alexa-conversation
v0.2.0
Published
Integration test framework for Amazon Alexa skills
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Alexa Conversation: Tests for your Alexa skills
Framework to easily test your Alexa skills functionally by creating a conversation with your skill. This framework makes it easy to test your Alexa skill's outputs for a given user input (intent) in different ways. This library is build on top of mocha, so you will need mocha installed in order to run the tests written with this framework,
Install
Install alexa-conversation
npm install --save-dev alexa-conversation
Install mocha
(if you don't have it already)
npm install -g mocha
(you can install it locally too, up to you)
How to use
In your functional test files, include the alexa-conversation
package
const conversation = require('alexa-conversation');
const app = require('../../index.js'); // your Alexa skill's main file.
const opts = { // those will be used to generate the requests to your skill
name: 'Test Conversation',
appId: 'your-app-id',
// Either provide your app (app.handler must exist)...
app: app,
// ...or pass the handler in directly (for example, if you have a custom handler name)
handler: app.customHandlerName
// Other optional parameters. See readme.md
};
// initialize the conversation
conversation(opts)
.userSays('LaunchIntent') // trigger the first Intent
.plainResponse // this gives you access to the non-ssml response
// asserts that response and reprompt are equal to the given text
.shouldEqual('Welcome back', 'This is the reprompt')
// assert not Equals
.shouldNotEqual('Wrong answer', 'Wrong reprompt')
// assert that repsonse contains the text
.shouldContain('Welcome')
// assert that the response matches the given Regular Expression
.shouldMatch(/Welcome(.*)back/)
// fuzzy match, not recommended for production use. See readme.md for more details
.shouldApproximate('This is an approximate match')
.userSays('IntentWhichRequiresSlots', {slotOne: 'slotValue'}) // next interaction, this time with a slot.
.ssmlResponse // access the SSML response
.shouldMatch(/<say>(Hello|Bye)</say>/)
.shouldNotMatch(/<say>Wrong answer</say>/)
.end(); // this will actually run the conversation defined above
Again, this module requires mocha
as a peerDependency
(make sure you have it installed either globally or locally: run npm install mocha -g
). After that just run:
mocha {path/to/your/test.js}
API
conversation(opts: Object)
Initializes a new conversation
and returns itself.
Non-optional parameters:
name
String: The name you want this conversation to have (useful for the test reports)app
Object: Your Alexa skill main app object (normally what is returned from yourindex.js
file). It either needs to exposeapp.handler
, or you can pass in ahandler
instead (see below)handler
Function: If your app doesn't expose ahandler
method or you want to use a custom handler, you can pass the handler in directly - this will take precedence overapp.handler
appId
String: Your Alexa Skill Id in order to build requests that will be accepted by your skill.
Optional parameters:
sessionId
String: Will default toSessionId.ee2e2123-75dc-4b32-bf87-8633ba72c294
if not provided.fixSpaces
Boolean: Defaults to false. If set to true, it will remove any unnecessary spaces form the actual responses before performing any assertions against them. Example: double spaces, spaces before comma or other punctuation marks, etc. This can be useful depending on how you build your reponses.userId
String: Will default toamzn1.ask.account.AHEYQEFEHVSPRHPZS4ZKSLDADKC62MMFTEC7MVZ636U56XIFWCFUAJ2Q2RJE47PNDHDBEEMMDTEQXWFSK3OPALF4G2D2QAJW4SDMEI5DCULK5G4R32T76G5SZIWDMJ2ZZQ37UYH2BIXBQ3GIGEBIRW4M4YV5QOQG3JXHB73CTH6AAPYZBOIQE5N3IKUETT54HMTRUX2EILTFGWQ
if not provided.accessToken
String: Will default to0b42d14150e71fb356f2abc42f5bc261dd18573a86a84aa5d7a74592b505a0b7
if not provided.requestId
String: Will default toEdwRequestId.33ac9138-640f-4e6e-ab71-b9619b2c2210
if not provided.locale
String: Will default toen-US
if not provided.
userSays(intentName: String, slots: Object)
Specifies what intent to trigger and the optional slots that it needs.
ssmlResponse
Use this member to add checks to the last SSML
response
and reprompt
.
The response
is taken form the JSON field: response.outputSpeech.ssml
and the reprompt form the response.reprompt.outputSpeech.ssml
plainResponse
Use this member to add checks to the last plain text
response
and reprompt. Plain text is the same as the ssmlResponse
without the markup tags.
shouldMatch(expectedSpeechRegex: Regex, expectedRepromptRegex: Regex)
Will assert that expectedSpeechRegex
and expectedRepromptRegex
Strings match (String.match()
) the responses from plainResponse
or ssmlResponse
.
This is useful for implementing powerful checks like cases where several responses are valid (i.e. dates, locations, or dynamic conditions like weather, etc.)
shouldNotMatch(expectedSpeechRegex: Regex, expectedRepromptRegex: Regex)
Will assert that expectedSpeechRegex
and expectedRepromptRegex
Strings do not match (!String.match()
) the responses from plainResponse
or ssmlResponse
.
This is useful for implementing powerful checks like cases where several responses are valid (i.e. dates, locations, or dynamic conditions like weather, etc.)
shouldApproximate(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String, minFuzzyScore: float)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings are approximately the same as the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
using fuzzy string matching. The default minimum fuzzy score to pass the test is 0.85
, you can override it by passing a new value to the call as the 3rd parameter (accepts values from [0...1]
).
This check is useful if you want to assert actual
and expected
are the same but discarding small differences like spaces or punctuation marks like full stops or question marks.
Learn more about the fuzzy matcher used: fuzzyset.js
shouldNotApproximate(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String, minFuzzyScore: float)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings are approximately NOT the same as the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
using fuzzy string matching. The default minimum fuzzy score to pass the test is 0.85
, you can override it by passing a new value to the call as the 3rd parameter (accepts values from [0...1]
).
This check is useful if you want to assert actual
and expected
are the same but discarding small differences like spaces or punctuation marks like full stops or question marks.
Learn more about the fuzzy matcher used: fuzzyset.js
shouldEqual(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings equal the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
.
shouldContain(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings are contained the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
.
shouldNotEqual(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings are not equal to the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
.
shouldNotContain(expectedSpeech: String, expectedReprompt: String)
Will assert that expectedSpeech
and expectedReprompt
Strings are not contained the ones in ssmlResponse
or plainResponse
.
Debugging & Troubleshooting
To start mocha in debug mode:
./node_modules/.bin/mocha debug {path/to/test/file}