# Integration Tests This document provides information about the integration testing framework used in this project. ## Overview The integration tests are designed to validate the end-to-end functionality of the Gemini CLI. They execute the built binary in a controlled environment and verify that it behaves as expected when interacting with the file system. These tests are located in the `integration-tests` directory and are run using a custom test runner. ## Running the tests The integration tests are not run as part of the default `npm run test` command. They must be run explicitly using the `npm run test:integration:all` script. The integration tests can also be run using the following shortcut: ```bash npm run test:e2e ``` ## Running a specific set of tests To run a subset of test files, you can use `npm run ....` where is either `test:e2e` or `test:integration*` and `` is any of the `.test.js` files in the `integration-tests/` directory. For example, the following command runs `list_directory.test.js` and `write_file.test.js`: ```bash npm run test:e2e list_directory write_file ``` ### Running a single test by name To run a single test by its name, use the `--test-name-pattern` flag: ```bash npm run test:e2e -- --test-name-pattern "reads a file" ``` ### Running all tests To run the entire suite of integration tests, use the following command: ```bash npm run test:integration:all ``` ### Sandbox matrix The `all` command will run tests for `no sandboxing`, `docker` and `podman`. Each individual type can be run using the following commands: ```bash npm run test:integration:sandbox:none ``` ```bash npm run test:integration:sandbox:docker ``` ```bash npm run test:integration:sandbox:podman ``` ## Diagnostics The integration test runner provides several options for diagnostics to help track down test failures. ### Keeping test output You can preserve the temporary files created during a test run for inspection. This is useful for debugging issues with file system operations. To keep the test output, you can either use the `--keep-output` flag or set the `KEEP_OUTPUT` environment variable to `true`. ```bash # Using the flag npm run test:integration:sandbox:none -- --keep-output # Using the environment variable KEEP_OUTPUT=true npm run test:integration:sandbox:none ``` When output is kept, the test runner will print the path to the unique directory for the test run. ### Verbose output For more detailed debugging, the `--verbose` flag streams the real-time output from the `gemini` command to the console. ```bash npm run test:integration:sandbox:none -- --verbose ``` When using `--verbose` and `--keep-output` in the same command, the output is streamed to the console and also saved to a log file within the test's temporary directory. The verbose output is formatted to clearly identify the source of the logs: ``` --- TEST: : --- ... output from the gemini command ... --- END TEST: : --- ``` ## Linting and formatting To ensure code quality and consistency, the integration test files are linted as part of the main build process. You can also manually run the linter and auto-fixer. ### Running the linter To check for linting errors, run the following command: ```bash npm run lint ``` You can include the `--fix` flag in the command to automatically fix any fixable linting errors: ```bash npm run lint --fix ``` ## Directory structure The integration tests create a unique directory for each test run inside the `.integration-tests` directory. Within this directory, a subdirectory is created for each test file, and within that, a subdirectory is created for each individual test case. This structure makes it easy to locate the artifacts for a specific test run, file, or case. ``` .integration-tests/ └── / └── .test.js/ └── / ├── output.log └── ...other test artifacts... ``` ## Continuous integration To ensure the integration tests are always run, a GitHub Actions workflow is defined in `.github/workflows/e2e.yml`. This workflow automatically runs the integration tests on every pull request and push to the `main` branch. The workflow runs the tests in different sandboxing environments to ensure Gemini CLI is tested across each: - `sandbox:none`: Runs the tests without any sandboxing. - `sandbox:docker`: Runs the tests in a Docker container. - `sandbox:podman`: Runs the tests in a Podman container.