knapsack_pro ruby gem

Circle CI Gem Version Code Climate Test Coverage

Knapsack Pro gem splits tests across CI nodes and makes sure that tests will run comparable time on each node. It uses KnapsackPro.com API. Original idea came from knapsack gem.

The knapsack_pro gem supports:

Would you like to try knapsack_pro gem? You can get API token here.

Is knapsack_pro gem free?

  • If your project is open source then you can use Knapsack Pro for free. Just add a link back to the page http://knapsackpro.com and please let me know via email ([email protected]). I will mark your account on KnapsackPro.com as open source.

  • If your project is commercial then I'd like to get feedback from you and work closely together to validate if the solution I'm building provide a value for the users. Switching to paid plan is a good way to validate that and a way to get support from happy users. Maybe you will be the next one who will join and support the project. Thanks!

How knapsack_pro works?

Basics

Basically it will track your branches, commits and for how many CI nodes you are running tests. Collected data about test time execution will be send to API where test suite split is done. Next time when you will run tests you will get proper test files for each CI node in order to achieve comparable time execution on each CI node.

Details

For instance when you will run tests with rake knapsack_pro:rspec then:

  • information about all your existing test files are sent to API http://docs.knapsackpro.com/api/v1/#build_distributions_subset_post
  • API returns which files should be executed on particular CI node (example KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0)
  • when API server has info about previous tests runs then it will use it to return more accurate test split results, in other case API returns simple split based on directory names
  • knapsack_pro will run test files which got from API
  • after tests finished knapsack_pro will send information about time execution of each file to API http://docs.knapsackpro.com/api/v1/#build_subsets_post so data can be used for future test runs

The knapsack_pro has also queue mode to get most optimal test suite split.

Requirements

  • >= Ruby 2.0.0

Table of Contents

Table of Contents generated with DocToc

Update gem

Please check changelog before update gem. Knapsack Pro follows semantic versioning.

Installation

Add those lines to your application's Gemfile:

group :test, :development do
  gem 'knapsack_pro'
end

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Add this lines at the bottom of Rakefile if your project has it:

KnapsackPro.load_tasks if defined?(KnapsackPro)

Run installer to get started. It will ask you a few questions and generate instruction steps for your project.

$ bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:install

You can read next section only if you want to better understand optional gem configuration and features.

How to set up

If you are using VCR gem then add Knapsack Pro API subdomain to ignore hosts:

# spec/spec_helper.rb or wherever is your VCR configuration

require 'vcr'
VCR.configure do |config|
  config.hook_into :webmock # or :fakeweb
  config.ignore_hosts('localhost', '127.0.0.1', '0.0.0.0', 'api.knapsackpro.com')
end

# add below when you hook into webmock
require 'webmock/rspec'
WebMock.disable_net_connect!(:allow => ['api.knapsackpro.com'])

Ensure you have require false for webmock gem when VCR is hook into it. Thanks to that webmock configuration in spec_helper.rb is loaded properly.

# Gemfile

group :test do
  gem 'vcr'
  gem 'webmock', require: false
end

Usage (How to set up 1 of 3)

Tip: You can find here example of rails app with already configured knapsack_pro.

https://github.com/KnapsackPro/rails-app-with-knapsack_pro

Step for RSpec

Add at the beginning of your spec_helper.rb:

require 'knapsack_pro'

# CUSTOM_CONFIG_GOES_HERE

KnapsackPro::Adapters::RSpecAdapter.bind

Step for Cucumber

Create file features/support/knapsack_pro.rb and add there:

require 'knapsack_pro'

# CUSTOM_CONFIG_GOES_HERE

KnapsackPro::Adapters::CucumberAdapter.bind

Step for Minitest

Add at the beginning of your test_helper.rb:

require 'knapsack_pro'

# CUSTOM_CONFIG_GOES_HERE

knapsack_pro_adapter = KnapsackPro::Adapters::MinitestAdapter.bind
knapsack_pro_adapter.set_test_helper_path(__FILE__)

Step for Spinach

Create file features/support/knapsack_pro.rb and add there:

require 'knapsack_pro'

# CUSTOM_CONFIG_GOES_HERE

KnapsackPro::Adapters::SpinachAdapter.bind

Custom configuration

You can change default Knapsack Pro configuration for RSpec, Cucumber, Minitest or Spinach tests. Here are examples what you can do. Put below configuration instead of CUSTOM_CONFIG_GOES_HERE.

