- Report issues or feature requests on GitHub Issues.
- If reporting a bug, please add a simplified example.
- Create a new topic branch for every separate change you make.
- Create a test case if you are fixing a bug or implementing an important feature.
- Make sure the build runs successfully.
We use the following tools for development:
Install NodeJS.
Install globally grunt-cli using the following command:
$ npm install -g grunt-cli
Browse to the project root directory and install the dev dependencies:
$ npm install -d
To execute the build and tests run the following command in the root of the project:
$ grunt
You should see a green message in the console:
Done, without errors.
You can also run the tests in the browser.
Start a test server from the project root:
$ grunt connect:tests
This will automatically open the test suite at http://127.0.0.1:10000 in the default browser, with livereload enabled.
Note: we recommend cleaning all the browser cookies before running the tests, that can avoid false positive failures.
You can build automatically after a file change using the following command:
$ grunt watch
js-cookie allows integrating the encoding test suite with solutions written in other server-side languages. To integrate successfully, the server-side solution need to execute the test/encoding.html
file in it's integration testing routine with a web automation tool, like Selenium. js-cookie test suite exposes an API to make this happen.
Specify the base url to pass the cookies into the server through a query string. If integration_baseurl
query is not present, then js-cookie will assume there's no server.
After the test suite has finished, js-cookie exposes the global window.global_test_results
property containing an Object Literal that represents the QUnit's details. js-cookie also adds an additional property representing an Array containing the tests data.
When js-cookie encoding tests are executed, it will request a url in the server through an iframe representing each test being run. js-cookie expects the server to handle the input and return the proper Set-Cookie
headers in the response. js-cookie will then read the response and verify if the encoding is consistent with js-cookie default encoding mechanism
js-cookie will send some requests to the server from the baseurl in the format /encoding?name=<cookie>
, where <cookie>
represents the cookie-name to be read from the request.
The server should handle those requests, internally parsing the cookie from the request and writing it again. It must set an application/json
content type containing an object literal in the content body with name
and value
keys, each representing the cookie-name and cookie-value decoded by the server-side implementation.
If the server fails to respond with this specification in any request, the related QUnit test will fail. This is to make sure the server-side implementation will always be in sync with js-cookie encoding tests for maximum compatibility.
This hook is being used in the following projects: