## Summary Homogenize all 23 ADRs to a single canonical header format, and rewrite `adr/README.md` to match the actual state of the corpus. This is **Tâche 7** of the ARCODANGE Phase 1 migration (Claude Code → Mistral Vibe). Independent from PR #17 (Tâche 6 — restructure AGENTS.md) — both can merge in any order. No code changes; only documentation. ## Changes ### 1. Homogenize 21 ADR headers (commit `db09d0a`) The audit (Tâche 6 Phase A, Mistral intent-router agent, 2026-05-02) had identified **3 inconsistent header formats** : - **F1** — list bullets (`* Status:` / `* Date:` / `* Deciders:`) : 11 ADRs (0001-0008, 0011, 0014, 0023) - **F2** — bold fields (`**Status:**` / `**Date:**` / `**Authors:**`) : 9 ADRs (0009, 0010, 0012, 0013, 0015, 0016, 0017, 0018, 0019) - **F3** — dedicated section (`## Status\n**Value** ✅`) : 5 ADRs (0020, 0021, 0022, 0024, 0025) Plus mixed metadata names (Authors / Deciders / Decision Date / Implementation Date / Implementation Status / Last Updated) and decorative emojis on status values made the corpus hard to scan or template against. **Canonical format adopted** (see `adr/README.md` for full template) : ```markdown # NN. Title **Status:** <Proposed | Accepted | Implemented | Partially Implemented | Approved | Rejected | Deferred | Deprecated | Superseded by ADR-NNNN> **Date:** YYYY-MM-DD **Authors:** Name(s) [optional **Field:** ... lines] ## Context... ``` **Transformations applied** (via `/tmp/homogenize-adrs.py` script, 23 files scanned, 21 modified — 0010 and 0012 were already conform) : - F1 list bullets → bold fields - F2 cleanup : `**Deciders:**` → `**Authors:**`, strip status emojis - F3 sections : `## Status\n**Value** ✅` → `**Status:** Value` (single line) - Strip decorative emojis from `**Status:**` and `**Implementation Status:**` - Convert `* Last Updated:` / `* Implementation Status:` / `* Decision Drivers:` / `* Decision Date:` to bold - Date typo fix : `2024-04-XX` → `2026-04-XX` for ADRs 0018, 0019 (off-by-2-years in original) - Normalize multiple blank lines after header (max 1) **ADR body content is preserved unchanged.** Only headers transformed. ### 2. Rewrite `adr/README.md` (commit `d64ab02`) Previous README had multiple inconsistencies : - Index table listed wrong titles for ADRs 0010-0021 (looked like an aspirational forecast that never matched reality — e.g. "0011 = Trunk-Based Development" but real 0011 is absent and Trunk-Based Development is actually 0017) - Listed entries for ADRs 0011 (validation library) and 0014 (gRPC) but **these files do not exist** in the repo - 0024 (BDD Test Organization) was missing from the detail list - Template still showed the obsolete F1 format (`* Status:`) - Decorative emojis on every status entry Rewrite : - Index table **regenerated from actual file contents** (title from H1, status from `**Status:**` line) — emoji-free, accurate - Notes that 0011 / 0014 are not currently in use (reserved) - Updated template block matches the canonical format - Status Legend extended with `Approved`, `Partially Implemented`, `Deferred` - Added note that 0026 is the next free number for new ADRs ## Test plan - [x] All 23 ADRs follow `**Status:**` / `**Date:**` / `**Authors:**` (verified via grep) - [x] No more occurrences of `* Status:` (F1) or `## Status` (F3) in any ADR header - [x] No more emojis on `**Status:**` lines - [x] `adr/README.md` index links resolve to existing files (no more 0011 / 0014 dead links) - [x] Pre-commit hooks pass (`go mod tidy`, `go fmt`, `swag fmt`) ## Migration context Part of Phase 1 of the ARCODANGE migration from Claude Code to Mistral Vibe. Tâche 7 of the curriculum. Independent from PR #17 (which restructures `AGENTS.md`). The two PRs touch disjoint files — no merge conflict expected when both are merged. 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) (Opus 4.7, 1M context). Mistral Vibe (intent-router agent / mistral-medium-3.5) did the original audit identifying the 3 formats during Tâche 6 Phase A. Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com> Co-Authored-By: Mistral Vibe (devstral-2 / mistral-medium-3.5) Reviewed-on: #18 Co-authored-by: Gabriel Radureau <arcodange@gmail.com> Co-committed-by: Gabriel Radureau <arcodange@gmail.com>
260 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
260 lines
7.8 KiB
Markdown
# Adopt BDD with Godog for behavioral testing
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**Status:** Accepted
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**Authors:** Gabriel Radureau, AI Agent
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**Date:** 2026-04-05
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## Context and Problem Statement
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We needed to add behavioral testing to dance-lessons-coach that provides:
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- User-centric test scenarios
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- Living documentation
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- Integration testing capabilities
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- Clear communication between technical and non-technical stakeholders
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- Complementary testing to unit tests
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## Decision Drivers
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* Need for higher-level testing than unit tests
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* Desire for living documentation that's always up-to-date
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* Requirement for testing through public interfaces
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* Need for clear behavioral specifications
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* Desire for good test organization and readability
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## Considered Options
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* Godog (Cucumber for Go) - BDD framework for Go
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* Ginkgo - BDD-style testing framework
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* Standard Go testing - Extended for integration tests
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* Custom BDD framework - Build our own
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## Decision Outcome
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Chosen option: "Godog" because it provides proper BDD support with Gherkin syntax, good Go integration, living documentation capabilities, and follows standard Cucumber patterns.
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## Pros and Cons of the Options
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### Godog
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* Good, because proper BDD with Gherkin syntax
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* Good, because living documentation
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* Good, because good Go integration
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* Good, because follows Cucumber standards
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* Good, because clear separation of concerns
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* Bad, because slightly more complex setup
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* Bad, because slower execution than unit tests
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### Ginkgo
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* Good, because good BDD-style testing
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* Good, because fast execution
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* Good, because good Go integration
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* Bad, because not proper Gherkin/BDD