# you can use your own logger
require 'logger'
KnapsackPro.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
KnapsackPro.logger.level = Logger::INFO

Setup your CI server (How to set up 2 of 3)

Set API key token

Set one or a few tokens depend on how many test suites you run on CI server.

  • KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC - as value set token for rspec test suite. Token can be generated when you sign in to knapsackpro.com.
  • KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER - token for cucumber test suite.
  • KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_MINITEST - token for minitest test suite.
  • KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_SPINACH - token for minitest test suite.

Tip: In case you have for instance multiple rspec test suites then prepend each of knapsack_pro command which executes tests with KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC variable.

Set knapsack_pro command to execute tests

On your CI server run this command for the first CI node. Update KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX for the next one.

# Step for RSpec
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec

# Step for Cucumber
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber

# Step for Minitest
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest

# Step for Spinach
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

You can add KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILE_PATTERN if your tests are not in default directory. For instance:

# Step for RSpec
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILE_PATTERN="directory_with_specs/**{,/*/**}/*_spec.rb" KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec

# Step for Cucumber
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILE_PATTERN="directory_with_features/**{,/*/**}/*.feature" KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber

# Step for Minitest
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILE_PATTERN="directory_with_tests/**{,/*/**}/*_test.rb" KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest

# Step for Spinach
$ KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILE_PATTERN="directory_with_features/**{,/*/**}/*.feature" KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

Tip: If you use one of supported CI providers then instead of above steps you should take a look on this.

Tip 2: If you use one of unsupported CI providers (here is list of supported CI providers) then you should set KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER=git.

Repository adapter (How to set up 3 of 3)

When you NOT set global variable KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER (default)

By default KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER variable has no value so knapsack_pro will try to get info about branch name and commit hash from supported CI (CI providers have branch, commit, project directory stored as environment variables). In case when you use other CI provider like Jenkins then please set below variables on your own.

KNAPSACK_PRO_BRANCH - It's branch name. You run tests on this branch.

KNAPSACK_PRO_COMMIT_HASH - Commit hash. You run tests for this commit.

You can also use git as repository adapter to determine branch and commit hash, please see below section.

When you set global variable KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER=git (required when CI provider is not supported)

KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER - When it has value git then your local version of git on CI server will be used to get info about branch name and commit hash. You need to set also KNAPSACK_PRO_PROJECT_DIR with project directory path.

KNAPSACK_PRO_PROJECT_DIR - Path to the project on CI node for instance /home/ubuntu/my-app-repository. It should be main directory of your repository.

Queue Mode

knapsack_pro has built in queue mode designed to solve problem with optimal test suite split in case of random time execution of test files caused by CI node overload and a random decrease of performance that may affect how long the test files are executed. The problem with random time execution of test files may be caused by many things like external requests done in tests.

How queue mode works?

On the Knapsack Pro API side, there is test files queue generated for your CI build. Each of CI node dynamically asks the Knapsack Pro API for test files that should be executed. Thanks to that each CI node will finish tests at the same time.

How to use queue mode?

Please use this command to run queue mode:

bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:queue:rspec

If above command fails then you may need to explicitly pass an argument to require rails_helper file or spec_helper in case you are not doing this in some of your test files:

bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:queue:rspec[--require rails_helper]"

Note if you will run queue mode command for the first time it might be slower. The second build should have better optimal test suite split.

Additional info about queue mode

  • If you are not using one of supported CI providers then please note that knapsack_pro gem doesn't know what is CI build ID in order to generated queue for particular CI build. This may result in two different CI builds taking tests from the same queue when CI builds are running at the same time against the same git commit.

To avoid this you can specify unique KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_BUILD_ID environment variable for each CI build. This mean that each CI node that is part of particular CI build should have the same value for KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_BUILD_ID.

  • Note that in the queue mode you cannot retry the failed CI node with exactly the same subset of tests that were run on the CI node in the first place. It's possible only in regular mode (read more).

Let's say one of the CI nodes failed and you retry just this single CI node while other CI nodes are still running. The retried CI node will be connected to the queue consumed by running CI nodes.

