theatre/compat-tests
2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
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fixtures Attempt: fix the CI errors 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
scripts Add more compat tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
utils Attempt: fix the CI errors 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
.gitignore Rename compatibility-tests to compat-tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
integrity.compat-test.ts Add more compat tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
package.json Rename compatibility-tests to compat-tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
README.md Rename compatibility-tests to compat-tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00
verdaccio.yml Rename compatibility-tests to compat-tests 2023-08-01 17:47:17 +02:00

Compatibility tests

This setup helps us test whether Theatre.js is compatible with popular tools in the JS ecosystem, such as Vite, Next.js, webpack, react, vue, etc.

The directory structure

  • ./fixtures (contains the fixtures - read on for more details)
    • parcel2-react18/: The name of the fixture. This name means we're testing a minimal setup of Theatre.js alongside parcel2 and react18.
      • package/: This is the npm package that contains a minimal setup of theatre+parcel2+react18.
      • production.compat-test.ts: This is a jest test for creating a production build of this setup.
      • *.compat-test.ts: Any .compat-test.ts file will be picked up by jest, so you can use more files to test different aspects of the fixture.

How to run the tests

  1. First, we run yarn run install-fixtures, which tries to install Theatre.js on a fixture as if @theatre/core|studio|r3f were installed through npm. This script runs a local npm registry and publishes a production build of all the Theatre.js packages to it. Then, it iterates through ./fixtures/*/package and runs $ npm install on them, using that local npm registry. If this step fails, that usually means one of @theatre/* packages has a dependency/peerDependency that cannot be satisfied by npm/yarn. So this is always the first thing to fix.
  2. Then, we run $ yarn test:compat:run, which will run jest on all of *.compat-test.ts files, each of which tests an aspect of a test setup.
  3. Most of our fixtures don't actually have .compat-test.ts files, so we'll have to run them manually and see if Theatre still works in them, jut like a manual QA pass.

Gotchas Some bundlers like webpack are not configured to work well with yarn workspaces by default. For example, the webpack config of create-react-app, tries to look up the node_modules chain to find missing dependencies, which is not a behavior that we want in build-tests setups. So if a setup doesn't work, try running it outside the monorepo to see if being in the monorepo is what's causing it to fail.