MCP HubMCP Hub
Volver a habilidades

test-cli-application

pjt222
Actualizado Yesterday
4 vistas
17
2
17
Ver en GitHub
Pruebastestingapidesign

Acerca de

Esta habilidad proporciona patrones para escribir pruebas de integración para aplicaciones CLI de Node.js utilizando el módulo incorporado `node:test`. Abarca escenarios clave de pruebas, incluyendo aserciones de salida, verificación del sistema de archivos, pruebas de casos de error y hooks de limpieza. Úsala al agregar pruebas a CLIs existentes, probar nuevos comandos o configurar CI para herramientas CLI.

Instalación rápida

Claude Code

Recomendado
Principal
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Comando PluginAlternativo
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternativo
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/test-cli-application

Copia y pega este comando en Claude Code para instalar esta habilidad

Documentación

Test a CLI Application

Write integration tests for a Node.js CLI using the built-in node:test module with execSync.

When to Use

  • Adding tests to an existing CLI application
  • Testing a newly created command
  • Verifying adapter/plugin behavior across target frameworks
  • Setting up CI that validates CLI correctness
  • Catching regressions after refactoring CLI internals

Inputs

  • Required: Path to the CLI entry point (e.g., cli/index.js)
  • Required: Commands to test
  • Optional: Framework adapters to test (dry-run mode)
  • Optional: Cleanup requirements (files/symlinks created by tests)

Procedure

Step 1: Set Up Test Infrastructure

import { describe, it, before, after } from 'node:test';
import assert from 'node:assert/strict';
import { execSync } from 'child_process';
import { existsSync, rmSync } from 'fs';
import { resolve } from 'path';

const CLI = 'node cli/index.js';
const ROOT = process.cwd();

function run(args) {
  return execSync(`${CLI} ${args}`, {
    cwd: ROOT,
    encoding: 'utf8',
    timeout: 10000,
  });
}

Key design decisions:

  • node:test is built-in — no test runner dependency needed
  • execSync runs the CLI as a subprocess — tests the actual binary, not internal functions
  • 10-second timeout prevents hanging on interactive prompts
  • encoding: 'utf8' gives string output for regex matching
  • All paths relative to ROOT for reproducibility

Got: A test file that imports from node:test and has a working run() helper.

If fail: If node:test is not available, your Node.js version is below 18. Upgrade or use a polyfill.

Step 2: Write Smoke Tests

Smoke tests verify the CLI starts, parses arguments, and produces expected output shapes:

describe('meta', () => {
  it('shows version', () => {
    const out = run('--version');
    assert.match(out, /\d+\.\d+\.\d+/);
  });

  it('shows help with all commands', () => {
    const out = run('--help');
    assert.match(out, /install/);
    assert.match(out, /list/);
    assert.match(out, /detect/);
  });
});

describe('registry', () => {
  it('list shows expected counts', () => {
    const out = run('list --domains');
    assert.match(out, /\d+ domains/);
  });

  it('search finds known items', () => {
    const out = run('search "docker"');
    assert.match(out, /result\(s\) for "docker"/);
  });

  it('search returns 0 for nonsense', () => {
    const out = run('search "xyzzy-nonexistent"');
    assert.match(out, /0 result/);
  });
});

Smoke test patterns:

  • --version and --help always work
  • Registry loading validates data integrity
  • Search with known and unknown terms

Got: Smoke tests confirm the CLI is functional and data is loaded.

If fail: If registry counts change frequently, use \d+ instead of hardcoded numbers.

Step 3: Write Lifecycle Tests

Lifecycle tests verify create → verify → delete sequences with cleanup:

describe('install', () => {
  const testPath = resolve(ROOT, '.agents/skills/commit-changes');

  after(() => {
    // Always clean up, even if tests fail
    try { rmSync(testPath); } catch {}
    try { rmSync(resolve(ROOT, '.agents/skills'), { recursive: true }); } catch {}
    try { rmSync(resolve(ROOT, '.agents'), { recursive: true }); } catch {}
  });

  it('dry-run does not create files', () => {
    const out = run('install commit-changes --dry-run');
    assert.match(out, /DRY RUN/);
    assert.ok(!existsSync(testPath));
  });

  it('installs creates the target', () => {
    run('install commit-changes');
    assert.ok(existsSync(testPath));
  });

  it('skips already installed', () => {
    const out = run('install commit-changes');
    assert.match(out, /skipped/);
  });

  it('uninstall removes the target', () => {
    run('uninstall commit-changes');
    assert.ok(!existsSync(testPath));
  });
});

