While building a product testing is one of the most important skills that you should have as a software developer. This is simply because most bugs should be found at the root before your code goes to prouduction. There are many types of tests, each with their own purpose, today let us find out more about end to end testing and why you might need it as you build your product.
What is End to End testing?
End-to-end (e2e) testing helps you mimic an end user and see how they would run through your application and find if there are any bugs.
Finding bugs in your software
It is an important aspect of software development because it helps ensure that the various components of a system work together as intended and can handle real-world scenarios. It allows developers to catch and fix any issues that may arise when the different parts of the system are integrated, ensuring that the final product is reliable and meets the requirements of the users. E2e testing helps identify issues that might not be discovered through unit testing, which only tests individual components in isolation.
Why do you need E2E testing?
Catch a bug before going to production
To catch a bug before going to production!
Let’s consider you are building an e-commerce website and the user flow diagram for login and registeration looks like this:
User flow diagram
For a normal development cycle, you write the code for register and test it. Once a user has registered and created an account, you need to test for login. This cycle will continue for every new change or after every update in case you find a bug. A software development process like this can lead to a lot of stress, cost more and can even cause a bug in production in the worst case.
And that’s why you need e2e tests!
With e2e testing, all you need to do is write a script for e2e test. This is script is linked to the deployment pipeline. This means once website is built and you these tests will run in multiple browsers. For our example, the script will check whether path changed to /login. For a new user journey, depending on the scripts you wrote, new tests will be done on multiple browsers on CI server.
With this you don’t need to check again and again after every change if anything breaks, because the script will do that for you!
E2E tests can be particularly useful in the following situations:
- Complex systems: E2E tests can help ensure that all the components of a complex system are working together as expected.
- User acceptance testing: E2E tests can be used to confirm that the system meets the requirements and expectations of the end users.
- Regression testing: E2E tests can be used to catch any regressions (i.e., unexpected changes or regressions in functionality) that may occur when new code is added or existing code is modified.
- Integration testing: E2E tests can be used to confirm that different components of the system are properly integrated with each other.
In general, E2E tests can provide confidence that the system is working correctly and is ready for deployment.
E2e testing cant thus help improve the overall quality of the software by identifying problems that might not be immediately apparent during development, such as performance issues or security vulnerabilities. This can help reduce the number of defects in the final product, leading to a better user experience and more satisfied customers.
As you might have noticed, testing largely depends on the scripts written by you. All the problems associated with writing e2e test cases can be easily solved using Keploy. Keploy is an open source e2e testing toolkit for Developers that creates test-cases and data mocks from API calls, making releases faster and highly-reliable.
Keploy for e2e testing
Cypress.io, Playwright and Selenium are some more E2E testing tools that you can explore for your application.
Playwright, Selenium and Cypress (tools for e2e testing)
Overall, e2e testing is an essential part of the software development process that helps ensure that the final product is reliable, functional, and meets the needs of the users.
Feel free to reach me on Twitter @ shivikapriya for any queries. Happy to help 😄🤝
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