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The Latest Testing, Deployment, and Maintenance Topics

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Achieving SOC 2 Compliance in DevOps
Learn more about the specific guidelines for meeting SOC 2 security requirements in a DevOps pipeline and how AWS can help meet them.
February 10, 2020
by Mauricio Ashimine
· 27,568 Views · 3 Likes
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Implementing MUnit And MUnit Matchers With MuleSoft
MUnit is a Mule application testing framework that allows you to build automated tests for your Mule integrations and APIs.
Updated February 10, 2020
by Jitendra Bafna
· 24,128 Views · 4 Likes
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When to ''Unstub'' a Component in a Vue.js Unit Test
To test a component in isolation you can replace it's children components by stubbing them. Vue Test Utils can automatically do this for you with a feature called shallowMount. But what happens if a component is tightly coupled to one of its children? You can still use shallowMount, but you'll then have to selectively "unstub" the tightly coupled child. In this article, I'll show you how to use stubbing to write simpler unit tests. Note: this article was originally posted here on the Vue.js Developers blog on 2019/09/30. Testing in isolation A key idea of unit testing is to test a "unit" of the application in isolation. In component-based frontend apps, we consider the "unit" to be a component. Testing a component in isolation ensures that tests are unaffected by dependencies and other influences of children components. To isolate a component from surrounding components, you can stub it's children components. The diagram below shows how stubbing this way would affect a typical component hierarchy. Stubbing a component usually means replacing it with a simple "stand in" component with no state, logic, and a minimal template. For example, you might replace this: export default { name: "MyComponent", template: "..." props: { ... }, methods: { ... }, computed: { ... } ... }; with this: export default { name: "MyComponentStub" template: "" }; Rather than manually stubbing children components, though, Vue Test Utils offers the shallowMount feature which does it automatically. Coupled components In the real world, components aren't always completely decoupled. Sometimes a component relies on a child component and so the child can't be stubbed without losing some functionality. For example, say we make a button with a cool animation, and we want to reuse it across an app, and so we decide to create a custom component called animated-button. We now have the my-form component that uses this button component. It's been implemented such that my-form is coupled to animated-button, since the latter emits a "click" event that's used to trigger the submit method in the former. MyForm.vue Unit testing my-form Another key idea of unit testing is that we want to test the inputs and outputs of the unit and consider the internals to be a black box. In the my-form component, we should make a unit test where the input is the click of the button, while the output is the Vuex commit. We'll call this test "should commit FORM_SUBMIT when button clicked". We'll create it by first shallow mounting MyForm to isolate it from the influence of any children components as previously prescribed. MyForm.spec.js import { shallowMount } from "@vue/test-utils"; import MyForm from "@/components/MyForm"; describe("MyForm.vue", () => { it("should commit FORM_SUBMIT when button clicked", () => { const wrapper = shallowMount(MyForm); }); }); Next, we'll use the wrapper find API method to find the button component. We pass a CSS selector "animated-button" as the locator strategy. We can then chain the trigger method and pass "click" as the argument. This is how we generate the input of the test. We can then assert that a Vuex commit gets made (probably using a spy, but that's not relevant to this article so I won't detail it). MyForm.spec.js it("should commit FORM_SUBMIT when button clicked", () => { const wrapper = shallowMount(MyForm); wrapper.find("animated-button").trigger("click"); // assert that $store.commit was called }); If we try to run that, we'll get this error from Vue Test Utils: find did not return animated-button, cannot call trigger() on empty Wrapper Is the CSS selector wrong? No, the issue is that we shallow mounted the component, so all the children were stubbed. The auto-stub process changes the name of AnimatedButton to "animated-button-stub" in the template. But changing the selector from "animated-button" to "animated-button-stub" is not a solution. Auto-stubs have no internal logic, so the click event we trigger on it is not being listened to anyway. Selective unstubbing We still want to shallow mount my-form, as we want to ensure it's isolated from the influence of its children. But animated-button is an exception as it's functionality is required for the test. Vue Test Utils allows us to specify the stub for a particular component rather than using an auto-stub when shallow mounting. So the trick is to "unstub" animated-button by using its original component definition as the stub so it retains all of its functionality! To do this, let's import the AnimatedButton component at the top of the file. Now, let's go to our test and create a const stubs and assign it an object. We can put AnimatedButton as an object property shorthand. Now, we'll pass in stubs as part of our shallow mount config. We'll also replace the CSS selector with the component definition, as this is the preferred way of using the find method. MyForm.spec.js import { shallowMount } from "@vue/test-utils"; import MyForm from "@/components/MyForm"; import AnimatedButton from "@/component/AnimatedButton" describe("MyForm.vue", () => { it("should commit FORM_SUBMIT when button clicked", () => { const stubs = { AnimatedButton }; const wrapper = shallowMount(MyForm, { stubs }); wrapper.find(AnimatedButton).trigger("click"); ... }); }); Doing it this way should give you a green tick. Wrap up You always want to isolate your components in a unit test, which can easily be achieved by stubbing all the children components with shallowMount. However, if your component is tightly coupled with one of its children, you can selectively "unstub" that component by providing the component definition as a stub and overriding the auto-stub. Become a senior Vue developer in 2020. Learn and master what professionals know about building, testing, and deploying, full-stack Vue apps in our latest course. Learn more
February 7, 2020
by Anthony Gore
· 6,330 Views · 2 Likes
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Using AWS Step Functions For Offloading Exponential Backoffs
This tutorial demonstrates how you can apply AWS Step Functions to offload exponential backoffs as well as the technical challenges that entails.
