Book Image

Automate Testing for Power Apps

By : César Calvo, Carlos de Huerta
Book Image

Automate Testing for Power Apps

By: César Calvo, Carlos de Huerta

Overview of this book

Low-code testing helps build better applications, freeing developers from frustrating problems faced while enhancing app features. Automate Testing for Power Apps will help you use automation testing to build better Canvas apps. You’ll start by understanding the fundamentals of automation testing, different approaches for low-code testing, and its application to Power Apps. Next, you’ll learn how to use Test Studio, Power Automate Desktop, and other tools to automate testing for your Canvas apps. You'll find out how to incorporate testing into your deployment processes for faster and more reliable releases. Additionally, this book covers advanced topics such as PCF components testing and model-driven apps. You’ll discover the new open-source project, Power Apps Test Engine, that’ll provide you with a single automated testing platform for all Power Apps. You'll learn how to test these more complex components to ensure the highest quality and business value for your Power Apps. By the end of this book, you'll have become a pro at using automation testing to build better Power Apps, reduce app release times, and increase the quality of your applications.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
1
Part 1:Tools for Power Apps Automated Testing
6
Part 2:Tools for Power Apps Automated Testing
11
Part 3:Extending Power Apps Automated Testing

Getting to know mock testing in Test Engine

I will take a step back before diving into this topic to present the type of activities we can do in the preview version of Test Engine, available at the time of writing. Test Engine is based on Playwright (https://playwright.dev/), a library that provides cross-browser automation. It allows you to execute your tests, interact with elements, navigate to screens, or simulate API calls in your apps, as Power Apps runs on any browser as a web app. Test Engine uses Playwright to monitor and modify network traffic. Any request that Power Apps makes can be modified.

Let’s imagine your app called GPT from Azure OpenAI Service to generate a summary of a text. You don’t want to call the service every time in your tests, so in Test Engine, you will create a mock for the service. In Figure 11.9, you can follow what is going on under the hood:

Figure 11.9 – The Test Engine flow to intercept network calls

Figure 11.9 – The Test Engine flow to intercept network calls...