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* Bad, because less clear for non-technical stakeholders
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### Standard Go testing
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* Good, because no external dependencies
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* Good, because familiar to Go developers
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* Bad, because no BDD capabilities
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* Bad, because no living documentation
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* Bad, because less organized for behavioral tests
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### Custom BDD framework
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* Good, because tailored to our needs
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* Good, because no external dependencies
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* Bad, because time-consuming to develop
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* Bad, because need to maintain ourselves
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* Bad, because likely less feature-rich
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## Implementation Structure
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```
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features/
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├── greet.feature # Gherkin feature files
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├── health.feature
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└── readiness.feature
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pkg/bdd/
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├── steps/ # Step definitions
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│ ├── greet_steps.go # Implementation of steps
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│ ├── health_steps.go
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│ └── readiness_steps.go
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│
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├── testserver/ # Test infrastructure
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│ ├── server.go # In-process test server harness
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│ └── client.go # HTTP client for testing
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│
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└── suite.go # Test suite initialization
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```
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## Testing Approach Evolution
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### Initial Approach (Process-based)
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Initially planned to test against external server process using `go run`, but this proved unreliable for automated testing due to:
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- Process management complexity
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- Port conflicts in parallel execution
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- CI/CD environment challenges
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- Process cleanup issues
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### Current Approach (Hybrid In-Process)
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Adopted a hybrid approach that maintains black box testing principles while improving reliability:
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```go
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// pkg/bdd/testserver/server.go
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func (s *Server) Start() error {
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// Create real server instance from pkg/server
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cfg := createTestConfig(s.port)
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realServer := server.NewServer(cfg, context.Background())
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// Start HTTP server in same process
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s.httpServer = &http.Server{
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Addr: fmt.Sprintf(":%d", s.port),
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Handler: realServer.Router(),
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}
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go func() {
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if err := s.httpServer.ListenAndServe(); err != nil && err != http.ErrServerClosed {
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log.Error().Err(err).Msg("Test server failed")
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}
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}()
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return s.waitForServerReady()
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}
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```
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## Black Box Testing Principles Maintained
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Despite using in-process server, the approach maintains core black box testing principles:
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✅ **External Interface Testing**: All tests interact through HTTP API only
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✅ **No Implementation Knowledge**: Tests don't access internal server components
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✅ **Real Server Code**: Uses actual server implementation from `pkg/server`
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✅ **Production Configuration**: Tests with realistic server configuration
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✅ **Isolation**: Each test suite gets fresh server instance
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## What We Test vs What We Don't
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### ✅ Covered by BDD Tests
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- HTTP API endpoints and responses
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- Request/response handling
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- Business logic through public interface
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- Error handling and status codes
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- Readiness/liveness behavior
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- JSON serialization/deserialization
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### 🚫 Not Covered by BDD Tests (Covered Elsewhere)
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- Actual process startup/shutdown (covered by `scripts/test-server.sh`)
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- Main function execution (covered by integration tests)
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- External process management (covered by server control scripts)
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- Operating system signals (covered by manual testing)
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## Example Feature File
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```gherkin
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# features/greet.feature
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Feature: Greet Service
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The greet service should return appropriate greetings
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Scenario: Default greeting
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Given the server is running
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When I request the default greeting
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Then the response should be "Hello world!"
