Differential User Guide: Test PlansPhorge Administrator and User Documentation (Application User Guides)
This document describes things you should think about when developing a test plan.
Overview
When you send a revision for review in Differential you must include a test plan (this can be disabled or made optional in the config). A test plan is a repeatable list of steps which document what you have done to verify the behavior of a change. A good test plan convinces a reviewer that you have been thorough in making sure your change works as intended and has enough detail to allow someone unfamiliar with your change to verify its behavior.
This document has some common things to think about when developing or reviewing a test plan. Some of these suggestions might not be applicable to the software you are writing; they are adapted from Facebook's internal documentation.
All Changes
- Error Handling: Are errors detected and handled properly? How does your change deal with error cases? Did you test them and make sure you got the right error messages and the right behavior? It's important that you test what happens when things go wrong, not just that the change works if everything else also works.
- Service Impact: How does your change affect services like memcache, thrift, or databases? Are you adding new cachekeys or queries? Will this change add a lot of load to services?
- Performance: How does your change affect performance? NOTE: If your change is a performance-motivated change, you should include measurements, profiles or other data in your test plan proving that you have improved performance.
- Unit Tests: Is your change adequately covered by unit tests? Could you improve test coverage? If you're fixing a bug, did you add a test to prevent it from happening again? Are the unit tests testing just the code in question, or would a failure of a database or network service cause your test to fail?
- Concurrent Change Robustness: If you're making a refactoring change, is it robust against people introducing new calls between the time you started the change and when you commit it? For example, if you change the parameter order of some function from f(a, b) to f(b, a) and a new callsite is introduced in the meantime, could it go unnoticed? How bad would that be? (Because of this risk, you should almost never make parameter order changes in weakly typed languages like PHP and Javascript.)
- Revert Plan: If your change needs to be reverted and you aren't around, are any special steps or considerations that the reverter needs to know about? If there are, make sure they're adequately described in the "Revert Plan" field so someone without any knowledge of your patch (but with a general knowledge of the system) can successfully revert your change.
- Security: Is your change robust against XSS, CSRF, and injection attacks? Are you verifying the user has the right capabilities or permissions? Are you consistently treating user data as untrustworthy? Are you escaping data properly, and using dangerous functions only when they are strictly necessary?
- Architecture: Is this the right change? Could there be a better way to solve the problem? Have you talked to (or added as reviewers) domain experts if you aren't one yourself? What are the limitations of this solution? What tradeoffs did you make, and why?
Frontend / User-Facing Changes
- Static Resources: Will your change cause the application to serve more JS or CSS? Can you use less JS/CSS, or reuse more?
- Browsers: Have you tested your change in multiple browsers?