Despite being a bit gross to look at, this brings a few advantages:
- Tests are now closer to what actually runs, so more likely to find broken stuff.
- We can start using things that were so far Webpack-only or browser-only, like ES6 imports, loading Handlebars templates, etc.
- We open ourselves to browser testing (there is some work to do, but that would be a necessary step).
- We improve the client/server separation, by making it possible to run them independently
I do some extra steps around coverage: now we have 2 reports (client + server), so I have an extra step to combine them (the `nyc report` part). This is strictly to keep feature parity (the coverage report of this code is effectively the same as before), but in the near future, we might want to keep both reports separate, for example to continue separating client/server. Another reason would be to use something like Codecov, which I believe has the ability to have multiple reports. This is down the road though, our coverage is not good enough to make hosting them somewhere be useful (I think).
A few extras with this commit:
- Coverage summary is displayed when tests are run (this is not slowing down tests)
- Tests check for leaks (see https://mochajs.org/#--check-leaks)
- Tests now output with the `dot` reporter. This is nice as `npm test` runs in parallel, the whole output holds in a few lines instead of spanning over multiple screens.
This has several reasons, benefits and consequences:
- When running on root (which is not recommended anyway), `npm run build` was already necessary.
- This allows to not use the `prepublish` hook, whose behavior is going to change in npm v5 and again in npm v6.
- This allows to create both production and development builds when running from source.
- It makes `npm run build` compatible with Windows again for development environments (lost in previous commit).
- It uses the `prepublishOnly` hook added in npm v4. Since this hook is not available prior to that, deployment to npm from Travis has to be done on the Node.js v7 environment.
This allows for a more meaningful build: if a newer version of a sub-package breaks,
builds would still pass as it uses the cached version. This uses a cache for downloaded packages instead.
I am expecting this to slow down a little bit the builds (but we are OK overall)
but be more accurate in practice.
See https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/cache#configuration and https://docs.npmjs.com/files/folders#node-modules.