Travis CI is a popular continuous integration service that integrates with your Github repository to automatically run your tests when the code is pushed. Integration is done by adding a simple YAML file to your project root; Travis and Github take care of the rest. Whenever tested, the Travis results will appear in your Github pull requests and your history will be available within their control panel. This article assumes you already have Travis account.
Create a file in your project root called .travis.yml
with the
following YAML content:
language: node_js
node_js:
- "4"
If you do not already have a package.json
in your project root, create one now. Travis runs npm test
to trigger your tests, so this
is where you tell Travis how to run your tests.
// ...snip...
"devDependencies": {
"karma": "~0.12"
},
// ...snip...
"scripts": {
"test": "karma start --single-run --browsers PhantomJS"
}
// ...snip...
Travis will run npm install
before every suite, so this is your
chance to specify any modules your app needs that Travis does not know
about like Karma.
Travis supports running a real browser (Firefox) with a virtual
screen. Just update your .travis.yml
to set up the virtual screen
like this (if you're using Xenial):
language: node_js
node_js:
- "4"
dist: xenial
services:
- xvfb
Or this, for Trusty and below:
language: node_js
node_js:
- "4"
before_script:
- export DISPLAY=:99.0
- sh -e /etc/init.d/xvfb start
And now, you can run your tests on Firefox, just change the npm test
command to
karma start --browsers Firefox --single-run
package.json
dependencies..travis.yml
, such as
running scripts before the install or test run. There are hints in
the Travis docs for GUI apps configuration.