We do not have any formalized testing only roles (a "Quality Assurance" team). We do a lot of human based testing, but it's mostly done by members of other teams.
We do use unit tests and integration tests, but the coverage / importance of them differs greatly across teams. Normally, anything that touches money is unit tested by default. A lot of other things also have unit tests, for example on Careers we have unit tests for loading critical pages, completing a job checkout, and fulfilling sold but not activated inventory items.
When it comes to pushing new code on Careers, this is what our flow is like:
Every time new code is pushed (we normally don't work on branches, we all push to the master branch and wrap most of our code in feature flags) the Dev tier there is automatically compiled and a lot of unit tests run. If the unit build succeeds, the new changes are uploaded onto a website on our dev tier automatically. The "Dev - Integration Tests" task starts running at the same time, and if any of the integration tests fail we physically can't push the new changes onto the production tier until that's resolved.
For a lot of things we work on, I think the integration tests are a lot more important than having wide coverage on unit tests (there are a lot of people at the company who disagree with me on this) -- In most cases, all we're doing is consuming some sort of CRUD action, I would rather test to make sure all the actions combined have the outcome we want, than test every individual one of those just to make sure that the C in CRUD really stands for "Create".
To your point about the need for a real QA team, I don't think even if we had anyone doing that as their full time job it'd make a big difference. Our biggest issue right now isn't that we're just not testing, it's that we're moving really really quickly so in a lot of cases there's nothing actually written down to say how something is supposed to function. We're consistently changing what we're working on as we're working on it, which makes it difficult to do something like TDD or having test plans.
Note that the above is really mostly about the Careers product (and somewhat about Mobile) but not about the Core Q&A team nor any of our other internal teams. Everyone kind of does it a little differently.
One thing that both the Core and Careers teams rely on however is the continuous feedback we get through our meta channels like this. I think this is honestly the best part of my job, I love that people care enough about our product to help us make it better, and that we can rely on this being consistent time over time.
We're currently beta testing Docs, Teams, the Jobs tab, and have beta tiers of our iOS and Android applications, the fact that we continue to get great feedback on all of these channels makes me really really happy. Thank you (sincerely) for being one of our awesome bug reporters :)
You suck at unit testing with JonH
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