain + e.g. `{{domains[www]}}` for the `www` subdomain. +* `{{ports[][]}}` - The port number of servers, by protocol + e.g. `{{ports[http][1]}}` for the second (i.e. non-default) http + server. +* `{{headers[]}}` - The HTTP headers in the request + e.g. `{{headers[X-Test]}}` for a hypothetical `X-Test` header. +* `{{GET[]}}` - The query parameters for the request + e.g. `{{GET[id]}}` for an id parameter sent with the request. + +So, for example, to write a javascript file called `xhr.js` that does a +cross domain XHR test to a different subdomain and port, one would +write in the file: + + var server_url = "http://{{domains[www]}}:{{ports[http][1]}}/path/to/resource"; + //Create the actual XHR and so on + +The file would then be included as: + + <script src="xhr.js?pipe=sub"></script> + +### status ### + +Used to set the HTTP status of the response, for example: + + example.js?pipe=status(410) + +### headers ### + +Used to add or replace http headers in the response. Takes two or +three arguments; the header name, the header value and whether to +append the header rather than replace an existing header (default: +False). So, for example, a request for: + + example.html?pipe=header(Content-Type,text/plain) + +causes example.html to be returned with a text/plain content type +whereas: + + example.html?pipe=header(Content-Type,text/plain,True) + +Will cause example.html to be returned with both text/html and +text/plain content-type headers. + +### slice ### + +Used to send only part of a response body. Takes the start and, +optionally, end bytes as arguments, although either can be null to +indicate the start or end of the file, respectively. So for example: + + example.txt?pipe=slice(10,20) + +Would result in a response with a body containing 10 bytes of +example.txt including byte 10 but excluding byte 20. + + example.txt?pipe=slice(10) + +Would cause all bytes from byte 10 of example.txt to be sent, but: + + example.txt?pipe=slice(null,20) + +Would send the first 20 bytes of example.txt. + +### trickle ### + +Used to send the body of a response in chunks with delays. Takes a +single argument that is a microsyntax consisting of colon-separated +commands. There are three types of commands: + +* Bare numbers represent a number of bytes to send + +* Numbers prefixed `d` indicate a delay in seconds + +* Numbers prefixed `r` must only appear at the end of the command, and + indicate that the preceding N items must be repeated until there is + no more content to send. + +In the absence of a repetition command, the entire remainder of the content is +sent at once when the command list is exhausted. So for example: + + example.txt?pipe=trickle(d1) + +causes a 1s delay before sending the entirety of example.txt. + + example.txt?pipe=trickle(100:d1) + +causes 100 bytes of example.txt to be sent, followed by a 1s delay, +and then the remainder of the file to be sent. On the other hand: + + example.txt?pipe=trickle(100:d1:r2) + +Will cause the file to be sent in 100 byte chunks separated by a 1s +delay until the whole content has been sent. + +## asis files ## + +Suitable for: + + * Static, HTTP-non-compliant responses + +asis files are simply files with the extension `.asis`. They are sent +byte for byte to the server without adding a HTTP status line, +headers, or anything else. This makes them suitable for testing +situations where the precise bytes on the wire are static, and control +over the timing is unnecessary, but the response does not conform to +HTTP requirements. + +## py files ## + +Suitable for: + + * All tests requiring dynamic responses + * Tests that need to store server side state. + +The most flexible mechanism for writing tests is to use `.py` +files. These are interpreted as code and are suitable for the same +kinds of tasks that one might achieve using cgi, PHP or a similar +technology. Unlike cgi or PHP, the file is not executed directly and +does not produce output by writing to `stdout`. Instead files must +contain (at least) a function named `main`, with the signature: + + def main(request, response): + pass + +Here `request` is a `Request` object that contains details of the +request, and `response` is a `Response` object that can be used to set +properties of the response. Full details of these objects is +provided in the [wptserve documentation](http://wptserve.readthedocs.org/en/latest/). + +In many cases tests will not need to work with the `response` object +directly. Instead they can set the status, headers and body simply by +returning values from the `main` function. If any value is returned, +it is interpreted as the response body. If two values are returned +they are interpreted as headers and body, and three values are +interpreted as status, headers, body. So, for example: + + def main(request, response): + return "TEST" + +creates a response with no non-default headers and the body +`TEST`. Headers can be added as follows: + + def main(request, response): + return ([("Content-Type", "text/plain"), ("X-Test", "test")], + "TEST") + +And a status code as: + + def main(request, response): + return (410, + [("Content-Type", "text/plain"), ("X-Test", "test")], + "TEST") + +A custom status string may be returned by using a tuple `code, string` +in place of the code alone. + +At the other end of the scale, some tests require precision over the +exact bytes sent over the wire and their timing. This can be achieved +using the `writer` property of the response, which exposes a +`ResponseWriter` object that allows wither writing specific parts of +the request or direct access to the underlying socket. + +For full documentation on the facilities available in `.py` files, see +the [wptserve documentation](http://wptserve.readthedocs.org/en/latest/). |