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Flutter: Intelligent test selection based on incremental code changes

CI codecov Gem Docs

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Flutter plugs in to your RSpec or Minitest test suites to run only the tests that exercise the code that has changed since the last run.

It can be used in local development as a live incremental test runner in combination with Guard (See examples for minitest and rspec respectively) or in continuous integration environments to only run the subset of tests affected by a pull request or changeset (See CI Recipes).

How?

Flutter tracks each method call within the context of each test case in your test suite and persists this mapping along with a signature for all the methods that were exercised. On subsequent runs Flutter intercepts test enumeration and skips any test if ALL the following conditions are true:

  • The test was seen before
  • The source of the test has not changed
  • All the methods exercised in the last recorded run have no changes in their source

Usage

Minitest

  • Add the gem as a dependency

    gem "flutter"
  • Include it in your test_helper.rb:

    require 'flutter'
  • Enable & configure it in your test_helper.rb (See Configuration options for available options):

    Flutter.configure do |config|
      config.enabled = true
    end
  • Run your test suite the way you normally would (for example: bundle exec rake test). The first run will run all tests. After the test run has completed the mapping of test cases to exercised code will be persisted in the ./.flutter folder.

  • Now make changes and run the test suite again. Only the relevant tests will be executed.

With guard

Using the same configuration as above (and assuming that the application sources are in the ./lib folder while the tests are in the ./test folder) add the following to your Guardfile:

guard :minitest, test_folders: ["test"] do
  watch(%r{^(test|lib)/(.*/)?([^/]+)\.rb$}) { "test" }
end

RSpec

  • Add the gem as a dependency:

    gem "flutter"
  • Include the plugin in your spec_helper.rb:

    require 'flutter'
  • Enable & configure it in your spec_helper.rb (See Configuration options for available options):

    Flutter.configure do |config|
      config.enabled = true
    end
  • Run your specs the way you normally would (for example: bundle exec rspec). The first run will run all tests. After the test run has completed the mapping of test cases to exercised code will be persisted in the ./.flutter folder.

  • Now make changes and run rspec again. Only the relevant examples will be executed.

With guard

Using the same configuration as above (and assuming that the application sources are in the ./app & ./lib folders while the specs are in the ./spec folder) add the following to your Guardfile:

guard :rspec, cmd: "rspec" do
  watch(%r{^(spec|app|lib)/(.*/)?([^/]+)\.rb$}) { "spec" }
end

Configuration options

option Description Type Default
enabled Whether flutter is enabled TrueClass, FalseClass true
sources List of glob style expressions to select source files to track Set ["#{Dir.pwd}/*"]
exclusions List of glob style expressions to exclude sources files Set ["#{Dir.pwd}/vendor}/*"]
storage_class The storage class to use for persisting the state Flutter::Persistence::AbstractStorage Flutter::Persistence::Marshal
storage_options Additional options to pass to the storage class Hash {path: './.flutter'}
reset_storage Whether to clear the persisted state on initialization TrueClass, FalseClass false

Configuring flutter in continuous integration

Flutter can be used in continuous integration environments to speed up the turn around time from running tests by only running tests affected by the changes in a pull request.

Github Actions

The following example workflow with github actions does the following:

  • Always run all tests on the main branch
  • Only run tests affected by the "current" commit for CI workflows triggered by a push event on other branches
  • If the CI workflow is triggered due to a pull_request event, run all tests affected by all commits in the branch (by comparing against the branch point of the pull request)
    # Get the commit where this branch diverges from origin/main
    - name: Retrieve branch point
      if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
      run: |
        echo "::set-output name=KEY::$(diff -u <(git rev-list --first-parent origin/main) <(git rev-list --first-parent HEAD) | sed -ne 's/^ //p' | head -1)"
      id: cache_keys
    # Use the always-upload-cache action to:
    #  - Restore the flutter state from cache from either the branch point (if it was set in the previous step)
    #    or the last run in the current branch
    #  - After the run cache the flutter state using the current commit hash as the hash key
    - name: Setup flutter state
      id: flutter-state
      uses: pat-s/[email protected]
      env:
        cache-name: cache-flutter-state
      with:
        path: .flutter
        key: ${{ runner.os }}-build-${{ env.cache-name }}-${{ matrix.ruby-version }}-${{ github.sha }}
        restore-keys: |
          ${{ runner.os }}-build-${{ env.cache-name }}-${{ matrix.ruby-version }}-${{ steps.cache_keys.outputs.KEY }}
    # If this is a push event on the main branch, clear the flutter state
    # so that all tests are run and a full state is cached on the main branch
    - name: Clear flutter state
      if: github.event_name == 'push' && startsWith(github.ref, 'refs/heads/main')
      run: rm -rf .flutter

Note The exact CI configuration would ofcourse depend on your workflow and confidence in selectively running tests for pull requests.

Warning Selectively running tests in a pull request would show a drop in coverage if you are collecting and/or using code coverage as a "Check". One way to make Flutter work hand in hand with code coverage checks is to only validate that the diff in the pull request has a 100% coverage. For example with codecov this can be achieved by only enabling the project status for the main branch and patch status otherwise.

Related work

Flutter is heavily inspired by testmon

Development

After checking out the repo, run bin/setup to install dependencies. Then, run rake test to run the tests. You can also run bin/console for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.

This project uses overcommit to enforce standards. Enable the precommit hooks in your local checkout by running: overcommit --sign

To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install.

Releasing a new version

  • Ensure that the Unreleased section of the changelog is up to date and contains useful details.
  • Create a new release using the release rake task as follows (for more details about specifying the version change run gem bump --help which is the command used by the task):
    • Patch release bundle exec rake release["patch"]
    • Minor release bundle exec rake release["minor"]
    • Major release bundle exec rake release["major"]

    Note The release rake task automates updating the changelog & version, committing the changes & creating a new tag

  • Push the tag. The CI workflow for tag pushes will take care of publishing the gem & creating a github release.

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/indydevs/flutter. This project is intended to be a safe, welcoming space for collaboration, and contributors are expected to adhere to the code of conduct.

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.

Code of Conduct

Everyone interacting in the Flutter project's codebases, issue trackers, chat rooms and mailing lists is expected to follow the code of conduct.