qwen-code/.qwen/skills/e2e-testing/SKILL.md
tanzhenxin dc833d9d94 feat: add bugfix workflow, test-engineer agent, and debugging skills
- Add test-engineer agent for bug reproduction and verification
- Add /qc:bugfix command for structured bugfix workflow
- Add e2e-testing skill covering headless/interactive modes, MCP testing
- Add structured-debugging skill for hypothesis-driven debugging
- Simplify AGENTS.md to focus on essential commands and conventions
- Add terminal-capture scenario for bugfix workflow testing
- Add .qwen folder to ESLint ignore list

Known limitations: The /qc:bugfix workflow and e2e-testing skill
are experimental and may be unstable or consume significant tokens.

Co-authored-by: Qwen-Coder <qwen-coder@alibabacloud.com>
2026-04-04 18:30:09 +08:00

4.7 KiB

name description
e2e-testing Guide for running end-to-end tests of the Qwen Code CLI, including headless mode, MCP server testing, and API traffic inspection. Use this skill whenever you need to verify CLI behavior with real model calls, reproduce user-reported bugs end-to-end, test MCP tool integrations, or inspect raw API request/response payloads. Trigger on mentions of E2E testing, headless testing, MCP tool testing, or reproducing issues.

E2E Testing Guide

How to run the Qwen Code CLI end-to-end — from building the bundle to inspecting raw API traffic. Use when unit tests aren't enough and you need to verify behavior through the full pipeline (model API → tool validation → tool execution).

Which binary to use

  • Reproducing bugs: use the globally installed qwen command — this matches what the user ran when they filed the issue.
  • Verifying fixes: build first (npm run build && npm run bundle), then run node dist/cli.js — this tests your local changes.

Headless Mode

Run the CLI non-interactively with JSON output (<qwen> = qwen or node dist/cli.js per above):

<qwen> "your prompt here" \
  --approval-mode yolo \
  --output-format json \
  2>/dev/null

The JSON output is a stream of objects. Key types:

  • type: "system" — init: tools, mcp_servers, model, permission_mode
  • type: "assistant" — model output: content[].type is text, tool_use, or thinking
  • type: "user" — tool results: content[].type is tool_result with is_error
  • type: "result" — final output with result text and usage stats

Pipe through jq to filter the verbose stream, e.g. extract tool-result errors: ... 2>/dev/null | jq 'select(.type=="user") | .message.content[] | select(.is_error)'

Inspecting Raw API Traffic

When debugging model behavior (wrong tool arguments, schema issues), enable API logging to see the exact request/response payloads:

<qwen> "prompt" \
  --approval-mode yolo \
  --output-format json \
  --openai-logging \
  --openai-logging-dir /tmp/api-logs

Each API call produces a JSON file (can be 80KB+ due to full message history). The bulk is in request.messages (conversation history). Trimmed structure:

{
  "request": {
    "model": "coder-model",
    "messages": [
      { "role": "system|user|assistant", "content": "...", "tool_calls?": [...] }
    ],
    "tools": [
      {
        "type": "function",
        "function": {
          "name": "tool_name",
          "description": "...",
          "parameters": { ... }      // schema sent to the model
        }
      }
    ]
  },
  "response": {
    "choices": [
      {
        "message": {
          "role": "assistant",
          "content": "...",          // text response (may be null)
          "tool_calls": [
            {
              "id": "call_...",
              "function": {
                "name": "tool_name",
                "arguments": "..."   // raw JSON string from the model
              }
            }
          ]
        }
      }
    ]
  }
}

Interactive Mode (tmux)

Use when you need to verify TUI rendering, test keyboard interactions, or see what the user sees. Headless mode is simpler when you only need structured output.

Launching

tmux new-session -d -s test -x 200 -y 50 \
  "cd /tmp/test-dir && <qwen> --approval-mode yolo"
sleep 3  # wait for TUI to initialize

Sending prompts

Split text and Enter with a short delay — sending them together can cause the TUI to swallow the submit:

tmux send-keys -t test "your prompt here"
sleep 0.5
tmux send-keys -t test Enter

Waiting for completion

Poll for the input prompt to reappear instead of blind sleeping:

for i in $(seq 1 60); do
  sleep 2
  tmux capture-pane -t test -p | grep -q "Type your message" && break
done

Capturing output

tmux capture-pane -t test -p -S -100   # -S -100 = 100 lines of scrollback

Limitations

  • Key combos: tmux send-keys cannot reliably send all key combinations. C-?, C-Shift-*, and function keys with modifiers are unsupported or unreliable. For these, use the InteractiveSession harness in integration-tests/interactive/ or test manually.
  • Visual artifacts: capture-pane captures the final rendered frame, not intermediate states. Flicker, tearing, or brief blank frames cannot be detected this way.

Cleanup

tmux kill-session -t test

MCP Server Testing

For testing MCP tool behavior end-to-end, read references/mcp-testing.md. It covers the setup gotchas (config location, git repo requirement) and includes a reusable zero-dependency test server template in scripts/mcp-test-server.js.