| # Testing | |
| ## Running tests | |
| Before you start to run tests, you need to [build the project first](./building.md): | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm build | |
| ``` | |
| We recommend running the tests in a specific directory pattern. | |
| For example, running one test in the production test suite: | |
| Running tests in the `test/e2e/app-dir/app` test suite in production mode (`next build` and `next start`): | |
| ```sh | |
| pnpm test-start test/e2e/app-dir/app/ | |
| ``` | |
| Running tests in the `test/e2e/app-dir/app` test suite in development mode (`next dev`): | |
| ```sh | |
| pnpm test-dev test/e2e/app-dir/app/ | |
| ``` | |
| When the test runs, it will open the browser in the background by default, you won't see the browser window. | |
| When you want to debug a particular test you can replace | |
| `pnpm test-start` with `pnpm testonly-start` to see the browser window open. | |
| ```sh | |
| pnpm testonly-start test/e2e/app-dir/app/ | |
| ``` | |
| **End-to-end (e2e)** tests are run in complete isolation from the repository. | |
| When you run an `test/e2e`, `test/production`, or `test/development` tests, | |
| a local version of Next.js will be created inside your system's temp folder (e.g. /tmp), | |
| which is then linked to an isolated version of the application. | |
| A server is started on a random port, against which the tests will run. | |
| After all tests have finished, the server is destroyed and all remaining files are deleted from the temp folder. | |
| All of this logic is handled by `nextTestSetup` automatically. | |
| ## Writing tests for Next.js | |
| ### Getting Started | |
| You can set up a new test using `pnpm new-test` which will start from a template related to the test type. | |
| ### Test Types in Next.js | |
| - e2e: Runs against `next dev`, `next start`, and deployed to Vercel. | |
| - development: Runs against `next dev`. | |
| - production: Runs against `next start`. | |
| - integration: Historical location of tests. | |
| Runs misc checks and modes. | |
| Ideally, we don't add new test suites here anymore as these tests are not isolated from the monorepo. | |
| - unit: Very fast tests that should run without a browser or run `next` and should be testing a specific utility. | |
| For the e2e, development, and production tests the `nextTestSetup` utility should be used. | |
| An example is available [here](../../test/e2e/example.txt). | |
| This creates an isolated Next.js installation | |
| to ensure nothing in the monorepo is relied on accidentally causing incorrect tests. | |
| `pnpm new-test` automatically uses `nextTestSetup` | |
| All new test suites should be written in TypeScript either `.ts` (or `.tsx` for unit tests). | |
| This will help ensure we catch smaller issues in tests that could cause flaky or incorrect tests. | |
| If a test suite already exists that relates closely to the item being tested | |
| (e.g., hash navigation relates to existing navigation test suites), | |
| the new checks can be added to the existing test suite. | |
| ### Best Practices | |
| - When checking for a condition that might take time, | |
| ensure it is waited for either using the browser `waitForElement` or using the `check` util in `next-test-utils`. | |
| - When applying a fix, ensure the test fails without the fix. | |
| This makes sure the test will properly catch regressions. | |
| ### Helpful environment variables | |
| Some test-specific environment variables can be used to help debug isolated tests better, | |
| these can be leveraged by prefixing the `pnpm test` command. | |
| - When investigating failures in isolated tests you can use | |
| `NEXT_TEST_SKIP_CLEANUP=1` to prevent deleting the temp folder created for the test, | |
| then you can run `pnpm debug` while inside the temp folder to debug the fully set-up test project. | |
| - You can also use `NEXT_SKIP_ISOLATE=1` if the test doesn't need to be installed to debug, | |
| and it will run inside the Next.js repo instead of the temp directory, | |
| this can also reduce test times locally but is not compatible with all tests. | |
| - The `NEXT_TEST_MODE` env variable allows toggling specific test modes for the `e2e` folder, | |
| it can be used when not using `pnpm test-dev` or `pnpm test-start` directly. | |
| Valid test modes can be seen here: | |
| https://github.com/vercel/next.js/blob/aa664868c102ddc5adc618415162d124503ad12e/test/lib/e2e-utils.ts#L46 | |
| - You can use `NEXT_TEST_PREFER_OFFLINE=1` while testing to configure the package manager to include the | |
