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Annotation-Protocol: Tests for the Web Annotation Protocol

The Web Annotation Protocol specification presents set of messages to allow Annotation clients and servers to interact seamlessly.

The purpose of these tests is to help validate that clients send and are capable of receiving correctly formatted messages, and that servers are able to receive and respond to correctly structured requests.

The general approach for this testing is to enable both manual and automated testing. However, since the specification has no actual user interface requirements, there is no general automation mechanism that can be presented for testing clients. Also the server tests need to be pointed at a server implementation to exercise. However, once provided the basic information, testing is automated.

Implementors could take advantage of the plumbing we provide here to help their implementations talk to the endpoint we provide or exercise their endpoint with the provided server tests. This assumes knowledge of the requirements of each test / collection of tests so that the input data is relevant. Each test or test collection contains information sufficient for the task.

With regard to server tests, the browser tests we provide can be pointed at an endpoint and will exercise that endpoint using well defined messages. This is done semi-automatically, although some set-up is required.

Running Tests

In the case of this test collection, we will be initially creating manual tests. These will automatically determine pass or fail and generate output for the main WPT window. The plan is to minimize the number of such tests to ease the burden on the testers while still exercising all the features.

The workflow for running these tests is something like:

  1. Start up the test driver window and select the annotation-protocol tests - either client or server - then click "Start".
  2. A window pops up that shows a test - the description of which tells the tester what is required. The window will contain fields into which some information is provided.
  3. In the case of client testing the tester (presumably in another window) brings up their annotation client and points it at the supplied endpoint. They they perform the action specified (annotating content in the test window, requesting an annotation from the server, etc.).
  4. The server receives the information from the client, evaluates it, and reports the result of testing. In the event of multi-step messages, the cycle repeats until complete.
  5. Repeat steps 2-4 until done.
  6. Download the JSON format report of test results, which can then be visually inspected, reported on using various tools, or passed on to W3C for evaluation and collection in the Implementation Report via github.

Remember that while these tests are written to help exercise implementations, their other (important) purpose is to increase confidence that there are interoperable implementations. So, implementers are our audience, but these tests are not meant to be a comprehensive collection of tests for an implementor. The bulk of the tests are manual because there are no UI requirements in the Recommendation that would make it possible to effectively stimulate every client portably.

Having said that, because the structure of these "manual" tests is very rigid, it is possible for an implementer who understands test automation to use an open source tool such as Selenium to run these "manual" tests against their implementation - exercising their implementation against content they provide to create annotations and feed the data into our test input field and run the test.

Capturing and Reporting Results

As tests are run against implementations, if the results of testing are submitted to test-results then they will be automatically included in documents generated by wptreport. The same tool can be used locally to view reports about recorded results.

Automating Test Execution

Writing Tests

If you are interested in writing tests for this environment, see the associated CONTRIBUTING document.