End to End Specification based Test Generation of Web Applications

Author(s):  
Khusbu Bubna
Author(s):  
Lalit Kumar Garg ◽  
◽  
Preeti Rani ◽  
Deepika Goyal ◽  
◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Nikolaos Karapanos ◽  
Alexandros Filios ◽  
Raluca Ada Popa ◽  
Srdjan Capkun

2015 ◽  
Vol 25 (09n10) ◽  
pp. 1777-1782
Author(s):  
Frederik H. Nakstad ◽  
Hironori Washizaki ◽  
Yoshiaki Fukazawa

Existing techniques for crawling Javascript-heavy Rich Internet Applications tend to ignore user interactions beyond mouse clicking, and therefore often fail to consider potential mouse, keyboard and touch interactions. We propose a new technique for automatically finding and exercising such interactions by analyzing and exercising event handlers registered in the DOM. A basic form of gesture emulation is employed to find states accessible via swiping and tapping. Testing the tool against 6 well-known gesture libraries and 5 actual RIAs, we find that the technique discovers many states and transitions resulting from such interactions, and could be useful for cases such as automatic test generation and error discovery, especially for mobile web applications.


Author(s):  
Óscar Soto-Sánchez ◽  
Michel Maes-Bermejo ◽  
Micael Gallego ◽  
Francisco Gortázar

AbstractEnd-to-end tests present many challenges in the industry. The long-running times of these tests make it unsuitable to apply research work on test case prioritization or test case selection, for instance, on them, as most works on these two problems are based on datasets of unit tests. These ones are fast to run, and time is not usually a considered criterion. This is because there is no dataset of end-to-end tests, due to the infrastructure needs for running this kind of tests, the complexity of the setup and the lack of proper characterization of the faults and their fixes. Therefore, running end-to-end tests for any research work is hard and time-consuming, and the availability of a dataset containing regression bugs, documentation and logs for these tests might foster the usage of end-to-end tests in research works. This paper presents a) a dataset for this kind of tests, including six well-documented manually injected regression bugs and their corresponding fixes in three web applications built using Java and the Spring framework; b) tools for easing the execution of these tests no matter the infrastructure; and c) a comparative study with two well-known datasets of unit tests. The comparative study shows that there are important differences between end-to-end and unit tests, such as their execution time and the amount of resources they consume, which are much higher in the end-to-end tests. End-to-end testing deserves some attention from researchers. Our dataset is a first effort toward easing the usage of end-to-end tests in research works.


2010 ◽  
Vol 36 (4) ◽  
pp. 474-494 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Artzi ◽  
A Kiezun ◽  
J Dolby ◽  
F Tip ◽  
D Dig ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Suresh Thummalapenta ◽  
K. Vasanta Lakshmi ◽  
Saurabh Sinha ◽  
Nishant Sinha ◽  
Satish Chandra

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document