| [`--prefer-offline`](https://pnpm.io/cli/install#--prefer-offline) argument during test setup. | |
| This is helpful when running tests in internet-restricted environments such as planes or public Wi-Fi. | |
| ### Debugging | |
| When tests are run in CI and a test failure occurs, | |
| we attempt to capture traces of the playwright run to make debugging the failure easier. | |
| A test-trace artifact should be uploaded after the workflow completes which can be downloaded, unzipped, | |
| and then inspected with `pnpm playwright show-trace ./path/to/trace` | |
| ### Profiling tests | |
| Add `NEXT_TEST_TRACE=1` to enable test profiling. It's useful for improving our testing infrastructure. | |
| ### Testing Turbopack | |
| To run the test suite using Turbopack, you can use the `-turbo` version of the npm script: | |
| ```sh | |
| pnpm test-dev-turbo test/e2e/app-dir/app/ | |
| ``` | |
| If you want to run a test again both Turbopack and Webpack, use Jest's `--projects` flag: | |
| ```sh | |
| pnpm test-dev test/e2e/app-dir/app/ --projects jest.config.* | |
| ``` | |
| ## Integration testing outside the repository with local builds | |
| You can locally generate builds for each package in this repository with: | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm pack-next | |
| ``` | |
| You can automatically apply modifications to `package.json` by specifying your project directory: | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm pack-next --project ~/shadcn-ui/apps/www/ | |
| ``` | |
| This will find and modify parent workspaces when relevant. These automatic overrides should work | |
| with `npm` and `pnpm`. There are known issues preventing it from working with `bun` and `yarn`. | |
| Flags can be passed to `napi`'s CLI, separated by an argument separator (`--`). For example: | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm pack-next --project ~/my-project/ -- --release | |
| ``` | |
| See `pnpm pack-next --help` for more details. | |
| ### Locally creating tarballs | |
| You can create tarballs with: | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm pack-next --tar | |
| ``` | |
| The tarballs will be written to a `tarballs` directory in the root of the repository, and you will | |
| be shown information about how to use these tarballs in a project by modifying the workspace | |
| `package.json` file. | |
| On Linux, this generates stripped `@next/swc` binaries to avoid exceeding 2 GiB, [which is | |
| known to cause problems with `pnpm`](https://github.com/libuv/libuv/pull/1501). That behavior can be | |
| overridden with `--compress objcopy-zstd` on Linux (which is slower, but retains debuginfo). | |
| These tarballs can be extracted directly into a project's `node_modules` directory (bypassing the | |
| package manager) by using: | |
| ```bash | |
| pnpm unpack-next ~/shadcn-ui | |
| ``` | |
| However, this is not typically recommended, as installing using the package manager is safer. | |
| ## Integration testing outside the repository with preview builds | |
| Every branch build will create a tarball for each package in this repository<sup>1</sup> that can be used in external repositories. | |
| You can use this preview build in other packages by using a https://vercel-packages.vercel.app URL instead of a version in the `package.json`. | |
| Dependencies are automatically rewritten to use the same commit SHA as the package you are using. | |
| For example, if you install `next` from commit `abc`, `next` will have a dependency on `@next/env` at commit `abc` **and** use `next-swc` from commit `abc` as well. | |
| To use `next` from a specific commit (full SHA required): | |
| ```json | |
| { | |
| "dependencies": { | |
| "next": "https://vercel-packages.vercel.app/next/commits/188f76947389a27e9bcff8ebf9079433679256a7/next" | |
| } | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| or, to use `next` from a specific Pull Request (PR number required): | |
| ```json | |
| { | |
| "dependencies": { | |
| "next": "https://vercel-packages.vercel.app/next/prs/66445/next" | |
| } | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| <sup>1</sup> Not all native packages are built automatically. | |
| `build-and-deploy` excludes slow, rarely used native variants of `next-swc`. | |
| To force a build of all packages, you can [trigger `build-and-deploy` manually](https://github.com/vercel/next.js/actions/workflows/build_and_deploy.yml) (i.e. `workflow_dispatch`). | |