In the case when there are no running CI nodes then your retried CI node will initialize a new queue and it will run whole test suite from the queue because there will be no other CI nodes running connected to the queue. The order of tests on retried CI node will be different than on the first run.

Supported test runners in queue mode

At this moment the queue mode works for:

  • RSpec

Extra configuration for CI server

Info about ENV variables

By default knapsack_pro gem supports a few CI providers so you don't need to set some environment variables. In case when you use other CI provider for instance Jenkins etc then you need to provide configuration via below environment variables.

KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL - total number CI nodes you have.

KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX - index of current CI node starts from 0. Second CI node should have KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=1.

KNAPSACK_PRO_FIXED_TEST_SUITE_SPLITE (test suite split based on seed)

  • KNAPSACK_PRO_FIXED_TEST_SUITE_SPLIT=true (default)

    It means when you run test suite again for the same commit hash and total number of nodes and for the same branch then you will get exactly the same test suite split.

    Thanks to that when tests on one of your node failed you can retry the node with exactly the same subset of tests that were run on the node in the first place.

    There is one edge case. When you run tests for the first time and there is no data collected about time execution of your tests then we need to collect data to prepare the first test suite split. The second run of your tests will have fixed test suite split.

    To compare if all your CI nodes are running based on the same test suite split seed you can check the value for seed in knapsack logging message before your test starts. The message looks like:

    [knapsack_pro] Test suite split seed: 8a606431-02a1-4766-9878-0ea42a07ad21
    
  • KNAPSACK_PRO_FIXED_TEST_SUITE_SPLIT=false

    When you disable fixed test suite split then your will get test suite split based on most up to date data about your test suite time execution. For instance, when you run tests for the second time for the same commit hash then your will get more optimal test suite split than it was on the first run.

    Don't disable fixed test suite split when:

Environment variables for debugging gem

KNAPSACK_PRO_ENDPOINT - Default value is http://api.knapsackpro.com which is endpoint for Knapsack Pro API.

KNAPSACK_PRO_MODE - Default value is production. When mode is development then endpoint is http://api.knapsackpro.dev:3000. When mode is test then endpoint is http://api-staging.knapsackpro.com.

Passing arguments to rake task

Passing arguments to rspec

Knapsack Pro allows you to pass arguments through to rspec. For example if you want to run only specs that have the tag focus. If you do this with rspec directly it would look like:

$ bundle exec rake rspec --tag focus

To do this with Knapsack Pro you simply add your rspec arguments as parameters to the knapsack_pro rake task.

$ bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:rspec[--tag focus]"

Passing arguments to cucumber

Add arguments to knapsack_pro cucumber task like this:

$ bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:cucumber[--name feature]"

Passing arguments to minitest

Add arguments to knapsack_pro minitest task like this:

$ bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:minitest[--arg_name value]"

For instance to run verbose tests:

$ bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:minitest[--verbose]"

Passing arguments to spinach

Add arguments to knapsack_pro spinach task like this:

$ bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:spinach[--arg_name value]"

Knapsack Pro binary

You can install knapsack_pro globally and use binary. For instance:

$ knapsack_pro rspec "--tag custom_tag_name --profile"
$ knapsack_pro queue:rspec "--tag custom_tag_name --profile"
$ knapsack_pro cucumber "--name feature"
$ knapsack_pro minitest "--verbose --pride"
$ knapsack_pro spinach "--arg_name value"

This is optional way of using knapsack_pro when you don't want to add it to Gemfile.

Test file names encryption

knapsack_pro gem collects information about you test file names and time execution. Those data are stored on KnapsackPro.com server. If your test file names are sensitive data then you can encrypt the names before sending them to KnapsackPro.com API.

By default, encryption is disabled because knapsack_pro can use your test files names to prepare better test suite split when the time execution data are not yet collected on KnapsackPro.com server. When you will enable test file names encryption then your first test suite split may be less optimal than it could be.

Each test file name is generated with Digest::SHA2.hexdigest method and 64 chars salt.

Before you enable test file encryption please ensure you are using fresh API key. You should not use the same API key for encrypted and non encrypted test suite. You can generate API key for your test suite in your dashboard.

How to enable test file names encryption?

First you need to add environment variable KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_FILES_ENCRYPTED=true to your CI server.

Next step is to generate salt which will be used to encrypt test file names.

$ bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:salt

Add to your CI server generated environment variable KNAPSACK_PRO_SALT.

How to debug test file names?

If you need to check what is the encryption hash for particular test file your can check that with the rake task:

$ KNAPSACK_PRO_SALT=xxx bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:encrypted_test_file_names[rspec]

You can pass the name of test runner like rspec, minitest, cucumber, spinach as argument to rake task.

Supported CI providers

Info for CircleCI users

If you are using circleci.com you can omit KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL and KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX. Knapsack Pro will use CIRCLE_NODE_TOTAL and CIRCLE_NODE_INDEX provided by CircleCI.

Here is an example for test configuration in your circleci.yml file.

machine:
  environment:
    # Tokens should be set in CircleCI settings to avoid expose tokens in build logs
    # KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC: rspec-token
    # KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER: cucumber-token
    # KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_MINITEST: minitest-token
    # KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_SPINACH: spinach-token
test:
  override:
    # Step for RSpec
    - bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec:
        parallel: true # Caution: there are 8 spaces indentation!

    # Step for Cucumber
    - bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber:
        parallel: true # Caution: there are 8 spaces indentation!

    # Step for Minitest
    - bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest:
        parallel: true # Caution: there are 8 spaces indentation!

    # Step for Spinach
    - bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach:
        parallel: true # Caution: there are 8 spaces indentation!

Please remember to add additional containers for your project in CircleCI settings.

Info for Travis users

You can parallelize your builds across virtual machines with travis matrix feature. Edit .travis.yml

script:
  # Step for RSpec
  - "bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec"

  # Step for Cucumber
  - "bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber"

  # Step for Minitest
  - "bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest"

  # Step for Spinach
  - "bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach"

env:
  global:
    # tokens should be set in travis settings in web interface to avoid expose tokens in build logs
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=rspec-token
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER=cucumber-token
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_MINITEST=minitest-token
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_SPINACH=spinach-token

    - KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2
  matrix:
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0
    - KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=1

Such configuration will generate matrix with 2 following ENV rows:

KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=rspec-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER=cucumber-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_MINITEST=minitest-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_SPINACH=spinach-token
KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=1 KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=rspec-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER=cucumber-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_MINITEST=minitest-token KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_SPINACH=spinach-token

More info about global and matrix ENV configuration in travis docs.

Info for semaphoreapp.com users

Knapsack Pro supports semaphoreapp ENVs SEMAPHORE_THREAD_COUNT and SEMAPHORE_CURRENT_THREAD. The only thing you need to do is set up knapsack_pro rspec/cucumber/minitest command for as many threads as you need. Here is an example:

# Thread 1
## Step for RSpec
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec
## Step for Cucumber
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber
## Step for Minitest
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest
## Step for Spinach
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

# Thread 2
## Step for RSpec
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec
## Step for Cucumber
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber
## Step for Minitest
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest
## Step for Spinach
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

Tests will be split across threads.

Please remember to set up token like KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC as global environment.

Info for buildkite.com users

Knapsack Pro supports buildkite ENVs BUILDKITE_PARALLEL_JOB_COUNT and BUILDKITE_PARALLEL_JOB. The only thing you need to do is to configure the parallelism parameter in your build step and run the appropiate command in your build

# Step for RSpec
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec

# Step for Cucumber
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber

# Step for Minitest
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest

# Step for Spinach
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

Please remember to set up token like KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC as global environment.

Info for snap-ci.com users

Knapsack Pro supports snap-ci.com ENVs SNAP_WORKER_TOTAL and SNAP_WORKER_INDEX. The only thing you need to do is to configure number of workers for your project in configuration settings in order to enable parallelism. Next thing is to set below commands to be executed in your stage:

# Step for RSpec
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec

# Step for Cucumber
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:cucumber

# Step for Minitest
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:minitest

# Step for Spinach
bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:spinach

Please remember to set up token like KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC as global environment.

FAQ

How to run tests for particular CI node in your development environment

In your development environment you can debug tests that were run on the particular CI node. For instance to run subset of tests for the first CI node with specified seed you can do.

KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=token \
KNAPSACK_PRO_REPOSITORY_ADAPTER=git \
KNAPSACK_PRO_PROJECT_DIR=~/projects/rails-app \
KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_TOTAL=2 \
KNAPSACK_PRO_CI_NODE_INDEX=0 \
bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:rspec[--seed 123]"

Above example is for RSpec. You can use respectively rake task name and token environment variable when you want to run tests for minitest, cucumber or spinach.