Cleanup rules:

  • Use after() hooks, not afterEach() — lifecycle tests build on each other
  • Wrap cleanup in try/catch — cleanup must not fail the test suite
  • Clean from leaf to root (file → parent dir → grandparent dir)
  • If the test modifies shared state (symlinks, config files), restore it

Got: Tests run in sequence within the describe block, cleanup runs even on failure.

If fail: If tests run in parallel (non-default in node:test), force sequential with { concurrency: 1 }.

Step 4: Write Dry-Run Tests for Each Adapter

Test each adapter's target path without making changes:

describe('adapter: cursor (dry-run)', () => {
  it('targets .cursor/skills/ path', () => {
    const out = run('install commit-changes --framework cursor --dry-run');
    assert.match(out, /\.cursor\/skills/i);
  });
});

describe('adapter: copilot (dry-run)', () => {
  it('targets .github/ path', () => {
    const out = run('install commit-changes --framework copilot --dry-run');
    assert.match(out, /\.github/i);
  });
});

This pattern scales to any number of adapters. Each test:

  • Uses --framework to bypass auto-detection
  • Uses --dry-run so no files are created
  • Asserts the target path appears in output

Got: One describe block per adapter, each with at least a path assertion.

If fail: If the adapter doesn't exist in the project, the test will fail with "Unknown framework." This is correct — adapter tests should only exist for implemented adapters.

Step 5: Write Error Case Tests

describe('errors', () => {
  it('rejects unknown items', () => {
    assert.throws(
      () => run('install nonexistent-skill-xyz'),
      /No matching items|Unknown/,
    );
  });

  it('rejects unknown framework', () => {
    assert.throws(
      () => run('install commit-changes --framework nonexistent'),
      /Unknown framework/,
    );
  });

  it('handles missing state gracefully', () => {
    assert.throws(
      () => run('scatter nonexistent-team'),
      /not burning|Unknown/,
    );
  });
});

Error testing patterns:

  • assert.throws catches non-zero exit codes from execSync
  • Regex match on the error message (captured from stderr)
  • Test both "item not found" and "invalid option" errors
  • Verify error messages suggest corrective actions

Got: All error paths produce non-zero exit codes and helpful messages.

If fail: execSync throws on non-zero exit. The error's stderr or stdout contains the message. Check error.stdout if assert.throws regex doesn't match.

Step 6: Write JSON Output Tests

describe('json output', () => {
  it('campfire --json outputs valid JSON', () => {
    const out = run('campfire --json');
    const data = JSON.parse(out);
    assert.ok(typeof data.totalTeams === 'number');
    assert.ok(Array.isArray(data.fires));
  });

  it('gather --dry-run --json outputs structured data', () => {
    const out = run('gather tending --dry-run --json');
    // JSON may follow a DRY RUN header — extract from first '{'
    const jsonStart = out.indexOf('{');
    assert.ok(jsonStart >= 0, 'Should contain JSON');
    const data = JSON.parse(out.slice(jsonStart));
    assert.equal(data.team, 'tending');
  });
});

JSON testing gotchas:

  • Some commands prefix JSON with human-readable text (e.g., DRY RUN header)
  • Extract JSON by finding the first { character
  • Validate structure (key presence, types), not exact values
  • Values like counts may change as content is added

Got: JSON output is parseable and contains expected keys.

If fail: If JSON.parse fails, the command may be mixing human text with JSON. Either fix the command to output pure JSON in --json mode, or extract the JSON substring.

