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@assertthat/assertthat-bdd
Advanced tools
Node.js plugin for interaction with AssertThat BDD Jira plugin.
$ npm install @assertthat/assertthat-bdd -g
Documentation on how to obtain access/secret keys and project id can be found here AssertThat+Configuration
Parameters can either be passed from the command line:
$ assertthat-bdd -i PROJECT_ID -a ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY -s ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY -f (for downloading feature files) -r (for uploading reports)
Available parameters:
-V, --version output the version number
-a, --accessKey [ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY] Access key
-s, --secretKey [ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY] Secret key
-f, --features Download features
-r, --report Upload report
-i, --projectId <ID> Jira project id
-j, --jsonReportFolder [FOLDER PATH] Cucumber json files folder
-m, --mode <mode> Features to download (default: "automated")
-n, --runName [NAME] Test run name
-d, --metadata [json string] Metadata json string
-o, --outputFolder [FOLDER PATH] Features output folder
-q, --jql [JQL] JQL filter for features
-t, --jsonReportIncludePattern [PATTERN] Pattern for json file names
-x, --proxyURI [URI] Proxy URI
-h, --help output usage information
Mandatory parameters are -i, -a, -s (if -a or -s is missing the plugin will attempt to read them from ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY and ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY environment variables respectively.
You can use the client in your own scripts to download feature files and upload reports to AssertThat BDD .
$ npm install @assertthat/assertthat-bdd --save
var assertThat = require('assertthat-bdd');
assertThat.downloadFeatures({
"projectId": PROJECT_ID,
"accessKey": "ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY",
"secretKey": "ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY"
}, function() {
// some optional callback code
});
Available parameters:
-a, --accessKey [ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY] Access key
-s, --secretKey [ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY] Secret key
-i, --projectId <ID> Jira project id
-m, --mode <mode> Features to download (default: "automated")
-o, --outputFolder [FOLDER PATH] Jira project id
-q, --jql [JQL] JQL filter for features
-x, --proxyURI [URI] Proxy URI
var assertThat = require('assertthat-bdd');
assertThat.uploadReports({
"projectId": PROJECT_ID,
"accessKey": "ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY",
"secretKey": "ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY"
}, function() {
// some optional callback code
});
Available parameters:
-a, --accessKey [ASSERTTHAT_ACCESS_KEY] Access key
-s, --secretKey [ASSERTTHAT_SECRET_KEY] Secret key
-i, --projectId <ID> Jira project id
-j, --jsonReportFolder [FOLDER PATH] Cucumber json files folder
-n, --runName [NAME] Test run name
-t, --jsonReportIncludePattern [PATTERN] Pattern for json file names
-x, --proxyURI [URI] Proxy URI
Refer to example project assertthat-testcafe-demo
FAQs
Node.js module for integration with AssertThat BDD Jira plugin
We found that @assertthat/assertthat-bdd demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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