+++ /dev/null
-These tests are run with js-test-driver
-(http://code.google.com/p/js-test-driver/).
-
-Running tests
--------------
-
-With phantomjs:
-
-- Install phantomjs (http://www.phantomjs.org).
-
-- Start a terminal window at the dygraphs root directory (one
- directory up from here.)
-
-- Run "./test.sh". This will tell you whether the tests passed.
-
-
-With a real browser:
-
-- Start a terminal window at the dygraphs root directory (one
- directory up from here.)
-
-- From there, you start the test server and capture at least one slave
- browser:
-
- Run:
- $ java -jar ./auto_tests/lib/JsTestDriver-1.3.3c.jar --port 9876
-
- Open
- http://localhost:9876/capture
- in the browser you want to use for your test.
-
-- Run the tests with:
-
- $ java -jar ./auto_tests/lib/JsTestDriver-1.3.3c.jar --tests all
-
-
-Debugging tests
----------------
-
-This is a bit of a hack, but you can also run tests manually inside the browser
-using auto_tests/misc/local.html.
-
-Once you've opened that page, open up the JavaScript console and run something
-like:
-
- new SimpleDrawingTestCase().runTest("testDrawSimpleRangePlusOne")
-
-to run just one test. This is useful for seeing the dygraph that the test
-creates, setting breakpoints, etc.
-
-Please don't rely on it as proof that your tests pass; the command-line is the
-reference for ensuring Dygraphs automated tests pass.
-
-
-(This is a specialized version of the instructions found at
-http://code.google.com/p/js-test-driver/wiki/GettingStarted.
-They're listed as a courtesy, but you really should get to understand
-js-test-driver, which has lots of powerful features.)
-
-
-Code Coverage
--------------
-
-To generate code coverage data, start the jstd test server:
-
- $ java -jar ./auto_tests/lib/JsTestDriver-1.3.3c.jar --port 9876
-
-Then run the tests with the --outputCoverage option:
-
- $ java -jar ./auto_tests/lib/JsTestDriver-1.3.3c.jar --tests all --testOutput .
-
-This can take a few minutes. It will spew out gobs of XML files, which should
-be deleted. The one file you care about is jsTestDriver.conf-coverage.dat. It
-contains LCOV-format coverage data. It contains coverage data for _all_ JS
-files, including the tests themselves and library code which is irrelevant for
-coverage analysis. So you need to filter it down:
-
- $ cat jsTestDriver.conf-coverage.dat | ./auto_tests/misc/filter-lcov.py
-
-To post the coverage data to coveralls, you'll need to export a few environment
-variables and install node-coveralls:
-
- $ npm install # installs node-coveralls, which is listed in package.json
- $ export COVERALLS_SERVICE_NAME=jstd
- $ export COVERALLS_REPO_TOKEN=... # get this by visiting http://coveralls.io
- $ export COVERALLS_GIT_COMMIT=$(git rev-parse HEAD)
- $ cat jsTestDriver.conf-coverage.dat \
- | ./auto_tests/misc/filter-lcov.py \
- | ./node_modules/coveralls/bin/coveralls.js
-
-If all goes well, you should see your coverage data posted at
-https://coveralls.io/r/danvk/dygraphs.