We haven’t thought about testing our interaction with the app yet, so in this step we will check if the dialog actually opens when we click the “Say Hello with Dialog” button. We can easily do this with OPA5, a feature of SAPUI5 that is easy to set up and is based on JavaScript and QUnit. Using integration and unit tests and running them consistently in a continuous integration (CI) environment, we can make sure that we don’t accidentally break our app or introduce logical errors in existing code.
In this tutorial, we focus on a simple use case for the test implementation. If you want to learn more about OPA tests, have a look at our Testing tutorial, especially Step 6: A First OPA Test.

You can view and download all files at Walkthrough - Step 29.

We add a new folder integration below the test folder, where we put our new test cases. Page objects
that help structuring such integration tests are put in the pages subfolder that we also create now.
/*global QUnit, opaTest*/
sap.ui.define([
"sap/ui/demo/walkthrough/localService/mockserver",
"sap/ui/test/opaQunit",
"./pages/App"
], function (mockserver) {
"use strict";
QUnit.module("Navigation");
opaTest("Should open the Hello dialog", function (Given, When, Then) {
// initialize the mock server
mockserver.init();
// Arrangements
Given.iStartMyUIComponent({
componentConfig: {
name: "sap.ui.demo.walkthrough"
}
});
//Actions
When.onTheAppPage.iPressTheSayHelloWithDialogButton();
// Assertions
Then.onTheAppPage.iShouldSeeTheHelloDialog();
// Cleanup
Then.iTeardownMyApp();
});
});
Let’s start with the journey first. A journey consists of a series of integration tests that belong
to the same context such as navigating through the app. Similar to the QUnit test implementation, OPA5 uses QUnit, that's why we first
set up a QUnit module Navigation that will be displayed on our result page.
The function opaTest is the main aspect for defining integration tests with OPA. Its parameters define a test name
and a callback function that gets executed with the following OPA5 helper objects to write meaningful tests that read like a user
story.
Given
On the given object we can call arrangement functions like iStartMyUIComponent to load our app component
for integration testing.
When
Contains custom actions that we can execute to get the application in a state where we can test the expected behavior.
Then
Contains custom assertions that check a specific constellation in the application and the teardown function that removes our component again.
In our journey, we create a very simple test that starts the app. Inside the app, we simulate a click on a button and expect that the dialog is opened afterwards. Finally, we shut down the app again.
As you can see, the test case reads like a user story, we actually do not need the implementation of the methods yet to understand the meaning of the test case. This approach is called "Behavior Driven Development" or simply BDD and is popular in "Agile Software Development".
sap.ui.define([
"sap/ui/test/Opa5",
"sap/ui/test/actions/Press"
], function (Opa5, Press) {
"use strict";
var sViewName = "sap.ui.demo.walkthrough.view.HelloPanel";
Opa5.createPageObjects({
onTheAppPage: {
actions: {
iPressTheSayHelloWithDialogButton: function () {
return this.waitFor({
id: "helloDialogButton",
viewName: sViewName,
actions: new Press(),
errorMessage: "Did not find the 'Say Hello With Dialog' button on the HelloPanel view"
});
}
},
assertions: {
iShouldSeeTheHelloDialog: function () {
return this.waitFor({
controlType: "sap.m.Dialog",
success: function () {
// we set the view busy, so we need to query the parent of the app
Opa5.assert.ok(true, "The dialog is open");
},
errorMessage: "Did not find the dialog control"
});
}
}
}
});
});The implementation of the page object holds the helper functions we just called in our journey. We require OPA5 from
the sap.ui.test namespace and define a page object with the helper function createPageObjects. We
pass in an object with the key of our page onTheAppPage and two sections: actions and
assertions.
In the actions section of the page object we define a function to click the "Hello" dialog button. This is done in OPA5 with a
waitFor statement, it is basically a loop that checks for the conditions defined as parameters. If the conditions
are met, the success callback is executed, if the test fails because the conditions have not been met, the text in the
errorMessage property is displayed on the result page.
We define a waitFor statement that checks for controls of type sap.m.Button. As soon as a button is
found on the app page the success handler is executed and we use jQuery to trigger a tap event on the first button
that we found. This should open the HelloDialog similar to clicking on the button manually.
In the assertions section we define another waitFor statement that checks if a sap.m.Dialog control
is existing in the DOM of the app. When the dialog has been found, the test is successful and we can immediately confirm by calling an
ok statement with a meaningful message.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Integration tests for SAPUI5 Walkthrough</title>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<script
id="sap-ui-bootstrap"
src="https://openui5.hana.ondemand.com/resources/sap-ui-core.js"
data-sap-ui-theme="sap_belize"
data-sap-ui-resourceroots='{
"sap.ui.demo.walkthrough": "../../"
}'
data-sap-ui-animation="false"
data-sap-ui-compatVersion="edge"
data-sap-ui-async="true">
</script>
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://openui5.hana.ondemand.com/resources/sap/ui/thirdparty/qunit-2.css">
<script src="https://openui5.hana.ondemand.com/resources/sap/ui/thirdparty/qunit-2.js"></script>
<script src="https://openui5.hana.ondemand.com/resources/sap/ui/qunit/qunit-junit.js"></script>
<script src="opaTests.qunit.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="qunit"></div>
<div id="qunit-fixture"></div>
</body>
</html>
This file contains our test suite for all OPA tests of the app. We use the same namespace as for our application.
Then we load the basic QUnit functionality via script tags from SAPUI5 so
that we can execute the test journey. The NavigationJourney we defined above will be loaded via a script called
opaTests.qunit.js:
/* global QUnit */
QUnit.config.autostart = false;
sap.ui.getCore().attachInit(function () {
"use strict";
sap.ui.require([
"sap/ui/demo/walkthrough/test/integration/NavigationJourney"
], function () {
QUnit.start();
});
});
This script loads the NavigationJourney, and the test functions inside are immediately executed. When you call the
webapp/test/integration/opaTests.qunit.html page of your project on the server, you should see the QUnit layout
and a test “Should see the Hello dialog” is executed immediately. It will load the app component on the right side of the page. There
you can see what operations the test is performing on the app, if everything works correctly the button click is triggered, then a
dialog is shown and the test case is green.
OPA tests are located in the webapp/test/integration folder of the application.
Use page objects and journeys for structuring OPA tests.