Step 7: Handle Cleanup and State Restoration

describe('stateful commands', () => {
  const stateDir = resolve(ROOT, '.agent-almanac');

  after(() => {
    // Remove state file created by tests
    try { rmSync(stateDir, { recursive: true }); } catch {}
  });

  // Tests that create/modify state...
});

// Restore symlinks that destructive tests may remove
describe('destructive tests', () => {
  after(() => {
    // Restore symlinks that scatter/uninstall removed
    const skills = ['heal', 'meditate', 'remote-viewing'];
    for (const skill of skills) {
      const link = resolve(ROOT, `.claude/skills/${skill}`);
      if (!existsSync(link)) {
        try {
          execSync(`ln -s ../../skills/${skill} ${link}`, { cwd: ROOT });
        } catch {}
      }
    }
  });
});

State restoration rules:

  • State files (.agent-almanac/state.json) must be cleaned after tests
  • Symlinks removed by scatter/uninstall must be restored
  • Manifest files (agent-almanac.yml) created by init must be removed
  • Order: after() hooks run in reverse declaration order — declare restore hooks last

Got: The test suite leaves the project in the same state it found it.

If fail: If CI reports leftover files after test runs, add the cleanup to after(). Use git status after test runs to detect leaked state.

Validation

  • Test file runs with node --test cli/test/cli.test.js
  • All tests pass (0 failures)
  • Smoke tests cover --version, --help, and registry loading
  • Lifecycle tests verify create → verify → delete with cleanup
  • At least one adapter dry-run test exists per implemented adapter
  • Error cases test non-zero exit codes with message matching
  • JSON output tests parse actual output (not mocked)
  • After hooks restore all state modified by tests

Pitfalls

  • Hardcoded counts that break: Registry totals change as content is added. Use \d+ regex or read the count dynamically instead of asserting 329 skills.
  • Tests that depend on execution order: node:test runs suites in declaration order by default, but tests within a suite may not. Use lifecycle suites (create → verify → delete) within a single describe to guarantee order.
  • Missing cleanup on test failure: If a test fails mid-lifecycle, after() still runs. But if you throw in before(), subsequent tests and after() may not run. Keep before() minimal.
  • Interactive prompts hanging tests: Commands with confirmation prompts will hang execSync. Either pipe echo y | or ensure --yes is always passed in tests.
  • Testing with real installs in CI: Tests that create files in .claude/skills/ or .agents/skills/ modify the working tree. CI may fail on "dirty working directory" checks. Always clean up.

Related Skills

  • scaffold-cli-command — build the commands that these tests verify
  • build-cli-plugin — build the adapters tested in Step 4
  • design-cli-output — output patterns that tests assert against

Repositorio GitHub

pjt222/agent-almanac
Ruta: i18n/caveman-lite/skills/test-cli-application
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

Habilidades relacionadas

evaluating-llms-harness

Pruebas

Esta Skill de Claude ejecuta el benchmark lm-evaluation-harness para evaluar modelos de lenguaje en más de 60 tareas académicas estandarizadas como MMLU y GSM8K. Está diseñada para que los desarrolladores comparen la calidad de los modelos, realicen seguimiento del progreso del entrenamiento o reporten resultados académicos. La herramienta admite varios backends, incluidos modelos de HuggingFace y vLLM.

Ver habilidad

cloudflare-cron-triggers

Pruebas

Esta habilidad proporciona conocimiento integral para implementar Cron Triggers de Cloudflare y programar Workers mediante expresiones cron. Cubre la configuración de tareas periódicas, trabajos de mantenimiento y flujos de trabajo automatizados, manejando problemas comunes como expresiones cron inválidas y inconvenientes de zonas horarias. Los desarrolladores pueden utilizarla para configurar manejadores programados, probar activadores cron e integrar con Workflows y Green Compute.

Ver habilidad

webapp-testing

Pruebas

Esta habilidad de Claude proporciona un kit de herramientas basado en Playwright para probar aplicaciones web locales mediante scripts de Python. Permite verificación de frontend, depuración de interfaz de usuario, captura de pantallas y visualización de registros, mientras gestiona los ciclos de vida del servidor. Úsela para tareas de automatización de navegadores, pero ejecute los scripts directamente en lugar de leer su código fuente para evitar contaminación del contexto.

Ver habilidad

finishing-a-development-branch

Pruebas

Esta habilidad ayuda a los desarrolladores a completar el trabajo terminado verificando que las pruebas pasen y luego presentando opciones estructuradas de integración. Guía el flujo de trabajo para fusionar, crear PRs o limpiar ramas después de que se completa la implementación. Úsala cuando tu código esté listo y probado para finalizar sistemáticamente el proceso de desarrollo.

Ver habilidad