Book Image

Hands-On Full-Stack Development with Swift

By : Ankur Patel
Book Image

Hands-On Full-Stack Development with Swift

By: Ankur Patel

Overview of this book

Making Swift an open-source language enabled it to share code between a native app and a server. Building a scalable and secure server backend opens up new possibilities, such as building an entire application written in one language—Swift. This book gives you a detailed walk-through of tasks such as developing a native shopping list app with Swift and creating a full-stack backend using Vapor (which serves as an API server for the mobile app). You'll also discover how to build a web server to support dynamic web pages in browsers, thereby creating a rich application experience. You’ll begin by planning and then building a native iOS app using Swift. Then, you'll get to grips with building web pages and creating web views of your native app using Vapor. To put things into perspective, you'll learn how to build an entire full-stack web application and an API server for your native mobile app, followed by learning how to deploy the app to the cloud, and add registration and authentication to it. Once you get acquainted with creating applications, you'll build a tvOS version of the shopping list app and explore how easy is it to create an app for a different platform with maximum code shareability. Towards the end, you’ll also learn how to create an entire app for different platforms in Swift, thus enhancing your productivity.
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Copyright and Credits
Dedication
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Chapter 8. Testing and CI

In the preceding chapter, we covered how to render HTML views with the help of Leaf, Swift's templating engine. We also made a middleware and used it to show HTML response for requests coming from the browser and JSON response for everything else, including our mobile app. By now, you should have a good understanding of how Vapor can be used to make both an API server and a web server.

In this chapter, we will focus on how to test our Vapor application server. We will also discuss how to write tests that run on both macOS and Linux. Also, we will discuss how to add Continuous Integration (CI) pipeline for our server app. This will trigger tests every time we have an event, from a submission of a Pull Request to our code on GitHub, or a merge to master branch of our repository. Using free services, such as Travis CI on open source projects, we will set up a CI pipeline for our Vapor server on GitHub.

By the end of this chapter, you should have a good understanding...