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Add more info about a11y tests #76045

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101 changes: 91 additions & 10 deletions docs/developer/contributing/development-accessibility-tests.asciidoc
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
@@ -1,23 +1,104 @@
[[development-accessibility-tests]]
== Automated Accessibility Testing


To write an accessibility test, use the provided accessibility service `getService('a11y')`. Accessibility tests are fairly straightforward to write as https://github.com/dequelabs/axe-core[axe] does most of the heavy lifting. Navigate to the UI that you need to test, then call `testAppSnapshot();` from the service imported earlier to make sure axe finds no failures. Navigate through every portion of the UI for the best coverage.

An example test might look like this:
[source,js]
----
export default function ({ getService, getPageObjects }) {
const { common, home } = getPageObjects(['common', 'home']);
const a11y = getService('a11y'); /* this is the wrapping service around axe */
describe('Kibana Home', () => {
before(async () => {
await common.navigateToApp('home'); /* navigates to the page we want to test */
});
it('Kibana Home view', async () => {
await retry.waitFor(
'home page visible',
async () => await testSubjects.exists('homeApp')
); /* confirm you're on the correct page and that it's loaded */
await a11y.testAppSnapshot(); /* this expects that there are no failures found by axe */
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});
/**
* If these tests were added by our QA team, tests that fail that require significant app code
* changes to be fixed will be skipped with a corresponding issue label with more info
*/
// Skipped due to https://github.com/elastic/kibana/issues/99999
it.skip('all plugins view page meets a11y requirements', async () => {
await home.clickAllKibanaPlugins();
await a11y.testAppSnapshot();
});
/**
* Testing all the versions and different views of of a page is important to get good
* coverage. Things like empty states, different license levels, different permissions, and
* loaded data can all significantly change the UI which necessitates their own test.
*/
it('Add Kibana sample data page', async () => {
await common.navigateToUrl('home', '/tutorial_directory/sampleData', {
useActualUrl: true,
});
await a11y.testAppSnapshot();
});
});
}
----

=== Running tests
To run the tests locally:
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[arabic]
. In one terminal window run
`node scripts/functional_tests_server --config test/accessibility/config.ts`
. In another terminal window run
`node scripts/functional_test_runner.js --config test/accessibility/config.ts`
. In one terminal window run:
+
[source,shell]
-----------
node scripts/functional_tests_server --config test/accessibility/config.ts
-----------

. When the server prints that it is ready, in another terminal window run:
+
[source,shell]
-----------
node scripts/functional_test_runner.js --config test/accessibility/config.ts
-----------

To run the x-pack tests, swap the config file out for
`x-pack/test/accessibility/config.ts`.

After the server is up, you can go to this instance of {kib} at
`localhost:5620`.

The testing is done using https://github.com/dequelabs/axe-core[axe].
The same thing that runs in CI, can be run locally using their browser
plugins:
You can run the same thing that runs CI using browser plugins:

* https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/axe-web-accessibility-tes/lhdoppojpmngadmnindnejefpokejbdd?hl=en-US[Chrome]
* https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/axe-devtools/[Firefox]
* https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/axe-devtools/[Firefox]

=== Anatomy of a failure

Failures can seem confusing if you've never seen one before. Here is a breakdown of what a failure coming from CI might look like:
[source,bash]
----
1) Dashboard
create dashboard button:
Error: a11y report:
VIOLATION
[aria-hidden-focus]: Ensures aria-hidden elements do not contain focusable elements
Help: https://dequeuniversity.com/rules/axe/3.5/aria-hidden-focus?application=axeAPI
Elements:
- #example
at Accessibility.testAxeReport (test/accessibility/services/a11y/a11y.ts:90:15)
at Accessibility.testAppSnapshot (test/accessibility/services/a11y/a11y.ts:58:18)
at process._tickCallback (internal/process/next_tick.js:68:7)
----


* "Dashboard" and "create dashboard button" are the names of the test suite and specific test that failed.
* Always in brackets, "[aria-hidden-focus]" is the name of the axe rule that failed, followed by a short description.
* "Help: <url>" links to the axe documentation for that rule, including severity, remediation tips, and good and bad code examples.
* "Elements:" points to where in the DOM the failure originated (using CSS selector syntax). In this example, the problem came from an element with the ID `example`. If the selector is too complicated to find the source of the problem, use the browser plugins mentioned earlier to locate it. If you have a general idea where the issue is coming from, you can also try adding unique IDs to the page to narrow down the location.
* The stack trace points to the internals of axe. The stack trace is there in case the test failure is a bug in axe and not in your code, although this is unlikely.