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Scenario: Personalized greeting
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Given the server is running
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When I request a greeting for "John"
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Then the response should be "Hello John!"
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```
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## Example Step Implementation
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```go
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// pkg/bdd/steps/steps.go
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func InitializeAllSteps(ctx *godog.ScenarioContext, client *testserver.Client) {
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sc := NewStepContext(client)
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ctx.Step(`^the server is running$`, sc.theServerIsRunning)
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ctx.Step(`^I request the default greeting$`, sc.iRequestTheDefaultGreeting)
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ctx.Step(`^I request a greeting for "([^"]*)"$`, sc.iRequestAGreetingFor)
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ctx.Step(`^I request the health endpoint$`, sc.iRequestTheHealthEndpoint)
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ctx.Step(`^the response should be "{\"([^"]*)\":\"([^"]*)\"}"$`, sc.theResponseShouldBe)
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}
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// StepContext struct holds the test client
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type StepContext struct {
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client *testserver.Client
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}
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func (sc *StepContext) theServerIsRunning() error {
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// Actually verify the server is running by checking the readiness endpoint
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return sc.client.Request("GET", "/api/ready", nil)
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}
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func (sc *StepContext) iRequestTheDefaultGreeting() error {
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return sc.client.Request("GET", "/api/v1/greet/", nil)
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}
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func (sc *StepContext) theResponseShouldBe(arg1, arg2 string) error {
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// Handle JSON escaping from feature files
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cleanArg1 := strings.Trim(arg1, `"\`)
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cleanArg2 := strings.Trim(arg2, `"\`)
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expected := fmt.Sprintf(`{"%s":"%s"}`, cleanArg1, cleanArg2)
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return sc.client.ExpectResponseBody(expected)
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}
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```
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## Black Box Testing Approach
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The BDD implementation follows black box testing principles:
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* **External perspective**: Tests interact only through public HTTP API
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* **No implementation knowledge**: Tests don't know about internal components
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* **Behavior focus**: Tests verify what the system does, not how it does it
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* **Interface testing**: Tests verify the contract between system and users
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## Testing Strategy
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### Test Types
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1. **Direct HTTP tests**: Test raw API behavior
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2. **SDK client tests**: Test generated client integration (future)
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### Test Execution
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```bash
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# Run BDD tests
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cd features
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godog
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# Run with specific format
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godog -f progress
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# Run specific feature
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godog features/greet.feature
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```
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## Links
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* [Godog GitHub](https://github.com/cucumber/godog)
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* [Godog Documentation](https://github.com/cucumber/godog#readme)
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* [Cucumber Documentation](https://cucumber.io/docs/gherkin/)
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* [BDD Introduction](https://dannorth.net/introducing-bdd/)
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## Integration with CI/CD
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```yaml
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# Example GitHub Actions step
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- name: Run BDD tests
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run: |
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cd features
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godog -f progress
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```
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## Performance Considerations
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* BDD tests are slower than unit tests (expected)
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* Each scenario runs with fresh server instance for isolation
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* Tests can be run in parallel where appropriate
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* Focus on critical paths rather than exhaustive testing |