In software engineering, graphical user interface testing is the process of testing a product's graphical user interface to ensure it meets its written specifications. This is normally done through the use of a variety of test cases.
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To generate a ‘good’ set of test cases, the test designers must be certain that their suite covers all the functionality of the system and also has to be sure that the suite fully exercises the GUI itself. The difficulty in accomplishing this task is twofold: one has to deal with domain size and then one has to deal with sequences. In addition, the tester faces more difficulty when they have to do regression testing.
The size problem can be easily illustrated. Unlike a CLI (command line interface) system, a GUI has many operations that need to be tested. A relatively small program such as Microsoft WordPad has 325 possible GUI operations.[1] In a large program, the number of operations can easily be an order of magnitude larger.
The second problem is the sequencing problem. Some functionality of the system may only be accomplished by following some complex sequence of GUI events. For example, to open a file a user may have to click on the File Menu and then select the Open operation, and then use a dialog box to specify the file name, and then focus the application on the newly opened window. Obviously, increasing the number of possible operations increases the sequencing problem exponentially. This can become a serious issue when the tester is creating test cases manually.
Regression testing becomes a problem with GUIs as well. This is because the GUI may change significantly across versions of the application, even though the underlying application may not. A test designed to follow a certain path through the GUI may not be able to follow that path since a button, menu item, or dialog may have changed location or appearance.
These issues have driven the GUI testing problem domain towards automation. Many different techniques have been proposed to automatically generate test suites that are complete and that simulate user behavior.
Most of the techniques used to test GUIs attempt to build on techniques previously used to test CLI (Command Line Interface) programs. However, most of these have scaling problems when they are applied to GUI’s. For example, Finite State Machine-based modeling[2][3] — where a system is modeled as a finite state machine and a program is used to generate test cases that exercise all states — can work well on a system that has a limited number of states but may become overly complex and unwieldy for a GUI (see also model-based testing).
A novel approach to test suite generation, adapted from a CLI technique[4] involves using a planning system.[5] Planning is a well-studied technique from the artificial intelligence (AI) domain that attempts to solve problems that involve four parameters:
Planning systems determine a path from the initial state to the goal state by using the operators. An extremely simple planning problem would be one where you had two words and one operation called ‘change a letter’ that allowed you to change one letter in a word to another letter – the goal of the problem would be to change one word into another.
For GUI testing, the problem is a bit more complex. In [1] the authors used a planner called IPP[6] to demonstrate this technique. The method used is very simple to understand. First, the systems UI is analyzed to determine what operations are possible. These operations become the operators used in the planning problem. Next an initial system state is determined. Next a goal state is determined that the tester feels would allow exercising of the system. Lastly the planning system is used to determine a path from the initial state to the goal state. This path becomes the test plan.
Using a planner to generate the test cases has some specific advantages over manual generation. A planning system, by its very nature, generates solutions to planning problems in a way that is very beneficial to the tester:
When manually creating a test suite, the tester is more focused on how to test a function (i. e. the specific path through the GUI). By using a planning system, the path is taken care of and the tester can focus on what function to test. An additional benefit of this is that a planning system is not restricted in any way when generating the path and may often find a path that was never anticipated by the tester. This problem is a very important one to combat.[7]
Another interesting method of generating GUI test cases uses the theory that good GUI test coverage can be attained by simulating a novice user. One can speculate that an expert user of a system will follow a very direct and predictable path through a GUI and a novice user would follow a more random path. The theory therefore is that if we used an expert to test the GUI, many possible system states would never be achieved. A novice user, however, would follow a much more varied, meandering and unexpected path to achieve the same goal so it’s therefore more desirable to create test suites that simulate novice usage because they will test more.
The difficulty lies in generating test suites that simulate ‘novice’ system usage. Using Genetic algorithms is one proposed way to solve this problem.[7] Novice paths through the system are not random paths. First, a novice user will learn over time and generally won’t make the same mistakes repeatedly, and, secondly, a novice user is not analogous to a group of monkeys trying to type Hamlet, but someone who is following a plan and probably has some domain or system knowledge.
Genetic algorithms work as follows: a set of ‘genes’ are created randomly and then are subjected to some task. The genes that complete the task best are kept and the ones that don’t are discarded. The process is again repeated with the surviving genes being replicated and the rest of the set filled in with more random genes. Eventually one gene (or a small set of genes if there is some threshold set) will be the only gene in the set and is naturally the best fit for the given problem.
For the purposes of the GUI testing, the method works as follows. Each gene is essentially a list of random integer values of some fixed length. Each of these genes represents a path through the GUI. For example, for a given tree of widgets, the first value in the gene (each value is called an allele) would select the widget to operate on, the following alleles would then fill in input to the widget depending on the number of possible inputs to the widget (for example a pull down list box would have one input…the selected list value). The success of the genes are scored by a criterion that rewards the best ‘novice’ behavior.
The system to do this testing described in[7] can be extended to any windowing system but is described on the X window system. The X Window system provides functionality (via XServer and the editors' protocol) to dynamically send GUI input to and get GUI output from the program without directly using the GUI. For example, one can call XSendEvent() to simulate a click on a pull-down menu, and so forth. This system allows researchers to automate the gene creation and testing so for any given application under test, a set of novice user test cases can be created.
At first the strategies were migrated and adapted from the CLI testing strategies. A popular method used in the CLI environment is capture/playback. Capture playback is a system where the system screen is “captured” as a bitmapped graphic at various times during system testing. This capturing allowed the tester to “play back” the testing process and compare the screens at the output phase of the test with expected screens. This validation could be automated since the screens would be identical if the case passed and different if the case failed.
Using capture/playback worked quite well in the CLI world but there are significant problems when one tries to implement it on a GUI-based system.[8] The most obvious problem one finds is that the screen in a GUI system may look different while the state of the underlying system is the same, making automated validation extremely difficult. This is because a GUI allows graphical objects to vary in appearance and placement on the screen. Fonts may be different, window colors or sizes may vary but the system output is basically the same. This would be obvious to a user, but not obvious to an automated validation system.
To combat this and other problems, testers have gone ‘under the hood’ and collected GUI interaction data from the underlying windowing system.[9] By capturing the window ‘events’ into logs the interactions with the system are now in a format that is decoupled from the appearance of the GUI. Now, only the event streams are captured. There is some filtering of the event streams necessary since the streams of events are usually very detailed and most events aren’t directly relevant to the problem. This approach can be made easier by using an MVC architecture for example and making the view (i. e. the GUI here) as simple as possible while the model and the controller hold all the logic. Another approach is to use the software's built-in assistive technology, to use an HTML interface or a three-tier architecture that makes it also possible to better separate the user interface from the rest of the application.
Another way to run tests on a GUI is to build a driver into the GUI so that commands or events can be sent to the software from another program.[7] This method of directly sending events to and receiving events from a system is highly desirable when testing, since the input and output testing can be fully automated and user error is eliminated.