Updated February 6, 2020
by Murat Balkan DZone Core CORE
· 8,971 Views · 2 Likes
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How to Create Your First GitHub Commit
This article shows you how to create your own GitHub commit by making your repo, create your commit, and link your remote repo.
February 6, 2020
by Marouen Helali
· 26,028 Views · 8 Likes
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Top 21 Selenium Automation Testing Blogs to Look Out For!
In this article, we have a look at the top 21 Selenium testing blogs (in no particular order) that would be helpful in your testing expedition.
February 6, 2020
by Himanshu Sheth DZone Core CORE
· 27,068 Views · 15 Likes
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Penetration Test Types for (REST) API Security Tests
Penetration testing for REST API security provides a comprehensive testing method and is supported by a number of open source and proprietary tools.
February 5, 2020
by Hari Subramanian
· 20,625 Views · 4 Likes
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Docker With Spring Boot and MySQL: Docker Swarm Part 3
In this article, we look at how to using Docker Swarm with Spring Boot and MySQL. We then dive into relationships between Worker and Manager nodes.
February 5, 2020
by Sanjoy Kumer Deb
· 21,676 Views · 5 Likes
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What Is a Service in Angular and Why Should You Use it?
A software engineer introduces the concept of services in the Angular web development framework and how they work with the other components.
Updated February 4, 2020
by Devquora Sharad
· 105,603 Views · 9 Likes
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The Anatomy of a Microservice, Satisfying the Interface
This article builds upon the ideas of interface implementation with unit testing, client implementations, and beyond.
February 4, 2020
by Ray Elenteny DZone Core CORE
· 10,248 Views · 6 Likes
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7 Best Practices to Achieve Better Results in Quality Assurance
A well-planned and executed QA process not only assures the quality of the product but also the success of the product and business operations.
February 3, 2020
by Stella M
· 23,350 Views · 3 Likes
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Creating a Microservice With Quarkus, Kotlin, and Gradle
A closer look at creating microservices on the modern JVM frameworks: Quarkus, Kotlin, and Gradle. Learn about the processes and technologies.
February 3, 2020
by Roman Kudryashov
· 16,344 Views · 5 Likes
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Modernizing IT Infrastructure for Manufacturing Organizations With Hyperconvergence: Part 1
Hyperconverged infrastructures bring a new and stronger connectivity throughout the IT infrastructure and integrate with cloud computing.
February 3, 2020
by Alan Conboy
· 7,242 Views · 2 Likes
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Set Up a CI/CD Pipeline for An Angular 7 Application From Azure DevOps to AWS S3 - Part 2
The second part of this tutorial finishes the series by walking you through the rest of the process of setting up a CI/CD pipeline for an Angular app.
January 31, 2020
by Ishan Juneja
· 60,303 Views · 4 Likes
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Reactive Messaging Examples for Quarkus
Quarkus provides different reactive messaging capabilities. Cloud-native-starter uses some of these capabilities in this sample application!
January 31, 2020
by Niklas Heidloff
· 12,807 Views · 6 Likes
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Microservices Architecture: What, When, and How
Check out what microservices are, a brief overview of when and how to use them, and advantages over monolithic structures.
Updated January 31, 2020
by Mrityunjay Kumar
· 129,896 Views · 68 Likes
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Four Ways to Keep Kubernetes’ Secrets Secret
In this article, we discuss four ways to keep Kubernetes secrets secure, including isolating Kubernetes applications from secrets.
January 31, 2020
by John Walsh
· 19,523 Views · 10 Likes
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Testing Spring Boot Apps With Kafka and Awaitility
Learn more about testing Spring Boot apps with Kafka and Awaitility!
Updated January 30, 2020
by Nakul Shukla
· 29,543 Views · 5 Likes
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Recipe To Implement the Jenkins Pipeline For MuleSoft Application [Videos]
Take a look at this recipe for creating a Jenkins pipeline for MuleSoft applications with these videos and feature descriptions of tools.
January 30, 2020
by Jitendra Bafna
· 25,443 Views · 7 Likes
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The Anatomy of Good Unit Testing
Here is a collection of thoughts and tid-bits that the author finds useful when writing tests (with examples in C#).
Updated January 30, 2020
by Jason Fauchelle
· 20,198 Views · 7 Likes
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