What happens when Knapsack Pro API is not available/not reachable temporarily?

knapsack_pro gem has fallback behaviour and it will split test files across CI nodes based on popular test directory names.

How can I change log level?

You can change log level by specifying the KNAPSACK_PRO_LOG_LEVEL environment variable.

KNAPSACK_PRO_LOG_LEVEL=warn bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec

Available values are debug, info, and warn. The default log level is info.

How to split tests based on test level instead of test file level?

If you want to split one big test file (test file with long time execution) across multiple CI nodes then you can:

A. Create multiple small test files

Create multiple small test files instead of one long running test file with many test cases. A lot of small test files will give you better test suite split results.

B. Use tags to mark set of tests in particular test file

Another way is to use tags to mark subset of tests in particular test file and then split tests based on tags.

Here is example of test file with specified tags for describe groups:

# spec/features/something_spec.rb
describe 'Feature' do
  describe 'something A', :tagA do
    it {}
    it 'another test' {}
  end

  describe 'something B', :tagB do
    it {}
  end

  describe 'something else' do
    it {}
  end
end

You need to create multiple API tokens for different tags. In this example we need 3 different API tokens.

You need to run below commands for each CI node.

# run only tests with tagA
KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=api_key_for_tagA bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:rspec[--tag tagA]"

# run only tests with tagB
KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=api_key_for_tagB bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:rspec[--tag tagB]"

# run other tests without tag A & B
KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=api_key_for_tests_without_tags_A_and_B bundle exec rake "knapsack_pro:rspec[--tag ~tagA --tag ~tagB]"

How to make knapsack_pro works for forked repositories of my project?

Imagine one of the scenarios, for this example I use the Travis-CI.

  • We don’t want to have secrets like the KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC in .travis.yml in the codebase, because that code is also distributed to clients.
  • Adding it as env variables to Travis itself is tricky: It has to work for pull requests from developer’s forks into our main fork; this conflicts with the way Travis handles secrets. We also need a fallback if the token is not provided (when developers do builds within their own fork).

The solution for this problem is to set KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC as env variables in Travis for our main project. This won't be accessible on forked repositories so we will run knapsack_pro in fallback mode there. This way forked repositories have working test suite but without optimal test suite split across CI nodes.

Create the file bin/knapsack_pro_rspec with executable chmod in your main project repository. Below example is for rspec. You can change $KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC to $KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_CUCUMBER if you use cucumber etc.

#!/bin/bash
if [ "$KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC" = "" ]; then
  KNAPSACK_PRO_ENDPOINT=https://api-disabled-for-fork.knapsackpro.com \
    KNAPSACK_PRO_TEST_SUITE_TOKEN_RSPEC=disabled-for-fork \
    bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec
else
    bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec
fi

Now you can use bin/knapsack_pro_rspec command instead of bundle exec rake knapsack_pro:rspec. Remember to follow other steps required for your CI provider.

Questions around data usage and security

What data is sent to your servers?

The knapsack_pro gem sends branch name, commit hash, CI total node number, CI index node number, the test file paths like spec/models/user_spec.rb and the time execution of each test file path as a float.

Here is the full specification of the API used by knapsack_pro gem.

How is that data secured?

The test file paths can be encrypted on your CI node with your salt and later send to knapsackpro.com API. You generate salt locally and only you can decrypt the test file paths.

Connection with knapsackpro.com server is via https.

Regarding payments we use the BraintreePayments.com and they store credit cards and your private information.

Who has access to the data?

I’m the only admin so I can preview data in case you need help with debugging some problem etc. I’m not able to decrypt them without knowing the salt.

When you sign in to your user dashboard then you can preview data for recent 100 builds on CI. If the test file paths are encrypted then you only see hashes for test file paths. You need to decrypt them locally on your machine to find out what each test file hash is.

Gem tests

Spec

To run specs for Knapsack Pro gem type:

$ bundle exec rspec spec

Contributing

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/KnapsackPro/knapsack_pro-ruby )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. You can create example tests in related repository with example of rails application and knapsack_pro gem usage.
  6. Create a new Pull Request