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TestBox Browser SDK

Test, build, publish code style: prettier Conventional Commits

Installation

First, install the package in to your front-end.

npm i @testboxlab/browser

yarn add @testboxlab/browser

Usage and Purpose

This package provides two sets of functionality:

Base Usage

If you just need the basics of TestBox for your app, you'll use something like this:

import { startTestBox } from "@testboxlab/browser";

startTestBox();

This will allow TestBox to communicate with your web site. This communication is important to remove loading states and generally provide a good user experience.

If you use React, your implementation might look like this:

import { startTestBox } from "@testboxlab/browser";
import { useEffect } from "react";

export default function App() {
    useEffect(() => {
        startTestBox();
    }, []);
}

Navigation

Navigation happens when a user chooses a use case they want to try out. By default, TestBox will use window.location to push the iFrame to a new URL.

If you use react-router, or any kind of client-side routing, you may want to override our standard navigation behavior. To do so, specify your custom handler in the configuration object for the startTestBox method:

const testboxConfig = {
    navigateHandler: (url) => { history.push(url) },
}

startTestBox(testboxConfig);

Keep in mind that the URLs that come from TestBox are full URLs (e.g. https://google.com/images), and not only the specific route (/images). You might have to manipulate the URL to use it with a custom navigation behavior.

Auto-login

If you have opted to use our client-side auto-login functionality, you have a bit more work to do. You should create a login handler, which is responsible for logging in to your platform and returning the url used by the navigationHandler to redirect the user accordingly.

It can be configured in one of two ways:

  • Once again, specifying it on the configuration object on start:
    const testboxConfig = {
        loginHandler: (email, password) => {
            // Use the email and password to log in, either by filling out
            // your "login" form and submitting, or some other mechanism.
            
            // Then return a boolean (according to the status of the login attempt)
            // or the url being fowarded to the navigation handler.
            return "/";
        },
    }
    
    startTestBox(testboxConfig);
  • or registering it afterwards:
    import { registerLoginHandler } from "@testboxlab/browser";
    
    const loginHandler = (email, password) => {
        // Use the email and password to log in, either by filling out
        // your "login" form and submitting, or some other mechanism.
        
        // Then return a boolean (according to the status of the login attempt)
        // or the url being fowarded to the navigation handler. 
        return "/";
    }
    
    registerLoginHandler(loginHandler);

Important

In case your implementation includes the usage of the login handler, it should always be registered, even when the user loads the page with a valid session logged in.

FullStory

Enabling FullStory allows us to give you insights into how users are using your web application compared to others. However, it is explicitly opt-in in case you do not wish for your environments to be recorded.

You can enable FullStory by setting the allowFullStory to true on the configuration object:

const testboxConfig = {
    allowFullStory: true,
}

startTestBox(testboxConfig);

Testing

Testing your installation

If you'd like to verify that you have installed the script correctly, you can use our self-check tool which can verify that everything is working!

Package testing

If you want to test this package, simply run npm run test. It will run the Cypress tests locally.