Files
hive/frontend/node_modules/fb-watchman
anthonyrawlins aacb45156b Set up comprehensive frontend testing infrastructure
- Install Jest for unit testing with React Testing Library
- Install Playwright for end-to-end testing
- Configure Jest with proper TypeScript support and module mapping
- Create test setup files and utilities for both unit and e2e tests

Components:
* Jest configuration with coverage thresholds
* Playwright configuration with browser automation
* Unit tests for LoginForm, AuthContext, and useSocketIO hook
* E2E tests for authentication, dashboard, and agents workflows
* GitHub Actions workflow for automated testing
* Mock data and API utilities for consistent testing
* Test documentation with best practices

Testing features:
- Unit tests with 70% coverage threshold
- E2E tests with API mocking and user journey testing
- CI/CD integration for automated test runs
- Cross-browser testing support with Playwright
- Authentication system testing end-to-end

🚀 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code)

Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
2025-07-11 14:06:34 +10:00
..

fb-watchman

fb-watchman is a filesystem watcher that uses the Watchman file watching service from Facebook.

Watchman provides file change notification services using very efficient recursive watches and also allows more advanced change matching and filesystem tree querying operations using a powerful expression syntax.

Install

You should install Watchman to make the most of this module.

Then simply:

$ npm install fb-watchman

Key Concepts

  • Watchman recursively watches directories.
  • Each watched directory is called a root.
  • You must initiate a watch on a root using the watch-project command prior to subscribing to changes
  • Rather than separately watching many sibling directories, watch-project consolidates and re-uses existing watches relative to a project root (the location of your .watchmanconfig or source control repository root)
  • change notifications are relative to the project root

How do I use it?

Read the NodeJS watchman documentation